LOGINClaude’s POV.
The door barely clicks shut behind me before Anastasia’s hands are on me.
It’s been less than ten minutes since we slipped into the hidden room near the library, the one students pretend they don’t know about, and she’s already kissing me like she’s been starved for days.
Her lips trail down my jaw, her fingers locking in my shirt, pulling me closer, demanding.
Normally, I’d respond instantly.
Normally, I’d lift her onto the desk and make her forget her own name.
But tonight…
Tonight my blood is boiling for a different reason.
“Claude,” she breathes against my neck, lips warm, needy. “You’re tense.”
I don’t answer. I can’t. My mind is miles away, still back on the field, replaying the moment I wish I could erase.
Elara.
Standing there in that ridiculous scrap of a skirt.
Looking small. Unprepared. Entirely too visible.
And the damn Veyron triplets, especially Cassian, looking at her like she was something carved for their hands alone.
I grind my teeth.
Cassian’s gaze wasn’t casual. It wasn’t friendly or curious.
It was hungry.
I felt it before I saw it, that shift in the air, the flare of his aura, the way his eyes dipped slowly down my sister’s legs and up again, lazy, possessive, like he already knew how she tasted.
A growl builds in my throat at the memory.
Anastasia kisses me harder, sliding her arms around my neck. “Claude… talk to me.”
But I can’t talk. Because if I open my mouth, I’ll say the truth:
Cassian Veyron looked at my sister like she was marked.
And no one, absolutely no one, should look at her like that.
Least of all him.
Anastasia presses against me, chest to chest, heat rolling off her in waves. She’s breathing faster now, little uneven puffs, her skin flushed.
I finally look down, and she’s already unbuttoning the top of her blouse with trembling fingers.
“Anastasia,” I say sharply, catching her wrists.
She freezes.
Her eyes lift to mine, dark, unfocused. There’s a glitter in them tonight, a feverish spark that wasn’t there earlier. Her pulse flutters where I’m holding her.
Something is wrong.
Something is… off.
And I know exactly what it is.
I smelled it the moment she touched me.
But I’m not ready to deal with that too.
“Not tonight,” I mutter.
She stiffens, hurt flashing across her face. “You’re pushing me away?”
“It’s not that.”
“Then what?” She steps closer again, almost desperate. “You can’t stand here with your jaw clenched and pretend you don’t want me.”
“It’s not about wanting,” I say quietly. “You’re… not thinking straight.”
Her breath shudders. “What if I don’t want to think straight?”
I shut my eyes.
Moon above.
She presses her forehead to my chest, fingers curling around the fabric of my shirt. “Claude… please. I’ve been trying to get your attention since we got here. You’re barely even touching me.”
“Because something’s wrong.”
“Wrong?” She laughs breathlessly, but it’s not amused, it’s shaky. “There’s nothing wrong. I just… I just need you.”
Her voice cracks slightly.
My eyes widen.
Yeah.
There it is.
The slip.
I gently lift her face. Her pupils are blown wide, cheeks flushed like she’s been running, lips red from kissing me too long. She’s trembling, but not from fear.
“Anastasia.”
My voice softens. “You’re burning up.”
She swallows. “I’m fine.”
“You’re not.”
She flinches, barely, but enough.
Then she says something that knocks the air out of my chest:
“Claude… don’t leave me like this.”
I curse under my breath.
Moon help me.
She’s not thinking like herself. She’s not speaking like herself. Her hands are slipping under my shirt with shaky determination, her breath hitching like she’s fighting her own body and losing.
I grab her wrists again, not hard, just firm.
“Stop,” I say, sharper than I intend. “You’re in heat.”
She goes still.
Her eyes flutter, as if the words pull a string inside her.
Heat.
She doesn’t deny it. She doesn’t even breathe.
Then, in a whisper that sends fire straight through my bones, she says:
“You think I don’t know that?”
My entire body tenses.
She steps closer, lips brushing my jaw. “You’re the only one I want right now. The only one who can help me. So stop pretending you don’t feel anything.”
I do feel something, everything, in fact, but I’m not thinking about me.
