로그인AVERY
The night settled heavier than usual. Not tense. Just full. By the time Ember was asleep, the packhouse had gone quiet again, the kind of quiet that only came after long days of movement and thinking and holding things together without letting them show. I found Rowan in our room, leaning over the table, still half in his work even with the reports closed. “You’re still thinking,” I said softly.AVERY The next morning felt slower. Not because anything had changed. Because I let it. Ember woke before the sun fully broke over the ridge, soft noises turning into determined ones as she decided the world was, in fact, worth demanding from. I smiled before I even opened my eyes, already reaching for her before she could escalate. Rowan didn’t move. That was new. Usually he woke the second I shifted. I glanced over my shoulder, careful not to jostle Ember as I lifted her. He was still on his back, one arm thrown over his head, breathing deep in a way that told me he’d finally, finally gotten real sleep. Good. He needed it. I carried Ember to the chair by the window, settling in with her as the sky lightened slowly, pale gold filtering through the trees. She latched quickly, focused and serious like always, tiny hand pr
ROWAN The decision didn’t leave me. It settled. Not heavy. Not uncertain. Just… present. Another child. Avery’s voice had carried no hesitation when she said it. No fear buried beneath it, no shadow of the past trying to claw its way forward. Just clarity. That was what stayed with me. I found her later near the overlook, Ember asleep back in the nursery, the packhouse quiet behind us. The night air carried the same steady calm it had since the wedding, but I felt sharper inside it now. Watching. Waiting. And something else. Want. Avery turned when she heard me, already smiling faintly like she knew exactly what I was thinking. “You’re doing that thing again,” she said. “What thing.” “Looking at me like you’ve already decided something.” I stepped
AVERY The night settled heavier than usual. Not tense. Just full. By the time Ember was asleep, the packhouse had gone quiet again, the kind of quiet that only came after long days of movement and thinking and holding things together without letting them show. I found Rowan in our room, leaning over the table, still half in his work even with the reports closed. “You’re still thinking,” I said softly. He looked up immediately, something in his expression shifting the second he saw me. “Always.” “About Hollowcrest.” “Yes.” I crossed the room slowly, stopping just in front of him. Close enough that I could feel the heat of him, the steadiness that had become something I relied on without noticing anymore. “Then stop,” I said quietly. His brow lifted slightly. “That’s not—” I kissed him.
ROWAN The shift in strategy was invisible to anyone not looking for it. That was the point. By the next morning, Hollowcrest wolves were no longer moving through Emberfall alone. Not restricted, not confined, but… accompanied. Every training session had a counterpart. Every patrol observation had a guide. Every shared space had presence. No confrontation. No accusation. Just structure tightening quietly around them. Ash approved. ‘She moves like you do,’ he said. ‘Better,’ I replied. Because Avery had done something I might not have. She hadn’t pushed. She had absorbed. And in doing so, she had removed every clean angle Alaric might have used against us. I stood at the eastern ridge, watching a Hollowcrest pair work through a sparring drill with two of ours. The technique was
AVERY I did not sleep well after that. Not because I was afraid. Because anger had a way of sharpening everything. Ember slept in her nursery down the hall, steady and warm and unbothered, four months old and blissfully unaware that a man she would never know had decided to build a grudge out of Kade’s ruin. Rowan slept beside me in fragments, not deeply, but enough that I could feel the difference each time his breathing shifted and settled again. Even in sleep, he stayed alert now, as if some part of him had already turned toward Hollowcrest and refused to look away. I lay still and listened to Emberfall breathe. The packhouse creaked softly around us. A patrol changed outside. Somewhere farther off, a wolf laughed under his breath before the sound disappeared into night. Nothing had gone wrong. Not yet. Lila stirred slowly, her presence warm but watchful. ‘He is not grieving Kade,’ she said. I stared up at the dark ceiling. ‘No.’ ‘He is using him.’ That felt right in a
ROWAN The first sign was not violence. It was absence. A Hollowcrest patrol failed to report at the agreed interval. Not late enough to justify alarm, just late enough to register. When the message finally arrived, it was polished and apologetic. A miscommunication. A route adjustment. An oversight corrected. On paper, it was nothing. Ash did not agree. ‘Patterns shift before borders do,’ he said quietly. I did not summon council. I did not confront Alaric. I watched. Two days later, Stoneveil’s eastern trade caravan was rerouted without direct authorization. A Hollowcrest liaison had suggested a safer path along the ridge, citing instability in the original route. The ridge was stable. It had been reinforced three weeks ago. The suggestion had been framed as courtesy. It was interference. I requested Hollowcrest’s internal patrol logs under standard agreement transparency. They arrived quickly. Too quickly. Complete. Clean. Ordered. Flawless. Ash moved closer to the s
AVERY Ember was four months old, and already deeply unimpressed by wedding planning.She lay on her stomach on the blanket near the window, fists clenched beneath her shoulders, dark eyes tracking everything with intense suspicion. Every few minutes she kicked hard enough to sc
ROWAN The first real test of the integration did not come with violence.It came with a sixteen year old boy who shifted for the first time at dawn and did not know where to stand afterward.I felt it ripple through Emberfall before anyone came to find me. That sharp,
AVERY Time didn’t move the way I expected it to after that.It didn’t rush forward in milestones or stall out in fragile pauses. Instead, it widened, stretched itself thin enough to hold everything at once. Days layered gently, feeding schedules and patrol rotations and quiet c
ROWANThe younger wolves arrived in pairs.Not because they were told to, but because that was how uncertainty liked to travel. Shared. Buffered. Less exposed.I watched from the edge of the training grounds as Avery met them one by one. Not standing at the center. Not elevated. Just present, Ember







