MasukEli Navarro left the pack world at eighteen with one bag and a decision, never look back. Ten years later he's the most feared Omega lawyer in the territory, three years deep into a rights treaty that could change everything, and one signature away from winning. That signature belongs to Kieran Voss. The Alpha who rejected him. Who is now, somehow, his stepbrother. Who is dying from what he did, and who needs Eli to survive it. Eli doesn't owe Kieran anything. He knows that. He's just not sure his wolf agrees.
Lihat lebih banyakELI’S POV
The first thing I heard when my father called was the sound of a restaurant in the background, low music, the specific hum of a place that costs too much. He always delivers bad news from somewhere comfortable. I think it's so he has somewhere to look that isn't the conversation.
"I have something to tell you," he said.
"Okay."
"I got married."
I put down my pen. I was in the middle of annotating a treaty clause that I'd been fighting over for three years, red ink everywhere, coffee going cold beside it. I looked at the wall.
"Congratulations," I said. Because what else do you say?
"Her name is Sienna. She's…we've been together for two years, Eli. I should have told you sooner."
"Yes."
"I know you're angry."
"I'm not angry, Dad." And I wasn't. Anger requires surprise as a foundation and my father had spent most of my life preparing me for exactly this kind of phone call, the one where he does the thing and tells me after. I was so unsurprised it almost felt calm. "What's her last name?"
A pause. Just one beat too long.
"Voss," he said. "Sienna Voss."
I didn't say anything for eleven seconds.
I know it was eleven because I was looking at the clock on my office wall, the one I keep there for depositions, so I can track how long a witness has been avoiding a question. Eleven seconds is a long time to be silent on a phone call. My father filled it with nervous sounds. I let him.
Here is what I knew about the name Voss in eleven seconds:
I knew that Kieran Voss had been the Alpha of the Northeast territory for six years. I knew he was twenty-eight, one year older than me. I knew that three years of my legal career had been building toward a Supernatural Rights Act that would mean nothing without his signature, and that getting his signature was going to be the hardest thing I had ever done in a courtroom, because Kieran Voss had every political reason to refuse.
I knew one other thing about Kieran Voss, but I didn't think about that in those eleven seconds. I had gotten very good, over the years, at not thinking about it.
"Eli," my father said. "Say something."
"I have to go," I said.
"I know this is a lot….."
"I have a filing due. I'll call you back."
I hung up. I sat in my office for a long time after that, the red pen still in my hand, the treaty clause still open in front of me. Then I turned to the last page of the file where I kept the opposing signatures, the ones I still needed, and I read the name at the top of the list.
Kieran Voss. Alpha, Northeast Territory.
I put the pen down very carefully, like if I was precise enough about small things, the large things would hold.
Here's something nobody tells you about being an Omega lawyer in the supernatural world: the humans respect you more.
Not because they're better people. Because they have no idea what you are. To them I'm just a thirty-seven-hundred-dollar suit and a win rate that makes opposing counsel check their notes twice before they speak to me. They don't smell the designation on me. They don't adjust their posture when I walk in. They don't have the specific look that some Alphas get, the one that says “you're doing very well for what you are” because they don't know what I am.
I left the pack world at eighteen with one bag and a decision that I was going to build something the pack couldn't touch. That took six years of law school, two years of cases nobody else wanted, and one very long night where Drea Santos sat on my kitchen floor with me and said: “you are going to be so devastating when you're finished being sad.” She was right. I finished being sad. I got to work.
I haven't shifted in four years. I tell people it's a choice. That's almost true.
Drea was in my office within three minutes of me texting her. She does this — materializes when things go wrong, like she has a separate calendar just for my catastrophes.
She sat across from me, read my face, and said: "How bad?"
"My father got married."
"To who?"
"Sienna Voss."
A silence. Then: "Eli."
"I know."
"As in—"
"Yes."
She sat back in her chair. She was quiet for a moment, which with Drea means something is serious because Drea is quiet approximately never. Then: "The treaty signature."
"Yes."
"So Kieran Voss is about to become your stepbrother."
"Technically."
"While you're suing his territory."
"I'm not suing, I'm filing for legislative enforcement of—"
"Eli." She leaned forward. "While you're suing his territory."
I looked at the treaty clause still open on my desk. Three years of work. Twenty-seven Omega families whose cases were attached to this filing. A rights act that would restructure pack law from the inside if it passed, and would mean almost nothing if it didn't. All of it sitting underneath one name on a signature page.
I closed the file.
"We go forward," I said. "Nothing changes."
Drea looked at me for a long moment with the expression she gets when she knows I'm wrong and has decided to let me figure it out myself.
"Sure," she said. "Nothing changes."
