Evelyn
Outside Damon's office building, the late morning sun turned the glass façade into a wall of fire. I stood on the sidewalk, Ava's carrier heavy in one hand, the bag with his documents and food in the other, wondering if I'd made a mistake coming here.
This is ridiculous. I'm his mate and the mother of his child. I shouldn't be afraid to walk into his office.
But my heart hammered against my ribs anyway, a trapped bird beating against its cage.
The security guard at the front desk recognized me, his eyes brightening. "Luna Evelyn! It's been weeks." His gaze dropped to the carrier, and his smile widened. "And this must be the little one."
"Yes, this is Ava," I said, grateful for the warmth in his voice after weeks of Damon's cold silence.
"The Alpha will be pleased to see you both," he said, buzzing me through.
Will he, though? I wondered, stepping into the elevator. I caught my reflection in the mirrored wall—dark circles under my eyes, hair pulled back in a hasty ponytail, wearing the first clean shirt I could find. Not exactly the put-together Luna I used to be.
As the elevator climbed, I rehearsed what I would say. I know things have been difficult between us. I want us to talk. Really talk. For Ava's sake, if nothing else.
Simple. Direct. No accusations, no tears.
The elevator doors slid open on the top floor. The familiar corridor stretched before me, lined with artwork from local pack artists—Damon's way of supporting the community. I'd helped him select most of these pieces, back when he still valued my opinion.
His assistant Marissa wasn't at her desk. Unusual for her to be away, but it made things easier.
I shifted Ava's carrier to my other hand and approached Damon's office door. Through the frosted glass, I could make out shadowy movements. He was there, and he wasn't alone. Probably in a meeting.
I hesitated, then raised my hand to knock. The porridge would be getting cold.
Knock first, I reminded myself. Don't just barge in.
My knuckles rapped against the wood, three quick taps. Without waiting for a response—a habit from years of coming and going freely in his spaces—I pushed the door open.
For one suspended moment, my brain couldn't process what I was seeing. Like looking at a painting that appeared to be one thing from a distance, only to discover it was something else entirely up close.
Damon was there, yes. But he wasn't in a meeting.
He stood with his back against his desk, his shirt half-unbuttoned. And wrapped around him, her legs straddling his thigh, her hands in his hair, was a woman. They broke apart at the sound of the door, two pairs of startled eyes turning toward me.
The flask of porridge slipped from my fingers. It hit the floor with a dull thud, the lid popping off, hot food spilling across the polished hardwood.
But I barely noticed. Because the woman disentangling herself from my mate, smoothing down her skirt with practiced ease, was Susan.
My sister.
The same sister who had held my hand in the hospital. Who had promised to help me. Who had looked me in the eyes and lied.
"Why?" The word escaped me, small and broken.
Susan didn't answer. She didn't even have the decency to look ashamed. Instead, she stepped away from Damon, her chin lifting slightly, her eyes meeting mine with an emotion I couldn't name. Something cold and foreign that had no place in my sister's face.
I turned to Damon, searching. Regret or apology. Anything that would make sense of this nightmare.
"Of all people, it had to be you," I said to Susan, my voice steadier than I expected. "You, Susan. My own Sister."
In front of me, Damon's hands settled on Susan's waist, casual and possessive, as if I weren't even there. As if I hadn't just caught them in the act of betraying me in the most intimate way possible.
Susan's lips curved into something close to a smile.
My heart wasn't breaking. Breaking implied a quick, clean snap. This was a slow, excruciating compression, like being crushed from the inside out.
"How..." I swallowed, my mouth dry. "How long has this been going on?"
Damon shrugged, his eyes cold. "What does it matter? I really just don't love you anymore."
The words hit me so hard, I stumbled back a step.
"But I'm your fated mate," I whispered. "Remember when you marked me?" The night he'd claimed me, promised me forever. The first man I'd ever been with, the only man I'd ever wanted.
Something flickered in his eyes—a shadow of the man I'd fallen in love with, perhaps. But it was gone in an instant, replaced by a hardness I'd never seen before.
