Se connecterConny and Rita were staring at me strangely. Apparently, this was something I was supposed to know already. Except that I didn’t. Then it all clicked.
“A wolf? L-like a werewolf? My betrothed is a werewolf?” I whispered, mostly out of shock. Then I felt the laughter bubbling at the base of my throat, and when it surfaced, I was helpless to stop it. Loud and long, I laughed like a lunatic. “I’m…engaged…to…a…werewolf…”, I heaved between laughs. Oh my goodness. This was just too precious. There was no freaking way. This had to be a dream. There was no way this was real life. Eva would laugh her ass off when I told her about this dream. I should probably power down on the number of fantasy movies I watched. “Yea, yer highness. What is wrong?” At some point, Rita had left my hair to come and stand with Conny at the base of the bath. There was a mixture of annoyance and concern on her face. She was probably concerned that I’d lost my mind with the way I was laughing. I couldn’t blame her. I felt crazy too. Everything in this weird dream was crazy. Wiping a tear from the corner of my eye, I sighed, slid lower into the bath, and closed my eyes. “Please carry on, ladies, “ I said. I popped one eye open when I didn't feel those competent hands in my hair. Rita and Conny stood a few feet away, staring at me in shock. I bugged my eyes out at them. “What?” Rita eyed me warily. “Yer Highness, are ye sure yer feeling alright?” “Yep. Totally fine. And you know what would make me feel even better? If you poured more of that sweet-smelling shampoo on my hair,” I said, smiling invitingly. “'Er Highness speaks strange too,” Conny stage-whispered to Rita. “Yea, I noticed the same too,” Rita answered distractedly, still staring at me in that unnerving way of hers. “Ye know about Varul, don't ye, Yer Highness?” Rita asked skeptically. I frowned. “I—” “'Is the scariest werewolf in these parts, I'll tell ye that,” Conny cut in before I could answer that I hadn't even the tiniest smidgen who this Varul person was. Rita threw a death glare her way, but Conny didn't seem to notice. She kept on speaking, each sentence scarier than the last. “Killed his own poor parents when he was eighteen seasons old. Clawed their eyes and tongues out, they say. Rumors say he did it for the throne, I say he did it to stir the deep pools of his black, black soul. Yea, there's a folk song about it too—what does it say again, Rita—? Oh.” Conny paused when she finally noticed the look on Rita's face. “What? I thought the lass 'ad forgotten,” Conny said sheepishly and retreated a minuscule step. Rita shook her head at Conny and turned to me with a pasted smile. “There are exaggerated stories about the Alpha, and Conny's is one of them,” she tried diplomatically, but I was still stuck on something Conny had said. “He did what to their eyes and tongues?” I could feel a possible hyperventilation forming at the base of my throat. Rita came forward and let out a placating hand. “There, there, Ye Highness, no use getting yerself worked up over nothing. If anything, I'm sure the Alpha would be kind to ye…,” she murmured and glanced away quickly as though she couldn't quite believe her own words. “Quick, Conny, let's get 'Er Highness prepared in time for the wedding. We don't want to get the wrath of queen,” she said hastily. “Whoa, whoa, wait,” I said swerving my head just before Conny could touch my hair. I wasn't sure I was so excited about this dream anymore. Huh. Come to think of it: Was this even a dream? Only one way to find out. “Pinch me,” I said. Rita blinked while Conny's mouth swung open. “What?” Rita asked in shock. “Pinch me. I need to be sure that I'm not in some kind of weird, messed-up dream. Go on,” I urged when neither of them would move. “We can't do that, Yer Highness,” Conny said, then added in a dramatically frightened whisper, “You could have us hanged for it.” I rolled my eyes. “Forget it. I'll do it myself.” And I did. Hard. But nothing happened. I tried again and again and again, but I didn't magically wake up on my own bed in my slightly messy apartment. There was only one explanation for this: I’d been trapped in some sort of alternate universe with weird Irish maids and werewolves that apparently had fun un-aliving their own parents. Just the same sort of stuff you'd snort at in sci-fi movies. Shit. Only my life. Just then, the door opened and I gasped when I saw who walked in. I had sudden flashbacks of summer picnics and trips to the mall filled with laughter. Then the flashbacks took a downturn and showed me that last moment at the hospital, eight years old, clutching my dad's hand desperately as we watched the nurses raise the sheets over her frail, thin body. A tear rolled down my cheek. There she stood healthy, full of life and very much alive. Biting back a sob, I choked out the word I hadn't uttered in thirteen years. “Mom?”SIGRUN I had been in the North for long enough to accept that giant wolves existed, but not long enough to stop mentally screaming about it. And tonight, apparently, I was meeting the people who helped govern them. No pressure. Absolutely none. I stared at my reflection for what had to be the fiftieth time. The woman staring back at me looked nothing like the Sigrún I knew. Rita had transformed me into a person who looked as though she belonged in a fantasy movie with an unnecessarily large budget. The dress was deep blue velvet, soft beneath my fingers and embroidered with silver threads that shimmered like frost. My hair had been braided back from my face with tiny silver pins worked into it. I looked expensive. But dressing like royalty and being royalty were two very different things. And if there was one thing I had learned since arriving in this world, it was that the North took its titles very seriously. A knock sounded at the door. My stomach immediately attempted to mi
