LOGIN“The Foxbridge Foxes!”The reaction was immediate but the Ravens’ side reacted, though with a different kind of energy.Beside me, Maya groaned. “Oh no.”I turned to her. “What?”“The Foxes made it to the finals,” she said, shaking her head. “A part of me doesn’t even want the Ravens to win tonight.
Aria.“Seriously? These seats? We can barely see anything.”I leaned forward, squinting past rows of heads and waving flags, trying to catch a proper glimpse of the field below. It was hard. All I could see clearly were flashes of gold, black, and the occasional blur of movement.Beside me, Maya let
Aria’s voice echoed in my head.“They like each other.”“Guys,” Ryder cut in, his tone sharper now. “Give us a minute.”The room quieted slightly.“We’ll meet you on the field,” he added.There were a few nods, a couple of claps on my shoulder again, lighter this time, more careful.“Let me know if
Then I looked up.The mirror reflected it all back.The uniform with my last name at the back. BlackthonThe number. 1The image, perfect future alpha, quarterback, captain..The lie.I held my own gaze for a second longer.Then I turned away.I reached for the table beside me, where Coach had left
Kai.I stood in front of the mirror longer than I should have because I couldn’t quite believe what I looked like.The reflection staring back at me barely resembled the person I was supposed to be.My left eye was bloodshot, the red stark against the pale of my skin. A dark bruise spread across bot
The one Kai had taken from my bag.The one piece of home I still had.My chest tightened.I reached out slowly, brushing my fingers along its surface. The memory hit immediately, him handing it back to me, and lying to my face that he had bought it. I shook my head as a tear escaped my eyes.I swall
The garden was empty, bathed in pale silver light. I lifted my face to the half moon, its glow washing over me, distant but familiar. My lips parted on a whisper. “Moon goddess, help my family.”The words fell from me like fragile pieces of hope.“She never listens to anyone,” a voice said from the
It was strange. Kai Blackthorn was never sad. He was arrogant, cocky, infuriating, but never sad.“Aww,” I scoffed, trying to shake off the weird pang in my chest. “The great alpha’s son, scared of the dark, while his father was out lighting fires in other packs. That’s rich.”He didn’t snap back li
The Alpha of Silverwood. The Alpha who had vanished. The Alpha my mother had sworn was alive.He really was. And he was here.He reached out and placed a hand on my shoulder. Even after everything, that old commanding aura rolled off him in waves, demanding attention, respect, obedience. My knees al
Kai.I knew I was dreaming. I could feel the weight pressing down on my body, the exhaustion sinking into my bones, pulling me deeper into unconsciousness. Still, the dream felt real enough that when I opened my eyes, the sound of whistles, cheers, and roaring voices filled my ears like I had steppe







