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Asher DravenHart
The pack house always smelled of cedar and iron after a patrol—old wood, old blood. And the kind of promises you would only make when you’re ready to die for them.
Tonight, it clung to my skin like smoke.
I stood in my office, both hands bracing on the floor to ceiling window, staring. My eyes slid over the training yard below. Floodlights carved pale moons in the snow. Young wolves sparred in the cold, barking laughter between blows, their breath puffing in sharp white clouds.
Their energy should’ve been comforting to me tonight.
Instead, my chest felt tight. Too tight. Like my ribcage was caught in a vice.
Behind me, my door shut with a soft click.
“You’re still awake,” a voice said. It wasn’t a question. A judgement.
I didn’t need to turn around to know who it was. His scent said everything.
Rowan Pierce. My beta, my eldest friend. He was the only person that talked to me like I wasn’t carved out of marble.
He crossed the room and tossed something onto my desk. My jacket, snow still dusted across the collar.
“You left this in the corridor. Again…” His tone condescending.
“One day you’re going to stop cleaning up after me, Rowan.” I said through a small laugh.
“One day.” Rowan countered, leaning against the desk like he owned it, “you’re going to admit you can’t keep sulking in your tower. You can’t keep doing this alone, Asher.”
My jaw tightened, clenching as I turned from the window and crossed the room, my boots squeaking quietly on the wood. I picked up the decanter and poured myself a glass of whiskey more out of habit than thirst. It was something that kept my hands busy, something I could focus on and pretend that I was calm. I poured a second and handed it to him. He accepted with a small cheers.
“Alpha…” Rowan started, staring at me over the rim of his glass, eyes steady, “you should really consider choosing a mate.”
The words hit me hard and I stumbled back like they shoved me.
It wasn’t the first time he stated the obvious, and it wouldn’t be the last. The only problem—he wasn’t wrong.
I swirled the whiskey until the amber liquid caught the light like trapped fire.
“I’m not just going to claim some random woman.”
“You can’t do both jobs by yourself all of the time.” Rowans expression didn’t change, but his voice softened, “You can’t be Alpha, the pack’s shield and the one who is the glue that holds all of us together. The pack needs a Luna.”
A pulse of irritation flared in my veins. Immediate. Sharp. Protective.
“I’m managing.”
“No. You’re surviving.” He corrected, “There’s a big difference, Asher.”
Inside me, my wolf paced. Restless. Impatient, just like he had been for years.
“Mate.” He growled low in the back of my skull, “Not random.”
My grip tightened around my glass.
I had been looking for her for so long that my search had become a part of who I am. Like breath. Like blood. Gatherings under bright moons. Allied pack visits. Every new face brought new scents and a new hopeful second where I though that maybe this is it.
Then nothing but emptiness.
Sometimes, late at night when the house quieted and the weight of my title pressed down on me so hard it felt like it was closing around my throat, I wondered if the Moon Goddess was punishing me for something that I hadn’t known I had done.
Other nights, I would let myself believe she was simply saving the best for her strongest warrior.
Rowan pushed off the desk. “The council’s pressuring you, Asher. And I know for a fact that the unmated females are pressuring you. You should hear how they mewl for you when they think that they are alone. Hell, even the pups are taking bets!”
“I don’t care!” I snapped, my voice echoed, too loud in the room.
“You should,” he said, unflinching. “Because if you didn’t really care, then others would doubt you. Doubt is a cancer. It spreads fast and cracks faster. It’ll be the first crack in your pack.”
“So, what?” I hiss through clenched teeth, my jaw working, teeth grinding. “I just pick someone and pretend it’s destiny?” I stared at him, waiting for his answer.
He held my gaze. “You pick someone who will be able to stand beside you. Someone who can carry some, ANY, of this!” he gestures around him, “Someone who can help you build something that will last for eons, Asher.”
My chest ached, deep, old. Because part of me wanted to say yes and give in. Wanted to do the wise thing for the pack.
