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Evelynn POV
The bond snapped sharp beneath my skin - a violent, invisible whip of pain that tore straight through my chest.I staggered. The air vanished from my lungs. My hand pressed hard over my heart, as if I could hold the tether in place by sheer will.
It used to hum - soft, steady, ever-present - my mate’s soul braided into mine, a melody of belonging that never stopped playing. Now that song had gone wrong. Discordant. Broken.
Dying.
"He’s slipping away," my wolf whispered, voice low and trembling. "Do something. Find him."
"Find him?" The thought was a knife. "And what, beg him to stay while the Goddess herself turns her face from us?"
She growled inside me, furious and scared. "He’s ours."
"Was."
The silence that followed wasn’t empty - it was screaming. Every instinct, every thread of me, rebelled against the hollow void where his presence used to be. I felt it unravel - thread by thread, note by note - until I stood in the middle of my chamber with tears burning my throat and a terrible truth clawing at my ribs.
If the pack ever sensed this… if they saw that the bond between Alpha and Luna was splintering… everything we’d built would crumble.
A Luna with a broken bond was a Luna unfit to lead.
So I straightened. Breathed once. Twice. Forced my trembling body to still. My wolf snarled and paced, begging to hunt, to find, to fight, but I caged her, locked her behind my ribs with all the other things I couldn’t afford to feel.
"Later." I promised her. "We’ll scream later. Right now, we survive the day."
I smoothed the front of my gown, wiped the ghost of pain from my lips, and turned toward the door.
Time to perform.
The packhouse was alive, as it always was at dusk. Too alive.
Laughter spilled from the kitchens; the clang of steel echoed from the courtyard where warriors trained beneath a blood-colored sky. The scent of roasted meat and earth and sweat filled the air. To them, it was home - to me, tonight, it felt like a world I no longer belonged to.
Everywhere I walked, wolves paused mid-step. Bowed. Whispered, “Luna.”
Their respect should have steadied me. Instead, it only reminded me how fragile my crown really was.
Smile, I told myself. They cannot know. Not yet.
I returned each greeting with warmth I didn’t feel - a touch to a shoulder, a word of praise, a gentle nod. I played my role perfectly, even as my wolf whimpered beneath my skin, pressing against the edges of my restraint.
"He’s far. Too far. I can’t scent him."
"Good." I lied. "He’s on patrol. That’s all."
But the bond pulsed once, weakly, and I felt the truth burning in that flicker of connection.
He wasn’t on patrol. He was somewhere else. Doing something he shouldn’t.“Luna!”
Maren’s voice broke through the haze. She rushed toward me, her braid half undone, a scroll clutched tight in her hand. “The council awaits you. They need your approval for the festival plans.”
I smiled - not kindly, but precisely. “Then let’s not keep them waiting.”
We walked together, her steps hurried, mine deliberate. She chattered about preparations - lambs for the feast, honey mead shortages, arguments over the hunt. I nodded in all the right places, though I barely heard her. My wolf’s low growl echoed in the back of my mind like thunder before a storm.
"He’s hiding something."
"Enough."
"You feel it too."
"Enough!"
Her silence was heavy, resentful. But she was right. The absence in our bond wasn’t distance - it was deceit.
The council chamber doors opened with a groan.
Conversations halted. Dozens of eyes turned toward me as I stepped inside, every gaze laced with reverence - or scrutiny. The elders and betas rose from their seats in unison.
But my eyes went straight to the Alpha’s chair beside mine.
Empty.
Again.
One of the younger betas muttered, not quietly enough. “The Alpha dishonors us.”
My wolf bristled, lips curling in a silent snarl. "Let me tear his throat for that."
"No." I kept my voice smooth. “The Alpha’s duties keep him occupied,” I said, settling gracefully into my chair. “And mine keep me here.”
A few heads bowed lower. Guilt, or fear - both worked in my favor.
“Shall we begin?”
The meeting stretched for hours - the endless back-and-forth of politics and pride. The young warriors wanted blood and spectacle; the elders fretted over omens and propriety.
I listened. Guided. Smiled when I had to. Every word I spoke was measured, deliberate, calculated to sound like care instead of command.
When tempers flared, I doused them with charm. When voices rose, I met them with a single look that cut them clean.
By the time the final decision was made, the council was at ease again. United. Believing they had chosen their own path, when in truth, I had chosen it for them.
