LOGIN~Selene’s POV~
I hang up.
I don't think about it — my thumb simply moves and the call ends and I stand on the pavement outside the flower stall with my heart hammering so loud I can hear it in my temples.
Three seconds later, she calls again.
I watch the screen. Let it ring. Let it ring. Let it ring.
Then silence.
A text arrives.
Don't be childish, Selene. I only want to talk. Woman to woman. Meet me at the Ivory Lounge. One hour.
I stare at the message until the letters blur.
Every rational part of me says no. Every instinct I have, honed by three years of navigating pack politics and the sharp-edged social world that came with being Caden's Luna, says that walking into a room with Vivienne Cole is walking into a trap.
But then there's the other part of me. The part that is furious.
The part that wants to look her in the eye.
---
The Ivory Lounge is tucked at the edge of Cresthaven's upscale quarter — white linen, low lighting, the kind of place where people come to be seen or to be discreet, depending on the need.
Vivienne is already seated when I arrive. Of course she is.
She looks beautiful. That has never been Vivienne's problem. Dark gold hair that falls in perfect, artless waves. A fitted ivory blazer that matches the room as if she dressed intentionally for it. Blue eyes so pale they're almost silver, watching me cross the room with an expression of quiet, practiced amusement.
I sit down across from her without being invited.
She smiles. "You look pale."
"What do you want, Vivienne?"
She wraps both hands around a porcelain coffee cup, considering me with those silver eyes.
"I want to make sure we understand each other," she says pleasantly. "Caden has made his decision. I think it's better for everyone if you accept that gracefully."
"The papers aren't signed yet."
"No." She tilts her head. "But they will be. He asked me to pass along his request that you do so today. He doesn't want this to become complicated."
The deliberate cruelty of using her as his messenger makes my chest constrict.
I breathe through it.
"How very thoughtful of him," I say.
Something shifts in her eyes, a flicker of irritation that she smooths over almost instantly.
"You were always going to be temporary, Selene. I'm sure some part of you knew that." She sets her cup down. "He was mine long before the Moon Goddess decided to interfere with her little arrangement."
"The bond isn't interference," I say quietly. "It's fate."
She laughs softly. "Fate. You sound like a child. Fate is for people who can't take what they want with their own hands."
I look at her — really look at her — and I wonder, as I have wondered before, how I ever believed her beautiful.
"Why did you leave?" I ask. "Three years ago, you disappeared. Caden looked for you. He was—" I stop. "He was devastated. Why come back now?"
Something crosses her face. Just for a moment. Something complicated and dark that she buries quickly.
"The timing wasn't right before," she says smoothly. "Now it is."
She's lying. I've spent enough time in pack leadership meetings to know when someone is managing information.
"He believes you were taken," I say carefully, watching her eyes. "Held against your will."
Nothing flinches.
"I was."
"By whom?"
"By people who are no longer a concern." She picks up her coffee again. "What matters is that I'm back. And Caden has chosen. You need to accept that."
I sit back in my chair.
The velvet box is still in my pocket. My coat hangs over my arm. I can feel its slight weight like a compass needle always pointing to what matters most.
Two heartbeats.
I won't let her see them. I won't let her anywhere near this secret.
"Are we done?" I ask.
Her eyes narrow fractionally. I think she expected more from me. Tears, perhaps. Begging. Something she could carry back to Caden as proof that she'd won.
"One more thing," she says, and now her voice carries a soft, dangerous edge. "If you make any move to complicate this process — if you try to use anything to delay the paperwork, any *claim* you think you might have—" Her pale eyes hold mine. "I will make sure Caden hears the version of you that I choose to tell him."
My jaw tightens.
"There are stories about your family, Selene. About your father's pack. About where the Ashford blood comes from." She smiles. "I wonder how Caden would feel knowing exactly what kind of woman he's been sleeping beside for three years."
I say nothing.
I will not give her a single reaction she can use.
Standing, I pull on my coat and button it slowly, deliberately, the velvet box pressed safe against my ribs.
"Goodbye, Vivienne."
I walk out.
---
I go straight to my mother's house on Larkspur Lane — the small, neat terrace with the blue window boxes where she grows herbs in every season.
She opens the door before I've finished knocking, and the look on her face tells me she already knows something is wrong. She's always had that gift.
"Come in, darling."
I step inside. The scent of her — warm wool and chamomile and something like safety — breaks the last thin strand of composure I've been gripping all day.
"He's divorcing me, Mum."
She closes the door. Turns to me. And the look in her eyes isn't surprise.
It's a quiet, devastated recognition.
"Oh, Selene."
The next hour unravels in her sitting room, me on the old sofa with my knees pulled up, her beside me with her arm tight around my shoulders while I tell her everything. Vivienne. The papers. Dr. Noel. The twins.
When I finally go quiet, she's silent for a long moment.
"He doesn't know about the babies."
"No."
"Are you going to tell him?"
I look at the blue window boxes through the glass. The herbs, still brave against the cold.
"Not yet," I say. "Maybe not at all. Not until I know he won't use them as leverage — or worse, that she won't."
My mother nods slowly, her lips pressed together.
"Then we leave," she says firmly. "Before this goes any further. Before there is a formal rejection and you are too weak to survive it."
I press my hand to my stomach.
