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KAYE”S POV
The coffee pot is burning my hand but I cannot let go because Mrs. Henderson at table four needs her third refill and she tips in quarters when she is happy. My shift started eleven hours ago. My feet stopped hurting around hour eight, which probably means something bad, but I do not have time to think about what. The truck stop diner smells like grease and diesel and the kind of exhaustion that settles into your bones and never leaves.
I am wiping down table seven when I feel it. Eyes on me. Not the normal trucker stare or the lonely salesman hoping for a smile. This is different. Predatory. My wolf stirs for the first time in months, pressing against my ribs like she is trying to claw her way out through my chest.
Don't shift. Don't shift. Don't shift.
I keep my head down and spray more cleaner on the table even though it is already clean. The chemical smell burns my nose but it is better than the alternative. Better than letting my wolf's senses take over and confirm what I already know in my gut.
They found me.
I glance up through my eyelashes, keeping my movements slow and normal. Booth six. Three men. They are not eating. They are not looking at menus. They are looking at me with the kind of focus that makes prey animals freeze before they run. Two of them are big, built like enforcers, with that military stillness that comes from years of training. The third is leaner but somehow more dangerous, like a knife wrapped in a smile.
My hand tightens on the spray bottle. The plastic creaks.
The lean one tilts his head, and I watch his nostrils flare slightly. He is scenting the air. Looking for confirmation.
I am wearing contacts that turn my green eyes brown. I dyed my hair black three weeks ago in a motel bathroom in Idaho. I have been working here for two months, long enough that the other servers know my fake name but not long enough that anyone will remember me when I am gone. I have been so careful.
But careful does not matter when you are standing fifteen feet from wolves who are trained to hunt.
The door to the kitchen swings open and Danny, the night cook, yells that order twelve is up. I force my feet to move, walking toward the counter like nothing is wrong, like my heart is not trying to punch its way out of my throat. I can feel their eyes tracking my movement. I pick up the plate, turn toward table twelve, and that is when the lean one stands.
He does not rush. He does not have to. He just moves into my path with the kind of confidence that says he knows I cannot get past him. Up close he smells like pine and cold air and something underneath that is all wolf. My wolf whimpers, recognizing pack, recognizing danger, recognizing that we are about to die.
"Kaye Muani," he says quietly. Not a question.
I could lie. I could say he has the wrong person, that my name is Sarah or Jennifer or whoever is on my fake ID this month. But lies do not work on wolves. They can hear your heartbeat spike. They can smell fear sweat. They know.
"I don't know what you are talking about." I say it anyway because what else can I do.
His smile does not reach his eyes. "Yes, you do."
The plate is still in my hand. I think about throwing it at his face and running for the back exit, but the other two are already moving, flanking me on both sides. They are not trying to hide what they are doing. The few humans in the diner are not paying attention, buried in their phones or their food, and even if they noticed they would just see three men talking to a waitress. Nothing unusual. Nothing wrong.
"You need to come with us," the lean one says. His voice is calm, almost kind, which makes it worse somehow. "Alpha Rivers wants to see you."
Alpha Rivers. Ethan Rivers. The name hits me like a fist to the stomach. Blackwater Pack. The pack my father supposedly ordered destroyed six years ago. The pack that has every reason to want me dead.
"I am not going anywhere," I say, but my voice shakes and we both know it does not matter what I want.
"You really want to do this here?" He glances around the diner, at Mrs. Henderson pouring sugar into her coffee, at Danny visible through the kitchen window, at the truck driver sleeping in booth two. "Because we can do this here if you want. But it will get messy. People will get hurt. Is that what you want?"
My wolf snarls inside me, all rage and terror, begging me to fight, to run, to do anything except go quietly. But there are humans here. Innocent people who have nothing to do with pack politics or six-year-old massacres or the fact that I was born with the wrong last name. If I fight, people die. If I run, they chase me, and people die. There is no version of this where I win.
I set the plate down on the nearest table. My hand is shaking so badly that the silverware rattles. "Let me get my stuff from the back."
"No," the lean one says. "We leave now."
"My bag—"
"You don't need it."
He is right. Everything I own fits in a backpack I keep in my car, and my car is parked three blocks away where I always park it, far enough that no one connects it to me. Everything I need to run is already waiting. Except I am not going to make it to my car. I am not going to make it three steps outside this diner.
The enforcers move closer, boxing me in. I can feel their body heat, smell their wolves pressing close to the surface. One of them is looking at me like he wants to rip my throat out right here. His hands are clenched into fists and there is something in his eyes that is more than just following orders. This is personal for him.
"Let's go," the lean one says, and his hand closes around my upper arm. Not hard enough to bruise but firm enough that I know struggling is pointless.
They walk me toward the door. I think about screaming, about making a scene, about doing anything that might help. But what would I say? These men are kidnapping me? They would be gone before the police arrived, and they would take me with them. Help, I am a werewolf and these are werewolf enforcers here to drag me to an Alpha who wants revenge? Yeah, that will go great.
Mrs. Henderson looks up as we pass and frowns slightly, like something is off but she cannot figure out what. I try to smile at her. I think it comes out more like a grimace. Then we are through the door and outside in the parking lot and the cold Montana air hits my face like a slap.
There is a van waiting, dark and windowless, the kind of vehicle that screams nothing good happens inside. The back doors are already open. I can see silver chains hanging from hooks welded to the interior walls, and my stomach drops.
Silver burns werewolves. Weakens us. Keeps us from shifting. Those chains are not just restraints. They are torture devices.