An elder leaned toward me as they dispersed. “Without you, Luna, we would be lost. The Alpha may be our sword, but you are our compass.”
I smiled. “Every pack needs both.”
Inside, the words tasted like ash. Every pack needs both… but what happens when the sword goes missing?
Later, I slipped into the gardens, craving silence.
The night air was heavy with roses - red, wild, overgrown. Their scent clung to my skin as I moved among them. The moon hung high above, silver and pitiless, spilling light across the stone paths.
"He should be here," I thought. "He should feel me breaking."
"He doesn’t care." My wolf’s voice was sharper now, cold with truth. Changed.
“Luna.”
I turned, startled.
Alric stood a few steps away, the torchlight carving hard lines into his face. His dark hair was tied back, his armor dusted with dirt and blood from training. His eyes met mine and didn’t flinch.
He bowed, but not low enough. “The Alpha will not return tonight.”
I felt my pulse spike. “Where is he?”
“He said he was patrolling the southern borders.” A pause. “Alone.”
There was something in his tone - disgust, maybe pity. Or maybe he knew exactly where my mate had gone and wouldn’t say.
My wolf’s growl trembled through me. He’s lying. They both are.
I know.
I lifted my chin. “Thank you, Alric. That will be all.”
He hesitated, gaze lingering - too bold for a subordinate. “If you ever need-”
“I won’t.” My words came out sharper than intended, but I didn’t soften them. “Good night, warrior.”
He bowed again, jaw tight, and disappeared into the shadows.
I stayed there long after he left, staring at the roses until they blurred red against the gray. The bond pulsed weakly again - a fading heartbeat.
He’s fading. Or betraying.
Either way, something in me cracked for the final time.
By the time I reached my chambers, the candles had burned low. His side of the bed was untouched, the sheets cold. His scent - once strong enough to drown me - had thinned to a ghost.
I sat before the mirror, staring at the reflection of a woman who looked whole and regal, even as the edges of her soul bled.
A Luna in black silk, hair like flame, eyes like frost.
They see a queen, I thought. Not a woman breaking.
“I deserve more,” I whispered.
My wolf pressed close, her voice a rumble of promise. "Then take it."
I met my own gaze in the glass. The woman there didn’t argue.
And soon, neither would anyone else.
Evelynn POVI had imagined childbirth many ways. None of them included threatening murder between pushes.“If one more person tells me to breathe,” I snarled, “I will make myself a widow.”“No one say anything,” Rafe ordered immediately. Smart male.Maddox sat behind me on the bed, bracing my back against his chest, arms wrapped around me while I bore down through another contraction. Sweat dampened his skin. His heart hammered against my spine as hard as mine.Calder knelt at my side, steady as stone, pressing cool cloth to my wrist and speaking only when it mattered.Jaxon held my hand in both of his, muttering encouragement, profanity, and promises to kill anyone who had ever called this beautiful.Becky, traitor that she was, laughed openly.Then the healer’s voice cut through the haze. “I can see him." A beat later: " I have the head. One more time. Push one more time.”The room changed. Everything sharpened. Pain became purpose. Fear became focus. My wolf surged forward, fierce
Evelynn POVThornborne breathed differently now. It had taken me months to stop waiting for silence. For abandoned roads. For broken doors hanging crooked on old hinges. For fear living in every shadow.Now mornings came with hammering from new houses near the ridge, laughter from training yards, carts rolling through the gates, children racing where patrol wolves once bled.Life had returned stubbornly. Beautifully.The old packhouse had been rebuilt stone by stone, stronger than before. My father’s crest hung above the great doors again - not as a relic, but as promise.Thornborne stood. And so did I.Mostly.“Do not lift that.”I glanced over my shoulder to find Becky glaring at me from the nursery doorway.Becky had been one of the youngest omegas when we fled Ironfang together months ago. Sweet-faced, sharp-tongued, impossible to intimidate. Now she ruled the nursery like a warlord.“It’s a blanket,” I said.“It’s a basket of blankets.”“It weighs nothing.”“It weighs enough to n
