LOGINThe moon wasn't supposed to be full for another night.
It was coming through Karl's bedroom window anyway, white and too bright, painting stripes across his bed. Across his back. Across my hands where I was holding onto him like he'd disappear.
My bones were on fire.
Not aching anymore. Burning. Like someone had poured hot metal into my spine and it was trying to find a way out.
"Karl," I gasped. "It's worse."
He was still over me, pinning me down with his weight, his mouth on my neck where he'd bit me in chapter 5. His eyes were full gold and wild.
"I know," he growled. "I can smell it."
He pressed his forehead to mine. His skin was even hotter than before. Sweat stuck his hair to his temples.
"Your scent changed again," he whispered. "It's not sweet anymore. It's sharp. Like ozone. Like before a storm."
Another wave hit. My back arched off the bed. I couldn't stop it. My fingers dug into his shoulders, nails breaking skin.
He didn't flinch. He groaned low in his throat and pushed his hips harder against mine, holding me still.
"Breathe with me, Theo," he ordered. "In. Out."
I tried. My lungs wouldn't work right. Every breath I took filled my nose with him — cedar and chlorine and that wild thing underneath. But now I could smell more. I could smell the soap on his sheets. The old blood under his fingernails from the locker in chapter 1. The fear-sweat coming from the hallway downstairs.
I could hear it too. Three heartbeats downstairs. Jace and the other two, pacing. I could hear the watch ticking on Karl's desk. I could hear Karl's heart hammering against my chest, too fast.
"Too loud," I whimpered. "Everything's too loud."
"That's your wolf waking up," Karl said. He kissed my temple, my cheek, the corner of my mouth. Not sexual. Desperate. "Focus on my voice only. Nothing else."
He slid one hand under the shirt I was wearing — his shirt — and pressed his palm flat against my bare stomach. His hand was huge and hot.
"Here," he said. "Feel me."
The cramp hit right under his hand. I cried out and doubled over. My forehead hit his collarbone.
"Shit — Theo, look at me."
I couldn't. My vision was blurring at the edges. Not black. White. Like the moonlight was inside my eyes.
Karl grabbed my chin and forced my head up.
His gold eyes went wide.
"What?" I panted. "What is it?"
"Your eyes," he whispered. He sounded scared, and Karl never sounds scared. "They're not turning gold."
My stomach dropped. In chapter 3 he told me latents turn gold. "What color?"
"Silver," he said. "Latents don't do that. Wolves don't do that."
He let go of me and went to his dresser fast. He pulled out a thick leather cuff, like a wide bracelet, and came back to the bed.
"Give me your wrist," he said.
"Why?"
"At the pool I used blood because we were in public," he said, strapping it on my left wrist. It was warm from his skin. It smelled like him, strong enough to make my head spin. "This is private. It's got my scent soaked in from three years of training. It'll hold you better than a surface mark."
The second it clicked shut, the burning in my bones eased. Just a little. Enough that I could breathe.
"Better?" he asked, his voice rough.
I nodded. "Yeah."
The bedroom door burst open.
No knock. No warning.
Jace stood there with Silas right behind him. Two other wolves flanked them.
Jace's nose twitched. He inhaled deep and his eyes blew wide. He looked straight at me in Karl's bed, wearing Karl's shirt, with Karl's bite on my neck and Karl's cuff on my wrist.
"Holy fuck," Jace said, smiling. "He's not latent."
Silas pushed past him into the room. The Alpha didn't look angry. He looked at my face. At my eyes.
He inhaled once, slow. Then his eyebrows lifted. Just a fraction.
"Silver," Silas said quietly. "That's not a normal latent."
Karl moved before I could blink. He was between me and his father in a second, shirtless, shoulders back, growling low.
"He's mid-shift," Karl snarled. "Get out."
Silas ignored him. "A null," he said. "A rare kind of latent. One in ten thousand. They don't follow scent. They cancel it."
My heart was going to beat out of my chest.
Karl turned his head slowly to look at me. His gold eyes were locked on my silver ones.
"Theo," he said, voice barely human. "What are you doing to me?"
I felt it then. The cuff on my wrist was pulsing with heat. But it wasn't Karl's heat anymore. It was mine. And every pulse was pushing Karl's scent back, out of my lungs, out of the room.
Karl stumbled back a step like I'd shoved him. He pressed a hand to his chest, breathing hard.
"Stop," he gasped. "Whatever you're doing — stop."
"I don't know how!" I shouted.
Jace was grinning now. "He's canceling you, heir. Your own claim can't hold him."
