Dr. Mira Lane was never meant to return to the world of wolves. After surviving the night her pack was slaughtered, she buried her past and her pain, becoming one of the best trauma surgeons in the human world. She doesn’t shift. She doesn’t trust. And she definitely doesn’t believe in mates. Until the night he is brought into her ER. Alpha Grey Maddox. He was bleeding, unconscious, and radiating the same wild power she’s tried to forget. He’s the leader of the very pack that once betrayed hers. And fate just marked him as her mate. Saving him means more than stitching wounds. It means exposing her secrets. Reawakening the wolf she swore she’d never be again. And stepping back into a world where power is everything… and love can kill. Grey is dangerous, controlling, and loyal to a war she wants no part in. But the bond between them burns hotter each day and when enemies begin hunting Mira for reasons she doesn’t understand, Grey may be the only one who can protect her. But he wants more than her trust. He wants her submission. Her loyalty. Her heart. And Mira must decide: will she run from the mate who could break her or fight for the only love that ever felt real?
View MoreThe smell of blood was never supposed to bring comfort.
But for Dr. Mira Lane, it grounded her. It was the smell of order, of crisis she could control, nothing like the chaos she’d left behind years ago. Nothing like the smell of scorched fur, burning pine, and betrayal that haunted her nightmares. Here in the ER, blood meant she still had a chance to save someone. And that was all she had left to live for. She pulled her gloves tight and pressed the back of her wrist to her forehead. It was nearly midnight. The last trauma had been a car crash. A teenager survived. Mira stitched his artery like it was nothing. Because she was good. One of the best. And she had to be. The doors to the trauma bay slammed open with a force that made every hair on her neck stand up. “Male patient! Multiple stab wounds! Found unconscious near the warehouses!” a nurse shouted, pushing through the swinging doors as the gurney rolled in. “Vitals?” Mira demanded, already moving into position. “BP 80 over 40 and dropping. Pulse thready. GCS three.” “Get me a unit of O-neg, start fluids wide open, and someone page the OR!” The body on the gurney was massive, easily over six feet, thick with muscle, though most of it was obscured by torn clothing soaked in blood. But then Mira caught the scent. She froze. It wasn’t just blood. It was something ancient. Earthy. Crisp like winter air. Tinged with ash and moonlight. Wolf. Her stomach lurched violently. “No,” she whispered to herself. But she couldn’t move. She stepped closer. Her fingers reached out almost on instinct. When they brushed his neck to find a pulse, everything stopped. For just one breath. And then her heart kicked. Hard. Desperate. Linked. Her lungs seized. Heat rushed through her spine like liquid fire. Her wolf, buried so deep for so long, surged upward like it had been waiting for this exact moment. Mira snapped her hand back, breath hitching. No. This wasn’t happening. She hadn’t shifted in over five years. She’d suppressed every instinct, every tether to the world she’d once belonged to. He couldn’t be…. “Name?” she asked sharply. “None,” the nurse said. “No ID. Found alone. Knife wounds and… claw marks?” Mira flinched. Claw marks. She turned back to the patient and began cutting away his shirt. Her hands worked quickly, but her brain moved slower, unwilling to piece together the impossible. His skin was littered with deep lacerations, wounds that should have killed a human. Yet… “They’re closing,” she murmured, stunned. “What?” another nurse asked. “These cuts. They’re healing.” And he wasn’t intubated yet, but suddenly his chest was rising easier. His color was returning. He was recovering….too fast. Which could only mean one thing. He wasn’t human. Mira’s hands trembled as she reached for the suture tray. “I’ll stabilize him enough for surgery. Prep the OR and keep him under heavy sedation” His hand snapped up like a lightning strike. Gloved fingers around her wrist. Tight. Burning. Gasps filled the room. Mira looked down and saw his eyes open. Golden. Glowing. Wolf eyes. And yet,....so full of pain. Recognition. And something far more terrifying. Possession. “Don’t run from me,” he rasped. “Mira.” She went cold. He knew her name. How could he know her name? “Mira, what do we do?” a nurse asked. She didn’t answer. She couldn’t. She stared at the man lying half-dead before her, and for the first time in years, she felt fear. Not of him. But of what he might mean. Her wolf wasn’t just awake. It was screaming. Then his eyes rolled back, and he went still again. End of Chapter One ……………………… Who is this wounded stranger who knows Mira’s name? Why is the mate bond triggering after all these years? And what secrets has Mira buried deep enough to shatter her now?The voice echoed again. It was soft, young, and unmistakably laced with the Circle’s cold programming.“Mira Lane… I’ve been waiting for you.”The black corridor pulsed once with that static-choked whisper, and Echo flinched behind Mira, instinctively pressing closer. But Mira didn’t flinch. She knew better than to believe anything was what it seemed down here.“Who’s there?” she demanded, scanning the dark.A soft light blinked to life ahead. A projection, not of code or file but of a child.No older than seven. Pale skin. White hair. Eyes too sharp for innocence.Mira’s breath caught.Because the girl had her face.“You’re not real,” Mira said slowly.“I’m more real than you are right now,” the child replied, tilting her head. “I’m the version they perfected. The one who never doubted. Never broke.”Echo whispered, “What… is that?”“A splinter construct,” Mira muttered. “They built a model of me. A predictive one. Probably embedded with my neurological base code.”The child nodded c
