LOGINThe uneasy calm that followed the rogue encounter didn’t settle the pack it sharpened them.By dawn, patrol rotations doubled without announcement. Wolves moved with quieter steps, conversations shortened, eyes lingering on the tree line longer than usual. No one said it aloud, but everyone felt it the rogues hadn’t come to fight, they were sent once again .Selene felt it in her bones and it made her shiver.She stood at the edge of the eastern perimeter, fingers brushing the rough bark of a cedar as she scanned the forest beyond. The air carried too many overlapping scent sold trails, disturbed earth, the faint metallic tang of blood from the skirmish the day before. Nothing was fresh enough to justify alarm, yet nothing felt right either.Behind her, footsteps approached.“You didn’t sleep,” Damien said quietly.She didn’t turn. “Neither did you.”A pause. Then he stepped beside her,
Veyra moved through the shadowed corridors of the pack hall with quiet precision, her mind mapping every detail of the upcoming day. Small gestures, subtle words, positioning of wolves all of it mattered. She paused at the edge of the training grounds, watching from a distance as the younger wolves practiced combat stances, noting where attention lagged and where she could quietly guide.Selene, patrolling nearby, caught the faintest movement of Veyra’s figure in the corner of her eye. Her instincts flared, a subtle prickle under her skin that she had learned to trust. Veyra’s posture was calm, almost casual, but there was something deliberate in the way she moved, a controlled precision that didn’t belong to ordinary wolf behavior.Selene’s lips pressed together as she slowed her pace. She watched as Veyra approached a small group of trainees, kneeling to adjust a wrist position, murmuring something low enough that only they could hear. The wol
Selene woke before the sun rose.It wasn’t the kind of waking that came from nightmares or restlessness. There was no sharp intake of breath, no instinctive reach for power or claws. It was softer than that. Subtler.The bond stirred.She lay still for a while, eyes open, listening. The world outside was quiet in that early, suspended way not night anymore, but not yet morning. Somewhere in the distance, an owl called once before falling silent. The pack house creaked faintly as it settleBeside her, Damien slept.That alone still felt strange.unfamiliar in a way that hadn’t fully settled yet. His breathing was steady, deep, One arm lay loosely around her waist, warm, grounding, She could tell even in sleep that he was careful with her now.Selene swallowed.There had been a time when she’d imagined waking like this and feeling complete.Now, what she felt was quieter than that. But also more real.She shifted sl
The pack woke up differently, It was settled and peacefulSelene felt it the moment she stepped outside her residence. The air carried a calm she hadn’t felt in months, the kind that didn’t press against her skin or demand anything from her. Wolves moved through the grounds with steady purpose, conversations low and unhurried. Even the wind felt gentler, brushing past her hair instead of tugging at it.She paused at the top of the steps, letting the feeling sink in.Inside her chest, the bond rested quietly. No sharp pull. No overwhelming heat. Just a steady presence, warm and constant, like a heartbeat that wasn’t hers but matched her own perfectly.Behind her, soft footsteps approached.“You’re awake early,” Damien said.She didn’t turn. “You didn’t sleep either.”He huffed a quiet laugh. “I slept, Just not much.”Selene glanced back at him. His hair was still slightly damp, shirt half-buttoned, expression calmer than she’d ever seen it. He looked rested in a different way that had
After the mate bond, The Pack was left to Celebrate while Selene and Damien went to their roomsBack in their rooms The door shut behind them with a soft thud that somehow seemed too loud.Selene kept her back to him.She stood by the window, fingers brushing the wall, her other hand loose at her side. Outside, the moon was huge and bright, flooding the pack grounds with cold silver light. Most of the festival fires had burned down to dull embers by now. The laughter from earlier had faded to quiet talk, then vanished into sleep. Life didn't stop for any of this.Inside, everything just sort of froze.Damien stayed where he was, back still against the door. He didn't try to fill the silence not this time. Three months ago, he'd have jumped in already: spun excuses, maybe argued. But now he knew silence wasn't empty not really. It was thin, breakable. And Selene had learned to live inside it.She broke the quiet first. "You can sit," she said, voice steady but a bit far away. "You don
The night did not fall suddenly.It crept in, slow and deliberate, wrapping the pack grounds in cool shadows as torches were lit one by one. Firelight flickered against carved stones and ancient pillars, symbols of the Moon Goddess etched deep into their surfaces by generations long past. The clearing buzzed with low conversation, restrained excitement, and something heavier anticipation mixed with unease.This festival had not been celebrated lightly.It had not been celebrated at all in years.Wolves gathered in ceremonial attire, warriors and healers alike setting aside rank for tradition. The Moon Goddess Festival was not about hierarchy. It was about truth. About bonds. About what could no longer be ignored.Selene stood at the heart of the clearing.White and silver draped her form, fabric light against her skin, glowing faintly where the moonlight touched it. Symbols traced along her arms and collarbone shimmered softly, responding to







