LOGINSIGRUN
The morning light streaming through the high, arched windows of the dinner hall was entirely too bright, entirely too cheerful for the absolute disaster that was my current state of mind. I stared down at the ceramic bowl in front of me, poking a piece of smoked trout with the tines of my heavy silver fork. The fish looked perfectly flaky, but my throat was so tight I knew a single bite would choke me. My resolve had been set the exact moment I woke up, tangled in the heavy linen sheets of my bed. Keep him at arm's length. That was the mantra. That was the only rule that mattered now. I needed to keep my walls up, before he systematically tore down every single defense I had. I had to keep reminding myself of who I actually was. I wasn't some bartered medieval princess destined to breed heirs for a wolf king. I was Sigrún Parker. I belonged to a world of subways, neon lights, over-priced iced lattes, and tight deadlines. But maintaining that ironclad resolve was a hell of a lot harder when the man in question was sitting directly across the oak table from me, looking as appealing as ever. The sexual tension in the room was so thick it felt heavy. It was a suffocating pressure, filling the vast space between the stone walls until I could barely draw air into my lungs. Yet, looking at Varul, you would never guess that last night had even happened. There was absolutely no sign that he had spent the previous night destroying every coherent thought in my head. He was completely unbothered. But me? I was a hyperventilating, jittery mess. Color me resentful. I resented how easily he could compartmentalize the fire that had nearly consumed us both in the map room. I needed to snap myself out of it, and FOCUS. The silence between us stretched on, heavy and suffocating, broken only by the occasional, agonizingly loud scrape of cutlery on cutlery. Back home, finding answers was a mindless reflex. If I needed to know the historical layout of a region or the mythical lore of a culture, it would have taken me ten seconds. I’d just pull out my phone, type a few precise keywords into G****e, and let the algorithm spit out thousands of pages of cross-referenced data. But I didn’t have the luxury of G****e here. Hmm. What did people do to get information when the internet hadn’t even been conceived? They went to the library. I ran through a frantic mental checklist of every corridor I had walked since arriving at Pillak Towers. I had seen the great hall, the armory, the endless drafty corridors, and the map room—which was clearly reserved for military strategy, not historical research. I hadn't seen anything resembling a proper repository of books. The only place closest to a library that I could think of was the Thompsons' store. Maybe Elara wouldn’t find it weird if I asked for books with anomalous travelers slipping through realms. Fingers crossed. Yep. I was going to Thompsons right after breakfast. There was just one massive, looming roadblock: Varul’s explicit, terrifying command that I was never to leave the perimeter of Pillak Towers without informing him first. I cleared my throat, deliberately forcing my posture to straighten as I broke the agonizing silence. "I will be going into town today.” Varul didn't stop cutting his steak. He didn't even look up. "No." My jaw dropped. The sheer, casual finality of that single syllable practically begged me to start a fight. The blood in my veins instantly turned hot with indignance. "Excuse me? No? I wasn't exactly asking for your permission. I was informing you. Isn't that exactly what you ordered me to do? To let you know before I stepped foot outside these walls?" Finally, his movements paused. He set his knife down on the table with a dull, heavy clatter that seemed to echo off the high rafters. He leaned back in his carved wooden chair, his dark, bottomless eyes locking onto mine behind a wall of absolute, immovable authority. "You are not leaving the castle grounds, Princess," he responded, his voice low and scraping like gravel. "Am I a prisoner here?” I snapped, leaning forward across the table, my hands clenching into tight fists against the dark oak tabletop. I felt a dangerous prickle of frustration behind my eyes. “No, Princess,” he replied indulgently. “You are not a prisoner.” “Well it feels like I am. I want to go into town. I can go with an army, if you wish.” “You went into town yesterday,” he pointed out. “Well, is there a problem if I want to go again?” I snapped. “Why?” “Why what?” “Why do you want to go into town? I can arrange for a servant to get whatever you need.” “I love reading, so I want to find some books at Thompson’s. I need something to occupy my head. And time.” Varul raised one heavy shoulder in a shrug as he picked up his fork and resumed eating. “Well. If it is books you want, there is an impressive collection of texts right here in the castle. More than Leward Thompson could ever hope to house in his shop." I blinked. Huh. Yesterday, Elara had estimated that their collection held over five thousand books. If Pillak Towers housed more…how many were we talking about? I let out a scoff that overtook my caution. "Oh, really? There's a library here? I wouldn't know, considering absolutely no one has bothered to give me a proper tour of this place since,” I said faux-sweetly. "Seeing as my husband left for an entire week the exact moment I arrived, leaving me to guess which corridors lead to the gardens and which ones lead to the dungeons." There was a spark of interest in his eyes. “Oh, I thought we discussed this yesterday. Are you still holding a grudge, Princess?” I crossed my arms stubbornly. “No.” For a few moments, we simply stared at each other. I had to admit that my breathing was actually much heavier than the situation demanded. His dark eyes flicked down to my lips for a fraction of a second, a silent acknowledgment of the fire still burning between us, before rising back to lock onto mine. "Would you like me to give you a tour, Princess?" he