The door to the next corridor hissed open before Mira touched it.Not mechanical. Responsive.She glanced down at her cuff, still humming with residual access. The drive in her pocket pulsed once, like a heartbeat. It wasn’t just a tool anymore. It was synced to her. Or maybe she was synced to it.“Come on,” Mira said. Her voice was low, focused. “Stay close.”Echo followed silently, her breath shallow, feet light on the metal grate floor. The corridor ahead stretched into flickering red light, no guards, no traps. Just silence.Too much silence.Mira’s wolf stirred beneath her skin, restless.She reached the next panel, another locked terminal. But this time, when she pressed her palm to it, the screen lit up without protest.Welcome, Subject Luna-13. Clearance Level: Internal Override.Echo’s breath caught. “They’re letting you in?”“No,” Mira murmured. “They’re trying to see how far I’ll go.”She pulled up the latest node - CORE-SIM BRANCH 09, the one she’d unlocked using her fathe
The lights obeyed her.For a breathless moment, that realization thrummed through Mira’s veins louder than the alarms outside. The simulation had flickered, reformed, then yielded. Not to the Circle’s commands, but to hers.Red Moon. Luna. Reprogrammed.Echo stared up at her like she was seeing something divine.“You changed the system,” she whispered.“No,” Mira said softly, stepping back to the console, “I’m becoming the system.”The drive pulsed gold where it was still plugged into the terminal. Lines of code streamed across the screen, faster now. Reactive. Mira could feel them inside her too, like a second heartbeat synced with her bloodline.A system prompt flashed:Mirror Node Stabilized. New Access Granted. Branch: Echo SyncMira inhaled sharply. “They’re trying to adapt. Build an interface through you now.”“Through me?” Echo’s voice was brittle. “Why?”“Because you’re bonded to me,” Mira said. “They designed you as a tether. Now they’re using that link to stabilize what they
The lights above flickered again, this time, not from failure, but indecision. The system didn’t know how to respond to Mira anymore.She wasn’t running. She wasn’t hiding.She was rewriting."That drive changed everything," she murmured, watching the ripple of red and gold pulse through the console screen. “They thought I’d use it to escape. But I’m staying.”Echo shifted beside her, pulling Mira’s coat tighter around her trembling shoulders. “You said we were going to find the core server and bring it down.”“We are,” Mira said. “But first… we overwrite the last chain.”She held her wrist up again, the cuff interface glowing with mirrored static. The signal she’d injected was stabilizing, spreading. She could feel it crawling through the Circle’s dreamnet. Not crashing it, yet. Just bending it. Warping it from within.The virus was learning.And so was she.“Is that… new?” Echo asked, pointing to the center console.A single node had appeared on the map interface: MIRROR-NODE-01. It
The abandoned lab was quiet, but Mira could feel the storm pressing against its walls.She crouched over the ancient terminal, connecting the drive she’d taken. Echo leaned against a cabinet nearby, recovering but watchful. Her eyes were still too wide, too hollow. The girl had seen more horror than most adults ever would."You said this could get us out," Echo whispered.Mira nodded, fingers flying over the cracked keys. "It can. But it can also do more than that. If I can reverse the neural encoding from the inside... I might be able to crash their whole cognitive grid.""You mean like a virus?"Mira nodded. "Like justice."The screen blinked, then loaded rows of encrypted files. Names. Project titles. Her name; Luna-13 flashed in red at the top of the list.Mira swallowed hard.Echo stepped beside her. "Are you okay?""No," Mira said. "But I’m ready."Before she could go deeper, a sharp, searing pulse ignited behind her eyes. She gasped, clutching the terminal for balance. The scre
Mira collapsed against the chamber wall, bloodied but conscious.The alarms hadn’t stopped screaming since she ripped out the IV. Somewhere in the upper levels, systems were failing. Not because she escaped physically, but because she broke the sequence. Their perfect loop.And now?She was writing her own."Subject Luna-13 has overridden chamber input," a voice crackled through the emergency feed. "Containment stability: compromised."Good, Mira thought. Let it all come down.The emergency lockdown should’ve sealed her in again but it didn’t. The system faltered. Doors flickered, unsure. It was the blood. Her blood. Her Red Moon blood. The tech didn’t know how to respond.She looked across the chamber at Echo. Still in the pod. Still alive. But the monitors were spiking."Hold on," Mira whispered.She didn’t waste time trying to brute-force the pod. Instead, she staggered to the terminal behind it, a Circle access console synced with biometric locks.Mira pressed her palm against it.
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