The word forms quietly, privately, beneath my ribs.
We.
Three of us.
"Yes," I whisper. "We leave."
My phone buzzes on the cushion beside me. A name on the screen that makes my stomach drop.
Caden.
I let it ring.
~Selene’s POV~My mother is waiting at the bottom of the stone steps.She doesn't ask questions. She doesn't say anything at all when I come through the Pack Hall doors and down the wide stone staircase, one hand trailing the rail because my legs are still deciding whether they will cooperate. She simply steps forward and puts her arm through mine, and we walk together to the car.I don't look back at the building.---The drive out of Cresthaven takes eleven minutes.I know because I watch the clock on the dashboard the way I have trained myself to watch things when the alternative is feeling them. Seven forty-three when we pull away from Pack Hall. Seven forty-nine when we pass the turn for Larkspur Lane, already curtains drawn, already empty. Seven fifty-four when the last of the town's buildings drops away and the road narrows into the long stretch of pine-edged tarmac that leads south.She drives with both hands on the wheel and her eyes forward.The pain from the severance has s
~Caden’s POV~Dawn comes in through the east-facing windows of his office in thin, pale strips.He has not moved.The chair is the same chair he sat in when Rhys left. The folder is still open on the desk in front of him, the single page inside it facing upward, the words legible from where he sits without needing to lean forward. He has read it enough times that he no longer needs to read it at all.Twin gestation. Fourteen weeks. High-risk classification. Maternal health stable. Fetal heartbeats strong.The candle he keeps on the corner of his desk for late nights has burned itself down to nothing. He doesn't remember watching it go.He thinks about the rejection ceremony instead. The third floor. Nine in the morning. The formal cadence of words he'd rehearsed until they sat in his mouth like something inert and manageable, and then the moment he'd spoken them, the moment the bond had actually broken, and the sound she almost made.Almost.He had caught her arm. He remembers the wei
~Caden’s POV~Four months.Four months since she walked out of this building and I have done nothing but work, manage, control, and refuse to think about the precise way she looked when the bond broke — the colour that left her face, the sound she didn't quite manage to suppress.I spin my phone slowly on my desk.It's eleven at night and the Pack Hall is empty except for me and the security rotation downstairs.Rhys, my Beta, has been on my case for weeks. He stopped pretending to be subtle about it approximately three weeks ago and graduated to blunt, bordering on insubordinate."She's gone," he'd told me last Tuesday, standing in this very doorway with his arms crossed and that particular look he reserves for when he thinks I'm being an idiot. "And whatever you think happened, you should have at least heard her side of it."I'd told him to drop it.He didn't. He never does.I pull up the browser on my phone. Type Selene's name. Delete it. Put the phone face-down on the desk.The pr
~Selene’s POV~The rejection is scheduled for nine o'clock.I know because Caden's message at six in the morning is clinical and precise, as if he is confirming a conference call.Pack Hall, third floor, nine a.m. Come alone.My mother reads the message over my shoulder and says nothing. She presses a warm cup of tea into my hands instead, and that silence is more comforting than any words she could offer.I dress carefully.Not for him. I need to be clear about that. Not for the man who handed me divorce papers over the dinner table I had spent hours making beautiful. Not for the Alpha who let Vivienne Cole deliver his messages like he couldn't be bothered.I dress for myself.Deep burgundy dress, fitted at the waist, falling just below the knee. My dark chestnut hair —which Caden always called the colour of autumn, on his rare, unguarded evenings — I leave down. Soft and deliberate. My eyes are clear despite the night I've just survived.I look like a Luna.Because regardless of wha
~Selene’s POV~I hang up.I don't think about it — my thumb simply moves and the call ends and I stand on the pavement outside the flower stall with my heart hammering so loud I can hear it in my temples.Three seconds later, she calls again.I watch the screen. Let it ring. Let it ring. Let it ring.Then silence.A text arrives.Don't be childish, Selene. I only want to talk. Woman to woman. Meet me at the Ivory Lounge. One hour.I stare at the message until the letters blur.Every rational part of me says no. Every instinct I have, honed by three years of navigating pack politics and the sharp-edged social world that came with being Caden's Luna, says that walking into a room with Vivienne Cole is walking into a trap.But then there's the other part of me. The part that is furious.The part that wants to look her in the eye.---The Ivory Lounge is tucked at the edge of Cresthaven's upscale quarter — white linen, low lighting, the kind of place where people come to be seen or to be
~Selene’s POV~I don't sleep.I lie on my side of the bed — our bed — and stare at the ceiling while Caden's side remains cold and untouched. I heard him leave again at midnight, the front door closing with a finality that vibrated through the walls.I don't ask myself where he went.I already know.By the time the grey light of morning creeps under the curtains, I have cried precisely once — a single, ugly sob that I pressed into the pillow and suffocated before it could grow into something I couldn't contain.I am not going to fall apart. I have a life depending on me now.I sit up and reach for the clinic report on the nightstand, turning it over in my hands.Dr. Noel had called me back this morning before I'd even had a chance to breathe. An earlier message, timestamped at six forty-two a.m., asking me to come in as soon as I could.Don't panic, her message had read. Just come see me.Those three words from a doctor are never reassuring.I dress quickly. Something plain — dark tro







