LOGINI could not sleep that night.
I lay on my back in the small infirmary room and stared at the ceiling and listened to the sounds of Nightfall Pack settling into its night around me, the distant footsteps in the hallways above, the occasional low voice somewhere down the corridor, the sound of wind moving through the pine trees outside my window. It was all completely unfamiliar and I was too exhausted to sleep and too wound up to rest and my mind would not stop going where I did not want it to go. It kept going back to Silverstone. I kept thinking about what the pack must look like right now, whether the celebration after the ceremony had continued or whether the wrongness of what happened had settled over everything the way it had settled over me. I thought about the great hall full of wolves eating and drinking and pretending that watching their Luna candidate fall to the ground and get escorted to the border was a normal thing to witness. I thought about the torches still burning in the ceremonial circle and the stone floor where I had pressed my palms trying to find something solid to hold onto. I thought about Caden. I did not want to think about him but I could not seem to stop. I kept seeing his face at the altar, that careful composed expression that had not shifted once the entire time, not when he said the words, not when I fell, not when three hundred wolves watched me walk out of that circle alone. I had spent six years learning every version of his face and I had never seen that particular version before, the one that looked completely certain and completely unreachable at the same time. I did not know what to do with the fact that the man I thought I knew better than anyone had stood in front of me and shown me a face I had never seen. I wondered if he was sleeping right now. Probably, I thought, and the thought sat in my chest like something cold and heavy. Probably he was sleeping fine, with Selene beside him in the room that had felt like home to me for three years, in the bed I had sat on the edge of a hundred times waiting for him to come back from late night Alpha duties, in the packhouse that still had my handwriting on the supply lists in the kitchen and my training schedule pinned to the board in the hallway. All of that was still there and I was not, and life in Silverstone was probably moving forward exactly the way life always did after something difficult, by simply continuing. I pressed the back of my hand against my mouth and breathed through it slowly. The thing that kept catching me off guard was not the anger, although the anger was there, sitting low and constant underneath everything else. It was not even the grief, although that was there too, enormous and shapeless and impossible to look at directly. The thing that kept catching me was the specific particular pain of realizing that I had not known him as well as I thought I did. Six years of choosing someone and believing you understood them and then discovering there was an entire version of them you had never been allowed to see. That was its own kind of loss, separate from everything else, the loss of the story I had been telling myself about who we were to each other. I rolled onto my side and looked at the pale rectangle of the window and the dark sky beyond it. My arm had stopped hurting completely, which still made no sense to me when I thought about it, and the rejection bond was doing its low persistent pulse through my chest that I was beginning to accept as simply the new background noise of my existence. It hurt less when I did not focus on it directly, which seemed like a reasonable metaphor for most things in my life right now. I thought about Selene. She had been in Silverstone for two years. Two years of training alongside the pack, eating in the great hall, joining the women's warrior group that I led every Tuesday and Thursday morning. Two years of smiling at me across tables and asking about my training techniques and once, memorably, telling me over dinner that she thought Caden and I were perfect together and that she hoped things worked out for us. I had thanked her. I had genuinely thanked her and meant it and thought she was kind for saying it. The memory made me feel sick in a way that had nothing to do with the rejection bond. I did not understand yet what Selene was or what she had done or how deep the thing she had built inside Silverstone actually went. All I understood in that moment, lying in the dark in a stranger's pack with the night settling around me, was that she had come to the ceremony wearing white, and that white dress had not been a coincidence or an accident or a poor choice of outfit. She had known exactly what was going to happen that night and she had dressed for it, and that single detail told me that whatever I thought I had understood about the last two years of my life was significantly less than the full picture. I was still turning that thought over in my mind when I heard something outside my door. It was quiet and careful, the sound of someone moving slowly in the hallway and trying not to make much noise. I held very still and listened, and then the sound stopped completely and the hallway went quiet again. I lay there for a moment and then I pushed back the blanket and padded quietly to the door and opened it a crack and looked out into the dim corridor. The hallway was empty in both directions. But on the floor directly outside my door, sitting on a small wooden tray, was a bowl of something warm and steaming, a cup of water, and a piece of bread still soft enough that it had clearly been made recently. I looked at it for a long moment and then looked up and down the empty corridor again, but there was nobody there in either direction and no sound of retreating footsteps anywhere. I picked the tray up and looked at it carefully. There was no note. No explanation. Nothing to tell me who had left it or why or what I was supposed to make of the fact that someone in this pack had gotten up in the middle of the night to bring food to a stranger who had arrived on their border two days ago with nothing. I carried it back inside and sat on the edge of the bed and ate every single bite of it, and I sat in the quiet of the room afterward