asked softly. I froze, completely caught off guard. The wind was instantly knocked right out of my sails, leaving me blinking at him across the table like an idiot. "Don't... don't you have Alpha duties to do?" I stammered, trying to find my footing. "Council meetings to dominate? Border skirmishes to plan? Strategic war maps to obsess over in the dark?" He picked up his silver chalice, taking a slow, measured sip of his dark wine before his heavy gaze trapped mine once again, pinning me to my seat without him ever having to touch me. "Showing my wife around her own castle is one of my duties," he murmured, his voice dropping into that low, gravelly register that made my skin flush with a sudden, entirely inappropriate heat. Remember, KEEP HIM AT ARM’S LENGTH. “Finish your breakfast, Sigrún. Let us see if our collection satisfies your curiosity."SIGRUNThe morning light streaming through the high, arched windows of the dinner hall was entirely too bright, entirely too cheerful for the absolute disaster that was my current state of mind.I stared down at the ceramic bowl in front of me, poking a piece of smoked trout with the tines of my heavy silver fork. The fish looked perfectly flaky, but my throat was so tight I knew a single bite would choke me. My resolve had been set the exact moment I woke up, tangled in the heavy linen sheets of my bed.Keep him at arm's length.That was the mantra. That was the only rule that mattered now.I needed to keep my walls up, before he systematically tore down every single defense I had. I had to keep reminding myself of who I actually was. I wasn't some bartered medieval princess destined to breed heirs for a wolf king. I was Sigrún Parker. I belonged to a world of subways, neon lights, over-priced iced lattes, and tight deadlines.But maintaining that ironclad resolve was a hell of a lo
VARULWeak. Coward. Chivalrous, pathetic fool.Siren’s voice tore at the base of my skull, a low, grinding friction that tasted of iron and ancient, thwarted fury. Within the dark space of my mind, the beast did not merely pace; he threw his massive weight against the bars of my restraint, his jaws snapping close enough to make my own teeth ache.“Silence,” I commanded internally, my bare feet biting the freezing stone of the corridor with heavy, measured steps.I will not be silent! We left her, Varul. Again! Her scent still hangs heavy on our skin—the sweet taste of her arousal is a hot brand on our tongue, and you turned your back. For what? To play the saint?“I am keeping her whole,” I fired back, my thoughts a rigid shield against his rage. “If we force the bond now, we might break her. I stand by what I said; I will not rule her by ruin.”Gods, you self-righteous coward. I remember your first excuse on the road from Windsmoor. ‘Oh, Siren, she is a sheltered Southern princess, I
SIGRUNMy heart beat faster, listening to his words. A proof that I must not have been in the right headspace was that all he was saying didn’t sound as terrifying as it should. “My claim is not to be decided by a council of old wolves who secretly fear the dark,” he continued. His jaw tightened so hard a muscle leaped in his cheek. He looked hungry—ravenous, even—and I knew with absolute certainty that he could hear the frantic, heavy pulse in my throat answering his proximity. He wanted me. I could feel the raw wave of his desire hitting me like a physical force. But there was a rigid, unyielding wall of restraint holding him back."I could silence them all tonight," he whispered, his breath brushing the shell of my ear, turning my blood to liquid fire. "I am the Alpha King. I could take the bond, take the consummation, and force this entire court to bow. My predecessor would have done it without a second thought. He would have taken what he thought was owed to the crown."He paus
SIGRUN Hours later, the castle was entirely dark, but my mind was a sleepless, tangled mess. I lay flat on my back in the center of a bed large enough to sleep a family of four, staring up at the heavy velvet canopy. The silence in the room was deafening. It was funny, really—back in my world, I would have killed for this much peace and quiet. Here, it just felt like a desert. My skin felt overly sensitized, humming with a restless, hollow ache that made it impossible to settle. I couldn't shake the clinical way Lord Krev had talked about us, but more than that, I couldn't shake the frustrating, disappointing reality of my current situation. I was sleeping alone. Again. In a frozen fortress at the edge of the world, married to a man who looked at me like he wanted to devour me, yet who left me to shiver by myself under layers of heavy furs every single night. Unable to pace the confines of my own bedroom anymore, I finally threw a heavy shawl over my shoulders and slipped
SIGRUNIf I thought the dinner toast fiasco was as bad as it could get, the formal council session that followed proved me hilariously, dangerously wrong.The plates had been cleared by a small army of neutral-faced stewards, but the heavy scent of spilled wine and raw, apex-predator adrenaline still hung thick in the air.Lord Halvar sat rigidly across from me, his expression carved from stone. He hadn’t looked at me once since Varul threatened to feed him and his entire pack to the crows. I hadn’t looked at him either. The memory of his face morphing into a bloodthirsty beast would probably haunt me for the rest of my natural life. For the rest of this frightening dinner, it was best to pretend he didn’t exist.“The eastern watchtowers require additional supplies,” Lord Eirik was saying, tapping a blunt finger against a map on the table. “The roads will be snowed over within six weeks.”“Five,” Elder Nola corrected.Eirik frowned. “Five if winter arrives early.”“It always arrives e
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 turn
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
“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
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







