LOGINAmaya's POV
The sheets are too soft. That's the first thing I notice when I wake up, softness against my skin instead of rough canvas straps. No restraints around my wrists. No cold metal beneath me. Just clean cotton and the smell of lavender instead of antiseptic, oh wow,this is amazing..
My eyes snap open. White ceiling. Sunlight streaming through gauzy curtains. A room that looks like it belongs in a luxury hotel, not a facility.
I bolt upright, and pain explodes through my ribs in a jiffy. My hand flies to my side, finding bandages wrapped tight around my torso. More bandages on my arms, my legs. Someone undressed me. Someone touched me while I was unconscious.
The panic slams into me like a fist. I can't breathe. Unable to think straight. The walls are closing in and I need to get out, need to run, need to..
"You're safe."
I whip around. A woman stands in the doorway, fifties, gray hair pulled back, kind eyes that I don't trust for a second. She holds up both hands like I'm a wild animal.
Maybe I am.
"My name is Principal Thorne. You're at Northridge Ice Academy. You've been asleep for ten days."
Ten days? I jump off the bed, stumble, catch myself against the nightstand. I'm wearing clean clothes, soft pants and a loose shirt that aren't mine. "Who changed me? Who touched me?"
"Our nurse. Only our nurse, I promise." She takes a careful step inside. "We found you on the rocks below Widow's Cliff. You should be dead, but somehow... you survived and that is really a miracle."
The cliff, how I actually jump. The water swallowing me whole. It comes back in fragments, cold, darkness, that strange scent on the wind right before everything went black.
"Where am I?" My voice sounds raw, broken.
"Northridge Ice Academy. A private school for.." She pauses. "gifted students."
Gifted. Code for something. Always code for something. I scan the room, one door behind her, one window to my left. Second floor, maybe third based on the tree line visible outside. I could make that jump if I had to.
"I want to leave."
"You can't." Her voice stays gentle, but firm. "You're registered under the name Amaya Rasford secured. The people looking for you won't find you here."
My blood runs cold. "How do you know people are looking for me?"
"Because girls don't wash up half-dead on beaches covered in medical restraint marks and needle tracks unless they're running from something very bad." Her eyes hold mine. "You're safe here. But you need to stay, blend in, become a student. At least until we can figure out what to do with you."
Blend in? Become a student. Like I'm normal. Like I didn't spend months as a lab rat.
"And if I refuse?"
"Then you walk out that door with no papers, no money, no protection, and they find you within a week max but we both know it will be a lot shorter than that." She steps aside, gesturing to the hallway. "It is entirely your choice."
Not really a choice at all.
+++++++
The uniform is crisp, navy blazer, white shirt, plaid skirt that falls just above my knees. I stare at myself in the bathroom mirror and don't recognize the girl looking back. Clean. Bandaged. Almost normal, if you don't look at the bruises still yellowing on my jaw or the haunted look in my eyes.
My hands won't stop shaking. I grip the sink edge until my knuckles go white. I just need to blend in and act like I have been doing this most of my life. I mean it is just school. What could possibly go wrong.
You can do this. Just breathe. Just survive.
The hallways are massive, vaulted ceilings, stone walls, students in matching uniforms streaming between classes. Rich kids. I can tell by the way they walk, confident and careless, like the world owes them everything and they know it.
I keep my back to the wall, tracking exits. Two at each end of the corridor. Windows every fifteen feet. Fire escape signs pointing to stairwells. My heart hammers against my ribs but I force my breathing steady.
Just blend in. Don't draw attention.
I found my first class, Advanced Supernatural History. The room falls quiet when I walk in. Twenty pairs of eyes lock on me, the new girl, the stranger. I feel their stares like hands on my skin and I want to claw my way out of my own body.
The teacher, Mr. Grayson, according to the board, gives me a tight smile. "Ah, Miss Rasford. Please, take any available seat."
I scan the room. Most desks are full, students sitting in clusters, but there are three empty seats in the back row by the windows. Perfect. I can see the whole room from there, and I'm close to an exit. I move toward them.
"Not there!" A girl with perfect blonde curls grabs my arm.
I flinch so hard I nearly hit her. My body moves on instinct, pulling back, hands coming up defensive. She drops my arm immediately, eyes wide.
"Sorry, I just.." She lowers her voice. "Those seats are taken."
I look at the empty chairs. "They're not here."