I’m thinking about Elara.
Standing there.
All eyes on her.
Cassian’s eyes on her.
Anastasia kisses my throat, dragging me back to the present with a soft moan.
“Claude… please.”
I almost break.
But she looks up at me, and something in me clicks sharply into place.
She’s shaking. Not seducing. Not teasing.
This is need.
Instinct.
Uncontrolled.
And she’s trying to fight it alone.
I release a slow breath, cupping her cheek gently this time, thumb brushing the warm skin beneath her eye.
“You should’ve told me,” I murmur.
Her voice breaks into a whisper. “I thought you’d push me away.”
Gods.
I pull her in and kiss her, slowly, deeply, grounding her. She melts instantly, fingers fisting my shirt like she’s drowning and I’m the only thing keeping her afloat.
Her heat spikes again, sharp, intoxicating. And the part of me that’s been wound tight since the field finally snaps.
I turn her, lifting her onto the desk in one smooth motion. She gasps, head falling back as I press her down, kissing her harder, deeper.
Her breath comes in quick, frantic waves as she wraps her legs around me. “Claude…”
“Shh.” My voice drops, low and rough. “Let me take care of you.”
She arches, trembling.
“And don’t,” I add, leaning close to her ear, “say another word about finding someone else.”
She shivers violently at that. “I wasn’t going to.”
“Good.”
Because the thought alone; her with someone else, makes my blood flare hot.
My mouth trails down her neck as she clings to me, heat pulsing off her in desperate waves.
I slide my hands under her thighs, pulling her closer. Her breath catches, a soft, helpless sound, and I lose the last of my restraint.
“Claude…” she whispers, voice breaking, “don’t stop.”
“I wasn’t planning to.”
Her fingers dig into my shoulders, and the rest dissolves in heat, her gasps, my breath, the sound of the desk shifting beneath us as I pull her against me, giving her exactly what she needs.
When it’s over, she’s curled against my chest, breathing steady again. The feverish edge has faded, replaced with exhaustion and warmth.
But I’m wide awake.
My thoughts go right back where they started.
Elara.
The field.
Cassian’s eyes.
His smile.
That sharp, knowing gleam.
The way he watched her like he recognized something he had no right to see.
My jaw locks.
Anastasia stirs slightly. “Claude?”
“Go back to sleep,” I whisper, brushing her hair back. “You’re okay.”
She relaxes again.
But I can’t.
Because one truth keeps repeating in my mind:
Cassian Veyron looked at my sister like she belonged to him.
And I will burn this entire academy down before I let that happen.
Dear readers, I hope you’re enjoying the book.😉 What do you think? Will Claude really burn the academy down to protect his sister from his best friends?
Elara’s POV. I haven’t stopped pacing. My footsteps keep dragging patterns into the rug, back and forth, back and forth, like if I stop moving, the weight in my chest will crush me. Claude’s voice still echoes in my skull, rough, angry, disappointed in that way only an older brother can manage. “Stay invisible, Elara.” “Promise me.” My stomach twists. I didn’t mean to pull half the attention of the combat field to myself. I wasn’t even trying to go. Tessa practically dragged me there. And then—gods help me—Cassian Veyron was there, and for one long, breathless second, he had looked at me like no one ever had. I should be thinking about Claude, not Cassian. Claude scolding me. Claude looking like he’d explode. Claude practically herding me off the field. Claude’s warning that kept replaying in my head. But all I can feel is the lingering heat behind Cassian’s stare, the way it sparked under my skin. I stop pacing and press both hands over my face. What is wrong with me?
