MasukCatherine "Cat" Evans is an independent eighteen-year-old shifter with strength in her bones and fire in her blood. She has plans for her future - and none of them include being claimed by fate. In a world where pack hierarchy and destined mates rule everything, Cat refuses to be boxed in. She trains harder, fights smarter, and keeps her heart guarded. But when an alpha enters her orbit - powerful, relentless, and impossible to ignore - the life she's carefully built begins to fracture. Can you outrun destiny? Can you fight fate? Or is the fight itself exactly what fate intended? Cat isn't going down without a battle. Even if the hardest war she'll face is the one inside her own heart.
Lihat lebih banyakBlood drips from my nose in warm, steady pulses, and for a second I honestly can't tell if it's just a split lip kind of bleed or if I've actually broken it.
Then Mike smirks, and I know it's the broken kind of proud. "You are such a—" I wipe under my nostrils and stare at the red on my glove. "You absolute prick." "Language," he says, like he didn't just clip me with a perfect elbow. I lunge. My fist connects with his shoulder, then his ribs, then I grab his shirt and use his momentum against him the way Dad taught us when we were ten and too small to do real damage. Mike stumbles, surprised, and I don't give him the mercy of a reset. I drive him back again—harder this time—until he hits the wall with a grunt and slides down onto the exercise mat. "Damn," he mutters, rolling onto his back and patting himself down like he's checking for fractures. "Okay. That one had feelings." I breathe through my mouth, because my nose is still bleeding and I refuse to pinch it like some delicate human girl in a teen drama. "You hit my face." "You walked into my elbow." "I did not." Mike sits up, dark hair sticking to his forehead with sweat, his mouth curved like he's about to say something stupid. He's bigger than me by a good few inches, and stronger in the obvious, visible ways. He's also the next Beta—officially trained, officially tested, officially annoying about it. Michael Evans. Mike, when he's not being introduced as the future Beta of the Crescent Moon Pack. He lifts his brows. "Come here, Cat. I'll kiss the pain away." I snort. "You're an ass." "Love you too, KitCat." I hate that nickname. I've hated it since I was fifteen, which apparently only made my family love it more. Mike proves it by leaning forward and lightly kicking my shin while I'm busy trying to decide if my nose is crooked. I glare at him. "Do that again and I'll knock your teeth into your throat." His grin turns wicked. "Promises, promises." Behind my eyes, June stretches like a cat waking from a nap. He deserved that, she says, sounding pleased with herself. I swallow a laugh and wince because it pulls at the ache across my face. He always deserves it. June hums. We're still winning. We are, technically. But Mike's sharper these days. Not stronger—just... better trained. Beta training is a privilege and a responsibility. And an annoying advantage when your older brother has been drilled in strategy and control while you've been drilled in "try not to kill each other in the basement." I'm Catherine Evans. Cat to everyone who knows me. KitCat to my family, because apparently they're incapable of letting go of anything cute and humiliating. I turned eighteen earlier this year—and finally got to shift into my wolf. June. She's sassy, stubborn, and terrifyingly proud of herself. We fit together like two blades in the same sheath. Dad's boots sound on the wooden stairs before he appears in the doorway, arms crossed, expression carved from stone. David Evans. The Beta of Crescent Moon. The man who raised his children like we were half soldiers and half wild animals. His gaze sweeps over me—blood, bruising, the angle of my nose—and then to Mike on the mat. "Outside," he barks. "Both of you. Shift and heal." Mike makes a face. "My ribs are fine." Dad's expression doesn't change. "Outside. And do it before your mother comes home, because I'm not listening to her complain all evening that I'm an irresponsible parent." Mike's grin returns, softer this time. "Yes, sir." I press my palm to my nose, trying to stop the bleeding. "It's fine." Dad's eyes narrow. "Cat." I hate that I still react to that tone. We head out the back door into the cold Montana air, the edge of the forest pressing close to our property like it's listening. The packhouse sits nearby—big, solid, built for gatherings and politics and rules. Our house is separate, because we're a big family and my dad likes having space between work and home even if work is always in his bones. When Mike becomes Beta, he'll move into the Beta apartment at the packhouse. He acts like it's a promotion to king. I think it sounds like living inside a meeting. June prowls at the edge of my thoughts. Shift. Let me fix it. Not here, I answer, because the yard is open and even though we're on pack land, privacy matters to me. Mike glances at me as we reach the treeline. "You okay?" I hate that my throat tightens. I hate that I love him—hate how it turns me soft. "I'm fine." He bumps my shoulder gently. "You got me good." "You deserved it," June and I say at the exact same time. Mike laughs, and we shift. It's always the same—bones rearranging, skin stretching, the world turning sharper. My wolf form is bigger than most females in the pack, built for power. An Alpha wolf. Pure and dominant. June stands tall in my limbs, ears forward, eyes bright. Mike's wolf is a Beta with Alpha traits. Sleek, strong, controlled. He shakes out his fur and gives me a look that says, still want round two? I bare my teeth and he chuffs, amused. We don't fight again. We run, because movement is better than violence when the blood is already drying on my face and the itch under my skin has been scratched. We loop the perimeter of our land, scent-marking out of habit. The pack's territory is familiar, safe, threaded through with the smells of family and home. Eventually, the ache in my nose fades to a dull throb, then disappears. Healing always feels like relief and victory at the same