"They're never here. Not for first period, anyway." She glances around like she's worried someone might hear. "Those are the Alpha Heirs' seats. You don't sit there. You don't even look at them too long. Trust me."
Alpha Heirs. The way she says it, all reverent and nervous, makes my skin crawl. Another hierarchy. Another system where certain people have power over others. I spent six months being powerless.
"I'll sit where I want," I say, and take the window seat. The blonde girl makes a small sound of distress and hurries back to her desk. Whispers ripple through the classroom. Mr. Grayson clears his throat but doesn't tell me to move.
Good. Let them whisper. I'm done being afraid of bullies and alphas and anyone who thinks they own me.
The class drags on. I don't hear a word of it. My mind keeps drifting, back to the facility, to Sera's screams, to the scalpel sliding between the guard's ribs. My hands curl into fists under the desk. When the bell finally rings, I'm the first one out.
I need air. Need space. Need to get away from all these eyes and voices and the walls that feel too much like confinement.
I take the stairs two at a time, following signs until I find a door marked ROOF ACCESS - AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY.
Perfect. I shove it open and step out into sunlight and wind. The roof is flat, scattered with ventilation units and..
Smoke.
Three figures lean against the far railing, cigarettes glowing between their fingers. Males. Large. Powerful in the way predators are powerful, all coiled muscle and easy confidence.
They turn slowly as the door clangs shut behind me. Three devastatingly beautiful faces. Three sets of eyes that catch the light like it fantasy, too bright, too intense. The air around them feels heavy, electric, like the moment before lightning strikes.
The one in the middle, dark hair, sharp jaw, eyes like winter storms, takes a long drag and smiles. "Lost, little wolf?"
My mouth moves before my brain catches up. "You're the Alpha Heirs."
The smile widens, Dangerous, Guilty. We stare at each other across the rooftop. The wind whips my hair back. Something in the air shifts, tightens, pulls.
Then it hits me, a wall of scent so strong my knees nearly buckle. Pine and smoke and something wild, something that reaches inside my chest and wraps around my lungs. My abdomen clenches, heat coiling low and insistent.
No. No, this isn't..
All three of them go rigid. Cigarettes fall from fingers. Their eyes start to glow, actual light bleeding through their irises, turning them inhuman. My heart stops. Starts. Hammers so hard I think it might break through my ribs.
The dark-haired one steps forward, nostrils flaring, pupils blown wide. When he speaks, his voice is barely human, rough and resonant and haunting.
"Mate."
CHAPTER 104AMAYAThe world did not return to what it had been.It became something new.The courtyard stretched wide beneath the open sky, filled with wolves from every pack.. different colors, different scents, different histories that once stood divided, now gathered in a single place.Not in fear and not in submission but in something far rarer..Unity.The scars of war had not vanished. They lingered in the way some stood quieter than before, in the empty spaces where others should have been, in the weight that still lived behind steady eyes.But they were here..Alive.And that meant something.I stood at the edge of the platform, my daughter resting in my arms, her small form warm against me, steady and real in a world that had nearly fallen apart.“They’re ready,” Luciano said beside me, his voice low, controlled as always..but I felt the shift in him, the awareness of what this moment meant.Javier exhaled slowly on my other side. “Never thought I’d see this many packs standi
CHAPTER 103AMAYA“Easy… don’t try to sit up too fast.”“I’m fine,” I murmured, though I didn’t pull away when Alvaro’s hand steadied me, his touch firm but careful as though I might still break if he wasn’t paying attention.“You said that during labor too,” Javier muttered from across the room, though there was no bite in it, only quiet relief threaded through the words as he leaned back against the wall, watching us in a way that felt different now, softer, like something in him had finally settled.“And I was right then too,” I said, a faint smile touching my lips as I adjusted the small weight in my arms, my daughter stirring slightly before settling again against me.For a moment, nothing else existed except my little angels..Luciano stepped closer, his gaze unusually gentle as it rested on the child, his voice quieter than I had ever heard it. “She’s stronger already.”“She would have to be,” Javier said, pushing off the wall and moving closer despite himself. “With everything
