I woke up to the low murmur of voices outside Adrian’s bedroom door.
Not the hushed tones of guards changing shifts, but something sharper — edged with anger. “You’ve gone too far this time.” Lucas. I froze, my fingers tightening around the blanket. “You’re trespassing in my house,” Adrian’s voice answered, calm in the way that made people more afraid. “Don’t twist this. You’ve got my fiancée’s ex-mate sleeping in your bed? In your quarters? Do you know what that makes you look like?” There was a pause, the kind that felt like it could split the air in two. “It makes me look like a man who protects what’s his.” The words slammed into me before I could process them. What’s his. I slipped out of bed, padding silently to the door. When I cracked it open, I saw them — two tall, dark-haired Lycans standing only feet apart, tension coiled between them like a live wire. Lucas looked the same as the night he’d rejected me — polished, smug, the faint scent of Clara’s perfume clinging to him like a brand. Only now, his jaw was tight, his eyes burning with something I almost mistook for jealousy. “You think you’re protecting her?” Lucas scoffed. “You’re making her a target. Everyone will think she’s your new toy. Is that what you want?” Adrian didn’t even blink. “I don’t care what they think.” “You don’t care?” Lucas stepped closer, his voice rising. “You’re humiliating me—” Adrian cut him off with a low, dangerous chuckle. “You humiliated yourself the day you threw her away for a political marriage. Don’t pretend this is about her safety. This is about you not liking that someone else sees her worth.” My heart thudded against my ribs. I had never heard anyone talk to Lucas like that. “This isn’t about worth,” Lucas snapped. “It’s about lines. And you—” he jabbed a finger toward Adrian “—have crossed one that should never be crossed.” “Lines?” Adrian tilted his head slightly. “The only line I see is the one between a man and a coward. You drew it yourself.” Lucas’s hands clenched at his sides, his knuckles whitening. “You think you can take whatever I’ve had? That’s what this is about?” Adrian’s expression sharpened. “No. I don’t take leftovers.” His eyes flicked toward me in the doorway. “Emma was never yours to keep.” The words hit Lucas like a blow. His jaw flexed, his voice dropping into something almost feral. “Stay out of my life. Stay away from her.” Adrian’s voice went quiet — too quiet. “You want me to stay away from her? Then maybe you should ask yourself why she’s here in the first place.” Lucas’s gaze snapped to mine, his face twisting as he realized I’d been standing there the whole time. “Emma…” His tone softened, like he thought he could still reach me. “He’s using you. You can’t see it yet, but—” “Enough.” Adrian stepped forward, his presence filling the hallway like a storm. “She doesn’t answer to you. Not anymore.” The tension between them was suffocating, their eyes locked like two predators circling. I could feel the weight of it pressing against my skin — the forbidden pull toward Adrian, the ghost of old wounds with Lucas, the fact that standing between them felt like standing at the center of a firestorm. Lucas turned to leave, but his parting words were thrown like a dagger over his shoulder. “This isn’t over.” The door shut behind him, and the silence that followed was thick enough to choke on. Adrian looked at me then, his gaze unreadable. “You’re not leaving my room tonight.” It wasn’t a question. I swallowed, my pulse racing. “That’s only going to make him angrier.” His mouth curved — not in amusement, but in something far more dangerous. “Good.”The air in the Dark Moon estate had shifted overnight. It was no longer just heavy with politics and whispers. Now it watched.Every corridor I walked seemed to have eyes—guards stationed at corners, servants suddenly stiff with formality, even wolves I once passed without notice now stared too long, their curiosity sharpened into suspicion.The Council’s decree wrapped itself around my throat like a leash. Under watch. That meant I couldn’t leave, couldn’t breathe freely, couldn’t move without the knowledge that someone, somewhere, was taking note.I had become a spectacle.Adrian refused to let them treat me like a prisoner. The first morning after the decree, when two guards appeared outside my chamber door, he nearly ripped them apart with his bare hands.“She is not your captive,” Adrian thundered, his voice shaking the walls. “Step away.”The guards exchanged nervous glances. “Elder Corrin ordered—”“Then let Corri
The orb’s shattered glow still pulsed faintly where it had rolled across the marble floor, its magic sputtering out in fractured sparks. The sound of it cracking seemed to echo louder than the applause of any battle.The hall had become a storm.Voices rose, overlapping in anger, shock, fascination. Wolves in human skin revealed their fangs, some snapping at each other, others whispering like vultures circling a fresh corpse.“Did you see—?”“He stopped her.”“He knows she’s guilty.”“The Council must act!”The whispers grew into accusations. All eyes burned holes into me. I felt naked under their judgment, stripped of whatever dignity I had left.Lucas thrived in the chaos. His smirk deepened as he spread his hands, the picture of innocence. “You see?” he said, his voice carrying easily over the noise. “I asked for truth. Father destroyed it. What greater confession is there?”The words cut sharper than any blade.
