Silas had never laid eyes on anything like her. Not in this lifetime, anyway.
The girl—wait, wolf?—was sprawled out in front of him, all tangled hair and sweat-slick skin, her chest rising and falling so damn shallow he almost missed it. Moonlight turned her skin silver, and her eyes, holy hell, they were alight. Gold, burning, wild. She looked like she’d crawled straight out of the heart of the woods, fierce and half-broken.
“Don’t move,” Silas muttered, pushing a wet lock of hair off her face. He kept his voice low, like he used to for the dying on the battlefield, except this? This wasn’t war. It felt bigger.
Sacred, almost. Weird thing to think, but there it was.
Hardly anything—her pulse, just this weak flutter, barely holding on beneath his fingertips.
“Hey. No way. Not letting you do this,” he stammered, voice all torn up, clutching her like some desperate idiot. Like if he let go, she’d just slip right out of the world. “Nope. Don’t you dare. Not now—not when I just found you.”
His own wolf was losing its mind inside him. Prowling, snapping, howling at the moon. Mate. Save her. Ours.
He ripped off his cloak, wrapped her up tight. She was burning up and freezing at the same time. Not a great combo, honestly. Her breath hitched, and for one godawful second, he thought she’d slipped away.
“Hold on,” he growled, more to himself than her.
He scooped her up—fluid, instinctive. Her head lolled against his chest, heartbeat a weak thud against his ribs, and he just ran. Didn’t think. Trees whipped past, roots tried to trip him, but he barreled through, eyes locked on the glow of the campfire up ahead.
“Silas?” Hann called, voice sharp and worried. He burst into the camp and the rogues—tough bastards, most of them—swarmed in.
Hann was at his side before he even stopped moving, hair stuck to her neck, eyes wide. “Who the hell is that?”
Silas’s voice came out rough. “I don’t know. She’s mine.”
That shut everybody up. Rogues didn’t talk about mates, didn’t claim, didn’t do any of that pack-bonding stuff. But this—yeah, this was different.
“Blankets. Boil water. Now,” he barked. People jumped.
Drew was already digging out his ragged bag of supplies.
“She shifted,” Silas told them, laying her out by the fire. “Not like any shift I’ve seen. Her wolf—red. Blood-red.”
Drew’s eyebrows shot up. “Red? Like… the—?”
“The prophecy,” Hann finished, voice low.
Silas ignored them, hand hovering over her chest, tracking every shaky beat. She was slipping again.
“She needs rest,” Drew said, crouching down. “But it’s not just exhaustion. Her heart’s… wrong. Like it’s always been weak.”
Silas bit down on his own frustration. “Then she’ll get stronger. I’ll make damn sure of it.”
Next morning, the world was all gray mist and damp air. Evangeline snapped her eyes open, instantly regretting it when the firelight danced all over the tent like some kind of rude spotlight. Ugh. Every inch of her body ached—like someone had pulled her apart piece by piece and stuck her back together with hot glue and maybe a little spite. Her heart still ached, but—stranger still—there was a new throb in her chest. Stronger.
She tried to sit up. Bad idea.
“Easy,” someone said. Deep voice. Calm.
She turned her head—too fast, stupid—and winced. Guy sitting next to her bed. Dark skin, built like a tank, eyes forest-green and serious. He looked wild, but safe. Weird combo, but there it was.
Her voice scraped out. “Where am I?”
“You’re safe,” he said, gentle. “You shifted. I found you in the woods.”
Suddenly, it crashed back—Kieran, the rejection, the pain, the shift, the blood-red fur, this stranger’s arms…
“Your eyes,” she whispered, not sure why that mattered, but it did.
He just watched her. “What about them?”
“They glowed when you touched me.”
His face didn’t move, but his voice dropped. “That’s ‘cause you’re my mate.”
Her heart stuttered. Not from pain, but—well, something else.
“No,” she blurted. “No, that’s… my mate rejected me last night.”
He just shrugged, like it was obvious. “Then he’s a moron.”
She opened her mouth, but words just… fizzled out.
“I’m Silas,” he said. “Leader of this merry band of misfits. And you—never seen a wolf like that before. Your shift shook the damn ground.”
She stared at her hands. “Never shifted before. Not till last night.”