"You can stop whatever games you're playing now and go to hell with that bastard of yours!" he spat, his voice rising. "We both know that child isn't mine."
I stared at him, uncomprehending. The room seemed to tilt beneath my feet. "What bastard?" Heat rushed to my face as understanding dawned. I glanced at Ava, sleeping peacefully in her carrier, oblivious to the ugliness around her. "You can treat me however you want, but I won't forgive you for calling my precious baby a bastard!"
Before I could think, I was moving toward him, my palm connecting with his cheek in a sharp crack that echoed through the room. The sting in my hand was strangely satisfying.
I turned to leave, my fingers closing around the door handle, desperate to escape this room, this betrayal, these people I no longer recognized.
"Wait." Damon's voice stopped me. Not gentle, not apologetic. Just cold. "Evelyn, just you wait, so I can prove to you that your bastard daughter doesn't belong to me."
I turned slowly, confusion cutting through my anger. What was he talking about?
Before I could ask, he tossed something onto the floor between us. Photographs, dozens of them, spreading across the hardwood like fallen leaves.
I didn't need to bend down to see what they showed. The images were clear enough from where I stood.
Me, or someone who looked exactly like me, in a hotel room. In bed with a stranger, his hands on my body in ways that left nothing to the imagination.
"This is not me!" I gasped, bile rising in my throat. "I can't... recall being that way with a man, I—"
Damon laughed. "Are you that dull?" he sneered. "You can't recall, huh?"
He stepped closer, his voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "Take another look at those pictures and think back. Deep. Where were you, seven months ago, on a Friday night of the second week?"
The question hit me like I had suddenly been poured a bucket of Ice water. Seven months ago. The timing of my pregnancy. And that specific date...
I looked to Susan instinctively, the way I'd always looked to her when I needed help. We were supposed to be in this together because I was with her that same night.
That night when we'd gone out for drinks. When I'd woken up the next morning in a hotel room with no memory of how I'd gotten there. Susan had been there too, had assured me nothing happened, that we'd just had too much to drink and decided to get a room instead of driving home.
"Susan..." I began, reaching for the one person who could corroborate my story, who knew I would never cheat on Damon.
But Susan stepped away, her eyes cold. "Don't expect me to cover your dirt for so long. My conscience is beginning to judge me."
She brushed past me, heading for the door. As she passed, she leaned close, her lips nearly touching my ear.
"That look of your blood boiling over just makes me happy," she whispered, her breath warm against my skin. "Now let's see who becomes Luna between us."
My blood ran cold. This wasn't just an affair. It was a calculated takedown. By my own sister.
I turned to face Damon, the man I'd once believed would love me forever. The stranger who now looked at me with contempt.
"I want a divorce," I said, the words clear and final.
In that moment, with the weight of their betrayal pressing down on me, it was the only truth I had left.
* * *
CatherineAva's body had that particular smell—not overwhelming yet, but there. Day-old death starting to set in. The others in the room were pretending not to notice, or maybe they were just avoiding setting Evelyn off.After that scene in the hallway, I understood why. My daughter was close to breaking completely.I sighed. Where was the hope here? The child's skin had gone waxy, her small body rigid. She'd been dead over a day now.I turned. Hilda stood a few feet from the door, Frost beside her. The red-haired girl's eyes never left Ava's body. The look on her face made me pity the sentinel, but it also worried me. What happened when a Wolf Hunter lost their charge?They weren't created to serve wolves, after all. They were created to hunt them. That's why Yrsa had looked ready to shit herself seeing two of them in one room. She'd probably stay in her cave for months after this. The old bitch had lived long enough to remember what Wolf Hunters did to packs. Longer than my mother,
Evelyn"I'm tired. I'm so fucking tired."No one spoke. The hallway stayed quiet except for my sniffling. My chest hurt. Everything hurt. If Ava was gone, what was the point?"Evelyn."I looked up at the infirmary entrance. The door had still been open since Catherine had come in with her dramatic entrance.Damon stood there.He looked—I didn't even know how to describe it. Wrecked wasn't enough. His clothes were torn to shreds, hanging off him in strips. Dirt and blood covered every visible inch of skin. His hair was matted with something dark. And his face—The missing eye was obvious now. The socket had healed over but the smooth, sunken skin where his eye should have been made him look wrong. Unbalanced.I stared at him for a second, then looked away. I didn't have the strength for this. The white-haired man still held my arms up from underneath, keeping me suspended like I was about to be crucified. All because I'd been swinging at Hilda.A hand caught my chin, forced my head up.
