Se connecter
The underground poker room reeked of cigar smoke and bad decisions. Anya Brooks...though that wasn't remotely her real name, wove between tables with practiced grace, her tray balanced perfectly despite the three-inch heels that were absolute murder on her arches.
Twenty-three years of training for one night. One mission. One chance. She'd rehearsed every detail. The way her dress hugged her curves without screaming desperation. How her dark hair fell across one shoulder, exposing her neck in a gesture that looked accidental but had taken hours to perfect. Even the subtle sway of her hips as she walked, engineered to draw male attention without triggering their predator instincts. And the perfume. God, the perfume alone had cost Project Seventh six months of research and enough money to fund a small military operation. Synthesized to smell like pack to a werewolf. Like belonging. Like the one thing these apex predators spent centuries searching for and rarely found. Like mate. Around her, Moscow's criminal elite threw around cash like confetti. The buy-in for this game was fifty thousand American. Pocket change to these men. Some were human, Russian oligarchs, oil barons, politicians so corrupt they made the mob look ethical. But most weren't human at all. She could always tell. The way they moved was wrong, too fluid and controlled. The way their eyes tracked motion with predatory precision even while their faces remained bored. The way they smelled, musk and danger and something wild that made the hair on her neck stand up. Werewolves. An entire room full of them, pretending to be civilized men in expensive suits. Her targets sat at the center table, naturally. The Volkov brothers didn't do anything by halves. Alexei Volkov commanded the space without effort. Six-four and built like violence, with black hair slicked back from a face that belonged on a Renaissance painting, if Renaissance painters had specialized in beautiful monsters. His suit probably cost more than a luxury car, charcoal grey and tailored within an inch of its life. But it was his eyes that made her pulse kick despite her training. Pale grey, almost silver, utterly empty of anything resembling human warmth. The Pakhan. The Alpha. The man who'd ruled the Russian supernatural underworld for over a century with calculated brutality. Kill target number one. To his left sat Dimitri. Leaner, dark hair falling across his forehead in a way that should've looked careless but somehow seemed intentional. Ice-blue eyes that never stopped moving, cataloging exits and threats and weaknesses. His suit was darker, navy so deep it looked black, and his hands rested on the table in a way that suggested he could have a weapon out and firing before anyone saw him move. The paranoid one. The strategist. The brother who saw through lies the way normal people saw through glass. Kill target number two. And Nikolai. Christ, Nikolai might've been the most dangerous of the three precisely because he looked the safest. Golden-brown hair that caught the light, a smile that crinkled the corners of warm eyes, the kind of face that made people trust him right up until he destroyed them. His suit was the lightest, grey with subtle pinstripes, and he'd loosened his tie like he was at a casual dinner instead of an illegal gambling operation that probably laundered millions. The kind one, according to her briefing. Which meant he was exactly as lethal as his brothers, just better at hiding it. Kill target number three. Anya refreshed drinks at the table beside theirs, close enough for them to notice. She could feel their attention like heat against her skin. Particularly Alexei's. Those dead eyes tracked her movement, and she watched his nostrils flare slightly as he caught her scent. The pheromones were working. Phase one: complete. She let herself glance at him. Just a heartbeat. Just long enough for their eyes to meet. Then she looked away quickly, a flush creeping up her neck that wasn't entirely fake because goddamn, the man radiated danger like radiation and some hindbrain part of her was screaming to run. But she'd been trained to ignore that voice. To push through fear until it became just another tool. "Excuse me?" Nikolai's voice was honey over gravel. "Could we get another round?" Anya turned, smile perfect. Shy but not cold. Approachable but not available. "Of course. Same as before?" "Please." His eyes lingered on her face a second too long. "I don't think I've seen you here before." "First night." She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. Vulnerable. "Trying not to mess it up." "You're doing fine." His smile widened. Charming. Disarming. Absolutely calculated. "What's your name?" "Anya." "Pretty name." He held her gaze. "I'm Nikolai." She already knew that. Knew his birthday, his kill count, his favorite breakfast and the name of his first childhood pet. Project Seventh didn't do half measures. "Nice to meet you." She ducked her head. "I should...drinks..." "Of course." He released her from the conversation like a catch-and-release, and she felt rather than saw Dimitri's attention sharpen on her as she walked away. Careful. He's the smart one. Don't give him a reason to look too close. She delivered vodka to the next table, Grey Goose, neat, exactly the way these men preferred it, and worked her way back toward the bar. Her internal countdown ticked away. Three minutes until she needed to "stumble" across the execution in progress. Two minutes to position herself near the back hallway. One minute to... A hand closed around her wrist. Anya gasped, the tray tilting. She caught it at the last second, vodka sloshing but not spilling. Turned to find herself facing a man she didn't recognize. Heavy-set, expensive suit, eyes glassy with vodka and something meaner. "Pretty thing," he slurred in Russian. "How much for the whole night?" Her smile never wavered. "I'm just serving drinks, sir." "Everything's