“Your wolf’s rare,” he said, almost like he was telling her a secret. “Old story says a red wolf, born with a busted heart, will rise after she’s rejected and lead the lost into power.”
Evangeline snorted. “Please. I’ve been called a lot of things. ‘Destined’ ain’t one of ‘em.”
He watched her, real quiet, like he was trying to figure out if she’d vanish if he blinked. For the first time, Evangeline actually noticed the crowd drifting through the camp—men, women, all of them rogues, but, honestly? They looked more like tired travelers than whatever monsters her pack used to rant about. A few snuck in curious glances. She tried not to shrink under the attention.
“You were pretty much dead when I found you,” Silas finally said, voice low, almost like he was embarrassed to admit it. “Didn’t expect to see those eyes pop open, honestly.”
She clutched the cloak like it might save her, knuckles white, breath coming way too fast. No way she was looking up at him.
“I’m not strong,” she muttered, barely a whisper. “Never was.”
“So, you’re still breathing, huh?” He just gave this lazy shrug, like that was some deep answer. “Hey, that’s more than most folks get, you know?”
Yeah, she didn’t buy it, not really. But a tiny, reckless part of her wanted to.
Later, everyone gathered around this bonfire that looked like it’d been burning for centuries. Evangeline perched on a rock, wrapped in a scratchy old blanket, still running on half-charged batteries. Felt weird—she was the outsider, but nobody shot her dirty looks. Not enemies, just… people.
Drew lobbed another log into the fire, sparks popping. “So, what do we call her? Red girl? Firehead?”
She cleared her throat. “It’s Evangeline.”
Hann slid down beside her, grinning sideways. “That’s a nice name. Anyone ever tell you your eyes do this weird glowy thing when you’re pissed?”
She snorted. “Not angry.”
“Yet,” Hann shot back, all teeth.
Silas sat across from her, quiet as always, letting the firelight paint him half-shadow. He could look dangerous and safe at the same time—didn’t seem fair, honestly.
“We’ve been rogues forever, fighting, stealing, just—surviving,” he said. “But maybe, with you here, we could finally be something better.”
Evangeline raised a brow. “Better, how?”
He shrugged. “Packs banish us. Say we’re cursed, rabid, whatever. But you, you’re the red wolf. The prophecy’s all about you, says you’ll pull us together.”
She laughed, and yeah, it was bitter. “I couldn’t even keep my mate from walking away.”
“Forget him,” Hann snapped, not even pretending to be polite. “He tossed you out. We won’t.”
Silas nodded. “We’re not building this new pack on fancy blood or old names. Just—survival. Loyalty. The stuff that actually matters. RedHowl Pack.”
Evangeline looked around at them—these so-called monsters. All she saw were survivors. Maybe even family.
She caught Silas’s gaze, steady and warm.
“Fine,” she said, voice stronger. “Make me your Luna.”
The flames jumped up, like the fire itself approved. And somewhere out there, deep in the woods, the MoonClaw Pack felt the ground shift. Something was waking up, and it had her name all over it.