But there was a smaller part. A bitter, stubbornly hopeful part. And it refused.
Before I could snap back, a knock hit the door, firm, more controlled than urgent.
It opened before either one of us could answer and one of my warriors stepped through. He took two steps in, met our gaze, then quickly dropped it to the floor.
“Alpha. Beta.”
“What is it?” Rowan asked.
“We uh…” the warrior glanced at me.
“Spit it out, boy.” I snapped.
“We found a woman on the east boundary trail, sir. She…” he hesitated, “She’s a human. No pack scent. No silver. She was lost, half frozen. We brought her here, before the storm could get any worse.” His words spilled faster and faster from his lips.
“A human crossed into our territory?” I asked as I slowly set my whiskey down.
“Yes, Alpha.”
My irritation spiked again, hot. Humans didn’t wander onto my lands by accident. Not this deep at least. Not past the warning signs, not past the scent marks that made even the most seasoned of hikers feel uneasy without knowing why.
“Did she not see the perimeter?” I asked, stepping closer to the wolf, “the patrol routes? The gates?”
“She was uh—” the warrior stumbled over his words, “Disoriented, sir. She could barely stand when we found her. We didn’t think leaving her on her own out there was a good option.”
Rowan’s gaze flicked to me. He didn’t move. Didn’t speak.
But his presence pressed against my mind, firm. Familiar. Like a warm cup of coffee.
“Asher.” His voice slid into my thoughts, low, controlled, “Easy. There are ears everywhere.”
The warrior blinked between us, clearly oblivious. The link was something special that higher ranked soldiers had, low class warriors couldn’t hear it. They couldn’t even feel it unless someone wanted them to, and Rowan didn’t.
I kept my face blank, the way that every Alpha learned to do when they were young.
“I’m listening.” I send back, my thoughts short, clipped.
Rowan’s gaze remained on the warrior as if nothing unusual was happening. To anyone watching, he was simply assessing the situation. Only I was the one that felt the edge beneath his calm.
“You are about to storm downstairs and make a spectacle. If she is truly lost, she will be terrified. If she’s bait, you’ll show your hand.”
My wolf snarled in me at the word bait.
“She is in our house.”
“Because one of your men chose mercy in a blizzard,” Rowan replied, a quiet warning in his tone, “Don’t punish that instinct. It was a good one.”
My jaw tightened until it ached. Damn him for being right.
“Where is she?” I asked aloud, trying to keep my tone cold, even.
“In the entry. By the main hearth,” the warrior answered, “Guarded of course.”
Rowan’s voice brushed against my mind again, steadier now.
“Go and see her. Just… don’t go down breathing fire, Asher.”
I exhaled slowly through my nose. “Stay close.”
“Always.”
SavannahThe ward line pulsed once.Long.Deep.The sound wasn't really sound, I more felt it through the floor, through the metal legs of the medical bed, through the bones in my ankles.It rolled through the house like a giant exhale.Then everything went still.Not calm.Just... still. Like the house had stopped breathing to listen.Asher's head snapped toward the door.Mable froze with one hand resting on the edge of the counter, her fingers curled against the wood. For once, she didn't bark an order or insult someone's intelligence. She just stared toward the hall, eyes narrowing, face drawn tight. Asher turned and looked at her. And she back at him. Then shrugged.A tiny, usless little shrug that made me want to throw something. I stared bewteen them."Soooooo.... what was that?"Asher didn't answer right away.Which, by this point, I had learned usually meant that the answer was either bad, complicated, or something he thought I couldn't handle. My patience was starting to d
RowanWhen my knee hit the wet ground, the second vampire flew over me, thrown my Caius's full weight, its body crashing into Valtheris before either of them could react.He caught the thing by the shoulder and shoved it away with disgust.Caius skidded to a stop near me, tawny fur streaked with black blood, one ear torn, teeth bared in a grin only a wolf could manage."Having fun?" I said, glancing his direction."I deeply regret having a big breakfast this morning. But yes." He huffed through the link."Good."The vampire scrambled upright again, half its face hanging loose from Cauis's bite. Valtheris wiped blood from his cheek with two fingers, then looked at the red smear as if it fascinated him."You two are more entertaining than expected." He rasped.I rolled my shoulders, grunting and ignoring the ache spreading through my back."Yeah? And you talk more than expected."Caius gave a low approving growl.The Bloodborn looked between us. The amusement in his face began to fade