for sale." His grip tightened. "Name your price." "Please let go." She kept her voice level. Polite. Even as she mentally catalogued three ways to break his wrist and two ways to crush his windpipe. "I don't think so." He pulled her closer. Vodka breath hot against her face. "You come work these games, you know what they are. You know what we are. So stop playing innocent and..." "Remove your hand." Alexei's voice cut across the room like a blade. "Now." The drunk froze. Every person in the room went still. Alexei hadn't stood. Hadn't even looked away from his cards. But something in his tone made the air feel thinner, harder to breathe. The drunk released her immediately. "I didn't know she was..." "Leave." Two syllables. Completely flat. But the man practically ran for the exit. Anya stood there, heart hammering, very aware that every eye in the room was now on her. This wasn't the plan. She wasn't supposed to attract Alexei's direct attention until after the "accidental" discovery, after she'd established herself as a frightened innocent who needed protection. She ducked her head. "Thank you." Alexei's gaze finally lifted to her face. Those silver eyes were absolutely empty. Not cold, that implied some kind of temperature, some spark of feeling. This was vacuum. Void. "You're welcome," he said. Then returned to his cards like she'd ceased to exist. But Nikolai was watching her with new interest. And Dimitri's ice-blue eyes had gone narrow and assessing. Fuck. She retreated to the bar, set down her tray with shaking hands that were only partly for show. The bartender, human, blessedly normal, gave her a sympathetic look. "You okay?" "Fine." She pasted on a smile. "Just need a minute." "Take five. You look like you need it." Anya nodded gratefully and headed toward the back hallway where the bathrooms were. And where, if her intel was correct, the Volkov brothers conducted their less legal business in a soundproofed room at the end of the corridor. Her internal countdown hit zero. Show time. She walked past the bathroom. Past the storage closet. Right up to the heavy steel door that should've been locked but somehow, miraculously, stood slightly ajar. Sloppy. The Volkovs were never sloppy. Which meant either her intel was wrong, or someone had left it open deliberately. Trap or opportunity...did it matter? The mission required her to walk through this door. To witness what came next. To cement herself as a terrified innocent who needed the protection of three powerful wolves. Anya pushed it open. The smell hit her first. Copper and fear-sweat and something acrid, gunpowder, recently fired. The room was concrete and sterile, a single bulb hanging from the ceiling. A man sat zip-tied to a metal chair in the center, his face a mess of blood and broken features. Nikolai stood behind him, hands covered in brass knuckles and fresh blood. His tie was loosened, his sleeves rolled up, and there was nothing warm about his expression now. Just cold focus. Dmitri leaned against a metal table, wiping a knife clean with methodical precision. The blade gleamed under the harsh light. And Alexei stood to the side, scrolling through his phone like this was a business meeting instead of an interrogation gone violent. The man in the chair saw her. His swollen eyes went wide. Desperate. "Please..." His voice was thick, wet. "Please, I told you everything, I don't..." Alexei glanced up from his phone. Raised his hand in a casual gesture. The gunshot was deafening. The man's head snapped back. Blood sprayed across the concrete. His body went limp, held up only by the zip ties. Anya's training kicked in before conscious thought. She screamed, high and genuine because Jesus Christ, she'd seen death before but not like that, not so casual and empty. She stumbled backward, hand flying to her mouth. All three brothers turned to look at her. For one frozen moment, nobody moved. Then Nikolai's nostrils flared. His head tilted. "Bozhe moy." "What?" Dimitri's gaze snapped from Anya to his brother. "Do you smell that?" Nikolai took a step toward her. His eyes had gone wide, pupils dilating. "Tell me you smell that." "I smell blood and a terrified human..." Dimitri stopped mid-sentence. His entire body went rigid. "No. That's not possible." "Smell what?" Alexei's tone remained flat, but he'd stopped looking at his phone. His attention fixed on Anya with the same focus a hawk might give a mouse. She was already backing away. Moving toward the door. Every instinct screaming at her to run even as her training said stay in character, play terrified, let them come to you... "Mate." Nikolai's voice came out rough. Almost reverent. "She smells like mate." Anya ran. Her heels clattered on marble as she sprinted down the hallway. Behind her, she heard motion. Fast. Too fast. They were coming. The service elevator was her target. Twenty feet away. Fifteen. Her fingers were already reaching for the button when... Ten feet. Five. She slammed her palm against the button. The doors began to slide shut with agonizing slowness. She could see her reflection in the polished steel, wide-eyed and flushed, the perfect picture of terror. Not all of it was acting. The doors were six inches from closing when a hand shot through the gap. Pale. Strong. A silver ring on the fourth finger catching the overhead light. The doors bounced open. Dimitri stood there, head cocked, studying her with those ice-chip eyes. His expression was unreadable, but something about the set of his jaw said he was working through a problem that didn't have a simple solution. "Going somewhere, milaya?" His voice was soft. Almost gentle. But there was nothing gentle about the way he stepped into the elevator, letting the doors slide shut behind him, trapping her in the small space with a predator who'd just watched his brother execute a man and felt absolutely nothing about it. Anya pressed herself against the back wall. And Dimitri smiled.POV: Multiple - ONE HUNDRED YEARS AFTER ANYA'S DEATH (2187) PART ONE: The Memorial Vera Volkova, now one hundred forty-six years old and still serving as Luna after seventy years, stood before her mother's memorial on the centennial of her death. The simple stone had weathered beautifully, moss growing in the carved letters, flowers blooming around its base—left by family, pack members, even strangers who'd learned Anya's story. Here lies Anya Volkova Weapon. Luna. Mother. Human. She chose love. It was enough. "Tell me about her," requested a child's voice. Vera turned to find her great-great-granddaughter, six years old, eyes bright with curiosity. "About Great-Great-Great-Grandma Anya." Vera knelt slowly, her supernatural body was aging finally, joints stiff after over a century—and pulled the child close. "What do you want to know?" "Everything. Why is she famous? Why do people still talk about her?" "Because she changed the world by choosing to fail. She was sent to kill
POV: Anya SIXTY-FIVE TO NINETY-TWO YEARS OLD The deterioration came gradually, then all at once. At seventy, Anya needed a cane. At seventy-five, she needed help bathing. At eighty, her memory became unreliable—she'd forget conversations from hours ago, repeat stories without realizing, occasionally fail to recognize people she'd known for decades. "It's dementia," Galina confirmed gently during one of their increasingly frequent check-ups. The ancient pack doctor was failing too, two hundred eighty years old, clearly approaching her final decade. "Early stages. It'll progress." "How long?" "Impossible to predict. Could be five years. Could be twenty. But yes, eventually you'll lose yourself to it." Anya absorbed this with surprising calm. She'd survived so much, why not this too? "I want to write everything down. While I still can. So my family has it all." She spent the next year compiling memories, writing letters, recording videos. Some days her mind was sharp, and she wor
POV: Anya THIRTY-FIVE TO FORTY YEARS AFTER INFILTRATION At fifty-eight years old, Anya Volkova discovered something unexpected: being ordinary was extraordinary. She woke each morning without Council sessions to attend or territorial disputes to mediate. She painted when inspiration struck rather than scheduling creativity around diplomatic obligations. She spent hours watching her granddaughter Sophia, now five years old, learn about the world with wonder Anya had never been allowed as a child. "Grandma Anya, why do trees have leaves?" Sophia asked, examining a maple leaf with intense concentration. "To catch sunlight and make food for the tree." "But why?" "Because that's how trees survive." "But why?" The endless questions would have frustrated Anya once. Now they delighted her. Sophia's curiosity was pure, unmarred by the cynicism that came from knowing too much about the world's darkness. Anya wanted to protect that innocence as long as possible. "You're good with her,"
POV: Anya THIRTY-TWO YEARS AFTER INFILTRATION The doctor's office smelled of antiseptic and fear. Anya sat in the uncomfortable plastic chair, staring at the X-rays illuminated on the wall, trying to make sense of the shadows that apparently meant something terrible. "I'm sorry," Dr. Petrov said gently. He was human, supernatural healers couldn't help with purely human diseases. "The biopsy confirmed it. Breast cancer. Stage two. It's aggressive, but we caught it relatively early." The words felt distant, abstract. Cancer. The disease that had plagued humanity for millennia. The thing supernatural healing should have protected her from, except she wasn't supernatural anymore. She was just human. Just mortal. Just fifty-five years old and facing the mortality she'd been trying not to think about for four years. "Treatment options?" she asked, her voice steadier than she felt. "Chemotherapy, starting immediately. Six cycles, every three weeks. Then we'll evaluate whether surgery i
POV: Vera TWO YEARS AFTER TRANSITION - THIRTY YEARS AFTER ANYA'S INFILTRATION Vera Volkova had been Luna for two years, and she was failing. Not obviously. Not catastrophically. But she felt it—the slow erosion of confidence, the mounting mistakes, the growing certainty that she'd never be what her mother had been. What the pack needed. "The German packs are refusing to honor the territory agreements," she reported to her small council, Papa Alexei, Papa Dimitri, Papa Nikolai, and three senior advisors. "They claim the borders were negotiated under Anya's authority and aren't binding under new leadership." "That's ridiculous," Alexei said flatly. "Treaties persist regardless of who negotiated them. That's foundational pack law." "They're testing you," Dimitri observed, ever the analyst. "Seeing if you'll fold under pressure. If you renegotiate, every pack in Europe will try the samep tactic." "So what do I do?" Vera heard the frustration in her own voice and hated it. A strong
POV: Anya TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS AFTER INFILTRATION The day Anya woke up completely human, she didn't realize it at first. She stretched in bed, feeling the familiar aches of her fifty-one-year-old body, and reached instinctively for the bond. For twenty-eight years, that connection had been as natural as breathing, a constant awareness of her three mates, their emotions and locations always present in the back of her mind. Now there was nothing. Silence where symphony had been. Anya sat up abruptly, panic flooding through her. She focused, trying to feel Alexei beside her, Dimitri in his command center, Nikolai in the kitchen preparing breakfast. Nothing. The bond that had defined her adult life was gone. "Alexei," she whispered, shaking his shoulder. "Alexei, wake up." He woke immediately, Alpha instincts alert. "What's wrong?" "The bond. I can't feel it. I can't feel any of you." His expression shifted from alarm to grief. "I know. I felt it break around four this morning. The