SIGRUN“Yes, your hatred for me was communicated perfectly through that kiss,” he said drily. “Ugh, you’re insufferable.” I scoffed and shoved at his chest, needing to put some distance between us. But of course he didn’t even budge.He smirked, but soon the amusement in his eyes faded and he turned sober. His eyes searched my face as though he was committing my features to his memory. Something strange tugged at my heart. “The North is no longer safe, Princess. Our borders were attacked a week ago. I lost good men.”Oh. The fight went out of me as soon as his words landed. People had died. “Is…Is that why you had to leave that night?” I asked softly. He nodded. “Yes. We had to make it to Linewatch as soon as possible. I spent the rest of that night on strategy discussions with my men. It is why I couldn’t come back to you. I should have informed you before we rode out. Or sent a message across while on the way. I was wrong. In the future, I will make sure to keep you informed abo
SIGRUNI blinked at his tone. Uh, excuse me?"I...beg your pardon?" I asked, narrowing my eyes at him. We were practically at the center of the courtyard, and he was raising his voice at me when he was the one who left? Yeah, I didn't think so. He leaned into me and repeated, "I said, where the fuck are you coming from?" For a second, I just stared at him. The audacity. The absolute, breathtaking audacity of this man who had brought a new wife to his home and promptly disappeared for seven days without a single word to her. Then he suddenly materialized back home, and somehow I was the one being interrogated?Alpha or not, I didn't care. Where I came from, respect was an important part of any relationship. Especially marriage. The fact that I wasn't from here didn't mean I had to stroke his male ego. I snorted. It was void of humor. "That's amusing. That's really amusing."His jaw tightened. "What is amusing?""The fact that you're standing here demanding answers from me when yo
“What does that mean?” I asked. “What story?” What the hell had the Northerners been saying about me? I was curious as hell. I'd thought that they were above gossip.Elara simply laughed nervously and righted a supply that was askew on a shelf. “It is nothing too damning, I assure you,” she said with a slight wave of her hand. “Just that no one had seen you out and about ever since the Alpha brought you to the North. So, it…reinforced the rumors.” I narrowed my eyes. “What rumors?” She had the grace to look uncomfortable. “Well, that you…the Southern princess from Windsmoor…is a, well, my apologies, but there is no softer way to say this…” she exhaled, “a noble snob. Like most Southern nobles are.”I blinked. Huh. Coming out had been a really good idea, after all. People thought I was being a snobby bitch by staying indoors, when in reality I had spent the last seven days trying to adapt in a new environment, in a castle that was as huge as a small country. Now I knew what Meghan
SIGRUNThe morning air carried a sharp bite that made my nose tingle as I stepped out into the courtyard.A stable hand was already waiting beside my mare.The sight of her immediately improved my mood. Never thought there’d come a day where I missed a horse, but here we were. She lifted her head the moment she spotted me, ears perking forward, and nudged my shoulder as I approached.“Someone missed me.”Her warm breath puffed against my cheek.I scratched the white patch between her eyes and frowned thoughtfully.“I need a name for you.”Something that didn’t sound like I had stolen it from a children’s storybook.Unfortunately, my imagination had failed me completely.“Maybe it’ll come to me eventually.”A throat cleared behind me.I turned and immediately remembered that I wasn’t simply riding into town by myself.Two enormous men stood several feet away. Each sat atop a massive black horse with a wolf banner inscribed in silver. The wolves were identical to the one on my pendant.
SIGRUNSeven Days Later...I was bored out of my mind.It wasn't the normal kind of bored.Not even a "there's nothing good on Netflix" bored.I'm talking trapped-in-a-massive-mountain-fortress-without-WiFi-and-my-werewolf-husband-had-disappeared-into-the-northern-wilderness-a-week-ago-without-informing-me bored.There was a difference. A very important difference.For one thing, normal boredom usually didn't involve several hundred thousand square feet of gothic architecture. Seriously, Pillak Towers was so enormous that after three days of exploring, I still wasn't entirely convinced I'd seen all of the east wing. There were corridors that seemed to exist purely because somebody's ancestor had looked at a perfectly reasonable wall and decided, "Um, you know what this needs? Another hallway."There were staircases that led to other staircases. There was an entire gallery dedicated to dead Northerners that glared judgmentally out of oil paintings. I was almost certain that one of th