Evelyn"My daughter is dead. Ava is gone."Catherine's face went blank. Not shocked, not sad, not angry. Just empty. Like someone had switched her off.That scared me more than anything. My mother had never been helpless. Not when she'd shot my grandmother to end her suffering. Not when she'd walked away from our pack. Not even when she'd been pretending to have dementia. She always had control, always had a plan.But now she just stood there. Blank."You can't say that."Hilda's voice cut through the silence. She was looking at me with those intense eyes."Excuse me?" I turned on her."You can't say she's gone.""Stop it, Hilda." My voice came out harder than I intended. "Just stop.""I'm telling the truth.""You're delusional." I stepped toward her. "This isn't helping anyone. Your denial doesn't bring her back.""She's not gone." Hilda looked around the room, her gaze landing on everyone—the parents, Cole, even where the Shaman had been standing. "She's in there. Stuck. She needs h
EvelynHilda and the white-haired man stared at each other. No words. Just this long, uncomfortable silence while everyone else pressed themselves against walls trying to get away from him."You're scaring the locals," Catherine said without looking back at him.He didn't respond. Didn't even acknowledge she'd spoken.The Shaman was muttering rapidly now, backing toward the wall. Her eyes kept darting between Hilda and Frost like she was seeing something impossible."Þetta er ekki hægt. Þeir eru útdauðir. Allir dauðir."This isn't possible. They're extinct. All dead.Catherine rolled her eyes. "Oh, calm down, Yrsa. You're being dramatic.""Þú veist ekki hvað þú hefur gert," the Shaman hissed. You don't know what you've done."I know exactly what I've done," Catherine said. "Question is, what are you doing here? Shouldn't you be in your cave, eating mushrooms and talking to rocks?"The Shaman's face twisted. "Börnin deyja vegna hennar." The children die because of her.She pointed at m
Evelyn"You're killing him, Hilda." Catherine stepped forward. "Let the man go."I stared at my mother. Everyone did. The woman who'd been confused and lost just days ago now stood there with perfect clarity in her eyes. No hesitation. No fog. Just Catherine Winters in full control.She looked around the crowded hallway, taking in the scene—parents pressed against walls, Cole and his useless guards, the Shaman cowering in the corner, Hilda strangling a man mid-air. Her gaze landed on me and she smiled. Tilted her head and shook it with pity.I didn't know how to react. Just stood there while my brain tried to process what I was seeing. The last time I'd seen her, she'd been confused, showing signs of memory problems. Now her eyes were focused and aware.Catherine walked forward and everyone's attention followed her across the room.She placed a hand on Hilda's shoulder, looked her straight in the eyes. "Relax. Put the man down."Hilda's grip didn't loosen. She looked at Tommy's father
CatherineMonths Ago"I think she's had enough. You can fix her now."The chalk snapped in my hand. I'd been writing equations for hours, lost in the flow, when Frost's voice cut through my concentration. My hand jerked, adding an unwanted line across the board.I took a deep breath, looking down at the broken pieces of chalk on the floor. Why now? I'd been so close to solving the protein synthesis problem.I breathed out slowly, looked around the room. Books stacked on every surface. Papers scattered across three different tables. Empty coffee cups I'd forgotten about. Then I looked at Frost standing in the doorway, hands tucked into his hoodie pockets. The hood was down, showing his pale face and that white hair that caught the fluorescent lights.The guy was beautiful—that was the only word for it, and even that didn't cut it. Wasn't natural for anyone to look like this. Cheekbones that could cut glass, those arctic blue eyes that seemed to glow when the light hit right. An Omega w