Kieran’s POVYeah, her voice just playing in his head. Wouldn’t shut up, honestly.Not in the way memories echo. It was sharper. Present. Like a hook caught beneath his skin.Kieran, please...The plea had haunted him since the moment she fled the celebration — the moment he’d spoken the words that broke them both."I reject you, Evangeline Blackwood."He'd felt it. The severing of the mate bond. Like tearing his own soul in half. But it had to be done. His father — the Alpha — had made it clear. Evangeline wasn’t Luna material. Too soft. Too unknown. Her dormant wolf a liability.And then the rumors started.Whispers of a red wolf spotted deep in the northern woods. A rogue encampment. A girl with silver eyes and hair like wildfire.His mate.Or what used to be.He gripped the edge of the war table so hard.“She’s alive,” his Beta said quietly.“And running with rogues,” Kieran snapped. “That’s not alive. That’s betrayal.”“She was rejected.”The reminder stung. He turned sharply. “S
The pendant — yeah, that stupid obsidian crescent — felt like an actual rock in Evangeline’s hand. Not magic. Not humming. Just... heavy. And not because of its weight, really, but because of his. Her dad’s. Some legacy she never signed up for.She sat alone, perched on a cold slab at the edge of the training clearing, the dawn making weird patterns on that black stone. All those fairy tales made relics sound so dramatic — glowing, singing, secret voices.Honestly, the last few days had been hell. Kieran shutting her out, her body turning inside out with her first shift, that second mate bond (seriously, what the hell?), her mom’s secrets, and now the whole Moonborn mess. Red wolf? Sure. Why not throw that in the blender too.She felt like a cracked egg — empty and overflowing at the same time.“Hey, you alive?”She jumped a little. Hann, with his perpetual resting grump face, ambled over and flopped down next to her like he owned the place. He dropped a bundle wrapped in cloth on the
Selina’s out there, balanced right on the edge of this ancient stone ridge — wind blowing her coat around, hair dangling in her face. Down below, that river slices through the trees, all silver and mean, looking exactly the same as it did twenty years back. Nothing changes. Except her. Except everything.That day — the one she can’t forget, no matter how many bottles of cheap Merlot she downs — it was the day she made the call that wrecked her, but also saved her, maybe. Necessary evil, that’s what people say. She’s not sure she buys it.Her heart’s in her throat. Her kid’s out there somewhere. Alone. Different. Hunted.“Please,” she whispers. “Let her be safe.” But the universe has never answered her, not once. The Moon Goddess? Might as well pray to a brick wall. If she ever listened, she’s gone silent now.Memory hits hard. Flashback to the red wolf — oh, she remembers. Him in that clearing, all muscle and moonlight, eyes burning like gasoline on a campfire. Not exactly a talker. D
Silas looked like a coiled spring, ready to launch or explode — honestly, hard to tell which. Evangeline? You could see she was rattled — yeah, totally freaked — but hell if she was backing down. Legs shaky as a newborn deer, she pulled herself together and glared right at the woman (Talia), eyes wide.“Go on, say that one more time,” Evangeline said, voice cracking, barely holding it together. “What do you mean, my mother made a choice?”Talia didn’t even blink. “Selina Blackwood never told you the truth about your father, did she?”The air got thick. Like, you could almost taste the tension. Rogues shuffled around, hands still half-gripping their weapons, but nobody piped up. Not with every word buzzing like it might explode.“I don’t know anything about my father,” Evangeline said, all honesty, all ache. “Just that he died before I was born. That’s all she ever told me.”“She lied.”Silas dropped his hand on her shoulder, and honestly, Evangeline clung to that tiny touch like her l
Evangeline woke up way too early. The sky wasn’t blue yet, and her room was so cold. She just lay there, all dizzy, brain doing that half-dream shuffle. All these flashes—something red, those creepy silver eyes, somebody shouting her name. The voice? Weird mix of familiar and totally not. Maybe her brain was just glitching. Or maybe—hell, maybe it mattered. No way to know.The bed squeaked under her like it had beef. She grabbed the clothes Hann handed off yesterday—shirt, leggings, both worn so thin you could probably read through ’em, but hey, at least they didn’t pinch. Every muscle screamed “nope” as she moved. Thing was? She almost liked it. Pain, at least, was honest. Pain couldn’t BS you.Outside, the camp was shaking itself awake, sort of. Fires popping, shifters stumbling around half-dazed, a couple tents looking like a stiff wind could finish the job. Not even close to the pack she’d grown up with. No patrols, no bossy alphas yelling orders, no one pretending things were all
God, that wind. Man, this cold wasn’t just your run-of-the-mill chill—it straight-up hated her. Like, personal vendetta kind of cold, stabbing right through her jacket and gnawing at her bones. Evangeline hung around at the edge of camp, burying her toes in the dirt, throwing daggers at the woods with her stare like she was gonna win some kind of staring contest against a bunch of trees. Spoiler: the forest just stared right back, all dark and fanged, not giving a damn. How long had she been out here anyway? Could’ve been an hour, could’ve been her whole damn life. Time didn’t mean anything when your chest felt like someone scooped it hollow and forgot to fill it back up.And of course, Kieran’s voice wouldn’t die. Just looping in her skull, all sharp edges and poison:“I reject you, Evangeline Blackwood.”God, she could punch something. Or him. Or herself, honestly. He didn’t just dump her—he detonated her whole world. No mate, no Luna, no fairytale. Just her and a bunch of rejects i