She stood, smoothed her jacket, and walked to the door. Stopped with her hand on the frame.
"He's going to be at the family dinner next Friday, you know," she said. "Your dad sent a group text. I'm on it somehow. You're on it. Presumably Kieran Voss is on it."
I stared at her.
"Sienna wants everyone to meet," she said, with a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Isn't that nice."
She left.
I sat in my office for a very long time after that, looking at the clock on the wall.
ELI'S POVI didn't tell Drea about the corridor.She was waiting with the car and she looked at my face when I got in and whatever she saw there made her not ask, which was the specific gift of someone who knows you well enough to read the room.We drove back to the firm. We debriefed the hearing professionally and efficiently and by five o'clock the post-hearing filings were drafted and the client notifications were sent and the fourteen-day execution countdown was documented in the case file.Then Drea went home and I sat in my office alone with the quiet.My hand remembered the angle of his jaw. The warmth of it. The way he'd gone completely still, like something that had been braced for a long time had finally stopped needing to be.I hadn't planned it. That was the part I kept coming back to. I was not a person who did unplanned things, especially not in public corridors outside active courtrooms, especially not with someone whose territory was still technically a signatory party
KIERAN'S POVI was in the gallery.Not as a party to the proceedings — the declaration had shifted my territory's position enough that Mott had allowed it, Cole beside me, third row back where I could see both counsel tables and the bench without being in the sight lines of either attorney.Eli arrived at the plaintiff's table eight minutes before the hearing and did the thing I'd watched him describe once — walked the room, found the angles, stood at each position for a moment like he was testing the weight of it. Drea unpacked beside him without looking up, completely synchronized, the two of them moving through the pre-hearing ritual like it had been running for years. Which it had.Harwick arrived at six minutes before. He looked at Eli's table, then at the gallery, and when he saw me his expression did something brief and controlled that he covered quickly. He hadn't expected me to be here. That was the point.Mott came in and the room settled.She looked at both counsel tables,
ELI'S POVThe conditional declaration filed at nine Wednesday morning.Drea sent me the confirmation and I read it twice and then set my phone face down and went back to the final hearing prep because there was nothing useful I could do with the feeling that arrived when I saw Kieran's name on a public record supporting the treaty I'd spent three years building.By noon three northeastern territorial Alphas had issued statements of tentative support. By two o'clock a fourth had followed. Draven's office had called Harwick, who had called our firm, and the message relayed back was that the board was requesting a pre-hearing conference with both lead counsels.Drea leaned in my doorway. "Mott's clerk says the judge is aware of the request and has declined to order it.""Good.""Draven's going to walk into that courtroom tomorrow knowing he's already lost the procedural ground.""He knows. He's known since the declaration went in this morning." I looked at the prep materials on my desk.
KIERAN'S POVReina Cross was already seated when I arrived Monday.She'd chosen a corner table in the governance board's regional office meeting room, her back to the wall, sight lines to both doors, which was either instinct or performance. With Reina it was usually both. She was dark-haired, composed, and had the particular quality of Alphas who'd built their power themselves rather than inherited it, a watchfulness underneath the ease.Cole sat beside me. Reina had one advisor with her, a woman I didn't recognize."Kieran," Reina said. "Thank you for coming.""Reina."She smiled. "I'll be direct. I think we both prefer it.""I do.""You're sick," she said. "I know the diagnosis. I know the timeline Ingrid gave you, or close enough to it." She held my gaze, not unkind, just factual. "I'm not here to exploit that. I want you to know that upfront.""Alright.""I'm here because I think there's a version of the next six months that works well for both our territories and I'd rather disc
KIERAN'S POVHe brought the Aldrich documentation to Thursday dinner in a separate folder from the treaty materials, which told me he'd been thinking about the order of things — business first, then the rest of it.I brought wine because Drea had said he wasn't fussy and because it felt like a norm
KIERAN'S POVWednesday dinner became Thursday dinner became the thing I organized my week around without deciding to.Eli always brought the folder. We always started with the treaty. Somewhere in the middle the folder closed and we talked about other things — the pack, his firm, the gap years betw
ELI'S POVIngrid's office was in a converted brownstone on the edge of pack territory, close enough to be accessible, far enough that human neighbors didn't notice the occasional wolf-related emergency coming through the side entrance. I'd been here once before, years ago, for a mandatory pack heal
KIERAN'S POVI woke up at three in the morning and couldn't get back to sleep, which had been happening more frequently and which I'd stopped pretending was stress.I lay in the dark and catalogued my body the way Ingrid had taught me to. Chest — tight, manageable. Hands — steady. The deep internal












Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.