Mag-log inMara
He bit down like it was nothing.
For half a second I stared at his hand, at the dark line of blood that welled up and ran over his knuckles. Even though I just watched him do it, my brain still tried to file it under normal injuries. Bar fight. Stupid guy showing off. But nothing about him was normal, and the way the blood smelled—sharp, clean, almost metallic—made my stomach pitch.
“Are you insane?” I snapped.
His eyes didn’t leave mine. “Open your mouth.”
“No.”
He lowered his hand, blood dripping onto the gravel between our boots. “Then you’ll run.”
“I might,” I said, even though I knew he’d catch me. “Or I’ll scream. Or I’ll do something that ruins your night.”
“That watcher will shoot you if you scream,” he said, voice flat.
The words hit harder than the cold. My gaze flicked past his shoulder again. The figure by the truck hadn’t moved. Still watching. Still waiting.
I forced my chin up. “So what, you’re saving me by doing… whatever this is?”
“Yes.”
“That’s not an explanation. Why? How does keeping my alive benefit you anyhow?”
“It’s a solution.”
I hated that my hands were shaking. I hated that my body wanted to listen to his tone, like it recognized command before it recognized logic.
He stepped closer, crowding my space. If I tried to slip past him, he’d block me. If I tried to swing, he’d catch it. He didn’t have to touch me to prove I was outmatched; the certainty in his posture did it for him.
“Back up,” I said.
He didn’t. “I’m not hurting you.”
“You already broke my window.”
“Glass is replaceable, your life is not.”
I barked a laugh, short and angry. “Oh, great. That makes me feel so much better.”
His gaze dropped to my lips again. “Open.”
“Make me.”
His jaw flexed, and something rough moved under his voice. Not a growl this time—controlled, but close. “Don’t test me.”
“Don’t order me around.”
His eyes flashed brighter, gold turning hard. “You’re in my territory. You’re a witness. And you’re alive because I’m standing here taking responsibility for you.”
“Responsibility,” I repeated. “Is that what you call claiming people?”
He went still for a beat, like the word irritated him. “This isn’t a claim.”
“Then what is it?”
“A tether,” he said. “A temporary one.”
“Temporary,” I echoed. “Like handcuffs are temporary.”
He didn’t smile. “If you leave here unbound, you’ll do what humans do. You’ll call someone. You’ll tell someone. And then you’ll die.”
“And if I let you… tether me, I won’t?”
“You’ll stay breathing long enough for me to move you to safety.”
I swallowed. “Where’s ‘safety’?”
“Packhouse.”
“Absolutely not.”
His hand rose again, blood glistening. He held it up between us like a line being drawn. “You don’t get to negotiate the destination.”
I took a step back. My spine hit the side of my car. Cold metal.
“You can’t just—” My voice cracked with fury. “You can’t just decide I belong to you because you feel like it.”
His gaze locked on mine, unblinking. “I can. And I did.”
Something inside me flared—anger, pride, the part of me that had spent her whole life refusing to be handled. I lifted my chin. “Try it and I’ll bite you back.”
For the first time, I saw it. A flicker of surprise. Not fear. Not doubt. Just… interest, sharp.
Then it was gone, buried under control.
“Open,” he said again, softer, and somehow that was worse. Like he wasn’t threatening now—he was expecting obedience.
I clenched my teeth. “No.”
His other hand came up, fingers brushing my jaw. Not gentle, but not cruel either. Firm. He tilted my face, forcing me to look at him instead of the shadows, instead of the watcher, instead of the door that could have been my escape.
“You don’t understand what you’re tangled in,” he said.
“I understand plenty,” I hissed. “You’re a wolf in a man suit and you’re about to drug me with your blood.”
“That’s not how it works.”
“Then explain it.”
His breath came out slow. “My blood carries my scent. My authority. If you’re marked with it, the pack won’t touch you without coming through me.”
“And if they want to come through you?”
His eyes narrowed. “Then they’ll have to try.”
That should have reassured me. It didn’t. It sounded like a dare.
My pulse beat hard in my throat. I could feel the watcher’s presence like pressure at my back. I could hear the bar’s music. I could hear my own breathing, too fast.
“Look,” I said, forcing my voice into something calmer. “I’m not trying to start a war with your… pack. I just want to go home.”
His mouth tightened. “Home is unsafe.”
“That’s not your call.”
“It is tonight.”