"Please," I hear myself say, and I hate how small my voice sounds. "Please, I didn't do anything. My father—"
"Your father ordered the slaughter of sixty-three wolves," the enforcer on my right says, and his voice is full of so much hate that I flinch. "Men, women, children. He burned them alive in their own packhouse while they slept. And you think you didn't do anything?"
"I wasn't there! I was at college, I didn't even know—"
"Shut up," the lean one says, but there is no heat in it. He almost sounds tired. "Just get in the van, Kaye. Don't make this harder than it has to be."
I look at the chains and then at the three wolves surrounding me and I know I am out of options. I could try to fight but there are three of them and one of me and I have not shifted in six years which means I am weak, slow, pathetic. My wolf is screaming at me to try anyway, to go down fighting, but what is the point? They will just hurt me worse and drag me into that van anyway.
ETHAN'S POVThe report comes in at three in the morning, Lucas's voice crackling through the radio with the kind of tension that means something is very wrong. Owen didn't return from patrol. I am awake immediately, the Alpha in me responding to threat before my conscious mind fully processes the words."How long overdue?" I ask, already pulling on clothes."Four hours. He was due back at eleven." Lucas's voice is steady but I can hear the concern underneath. "I sent Marcus to check his route but Marcus isn't responding either."My stomach drops. Two enforcers, both experienced, both overdue. That is not coincidence. That is a problem."Organize search parties. I want every available wolf on this. Cover his entire route, check in every fifteen minutes, no one goes out alone." I am moving through my room, grabbing weapons, strapping on the tactical vest I keep for emergencies. "I will meet you at the garage in five.""Ethan, maybe you should stay here. If something is targeting enforce
KAYE'S POVThe laundry room is in the basement three doors down from my cell, which I suppose is efficient even if it feels like another way to keep me contained in the lowest level of the packhouse. The room is massive, industrial washers and dryers lining two walls, folding tables in the center, and mountains of dirty linens and clothes piled in sorting bins. The air is thick with the smell of detergent and fabric softener and the underlying musk of two hundred wolves whose scents cling to everything they touch.I have been here for two hours, loading washers and moving wet clothes to dryers and trying not to think about how my wrists scream every time I lift something heavy. The bandages help but they are already dirty from work, spotted with water and soap residue. I need to change them but I do not have supplies and I am not brave enough to ask for them.The ankle cuff chafes with every step. I have started walking differently to minimize the friction, a slight limp that makes my
ETHAN'S POVThe camera sits on my desk like an accusation, small and black and absolutely not supposed to be in my private quarters. I stare at it and try to make sense of what it means, who would plant it, why they would risk discovery. Military-grade surveillance in an Alpha's bedroom is not just bold, it is suicidal if caught. Whoever did this either has massive confidence in their ability to avoid detection or they do not care about consequences.Neither option is comforting.Lucas knocks once and enters without waiting for permission, the way he has since we were teenagers and formality seemed stupid between best friends. He looks alert despite the early hour, already dressed for the day in tactical pants and a tight black shirt that probably has at least three concealed weapons. My Beta takes security seriously, which is one of the many reasons I trust him with my life."You said it was urgent," he says, closing the door behind him. His eyes land on the camera and his expression
KAYE'S POVI wake up warm for the first time in three days, and that is so disorienting, that for a moment I cannot figure out where I am. The basement room was always cold, the thin blanket doing nothing against the chill that seeped up through the concrete floor. But this bed is soft and I am buried under what feels like six blankets and there is actual heat coming from a vent somewhere nearby.My eyes open slowly, fighting against exhaustion that has soaked into my bones. The ceiling above me is not water-stained concrete but clean white drywall. There is a window to my left with actual curtains, not just a tiny rectangle near the ceiling that shows nothing but grass and fence posts. Daylight streams through the glass, weak winter sun that still manages to feel warm on my face.This is not the basement.My wolf surges forward in immediate panic. Wrong room, wrong place, deeper in territory, danger danger danger. I try to sit up but my body does not want to cooperate. Everything ach
ETHAN'S POVThe quarterly security report is spread across my desk in neat columns that are supposed to make sense but currently look like gibberish because I cannot focus. Lucas is explaining patrol rotation adjustments, his voice steady and professional the way it always is, and normally I would be paying attention because border security is not something to take lightly. But right now all I can think about is the constant hum of the mate bond at the back of my mind, that awareness of Kaye somewhere in my packhouse that I cannot shut off no matter how hard I try.Three days. It has been three days since they brought her here and three days of fighting every instinct my wolf has. He wants to go to her, wants to check on her, wants to make sure she is okay even though I know exactly what is happening to her because I am allowing it to happen. The pack needs to see that I will not show favoritism. They need to know that being my mate does not protect her from justice.Except it is not
KAYE'S POVThree days. Seventy-two hours. Four thousand three hundred and twenty minutes, not that I am counting except I absolutely am because counting is the only thing keeping me from losing my mind completely.My wrists look like something from a horror movie. The silver burns should have healed by now, would have healed by now if I were a normal werewolf with normal access to her wolf. But I have not shifted in six years and the silver poisoning is spreading through my system like rust in water, slowing everything down. The burns are still raw and weeping, the skin around them an angry purple-black that smells faintly of infection.I tried to hide them yesterday during kitchen work but Miriam noticed and laughed. Actually laughed. Told me it was justice, that I should hurt the way her sons hurt when they burned. One of the other kitchen workers, a young woman named Petra, looked uncomfortable but said nothing. No one ever says anything.Five AM comes too early, the way it does ev