Silas held up a hand. Everyone shut up.
"The full moon is tomorrow," Silas said calmly. "If he finishes this shift as a null, every wolf in a mile radius will lose their wolf when he's near. Including my son. Including me."
He looked at Karl. "You brought a weapon into your bed, Karl."
Karl wasn't listening. He was staring at me like he was in pain. Like I was hurting him just by breathing.
"Theo," he whispered. "Come here."
I got off the bed on shaky legs. I was still wearing his shirt. His cuff. His bite was still on my neck. I walked to him.
The closer I got, the more his gold eyes faded back to brown. The more his shoulders dropped.
When I was a foot away, he dropped to his knees.
Right there in front of his father, in front of Jace, in front of the whole pack, Karl Maddox — Alpha heir, captain, golden boy who'd looked through me for two years — sank to his knees and pressed his forehead against my stomach.
He'd never knelt for anyone. He was on the floor because of me.
He inhaled deep against my skin. And he shuddered.
"Mine," he said, voice broken. "Even like this. Even if you kill my wolf. You're still mine."
Silas made a low sound. "Impossible. A null can't be claimed."
Jace pulled out his phone. "Alpha, I'm recording this. The council needs to see—"
Karl moved so fast no one saw it. One second he was on his knees, the next Jace was slammed against the wall with Karl's hand around his throat, feet dangling.
"Delete it," Karl snarled, eyes flashing gold again despite me standing right there. "Or I rip your throat out and let him watch."
He looked back at me over his shoulder, still holding Jace up with one hand.
"Theo," he said. "Tell me to stop."
My legs were shaking. My eyes were burning silver. My whole body felt like it was being rewired. And the most dangerous wolf on campus was asking me for permission.
I walked up to him and put my hand over his on Jace's throat.
"Stop," I whispered.
He let go instantly. Jace dropped to the floor gasping.
Karl turned to me, breathing hard, and cupped my face with both hands.
"You just gave an Alpha an order," he said, amazed. "And I obeyed. Because of what you are."
Downstairs, the front door crashed open. More wolves poured in, drawn by the scent of a null waking up.
Silas looked at the window, at the moon, then at me.
"Son," he said to Karl, "if you can't control him by sunrise, I will put him down myself. Null or not. Pack law."
Karl pulled me against his chest, one arm locked around my waist, the other hand on the back of my neck over his bite.
"Then you better hope I can," Karl said, "because I'm not letting go."
Outside, the pack started to howl — not at the moon.
At me.
The whole circle went quiet after Marcus said it."You're mine by right."Karl's claws were out, digging into my wrist where he was holding me. Not hurting me — just holding on.My dad took one slow step forward. "Say that again, Marcus."Marcus didn't look at him. He was looking at my mom by the cabin. "Tell him, Sarah. Tell your son who you were promised to before you ran off with a null."My mom's face was white. "That was twenty years ago. It was voided.""It was never voided," Marcus said. "You left. The council never released you."I looked between them. "What is he talking about?"My mom came into the circle, past all the kneeling wolves. She didn't look at Marcus. She looked at me."When I was eighteen, my family arranged a mating with the Alpha heir of North Shore," she said quietly. "Marcus. It was political. To join packs. I met your father two weeks before the ceremony."My dad — Daniel — took her hand. "She chose me.""She broke pack law," Marcus said, voice flat. "A prom
The whole pack was growling at me.Maybe thirty wolves around the lake, in the trees, on the shore. All eyes on me. The Council Alpha — Marcus — stood barefoot in the mud in front of them, not even bothering to shift back to wolf.Karl was in front of me, half-shifted, gold eyes burning, claws out. My dad was on my other side, silver eyes matching mine.Marcus looked at Karl first. "Step aside, heir.""No," Karl said. Simple. No growl. Just no.Marcus smiled, but it wasn't friendly. "Your father let a null live twenty years ago. Look what it cost us. Humans with guns. Livestreams. The National Guard in our territory. You want to make the same mistake?""He's not a mistake," Karl said. "He's my mate."The growling around the lake stopped. Dead silent.Even my dad turned his head to look at Karl.Marcus raised an eyebrow. "You haven't done the claiming rite. You haven't presented him to the council.""I don't need your rite," Karl said. He reached back without looking and found my hand.