He pressed his thumb at the corner of my mouth. The contact sent a jolt through me that made no sense. Heat, quick and sharp, like my skin had decided to betray me. I hated that too.
“Stop doing that,” I snapped.
“Doing what?”
“Touching me like you own me.”
“I’m touching you like you’re about to get killed,” he said. “Pick a better fight.”
I tried to pull my head away. His fingers tightened, holding me in place. “Let go.”
“No.”
My fear turned into a cold, focused thing. If I couldn’t run, I could still control one choice. “If I do this, I want terms.”
His eyes didn’t change. “You don’t have leverage.”
“I do,” I said. “I have what I saw. I have what I heard. Crowe. Fire. Purge. Council. And I have a recorder running.”
His gaze flicked, just once, to my jacket pocket. A tell. Confirmation.
“Turn it off,” he said.
“After.”
He exhaled, slow. “You’re playing with your life.”
“Maybe, but it’s my life. Not yours.
For a long second, we stared at each other—me furious and shaking, him steady and lethal. Then his hand with the blood rose again.
“Open,” he said, and this time it sounded like the last warning before force.
I swallowed. My throat felt tight. My whole body screamed no, but the watcher was still there and Gage was still between me and whatever came next.
Fine. I could cooperate without surrendering completely.
I parted my lips just enough to breathe.
His thumb slid against my lower lip, and the touch made my pulse jump. Then he pressed his bleeding hand to my mouth.
Warmth hit my tongue. Metallic. Wrong. Real.
Every nerve in my body lit up like someone flipped a switch. Heat rolled through my chest and down my spine. My knees went weak. I grabbed his forearm without thinking, fingers digging into his skin like I needed something solid.
His eyes widened.
Not much. Just enough to prove he hadn’t expected this reaction from his weird… tethering thing.
The air between us thickened. My skin prickled. My heartbeat stuttered, then sped up, then changed—like it found a new rhythm.
Something snapped into place inside me.
Not a feeling. Not a thought.
A connection.
Gage went rigid, his hand still at my mouth, his breath catching hard. The gold in his eyes flared, and the color drained from his face so fast it looked like someone yanked the blood out of him.
He went white-still.
GageI brought her in through the back entrance because the front hall has too many eyes and too many mouths. Mason met me at the threshold, jaw tight, nose flaring at the blood on my hands and the silver tang on Mara’s skin.“She’s hurt,” I said.“I can see that,” Mason snapped, then caught himself. “Alpha. Wren’s ready.”Wren didn’t waste time on greetings. The medical room lights were bright and cruel, the kind that make everything look worse. Mara sat on the edge of the exam table, sleeve pushed up, forearm mottled red where the silver had kissed her. She was pale, angry, and trying not to show either. That stubbornness might keep her alive.Wren pressed gauze to the cut and Mara hissed through her teeth. “Ow.”“It’s silver,” Wren said, matter-of-fact, like she was explaining a splinter. Then she paused—just a fraction too long—and her eyes narrowed at the angry red blooming under the wrap. “It’s supposed to hurt.”Mara’s glare snapped to me like I’d personally dipped the blade. I
MaraThe gunshot cracked so close my ears rang. I flinched hard behind the truck, one hand clamped over my mouth like that could keep me alive. Gravel kicked up near the rear tire. Doyle yelped, high and wet.Gage didn’t flinch. He shifted his body tighter over mine, shoulders blocking the line of fire. “Don’t move,” he breathed, and it wasn’t just a warning—it was control.I hated that my spine listened.Another shot snapped. Metal pinged. Something punched through the truck bed with a dull thud. The smell hit a second later: burnt powder, oil, and that sharp metallic tang that didn’t belong in a human gun. Silver. Like someone had soaked the bullets in it on purpose.“What is he shooting?” I whispered.Gage’s jaw flexed. His eyes stayed on the open lot. “Something meant for me.”“And me?” I asked, because my voice refused to behave.He didn’t answer. He reached back, grabbed my wrist, and pulled me along the ground toward the shadow under the feed store’s loading ramp. His grip was