CHAPTER 102 AMAYA“Breathe don’t fight it, breathe through it!”“I am breathing..” The words tore out of me, uneven, strained, as another contraction slammed into my body, stronger than the last, sharper, deeper, like something inside me was splitting open and demanding to be felt.“Stay with me,” Alvaro said, his voice steady, unshaken, his hand locked around mine like an anchor I refused to lose. “Right here. Look at me.”“I’m here,” I gasped, though the world kept tilting, narrowing, every sound stretching and distorting under the pressure building inside me.“It’s progressing fast,” the healer said, her tone controlled but tighter now. “Faster than expected.”“Is that a problem?” Javier demanded immediately.“It can be,” she answered without looking at him. “But not if she stays focused.”“I am focused,” I said, though another wave rose before I could even finish the thought, crashing through me with brutal force as my back arched slightly and a cry escaped before I could stop it
CHAPTER 101 AMAYA“Move! move, clear the way!”“Careful.. don’t jolt her”“I said clear the path now!”The world blurred around me as they rushed me forward, the remnants of the battlefield fading behind us in streaks of noise and motion, but the war hadn’t truly left me.it clung to my skin, to my breath, to the ache in my body as another wave of pain tore through me, sharper this time, deeper, dragging a strained sound from my throat before I could stop it.“Amaya,” Alvaro’s voice cut through everything, steady, close and anchoring.. always anchoring. “Stay with me.”“I’m here,” I managed, gripping his arm as the contraction tightened, relentless, refusing to ease. “I’m not.. I’m not going anywhere.”“Good,” he said quietly, his hand firm around mine, grounding, unshakable even as everything else felt like it was slipping.“Faster,” Luciano snapped ahead of us, his voice all command, all control, as he pushed guards aside without hesitation. “Open the gates now!”“They’re open!”“T
CHAPTER 100 AMAYA“Careful easy, easy he’s still breathing.”“Get pressure on that wound no, not there, lower!”“Over here, we need help!”The war did not end with silence, not completely, not immediately, because even with Castillo gone and the fighting stilled, the battlefield still breathed in broken, uneven rhythms, filled with voices that no longer shouted orders but clung to life, to hope, to whatever remained after everything had been torn apart. I stood in the middle of it all feeling the weight of it settle deep into my bones as the reality of what we had done, what it had cost, unfolded around me in slow, painful clarity.“We need more healers here!” someone called.“I’m coming hold him steady!”“Don’t close your eyes hey, stay with me !”The urgency hadn’t disappeared it had simply changed.“They’re stabilizing the eastern line,” Luciano said beside me, his voice quieter now, stripped of the sharp edge it had carried throughout the battle but still steady, still holding t
CHAPTER 99 AMAYA“Wait why are they slowin..” Luciano muttered“He’s here,” I said and the battlefield answered.A ripple moved through Castillo’s forces, subtle at first, then undeniable it was the kind of shift that didn’t come from fear or panic but from recognition.It came from something far more dangerous as the fighting around us slowed just enough to create space, not peace, never that, but anticipation.“He’s somewhere around,” Luciano said quietly.“I know,” I replied.“Where?” Javier demanded, his chest rising and falling hard as he wiped blood from his jaw, eyes scanning for the next threat.I didn’t need to look.“I can feel him.”And then…“Amaya.” The voice cut through everything.When I turned, I saw him standing just beyond the fractured lines of the battlefield, untouched by the violence surrounding him, as if the war itself had bent around his presence.“Castillo,” Luciano muttered all the tension in his body snapping tight in his posture.“So this is what you’ve b
AMAYA.The place was too quiet. That was the first thing I noticed. The air smelled of damp earth and trees, but underneath it, there was a metallic tang that made the hair on my arms stand up.The smell of blood.We were here for a duel. A formal challenge between packs to settle the border di
AMAYa.The map on Morrison's tablet led us far away from the Academy. It led us deep into the Dead Woods, a place where the trees grew too close together and the sunlight barely reached the ground.We had been tracking Lord Castillo's digital footprint for two days. The money transfers, the secret
AMAYA.The days after the hockey arena attack were hard. The Academy was busy fixing broken doors and building higher walls. Everyone was on edge. But the biggest problem for me wasn't the monsters hiding in the woods. It was the monster hiding in my own chest: jealousy.It started when the refugee
AMAYA.The air inside the Academy’s rebuilt west wing smelled of fresh cedar and drying plaster, a thin veil of "newness" trying to hide the scars of the recent attacks. But no amount of paint could cover the feeling of being watched.I was standing by the window of our private suite, watching the