The helicopter didn't explode. It hit the lake hard and tipped sideways, rotors still spinning slow in the water.Everything else was quiet.Every soldier on the grass was out cold, breathing but not moving. Silas was on his knees holding his head. The Beta was face-down in the dirt. My mom was sitting up, dazed.And Karl was on his hands and knees in front of me, staring at his own hands like they belonged to someone else.His eyes were brown. Not gold. Not even a flicker."Karl?" I said. My voice sounded far away.He didn't answer. He pressed his palm to his chest, over his heart. Then he looked up at me, panicked."I can't hear him," he whispered."Who?""My wolf," he said. "He's gone."My dad was still holding me up. He let go slowly. "You didn't just cancel his shift, Theo. You shut his wolf down completely. Full null pulse does that."I dropped to my knees in front of Karl. "I didn't mean to—""I know," Karl said quickly. He grabbed my face with both hands. His hands were shakin
The helicopter wind blew the broken cabin door clean off its hinges." HANDS UP! HANDS UP NOW!"Four soldiers in full gear stormed in, rifles up. Behind them, more outside. Red dots danced on all our chests — me, Karl, my dad, my mom, Silas on the floor.My dad didn't put his hands up.He just looked at the lead soldier and said, "Lower your weapons."The soldier's rifle jerked down like someone pulled it. So did the other three. They hit the floor hard."What the—" the lead soldier started.My dad flicked his fingers. All four men dropped to their knees, gasping, hands on their throats."Null field," my dad said to me, calm, like he was teaching me to swim. "We don't stop hearts. We stop the electricity in the muscles. Makes it hard to breathe. Watch."He relaxed his hand. The soldiers sucked in air.Karl stepped in front of me anyway, even though his wolf was still weak from my wave. "Don't touch him."My dad looked at Karl, then at me. "You pick interesting protectors, kid."My mom
The police officer had his hand on his gun. The athletic board lady had her tablet up, still playing Jace's livestream. My mom was standing between me and them. Karl was still in my lap, blinking slow, trying to sit up.And across the lake, the silver-eyed wolf was swimming straight for us."Everybody on the ground!" the cop shouted. "Now!"Silas, bleeding on the floor, laughed wetly. "Too late. He's here."My mom turned white. She looked out the window at the wolf cutting through the water. "No. No, it can't be."Karl grabbed my hand, hard. "Theo, get behind me."I couldn't move. The silver cuff on my wrist was ice cold now. The black root ash was still on my palm.The wolf reached the shore and shook water off. Then, in front of all the humans with their phones out, he shifted.Not like Karl's half-shift. This was smooth, fast, bones cracking and reforming in seconds. One second a huge silver wolf, the next a man in his forties, soaking wet, wearing torn jeans.He had my face. Older
Silas had the shotgun pointed at Karl's chest.My mom was in front of me. Karl was on his knees on the cabin floor, breathing hard because my null wave was still pouring out of the silver cuff. Jace's dad, the Beta, was on his knees too, human again, furious."It's sunrise," Silas said again. His eye was bleeding. "The council voted 7-2. Nulls are a threat to the bloodline. You both die."Karl didn't look scared. He looked up at his dad from the floor and laughed, short and bitter. "You're going to shoot your own heir?""I'm going to save the pack," Silas said, but his hand shook on the gun.I could feel the cuff burning my wrist. Hotter and hotter. The leather pouch my mom gave me was on the floor, open. The black root inside was smoking."Theo, take it off!" my mom yelled. "It's too much! You'll burn out!"I didn't know how. The silver in my eyes was so bright I could see it reflecting in the window. Everyone in the room was holding their chest like they couldn't breathe.Everyone e
The Alpha wasn't on a phone.He was on a laptop in Coach's office, on video, and the second Karl pulled me through the door, the man on the screen looked straight at me like he could smell me through the camera.He looked like Karl in twenty years. Same gold-brown hair, same shoulders, same eyes th
I hadn't swum a real warm-up in two years.I timed laps. I handed out kickboards. I sat behind the blocks with my stopwatch and my inhaler and watched Karl cut through the water like he was born in it.Now I was standing on the block next to him at 5:17 am in borrowed jammers that were too big, wit
I didn't sleep.I went back to my dorm with my inhaler in my fist and my neck burning where his mouth had been. My roommate was snoring. I stood in our tiny shower for twenty minutes and scrubbed until my skin was red.It didn't work.I could still smell him. Not cologne. Heat and chlorine and some
The locker screamed at 11:07 pm.Metal doesn't make that sound unless something is tearing it open from the inside. I was standing in the dark hallway outside the varsity locker room with my inhaler in my pocket, and I heard steel give way one slow claw at a time.I shouldn't have been there.My na







