Mag-log inKalev’s POV
I was gone for a total of twenty-eight minutes. As I sat back down in my seat, the feed came back up. Viktor was at my side before I’d even taken a full breath.
"Terrain anomaly," he said, clicking his chin. He leaned against the back of my chair with his arms folded. "Is that's what we're calling it?" Her tone was sardonic, mocking.
"There's a briar formation on the western ridge that wasn't there an hour ago. I'd call that anomalous." I didn't look up from the console. The duty log was open in front of me. I was backfilling it with steady, boring lies. Ground survey. Structural assessment. No participant contact. "I needed to confirm it wasn't a hazard system misfire before we put it back on broadcast. Which it wasn't. Which is now logged." I motioned towards the log system.
“So the briars were a system glitch?” he asked.
“Yes, of course. What else would they be?”
"Mm." He stood up and sauntered over to the edge of the desk. He perched on the side of it, like he'd done since we were fifteen and this was my father's office. "And the girl?" He raised his eyebrow, a sly smile on his face.
"She’s stable. Her wolf presented under combat stress. It happens."
"It happens," Viktor agreed. "Flora wolves, though?” He paused dramatically. “I’m afraid those don't ‘happen’. In fact, they haven't happened in sixty years." He tilted his head. “You know as well as I do that she’s a flora wolf. You can convince everyone else that those briars were just a system glitch. But you and I know the truth. So what do you think of that?”
Orrin stirred, a low warning. I kept my hands flat on the desk.
"I know what the signature reads as. I also know the archive says that bloodline's extinct. Which means either the archive's wrong or the sensors are. I'd like to find out which before the Council does." I finally looked up at him. "Wouldn't you?"
He held my eyes. Viktor's eyes were very pale. They always had been. Gray and washed out to almost nothing.
He smiled, the smile I’d known my entire life. It was an easy smile, fond, and real.
"You would tell me though,” he said. “If there was something else. Anything else. Wouldn’t you? You and don’t keep secrets.”
“Of course I would,” I lied. It was only a matter of time before everyone saw Senna’s mark on her throat. But there was something I needed to know before that happened. I didn’t have time to sit there and talk to Viktor. “I have something to attend to. Keep watch? On the stream?”
He nodded.
“Happy to,” he replied. “But I’d prefer to watch with the others. In the main room.”
“Of course,” I said. “Suit yourself. I’ll join you soon.”
I left my office and went straight to find Endrick. He was in the archives, where he always was, since it was his job to keep the archives in pristine condition.
The room that smelled of dust and old binding glue. House Solenne had been archivists for nine generations. Endrick was born to be the tenth and had spent most of his life trying to be anything else, which is how we ended up friends.
He took one look at my face and set down the ledger he was holding. "What is it."
"Close the door."
He did and then he waited. Vesper, his wolf, watched me from behind Endrick’s eyes, alert and silent.
"I found her," I said, my tone flat.
It took him a second. Then his whole face changed. "You mean…your mate? You're sure?"
"Orrin nearly tore me in half getting to her. I'm sure."
"Goddess." He sat down, hard. A grin was starting to spread across his face, the helpless kind. "Who is it? Which House? Does Petra know yet, she's going to be insufferable…"
"She's a participant. In the Slave Games"
The grin fell from his face.
"She's on the Island," I said. "Right now. She’s from Sector 6. Our family acquired her. Her wolf woke an hour ago and Endrick, it's a flora wolf. I…went to see her. I marked her. I shouldn't have, but Orrin was…" I dragged a hand down my face. "I called a blackout to do it. Viktor knows something's wrong. He doesn't know what yet. He will soon."
Enrick was very quiet. Outside, far above us, the ceiling gave a long low roar. People were cheering. Something worth watching just happened. My mind flashed to Senna. What happened? Was she hurt?
"Flora," he said finally. "You're certain?"
"I walked through a wall of thorns that opened for me because her wolf recognized mine. So yeah, I'm certain."
"Then she's not just your mate." He was already moving toward the back of the archive, toward the locked stacks and the records. "She's a problem, Kalev. The kind of problem the Council put in a box sixty years ago and nailed shut. And you've just…" He stopped and turned around. "Does she know? What she is?"
"She knows she woke with a wolf that grows briars. So yes. I assume she knows she had a flora wolf.”
“But does she know what that means?” he asked.
I shrugged and shook my head. “I talked to her for five minutes total. I have no idea what she knows and what she doesn’t.”
Enrick looked at me for a long moment. Then he pulled a key from around his neck. It was an old iron key, the archive master’s. He turned toward the locked stacks.
“What are you doing?” I asked.
“These are sealed records. They were put here sixty years ago when the flora wolves went extinct. I’ve never seen them before. No one has. There’s never been a reason to.”
“Until now?” I asked.
“Until now,” he nodded. “We'd better find out what's in these records," he said. “I have a feeling your new mate is going to need some help. And the more we know, the better.”