time. Back inside, I shift in the bathroom and stand under the shower until the water runs clear and hot and my muscles stop humming with leftover adrenaline. I pull off sweaty clothes and start humming "Cry to Me" under my breath. From downstairs, Mom's voice carries like she's standing right beside me. "Cat! Come down after your shower. We have to plan for the mating ball." My whole body deflates. "Fuck," I sigh. "I heard that, Catherine Evans!" I roll my eyes at the ceiling. "Enhanced wolf hearing," I mutter. June snickers. You're doomed. My mother, Sarah Evans, has spent my whole life trying to sand down my edges. She calls it "helping me be more feminine," like being a girl is a narrow hallway with rules and I keep smashing the walls. She once tried to recruit our Luna, Diana, to "make a lady out of me." They gave up. Thank the Goddess. I finish my shower, pull on comfortable clothes, and drag myself downstairs like I'm heading to my own execution. Because a mating ball is exactly that, in a prettier dress. And Mom is waiting.Morning arrives gray and cold, the kind of morning that feels heavy before the day has even begun.I stand by the bedroom window with my arms folded across my chest, staring out at the forest. Mist drifts between the trees, turning the territory into a blur of gray and green. Everything looks peaceful.Too peaceful.Behind me, Aiden adjusts the sleeves of his black shirt. His movements are calm and deliberate, but I know him too well not to notice the tension underneath.He's nervous.He's just better at hiding it than I am.I turn from the window."You're pretending you're not nervous."Aiden glances up."I'm not pretending.""You are."The corner of his mouth lifts slightly."I'm choosing not to panic."I let out a breath."Honestly, that's probably the better strategy."He walks over and rests a hand lightly at the back of my neck.The contact helps more than I want to admit."You ready?""No.""Good."I blink."That's good?""It means you understand what's at stake."I suppose tha
The summons arrives two days later.By email.Which somehow feels worse.I'm sitting at the kitchen table with my laptop when the notification pops up. For a second I just stare at it.Sender: Shifter Council AdministrationSubject: Official Notice of ReviewFucking fantastic.I let out a slow breath."Well."Across from me, Tara is buried beneath fabric samples, color swatches, and what appears to be an increasingly unhinged collection of ceremony sketches."Is it about the chocolate fountain?""No."She looks genuinely disappointed."That's disappointing."I open the email.Ryan immediately appears over my shoulder like he has some supernatural ability to sense incoming drama."Is that it?""Yes."Lizzie slides into the chair beside me."What does it say?"I read it once. Then again. Then I wish I hadn't."They want a hearing."Ryan straightens."A full Council hearing?""Apparently."That gets Tara's attention. She looks up."Wait. The Shifter Council?""The big one."Ryan whistles
By the time school ends, Hunter looks like a man who's aged ten years in a single day.Ryan notices it first.We meet up near the training field, and Hunter is leaning against the fence like gravity personally betrayed him sometime around lunch.Ryan squints at him."You look terrible."Hunter nods slowly."I feel terrible."I study him more closely."You look like you didn't sleep."Hunter lets out a weak laugh."I didn't."A moment later Tara appears carrying two shopping bags and a notebook.She looks energetic.Suspiciously energetic.Hunter groans under his breath.Ryan raises an eyebrow."...What happened to you?"Hunter rubs both hands over his face."I think she's on pregnancy heat."I nearly choke.Lizzie blinks."Pregnancy... what?"Hunter gestures helplessly toward Tara."We've basically been going at it all night."Ryan bursts out laughing."Poor guy.""I'm serious," Hunter says. "I haven't slept."I tilt my head."Then why are you here?"Hunter glares at me."Because appa
The packhouse is quieter than usual that evening.Not silent. Just watchful.Word travels fast in a wolf pack. Faster than anyone likes admitting.By the time Aiden, Alpha Marcus, and I step out of his office, half the pack already knows something serious happened. Maybe not the details, but definitely the tension.And wolves are very good at sensing tension.The hallway outside Alpha Marcus's office smells faintly like pinewood and coffee. Somewhere downstairs someone is cooking dinner while voices drift up through the stairwell.Normal life.Except nothing feels normal anymore.Aiden closes the office door behind us.I exhale slowly."That escalated quickly."Alpha Marcus walks a few steps down the hallway before answering."That," he says calmly, "is what happens when the Council becomes nervous."I cross my arms."They weren't nervous.""They were suspicious."Alpha Marcus glances back at me."In our world, Catherine, those are usually the same thing."Aiden reaches for my hand an
The door closes behind the Council Alphas.For several seconds, nobody in Alpha Marcus's office moves.The tension from the interrogation hasn't disappeared.It's just shifted into something quieter and heavier.Alpha Marcus walks slowly around his desk and pours himself a glass of water.Aiden sta
The door closes behind us with a solid click.It's a small sound, but it feels heavier than it should. Like the beginning of something complicated.Alpha Marcus's office is quiet compared to the rest of the packhouse. Dark wood shelves line the walls, filled with ledgers, old pack records, and fram
Tara flips another page in her notebook."Next topic. Dress."Hunter freezes immediately."That word scares me now. You tried dresses yesterday, right?"Tara groans like someone personally betrayed her."Yes.""And?"She slowly lowers the notebook into her lap."It was a disaster."Ryan squints at
The sound of tires crunching over gravel carries across the packhouse drive, and I'm already halfway down the stairs before the SUV even stops."That's them."Tara practically vaults over the couch.Lizzie gasps. "Already?"Outside, the late afternoon sun spills warm gold through the trees while th
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