RowanValtheris laughed and when he did, something cold slid through me. Cold enough to become calm.The vampire shrieked in front of me, rotten chest split and spilling into the pristine snow. Black blood pooling hot and foul by its feet. It staggered backward, hands clawing uselessly at the ruin I made of it. I didn't give it time to recover. Grim surged beneath my skin, not separate from me but through me. Bone-deep. Breath-deep, all teeth and instinct. I caught the vampire by the throat. Its dead eyes widened."You messed with the wrong house." I growled.I drove my claws from my opposite hand up beneath its jaw and tore. The thing came apart with a cracking, wet sound that echoed through the clearing. Black blood sprayed across the snow and steamed where it hit, eating tiny pits into the frost. The vampire's body hit the ground in two heavy pieces, twitching once before going still. Fast,Messy.Finished.Caius made a choking some somewhere to my left."Well that was-"The se
RowanThe Bloodborn's smile didn't falter. If anything, it sharpened.The vampire in front of us swayed slightly, its dead eyes fixed somewhere near my throat, but it didn't move without being told to. That was what made my stomach tighten. It wasn't hunger holding it back. It was command.The Bloodborn stood behind it like a shadow wearing skin, pale and elegant and wrong in way that made Grim snarl loudly beneath my skin. Caius shifted beside me, just enough that his shoulder nearly brushed mine."Rowan..." he murmured through the side of his mouth."I see it." The Bloodborn's gaze slid to Caius, who went still.Not afraid, but every ounce of humor drained from his face."Such a fast little thing..." It rasped, "You were difficult to follow.""I get that a lot." Caius said his eyes never leaving the Bloodborn.It chuckled. The sound was dry. Thin. Like bones being lightly tapped against stone. My claws lengthened another fraction."Why are you here?" I demandedThe Bloodborn loo
Rowanthe cold air hit harder once I reached the edge of Sector 4. Out here, away from the house and it's humming wards, the forest felt bigger. Hungrier. The trees pressed close in thick black rows, their branches clawing across the wanning sun like crooked fingers. Snow dusted the ground in uneven patches, broken here and there by boot prints and paw prints. Sector 4 had always been quiet, but usually not this quiet. That was the probelm.Quiet meant something was holding its breath,I stopped at the edge of the forest, fingers curling slightly as I listened through the link. Caius was close.I could feel him before I saw him. His pulse was frantc, though his thoughts were sharp with adrenaline. Then he broke through the trees at a run, boots skidding in the frost as he caught himself against a pine.Caius was built for speed, not bulk. Lean, long limbed, with sandy brown haior that had been shoved back one too many times and now stuck up in every direction, making him look like
SavannahAsher crossed the room like he had walked through fire to get here. Not physically at least this time, but something about him looked burned anyway.His face was too still. His jaw too tight. His eyes kept flicking toward the door like a part of him had been left on the other side of it. His hand found mine, warm and steady, but his fingers curled around me a little too hard. I looked down at our joined hands, then back up to him."Asher?" I asked quietly, "What's wrong? You seem distant."For a second, he didn't answer. His throat moved as he swallowed. That scared me more than if he had come in shouting orders. "Asher," I tried again, sitting straighter on the bed, "Why are you here? Shouldn't you be out there with Rowan?" His eyes snapped to mine and a slight blush tinged his cheeks. Something raw and complicated moved through them, like he was startled and hadn't caught up with himself. "Rowan..." he said, "sent me back here."My eye brows pulled together."He sent yo