The hall was silent.Hundreds of eyes locked on me, on Adrian, on Lucas—three points in a triangle stretched to breaking.Adrian’s hand enclosed mine. Warm. Steady. A vow in the middle of the storm.Lucas’s smile cut sharper. His glass lifted, a toast without wine. He had planned this moment—every gasp, every whisper, every flick of attention that now hung between us.The silence broke.“Ladies and gentlemen,” Lucas said, his voice rich with false warmth, “may I have your attention?”The crowd turned as one. The Alpha’s son, heir apparent, was speaking.He slid his arm around my waist as if nothing were amiss, his grip bruising. “This evening, I wanted to honor tradition… and family.” He looked at Adrian, then back at me, his eyes glittering. “After all, what are we without loyalty to blood?”A murmur rippled. Adrian’s jaw was stone.Lucas lifted his glass higher. “But family is also about… truth.”
The days after Lucas’s confrontation felt like living in a tightening noose.He no longer shouted. He no longer demanded.He simply… acted.Everything shifted, quietly but decisively.My schedule changed without warning. My phone calls began dropping mid-conversation. The car I usually used to reach Adrian was suddenly “in the shop” every other day. The staff whispered when they thought I wasn’t listening.Lucas had stopped playing the wounded husband. Now, he was the tactician.The first blow came at breakfast three days later.He set a folded invitation beside my plate without a word. The heavy parchment bore the seal of the Alpha Council—the inner circle of wolves, pack leaders, and their families. The kind of gathering where appearances were everything.“You’re coming with me,” Lucas said simply.I stared at the invitation, my stomach tightening. “Why?”His lips curved faintly. “You’ve been… restless. I t
The morning after felt wrong the moment I opened my eyes.Lucas was already up, showered, and dressed, seated at the edge of the bed as though he’d been waiting for me to wake. The sight of him made my stomach clench—the crisp shirt, the polished boots, the calm smile that wasn’t really a smile.“Good morning,” he said, voice warm. Too warm.My throat tightened. “Good morning.”He rose slowly, his movements controlled, deliberate. “I made breakfast. Come downstairs.”It wasn’t a request.The dining table was set more carefully than I’d ever seen it—eggs, toast, fresh fruit, even coffee brewed the way I liked it. It looked like something from a memory of when we were happy. But the atmosphere was wrong, suffocating.Lucas poured my coffee, slid the cup toward me, and watched as I wrapped trembling fingers around it.“You’ve been walking a lot at night,” he said finally, his voice even.I froze, the porce
The days after the ring incident felt like living inside a thundercloud. Every moment was heavy with static, waiting for the strike.Lucas no longer tried to hide the fact that he was watching me. His eyes followed me when I moved about the house, his silence sharper, his gestures deliberate. He stopped pretending to sleep at night. I could feel him lying awake beside me, his body rigid, his breathing slow but too controlled to be real.The predator had stopped circling. Now he was stalking.Adrian had become reckless in equal measure.He no longer spoke of caution or discretion. Instead, his messages came earlier, his demands more urgent: Come now. Come earlier. Don’t make me wait.He wanted me not just at night but in daylight. In his office, his garden, the private wing of the estate. He began pressing me to appear with him at events—not as a guest, but at his side, unhidden.It was madness. But I couldn’t stop.That