Senna’s POVThe tavern stood where the old supply depot used to be. I stopped at the edge of the street for a moment, taking it in. It hadn’t been here before.The structure was new. I noticed the new wood, the new supports. I could smell the fresh coat of paint. The windows were larger than most buildings in Sector 6. From the outside it looked like a really nice tavern. This had always been his dream, to open up a bar. He’d told me about it countless times.It was something we’d talked about doing together. It was the reason I was saving all my money. So I could help him fulfil his dreams.But by the looks of it, he’d come and done it without me. With my money. And with my best friend.I seethed.Kalev appeared beside me.“He’s in there?” Kalev asked in a low growl.“Yes,” I replied.“Then let’s go.” Kalev made a move to enter the tavern, but I stopped him. Kalev wanted to rip Kalen to shreds. I could feel his anger coming off of him. But I wanted to do this alone.This was my fight
Senna’s POVSector 6 looked smaller than I remembered. I noticed it at we approached.From the transport window, the familiar sprawl of uneven rooftops and narrow, dirt-packed streets stretched out in front of us. But it no longer felt endless. Was this really the place I’d grown up in? It felt like a lifetime had passed since I’d been taken from here and put on that bus with all the other participants.I wasn’t the same person anymore. No. I was stronger. More confident. And thanks to this victory tour, I had the eyes and ears of all the sectors. I could leverage that to do something important. Something meaningful.“It used to feel bigger,” I said to Kalev. He flashed me a sympathetic smile, but he didn’t say anything. What could he say? He couldn’t possibly understand the flurry of emotions inside of me as we approached my home.They had cleared a section near the central square had been marked off for the arrival. People had gathered to watch. Well, not just watch. They were there
Senna’s POV“I’m not bringing him.” The refusal left my mouth. It came out sharper than I’d intended. So sharp that even the servants near the walls stiffened.Kalev didn’t react. His face remained gentle.“You are,” he said calmly.“No, I am not,” I replied firmly.“Yes, Senna, you are,” he replied.We stood across from each other in the center of the sitting room. Late afternoon light spilled through the windows.Our night of passion had changed things between us. I quivered whenever I thought about it. I’d given myself over to him in that bed.But we weren’t in bed right now. We were in the sitting room. And what happened in the bedroom stayed in the bedroom. In the light of day, we were just as we’d always been.And right now, there was tension between us.“This is my tour,” I said. “So it’s my choice.”“And you are my responsibility,” Kalev replied. His voice softened. He reached out brushed my cheek with his hand. “I am coming to protect you.”“I don’t need your protection,” I s
Senna’s POVLaying beside Kalev, I couldn’t sleep. I could hear him breathing beside me. I tossed and turned. The silk sheets were soft against my skin. A breeze blew in from the window. I knew I should try to sleep. But I just couldn’t. Verity paced inside of me. Orrin’s presence was keeping her up too.“I know you’re awake,” he said.His voice startled me. I’d thought he was asleep. I froze, not knowing what to say. For five nights we’d slept like this, side by side. I’d been careful to stick to my side of the bed. But truth be told, I hadn’t been sleeping well. Not with him beside me.The matebond was getting stronger by the day. Whenever I was near him, I could feel it throbbing inside of me. It was an aching, a desire that threatened to consume me whole.Lying there next to him, the heat from the bond pulsed between us. I swallowed hard. He was shirtless and I was painfully aware of his body next to mine.“You can feel it,” he said. “The matebond. Look at me.”I rolled over onto
Kalev’s POVViktor chose the location.The hunting grounds stretched along the northern edge of the Capital’s territory. They were a carefully maintained wilderness designed to feel dangerous without really being so. The trees stood tall and evenly spaced, while preserving the illusion of untouched land.The paths were subtle but deliberate. The nobility went there to hunt pretend they were surviving something wild. But even the animals here were controlled.Every animal was tracked. They were specially bred. They were released in calculated numbers to guarantee they could be hunted with certainty.It was all smoke and mirrors, although none of the nobility actually openly recognized this.“It’s been a while,” Viktor said as we stepped onto the main trail.The morning air was cool. It carried the sharp scent of pine and damp earth. Sunlight filtered through the trees in pale strips.“Yes,” I replied.Viktor had asked me to go hunting. I’d almost refused. But then I decided to go. Mayb
Senna’s POVThe paperwork arrived in a box. I was sitting at the dining room table nibbling on fresh fruit when the servant came in.It wasn’t a folder or a thin stack of documents tied neatly with ribbon. It was an actual box. It was large enough that the servant carrying it had to brace it both hands. He entered without meeting my eyes and set it carefully on the table in front of me.“Victor privileges,” he said stiffly. Then he left before I could answer.The door clicked shut behind him. I set down my fruit and stared at the box for a long time.It looked expensive. It was made out of dark polished wood with brass corners. The crest of the Capital carved neatly into the lid. Verity stirred uneasily beneath my skin.“I don’t like it,” she said.“I know,” I muttered.Slowly, I lifted the lid.Inside, the documents were arranged with care. They were separated into sections by thin dividers. Every page was crisp. Someone had spent a lot of time making this look clean. It was all very
Kalev’s POVI hated that they sedated her. They did it before I could interject. They just shoved a needle into her neck and within seconds, she collapsed.“She was hysterical,” one of the medics on the helicopter said. It was true. She had been. She’d been hyperventilating. They’d acted on instinc
Senna’s POVI glared at Kalev. The horns didn’t stop. They kept echoing across the beach, piercing our ears. I struggled to process what had actually happened as the reality sunk in.My friends were going to live. That’s what I focused on. All of them. We were all getting out of here. I’d have to l
Kalev’s POVI grabbed Senna’s wrist just in time. My voice had stopped everyone else mid-reach. Holding onto to Senna’ wrist, everyone whipped their heads at me.I had no idea what would happen if Senna touched that Spire. But my instincts told me it wouldn’t be good. Orrin agreed. Now that I knew
Senna’s POVThe forest thinned long before we reached the beach. We knew the way since we’d done it several time. We’d stayed holed up in the safe place for two nights. As a result, Korrigan and I were a lot stronger.I did my best to mostly ignore Kalev during our time in the safe place. It was ha