GageI don’t like bringing her into town, and she knows it.Mara stood in the cabin’s kitchen doorway in my hoodie, arms crossed like she lived there. The view of her in my clothes made my skin hot. Put thoughts in my head I had to shake away.The ward stone in the baseboard killed her signal and kept her here. The bond kept tugging anyway, reacting every time her gaze slid over me like a challenge.“You said one lead,” she said.“I said you come with me to verify one lead,” I corrected. “Not that you get to freelance.”She lifted her chin. “Same thing.”“It’s not.” I checked the bag: cuffs, zip ties, gauze, silver wrap, burner, keys. Then I shut it. “Rules.”Her eyes narrowed. “Let me guess—don’t breathe.”“Rule one: you stay within arm’s reach in public.”“I’m not a toddler.”“You’re a target,” I said. “Rule two: you don’t speak unless I ask you a direct question.”She opened her mouth anyway.I stepped closer until the bond flared and her breathing hitched. “Rule three: if I put my
SilasA human in my packhouse should have been simple. You scare her, you silence her, you move on.Gage made it complicated the moment he put his blood on her mouth and then acted shocked that she answered. Now every wolf with a nose is smelling a bond that doesn’t fit the story, and every elder is pretending their interest is “protocol” instead of opportunity.I didn’t need to see Mara up close to understand what she was. I’d heard her in the corridor and watched her keep her chin up while half the pack measured where they’d put their hands if they were allowed. Not prey. Not obedient. The kind of human who thinks rules are suggestions.And the worst part? She was breathtaking. Mara was one of the most beautiful women I'd ever laid eyes on. The kind of woman who didn't believe she was worth looking at, but was incredibly wrong. How could someone who looked like that be such a pain in the ass?I shut the door to my office and slid the deadbolt. My space sat on the perimeter of pack g
MaraThe packhouse looked normal from the outside in the way a trap can look like a home if you don’t know what you’re seeing. Wide porch. Warm lights. Trucks. Woods pressed in on every side like the whole place had been built to vanish.Gage had agreed to a “brief return” for one reason: I wouldn’t stop asking what the crescent-and-slash meant, and I’d started asking loud. Fifteen minutes, he’d said. Escort. No wandering. “Eyes forward,” Mason told me, and I almost laughed at the irony of being told not to look while every living thing here was looking at me.Two wolves flanked me as we crossed the gravel. Not guards, they’d insist. “Escort.” Like changing the word made it less obvious I could be grabbed at any second. Mason stayed half a step ahead, scanning the yard like he expected trouble.The moment I stepped inside, the air hit different—warmer, thicker, saturated with scent. Coffee. Laundry detergent. Sweat. A metallic bite like weapons cleaned too often. Under it, wolf. Pack.
GageThey didn’t summon me to the elders’ den because they wanted my input. They summoned me because they wanted my compliance.The den sat behind locked doors and a warded threshold, carved into the packhouse like a bunker dressed as tradition. Voss was already seated at the long table, hands folded, expression neutral. Maren lingered near the cabinet of records, watching me like she was taking notes. Two other elders sat on the council channel, their voices tinny through the speaker on Voss’s desk.I shut the door behind me and didn’t sit until Voss gestured.“Alpha Gage,” Voss said.“Elder,” I replied.The bond tugged the moment my mind brushed Mara’s name. Off-site. Warded. Locked down. Alive. Facts I’d repeated all morning. They didn’t settle the wolf under my skin. He kept pacing anyway, like he knew she was a thread someone else wanted to cut.Maren’s eyes flicked to my throat. “You smell like her.”“I smell like blood and dirt,” I said. “We had a breach.”“We had an exposure,”
Mara By morning, my body felt like it had been rewired overnight.I wasn’t sick. I was turned up—sounds too crisp, skin too sensitive, my pulse too quick. The bond tugged whenever I thought about Gage, like my ribs had grown a compass and it only pointed at him.I hated that.I tried to tell mysel
GageThe pack grounds should’ve sounded normal. Instead, when my truck rolled through the gate, the noise thinned into that quiet, where everyone is talking, but they’re talking about you.Heads turned. Sparring stopped. Even the younger wolves who liked to pretend they weren’t watching their Alpha
MaraGage snatched the photo out of my hand and shoved it in his pocket. I started to question him but he stormed away in perfect Gage fashion. I decided not to push the subject.. yet.The cabin was too clean and too quiet, built for people who needed to disappear. Gage called it a safe room. I cal
MaraGage didn’t speed.That should’ve been reassuring. Instead it made me itch, because his burner had just lit up with a threat and he was still driving like we weren’t being hunted. Hands steady on the wheel. Eyes on mirrors. No wasted motion.The cab smelled like him—soap, leather, and that sha







