LOGINThe door stuck. I put a shoulder into it, and it gave with a groan.
The courtyard beyond lay dark except for the moon’s soft glow. Thankfully, the music didn’t reach me here, only the sounds of frogs and crickets.
I stepped outside and breathed in a huge gulp of the night air.
The fountain in the center of the courtyard sprayed water as the droplets hit the pool at its base. Around me the pack lands spread for miles and miles.
Orielle!
His wolf. Reaching.
Orielle surged up inside me, ears pricked, tail high, ready to run back. Mine! Let me go to him.
My chest lurched with her.
“We can’t,” I whispered out loud, clutching the fountain’s edge until my knuckles ached. “He doesn’t want us Ori.”
His wolf wants me. Ori’s voice rang fierce with certainty. He called my name.
My tears blurred the fountain’s shimmer. “But his human mouth rejected us,”
I choked. “There’s nothing we can do.”
Orielle whined, the sound so full of longing, before she curled small again. Tears cooled on my cheeks and left my skin tight.
When I could finally breathe, my hands were shaking. I flattened them against the stone.
The door to the ballroom opened, and music spilled into the night, voices raised in laughter. I turned my head toward the festivities that already forgot about me.
Footsteps followed. Hard, confident steps. Another set, light and quick, keeping pace. Murmurs drifted between them: joy, relief, the sound of two who had found each other.
I stayed very still. They didn’t even glance my way as they passed into the night, too wrapped up in their own happiness.
When their voices faded, I pushed myself up on unsteady legs.
Orielle sulked silent in the corner of my chest, and I didn’t try to rouse her.
Wane Hall, the only place that had ever taken me in. The benches out front were worn smooth by years of bodies seeking rest, and I sank onto one, pulling my arms tight around myself.
The door beside me opened softly.
I scrubbed the last of the tears from my cheeks with the heel of my hand and pressed my mouth flat.
“Sori? Are you—do you need water?”
It was only another Wane. A girl about ten, hair pinned in a practical knot, flour dusted on her sleeve. She held a cup as if to offer it, then hesitated and hugged it closer to her apron. The effort in her eyes said she wanted to help, even if all she had was a glass of water.
“I’m fine,” I said. The words came out thin and wrong.
She nodded.
“Thank you,” I managed, trying to acknowledge her kindness.
Her gaze flicked to my hair, my face, my bodice, then politely away. I must have looked as run over as I felt.
“The night air’s colder than it feels,” she said rubbing her arm with her free hand, and left before I had to find anything else to say.
I stood until my legs steadied.
I slipped through the door behind her and tiptoed into the hallway that led to the stairs. It smelled of soap, old pine, and the stew the matron made.
A lamp burned low on the table by the front door because she always left one lit when anyone was out late. A basket of mending sat beside it, the topmost shirt pinned neatly where a cuff had torn.
From the far room came the murmuring of voices. A chair creaked. I stepped carefully, avoiding the boards that creaked under my feet.
In the narrow mirror by the stairs, a girl in a silver dress looked back. Her eyes were swollen at the corners. Her lips pursed. The bodice was blotched where tears had dried. The hem was marked where dirt scraped it.
“You’re back early,” the matron said softly from the end of the hall, as if she had been there the whole time and I’d simply been too full of my own misery to see her.
“Yeah,” I said.
She squinted. She didn’t ask anything else. She just opened her arms, the way she had for every child who needed someone.
I went, because I could. Because I had to.
Her shoulder smelled of flour, wool, and the cinnamon she hid in the top cupboard for special baking. I didn’t cry again. I had used that up. The emptiness after wasn’t better, but it was quieter.
“Kitchen,” she said after a minute, patting my back once, brisk again. “You’ll eat. Then you’ll sleep. In the morning you won’t go to work; I’ll tell Gamma Rellan you’ve a fever. In two days, you’ll decide whether to be angry or sad. You may do both if you can manage the time.”
I huffed something that might have been a laugh if anything in me could lift.
“I have time,” I replied.
She kissed my hair, then turned me toward the kitchen as if I were a lost little pup. The little stove glowed low. A bowl and spoon waited on the table as if she’d set them before I left.
Food tasted like nothing, but it filled a void.
When I climbed the narrow stairs to the dormitories, my eyes got heavy. Maybe sleep would be kind to me and pull me under so I couldn’t think anymore.
Something burned under my ribs. It felt like it would for a while, I had no idea how long it took for a bond to go away. My wolf lay there too, bruised and beaten down, silent. I didn’t know what I would do with either tomorrow, or the day after, or the day after that.
I lay on my side and stared at the slice of moon that fit between the sill and the eave and tried to picture the ballroom now, with the lights and smiles. I couldn’t; only laughter and humiliation were etched in my brain.
My throat ached. My eyes burned for one more second and then calmed, and sleep finally pulled my lids closed.
But then memories haunted my dreams:
“I, Lucien Veyrac of the Silverpine Pack, heir to the Alpha’s line, reject you, Soraya Wane, as my mate.”
Laughter followed.
I ran and ran, then ran again.
Over and over.