and thought about the hot meal and the empty hallway and the absence of any note, and I felt something shift very slightly in the tight closed place in my chest that had not moved at all since the Blood Moon ceremony. It was small and I did not trust it yet and I was not ready to name it. But it was there.I woke at three in the morning with a sound coming out of my throat that I did not recognise as my own voice.It took me several seconds to understand what was happening, that I was awake and in my room in Nightfall and not back in the ceremonial circle, because the rejection bond had been so vivid in the dream that the boundary between sleeping and waking had dissolved completely. I was sitting upright in the bed with both hands pressed against my chest and my heart slamming so hard I could feel it in my fingertips, and the bond was tearing through me in waves the way it had on the night of the ceremony, hot and vicious and completely indifferent to the fact that I was supposed to be healing.I pressed the heels of my hands against my sternum and breathed slowly and deliberately, counting each breath the way Sena had taught us in early morning training when she wanted us to bring our heart rates down after a hard set. In for four counts. Hold for four. Out for four. I did it over an
I had been in Nightfall for five days when Zane came to find me with the kind of expression that told me whatever he was about to say was going to change something.It was late afternoon and I had just come back from training, my muscles aching in the specific satisfying way they did after a session where I had actually pushed past my own limits instead of just maintaining them. I was sitting on the edge of my bed pulling off my boots when I heard the knock at my door, two short deliberate knocks that I was beginning to recognise as specifically his, and I told him to come in without thinking about it.He walked in and stood near the door with his arms folded across his chest and looked at me for a moment without speaking, which was not unusual for him, but something about the quality of his silence this time felt different. It felt like he was deciding how to begin rather than simply being unhurried, and that distinction made me set my boot down and give him my full attention."I nee
I told Zane my decision the next morning, finding him in the courtyard just after sunrise where he was standing at the edge of the training ground with a cup of something hot in his hand, watching his warriors run through their morning drills in the pale early light. He did not look surprised when I walked up beside him, which I was beginning to understand was simply his default state. I was not sure anything could genuinely surprise this man."I am staying," I said, looking out at the training ground rather than at him.He took a slow sip from his cup before answering. "I know," he said, with the same unhurried calm he brought to every single thing he said. I turned to look at him and he was still watching the drills, his expression giving away nothing as usual."You knew before I told you?" I asked."You made your decision last night," he said simply. "I heard you pacing in your room until almost two in the morning, and then you stopped. That was when I knew." I opened my mouth to
Mira left without being asked. She simply closed the old leather book, set it back on its shelf with quiet practiced hands, and walked out of the herb room without a word, pulling the door almost shut behind her. I did not look away from Zane when she left, and he did not look away from me, and the room settled into a silence that was somehow both uncomfortable and completely natural at the same time.He straightened from the doorframe and walked into the room, moving the way he did everything, unhurried and deliberate, like he had already decided exactly how much space he intended to take up and was simply occupying it. He stopped at the opposite end of the worktable and looked at me across the length of it, and I sat on my stool and looked back at him and waited for him to say whatever he had come in here to say."How much did you hear?" I asked, when the silence had stretched long enough."Enough," he said, without any particular expression on his face. I waited for him to elaborat
Mira did not answer my question right away. She moved to the shelf on the far wall and lifted down a worn leather book that looked old enough to have its own history, setting it on the worktable between us and opening it to somewhere near the middle. She turned it to face me and I looked down at a page covered in small careful handwriting, with diagrams in the margins and words written in a language I did not recognise at all.She pulled the stool from under the table and sat down across from me, folding her hands on the surface in the way people do when they are about to say something that requires steadiness to deliver. I stayed standing because sitting felt too settled for whatever this conversation was about to be."Your mother did not tell you because she was protecting you," Mira said, holding my gaze across the table. "She failed." The two sentences landed simply and directly without any softening around them, and I stood there absorbing them without saying anything, my hands p
I woke the next morning to the sound of whispering in the hallway outside my room.I could not make out the exact words but I could hear the tone, that low urgent kind of talking that people do when they find something surprising and are not sure yet what to make of it. I lay still for a moment and listened, and then I heard my own name spoken quietly by a voice I did not recognise.I sat up slowly and looked at my arms.The cuts from the Darkwood were almost completely gone. I had noticed them closing faster than normal the day before but I had told myself I was imagining it, that exhaustion was making me see things that were not there. Looking at them now in the pale morning light coming through the window, I could not tell myself that anymore. The skin was smooth and pink and clean, like wounds that were a week old rather than two days.I pressed two fingers against the place where the deepest cut had been and felt nothing at all. No tenderness, no soreness, nothing. I sat there st







