로그인Wren
Wren had rehearsed this moment more times than she'd ever admit to another living soul. Alone at night, in the early years when the ache still occasionally won and dragged her thoughts somewhere she didn't want them to go, she'd built and rebuilt the scene of walking into a room and finding Kade Voss's eyes on her again — testing every possible version of her own reaction, discarding the ones that felt too raw, too much like the girl in the clearing, until she was certain she'd found the one that wouldn't give anything away. She'd practiced her expression in the reflection off still water. She'd practiced the exact angle of her chin. By year three, she'd stopped needing to practice at all, certain enough in who she'd become that the old rehearsal had started to feel like a habit from someone else's life entirely. She discovered, the actual moment it happened, that five years of rehearsal hadn't prepared her for a single second of it. The bond didn't ease into place the way she remembered it doing five years ago, patient and building. It slammed, sudden and total, a physical force behind her sternum that nearly buckled her stride mid-step across the hall, sharp enough that for one disorienting instant the old stone floor seemed to tilt beneath her, the tapestried walls swimming at the edges of her vision the way they hadn't since the very first night any of this began. It took everything she'd built in five years — every hour of training with Ezra, every rogue fight, every night she'd made herself breathe through the old ache instead of letting it own her, every single day she'd chosen, deliberately, to be someone this pain didn't get to define — to keep her feet moving in a straight, unbroken line toward her seat. She did not stop walking. She would think about that later, the way she'd thought about not going down the night of the rejection — that whatever else this moment cost her, it hadn't gotten that. His face had changed less than she'd expected, and more than she wanted to admit noticing. Older around the eyes, the particular weariness of a man who'd spent five years holding something together through sheer will alone. Something worn into the set of his jaw that hadn't been there five years ago, a weight she recognized because she carried a version of it herself, buried under five years of careful discipline. For one unguarded second, crossing that hall, she let herself actually look at him — not the Alpha, not the political obstacle, not the man whose name she'd spent five years training herself not to flinch at hearing — and found something there that looked, unmistakably, like a man who'd been waiting five years for exactly this moment and had no idea, now that it had arrived, what to do with it either. She looked away first. She made herself do it deliberately, the choice itself a kind of victory nobody in that hall would ever understand the weight of — because five years ago, she'd have given anything to be the one who got to look away first, and tonight, finally, it hadn't cost her anything at all to choose it. Ezra's hand found her shoulder briefly under the table where nobody else could see it, a small, steady anchor, and she was grateful for it in a way she didn't have words for at that particular moment. "You good?" His voice barely above a whisper, echoing the same question he'd have asked five years ago in a very different clearing. "I'm good." And this time, unlike the fight five years ago, she found she almost believed herself saying it. "I'm exactly where I'm supposed to be." She kept her attention fixed on the herald as the formal proceedings began — Ashborne's border dispute, something about disputed grazing rights along the Ironfang line that under any other circumstances would have held her full attention — but some part of her stayed aware, constantly, unwillingly, of the exact spot across the ceremonial circle where Kade Voss sat with his wife's hand on his arm, watching her with an intensity she could feel like heat against her skin even without looking back to confirm it. She caught herself, twice, losing the thread of the actual dispute being discussed, and had to lean toward Ezra both times to quietly ask him to summarize what she'd missed, a small, private humiliation she hadn't experienced in this particular way since she'd first started learning to lead a room full of people who expected her to have every answer. Rurik, she noticed, was watching her too, though with a very different quality of attention — careful, assessing, the look of a man doing quiet math about a situation he'd clearly suspected was coming for longer than he'd ever let on. He caught her eye once, briefly, and gave her the smallest possible nod, something steady and unbothered in it, an offer of support that asked for nothing in return. She was grateful for that too, in a different register than her gratitude toward Ezra — Rurik had never once, in five years, made his own feelings her problem to manage, and she suspected he wasn't about to start today. Five years. She'd built an entire life in five years — a pack, a title, a bloodline finally awake and answering to her call, a found family that had never once looked through her the way Blackthorn had, an alliance that stretched across three territories and counting. She'd told herself, more nights than she could count, that she'd made peace with never getting whatever this moment might have offered her if things had gone differently — had told herself that so many times, in fact, that she'd genuinely believed it, right up until the second his eyes found hers across a crowded hall and every carefully constructed piece of that peace turned out to be built on ground considerably less solid than she'd assumed. Sitting in that hall, feeling the old bond settle back into place like it had never actually left, she understood, with a clarity that felt almost cruel in its timing, exactly how much of that peace had been a story she'd told herself because the alternative had simply been too heavy to carry. She didn't know yet what she intended to do about that. For now, it was enough to sit in