Claude’s POV. The door barely clicks shut behind me before Anastasia’s hands are on me.It’s been less than ten minutes since we slipped into the hidden room near the library, the one students pretend they don’t know about, and she’s already kissing me like she’s been starved for days. Her lips trail down my jaw, her fingers locking in my shirt, pulling me closer, demanding.Normally, I’d respond instantly.Normally, I’d lift her onto the desk and make her forget her own name.But tonight…Tonight my blood is boiling for a different reason.“Claude,” she breathes against my neck, lips warm, needy. “You’re tense.”I don’t answer. I can’t. My mind is miles away, still back on the field, replaying the moment I wish I could erase.Elara.Standing there in that ridiculous scrap of a skirt.Looking small. Unprepared. Entirely too visible.And the damn Veyron triplets, especially Cassian, looking at her like she was something carved for their hands alone.I grind my teeth.Cassian’s gaze w
Elara’s Pov. If peace had a personality, it would be the quiet hum of my phone screen.I scroll aimlessly, pretending to read, pretending I’m not replaying every second of the ball in my head.Cassian’s hand.His heartbeat.That look that felt like a secret I wasn’t meant to know.I shake the thought away and swipe to the next post on WolfNet, nothing but glittering selfies from other girls at Lunacrest. Perfect smiles, perfect marks, perfect wolves. My chest tightens.Then my door bursts open.“Elara! Tell me you’re not planning to spend the night hiding in here!”Tessa’s voice hits like sunlight. She’s my new roommate, curly red hair, loud laugh, more energy than five full moons combined.I blink at her. “I’m resting.” She stares at my pajamas like they’ve offended her. “Resting? On combat night?”“Combat night?” I echo.She drops her bag dramatically. “Don’t tell me you don’t know. The Alpha training trials? They’re tonight at the field. Only the strongest compete, but the whole
Elara’s POV—Present day. My phone has been vibrating for the past ten minutes, buzzing against the nightstand like it’s personally offended. I already know who it is, because only one person calls this early, and only one person uses anger as a ringtone.When I finally answer, my brother doesn’t bother with hello.“You went to the ball.”I pinch the bridge of my nose. “Good morning to you too, Claude.” “Don’t ‘good morning’ me, Elara. You promised. You said you’d keep your head down, stay invisible…” “I did stay invisible,” I interrupt quickly, forcing a calm I don’t feel. “No one knows it was me.”There’s a pause. I can practically hear him grinding his teeth on the other end. “You think hiding behind a silver mask counts as invisible? Everyone’s talking about the girl who danced with Alpha Cassian Veyron.”“Exactly,” I say softly. “They’re talking about the girl in the mask. Not me.”Silence again. A heavy one this time.He sighs, that long, tired kind that makes guilt crawl up m
Elara’s Pov- 35 hours earlier. If happiness had a sound, it would be the rustling of suitcases and the clatter of shoes on marble floors.“Careful with that one!” I call out as one of the maids lifts my third trunk, the one with my books and sketchpads. “That’s fragile!”“Yes, Miss Elara,” she says, breathless but smiling.My room looks like a storm of silk and sunlight, dresses everywhere, ribbons scattered, the scent of fresh lavender and excitement in the air. I haven’t felt this alive in years. Maybe ever.Lunacrest Academy.I whisper the name in my head like a spell.The place where legends are made. The academy for the strongest wolves of the realm. And somehow, me, Elara Vayne, the girl without a wolf, got in.“Mother!” I shout, practically running to the mirror to check my reflection. My curls fall in soft waves down my back, and for the first time in a long while, I don’t hate what I see.My mother appears in the doorway, radiant and composed, holding a folded cloak in her a
Lucien’s Pov. I’ve lived my best life in solitude.Silence has always been easier than conversation, control easier than chaos.My brothers never understood that.Riven spends his nights boxing his punching bag just to prove he still can. Cassian spends his pretending he’s never been broken at all.And me?I study the pieces.The candle beside me flickers, painting shadows across the open book on my lap. I’m supposed to be reading some forgotten historian’s thoughts on wolf lineage, but my eyes keep tracing the same paragraph over and over again.I can still hear the music from last night.The laughter. The whispers. The sound of Cassian’s pulse, faint but real, after years of nothing.It shouldn’t have been possible.We don’t have heartbeats. Not since the curse. Not since the moon turned her face away from us.I glance toward the balcony, where Riven is pacing again. His jaw tightens every time the memory crosses his mind.Cassian lies sprawled on the couch, throwing grapes into hi