Evelynn POVThe next morning peace ended exactly the way peace usually ended in pack life - with an announcement and too many opinions.Rafe found me halfway through breakfast, already dressed, already armed, already irritatingly efficient. “Morning love. Main hall. .”I looked up from my plate. “That sounds ominous.”“It’s a meeting.”“Same thing.”He ignored me. “Both packs gonna attend. Ironfang and the survivors from your lands.”I set the fork down slowly. “They know?”“That you’re alive?” Rafe asked.“Yes.”A rare softness crossed his expression. “They know.”Maddox entered behind him, carrying tea. He handed it to me before speaking.“They’re waiting.”No warning could have prepared me for the main hall. It was full.Ironfang wolves lined the long room in heavy rows - fighters, elders, healers, hunters, young wolves standing on toes to see better. And mixed among them were my people.Not all. Never again all. - That truth still hurt. - But enough to make my throat tighten. Face
Evelynn POVI woke tangled in warm limbs, heavy blankets, and the kind of deep satisfaction that made moving feel optional. For one lazy moment, I kept my eyes closed.Maddox’s arm was locked around my waist like a restraint device disguised as affection. Jaxon’s leg was thrown across the lower half of the bed with no respect for territory or anatomy. Calder slept on his back, somehow composed even unconscious.Rafe was awake. I knew it before I opened my eyes.His hand rested lightly over my stomach, thumb moving in absent circles, gaze fixed on the ceiling like he was planning six futures at once.“Good morning,” I murmured.His eyes slid to mine. “Debatable.”I smiled. “You’re brooding.”“I’m organizing.”“Same thing with better posture.” That got the faintest twitch at the corner of his mouth.Beside me, Maddox tightened his grip without waking. Reflexive possession. Ridiculous male.I shifted carefully and immediately regretted. I felt every muscle in my body.Rafe noticed. “You
Evelynn POV I threaded my fingers into his hair instead.“That was unclear,” Jaxon said helpfully.Maddox ignored him completely. The first touch of his mouth made my whole body jolt. Heat shot through me sharp and immediate. My head fell back into the pillows.“Oh.”Jaxon grinned against my throat. “Excellent start.”“Might kill him later,” I managed.“You say that often.”“And mean it every time.”Maddox’s hands tightened on my thighs as he kissed higher, slower, taking his time with a patience I did not believe he possessed.Every deliberate touch and lick pulled another sound from me. Every sound seemed to encourage him.Calder brushed damp hair back from my face, fingers gentle against my temple while the rest of me unraveled.“You’re shaking,” he murmured.“Your observation skills are useless.” I hissed.“Noted.”Rafe shifted closer, one hand sliding into mine. Grounding me. Holding me steady while Maddox did everything possible to destroy my ability to think.Pleasure built qu
Evelynn POVBodies shifted around me in the bed - warm skin, quiet laughter, the rustle of sheets and low male voices too close to my ear.Then Maddox’s hand returned to my thigh. Painfully slowly moving his fingers higher. I sucked in a breath.“There it is,” Jaxon murmured somewhere near my shoulder. “That sound.”“Be quiet,” I whispered.“Impossible.” His lips brushed the curve of my shoulder a second later, smiling against my skin.I turned toward the touch instinctively and found his mouth in the dark. Jaxon kissed like he lived his entire life convinced rules were suggestions. Teasing first. Light. Amused. Then deeper the moment I answered him back.He made a pleased sound low in his throat. “Missed that.”“Your ego?”“Also that.”A laugh escaped me, and Maddox used the distraction to drag me back against his chest. Strong arms wrapped around my waist, like he was saying: mine. Even without words, that was what he said every time he touched me.His mouth found the side of my nec
Calder POV For a full breath, the world stopped.No movement. No sound. Not even air dared to move. Just four wolves and one mate… fading.Then something primal detonated inside the room. Instinct. Pure, ancient, mate-bond instinct buried in the marrow of our bones.My wolf lunged through me so ha
Calder’s POVBy the time I hit the door, my wolf had already shoved halfway through my skin. Claws cracked from my fingertips. My spine tried to lengthen. My teeth ached with the need to tear something apart.Something was wrong. Bad wrong.“Open it,” my wolf snarled inside me, pacing, frantic. “N
Maddox POVEvelynn slept like someone who had fought her way through fire and heartbreak. Too still. Too pale. Her chest rose, but each breath felt like it had to claw through pain before it could reach the surface. I sat in the room with her, the little half-burned sanctuary that used to be hers,
Aldric answered before any of us could push it: “Gone. She claimed what she wanted and left the place - left us - burned and she laughed on the way out.” He rocked on his heels. “I told Varrick she would do what he wanted. I told him she would make us right. I-” He pressed a hand to his temple as i