that hall, Alpha of Nightshade, unbroken and unbowed and finally, finally seen — and to let that be its own answer, at least until the summit gave her a reason to need a better one.WrenShe found him later that night on the training grounds, alone, working through forms by moonlight the way she remembered him doing once, years ago, in a story he'd told her at a war room table three weeks past."Can't sleep either?""Too much to think about." He lowered the practice blade, turning to face her fully, moonlight catching the tired, careful hope in his expression that she was becoming increasingly unable to pretend she didn't feel an answering pull toward. "Your pack is remarkable, Wren. I mean that. I've led Blackthorn eleven years, and I don't know that I've built anything with half the heart this place has.""You had different obstacles.""I had different excuses." He set the blade aside entirely, closing some of the distance between them, careful and unhurried in a way that let her retreat if she wanted to. She found she didn't want to. "I keep thinking about what Ezra said. About earning a place here, instead of assuming one. I don't know how to do that, exactly
KadeNightshade's territory announced itself long before they reached the pack house proper — patrol wolves falling into escort formation at the border with a discipline that told Kade, more clearly than any report ever had, exactly what kind of pack Wren had actually built."That's new," he said, watching a young wolf peel off from the patrol to race ahead, presumably to announce their Alpha's return."That's Denna. She joined us two years ago, half-starved, from a pack that didn't want her anymore." Wren's voice held quiet pride she didn't bother disguising. "We don't turn people away here. Never have, since the day Ezra didn't turn me away."The pack house itself, when they reached it, was nothing like Kade had pictured — not grand, not built for show, but solid and warm and clearly, thoroughly lived-in, wolves of every age moving through the grounds with the easy confidence of people who genuinely belonged exactly where they were. A young man came sprinting from the main hall befo
WrenThey found a single piece of useful intelligence among the fallen wolves' effects — a folded, water-stained map marking locations across three territories, three sites circled in dark ink, one of them uncomfortably close to Nightshade's own southern border."They've been planning this for a while," Ezra said, studying the map by firelight once they'd made it back to the rendezvous clearing. "This isn't reconnaissance. This is a target list."Wren said nothing, her shoulder throbbing beneath its hastily wrapped bandage, watching the map like it might rearrange itself into something less frightening if she stared long enough.Kade sat close beside her, near enough that she'd stopped, sometime in the last few hours, bothering to maintain the careful distance she'd been so certain she needed. "We ride for Nightshade at first light," he said. "All of us. I'm not leaving you exposed on the road with whoever sent those three still out there.""You have your own pack to think about.""To
KadeThe rest of that night passed without incident, though incident, Kade was beginning to suspect, was simply taking its time.Ezra called a council at first light, the whole expedition gathered around the cold remains of the previous night's fire, exhaustion and unease sitting heavy over every face in the circle."We have two choices," Ezra said, without preamble. "Push further into the ruins, see what else that vault might tell us, or pull back now with what we've already learned and regroup somewhere safer to plan our next move. I won't pretend either option is obviously right.""Wren needs rest," Kade said, before he could stop himself, aware of how it sounded even as he said it — proprietary, protective, more than his actual authority in this expedition technically justified."Wren can speak for herself," Wren said, though without real heat in it, more tired amusement than actual annoyance. "And Wren agrees, mostly, though not for the reasons you're implying. Whatever's out the
WrenThe central hall's foundation was mostly intact beneath the overgrowth, and it was Ezra who found the stairs down — a narrow, half-collapsed passage beneath what had once been the hall's main floor, leading to something that had clearly been built to survive considerably more than forty years of neglect."A vault," he said, crouching at the entrance, running weathered fingers over stonework considerably older and more deliberate than the ruined hall above it. "Old construction. Older than the hall itself, I'd guess — this might predate Ashenmoor splitting from Nightshade entirely."They descended carefully, torches raised, the air growing colder and stranger with every step, until the passage opened into a low chamber that made Wren's breath catch the moment her torch light swept across it.The walls were carved — not crudely, but with the same careful, deliberate craft as the vault's entrance — image after image of wolves shifting into forms that weren't quite natural, moon-mark
WrenThey made camp that first night just inside Ashenmoor's border, close enough to reach the ruins proper by midday tomorrow, and Wren found she couldn't sleep — not from the cold, and not entirely from the low, persistent wrongness still humming under her skin since they'd crossed the tree line, though that was certainly part of it.She found Kade already awake when she gave up on sleep entirely and made her way to the low-burning central fire, sitting alone with a cup of something that had long since gone cold, staring into the flames with the particular stillness of a man doing the same math she was."Can't sleep either.""No." He glanced up, made room on the log beside him without being asked, and she found herself sitting, telling herself it was simple practicality — shared warmth, shared watch, nothing more complicated than two Alphas unable to rest before a dangerous day. "This land. It doesn't feel like it wants us here.""It doesn't feel like it wants anyone here." Wren pul