The nursery didn’t feel right. I know Halia gave me her suggestions as a mother and grandmother, but the more I looked at it, something felt off.I couldn’t pinpoint it, though.I dragged the new glider Gabriel bought for me, and the baby swing, and the stroller, and the car seat, into the center of our room so I could look at Kali’s room without all the extra clutter.“Ah,” I sighed. “That’s it. The crib should be on that wall and the dresser where the crib is.”The crib was on wheels, so that was easy enough to roll out of the way. Once that was done, I lifted one corner of the bureau and inched it out, then walked to the opposite side of the waist-high set of drawers to repeat the process.I would move it little by little.Just as I had the second corner lifted, Elara swept into the room and shrieked like only Elara could.“What are you dooo-ing!” she cried, rushing over to me as if I’d fallen down a cliff. “Are you alright?
Life was relatively quiet since the New Moon Dinner.Too quiet. It felt like the calm before the storm, but I knew the storm was right at our doorstep.Bear’s wolves had settled in without incident. Bear and Maw themselves adjusted easily to life outside their frigid lands. After the email exchange with the High Council, they decided to make the trip back to Wintermere after the dinner with the other Packs, just to keep up appearances.They were due back in a couple of days. Maw wanted to be here before Sori went into labor.Sid hadn’t uncovered where the HC spies were around town yet, but he was mostly sure it didn’t come from inside the Pack. Unless they didn’t use Coralridge servers for communication. He said that wouldn’t be unusual to use something like public WiFi to further mask their back and forth.
The workers quickly pocketed their cash and practically ran out of the villa at the end of their workday. It was the start of the weekend and I’m sure they wanted to go spend it much faster than they earned it.I was thoroughly impressed by their workmanship. I couldn’t tell exactly where I’d put the hole in the wall. Bina would be pleased when she got back from the ragtag coven meeting she was now a part of.Her magick was getting stronger. Still nothing new on the scrying front, but that was what it was. She even paired up with one of her friends and tried, the crystal still pointed right to where we were.I grabbed a couple of beer bottles from the fridge and made my way back out to the patio. The sun neared the horizon, casting the sky in reds, yellows, and oranges.I handed a bottle to the old grizzled wolf shifter, Lin
I sat down at the table while the applause still roared for my lovely mate, whose cheeks were a bright red from embarrassment.I purposely didn’t tell her about the speech, letting her think the only fanfare was the receiving line. It was a simple speech, but it still made her blush.Mission accomplished.We sat in tables of six in one section of the room, leaving the rest for mingling and dancing once the dinner was over. Nothing elaborate, just enough time for the Twelve to get their time in with our new Luna, and each other.Halia intentionally seated Kane’s party with us primarily to keep them away from the prying Alphas of the Twelve so they could at least enjoy dinner before the grilling started.“I’m glad Rodgrick didn’t push it and try to tag along,” I began as the servers swarmed the
This was it, the moment I’d been dreading for weeks.Maybe he won’t recognize me.I wanted to hold on to that thought, but knew the likelihood of that was slim to none.I heard Seith call out. “Kane, welcome to Coralridge.”“Seith, good to see you, man,” the deep voice replied.It was then I realized it wasn’t Victor I should have dreaded; it was Kane. I remembered that voice from inside the SUV when they snatched me off the street.He was there.I swallowed hard.I wanted to run, plead illness, go to bed.But I couldn’t do any of those things without calling more attention to myself.“May I introduce you to our Alpha and
I smoothed the front of my gown, trying to get my pulse under control. This was my first official event as a hostess and Luna.Everyone had arrived by noon, but settled into their rooms for the afternoon to rest before the party. Except for Silverpine, they were arriving right before the festivities started.I’d been practicing my ‘nice to meet you’ expression for when Victor passed through the receiving line. I decided to go with a black wig to completely change my hair from the blonde waif that he rescued or the red dye the matron left at the safehouse.Elara offered to make me an herbal tea to help me relax, but I was too close to my due date for me to feel comfortable ingesting anything.I reached for my moonstone jewelry in the safe, remembering when Gabriel gave it to me. I’d bought him some moonstone cufflinks around the same time. Neither of us knew the significance of the moonstone and the Luna-kissed at the time.I
I slowly blinked my eyes open, morning two in my new bedroom. I tried to move, but there was a heavy weight thrown across my waist.Then I registered soft snoring at my ear.Gabriel came home, slipped into bed, and somehow, I slept through it.I was doing everything in my pow
The upstairs was empty; I could hear Sam and Elara downstairs in the kitchen. I scooted across the hallway barely wrapped in a towel… old habits die hard.I held my towel firmly in place, even in the privacy of my room. Again, old habits.I closed my bedroom door and leaned a
I stepped up onto the porch behind Sam. Behind me was the rest of the gang, Seith, Nakoa, and Halia.I hadn’t seen Sori in a couple of days, and it was making me anxious. I recognized it for what it was… the bond. I certainly didn’t know her well enough for me to be this
“Thanks, I appreciate it,” I said into the speakerphone before I pressed the button to end the call to the granary in Riverton, the town to the west, bordering Silverpine’s land.During the last snowstorm, there was a leak in the roof of our silo, and the grain molded.Now we had to







