Se connecterMIRA POV
“You look terrible.” That was Dani, at the front desk, not even looking up when I walked in. She had a pen behind her ear and a stack of intake forms in front of her and the particular expression of someone who had already been at work for an hour and had feelings about it. “Thank you,” I said. “Did you sleep?” “Some.” She looked up at me properly then. Did the quick scan that people who knew you well did, top to bottom, checking. “You want to talk about it?” “Not even a little bit.” “Fair enough.” She went back to her forms. “There’s fresh coffee in the back. Actual coffee, not the powder. And someone’s been in the side corridor for about ten minutes. I was going to say something but he’s not doing anything, just standing there.” She paused. “Tall. Dark jacket. Very tall.” I stopped walking. “Did he say anything?” “No. He’s just standing. Should I call someone?” “No,” I said. “It’s fine. I’ll handle it.” She watched me change direction toward the side entrance with an expression that had a lot of questions in it. She kept them all to herself. I really did appreciate that about her. He was exactly where she’d said. The side corridor was narrow, one of those in-between spaces that old buildings always had, with a noticeboard on one wall covered in outdated memos and a row of coat hooks on the other and a window at the far end that looked out onto the car park. Fluorescent light overhead, one of them slightly off, flickering every few seconds in a way that had been happening for two weeks and nobody had fixed. He was standing with his back to me, facing the window, two coffees in his hands. I stood in the doorway and looked at the back of him and took a breath. He turned around before I said anything. Of course he did. “I wasn’t sure what time you came in,” he said, like this was a completely normal thing to be doing at eight-fifteen in the morning. “How did you know I’d use this entrance?” “I didn’t. I tried the front first.” He’d walked around the building. Looking for me. With two coffees. I did not know what to do with that information so I filed it somewhere I could deal with later and kept my face even. He held one out. “I wanted to ask you a few more things.” I looked at the cup. Paper cup from the place on Garner Street, the good one. I took it and lifted it to my mouth before I could think about it too hard and immediately knew. Black. No sugar. I took the sip and swallowed it and kept my face the way I needed it to be. Still. Open. Nothing behind it. He used to know how I took it. Oat milk, one sugar, he’d made it for me so many times he didn’t even ask anymore, he just made it. And now he was standing here with a coffee that was wrong in every way that mattered and he had no idea it was wrong and that was somehow the thing that got me, more than the meeting yesterday, more than his hand on my wrist. This small wrong thing. This ordinary missing piece. I drank it anyway. The thing about carrying someone’s memories was that you also carried the small stuff. Not just the big moments. The ordinary things. The way they took their coffee. The side of the bed they slept on. The specific sound they made when they were reading something that surprised them. Five years of small things living inside me and now he was standing three feet away getting the small things wrong and I had to just stand there and let it happen. “What did you want to ask?” I said. “Your previous pack. Northmere. Why did you leave?” “Opportunity. There was a position open here. Better role.” “You left a full pack to take a healer’s assistant position somewhere else.” “Yes.” “People don’t usually do that.” “Maybe I’m not a usual person.” Something crossed his face. Quick. Gone before I could catch it properly. He looked down at his cup for a beat and then back at me and when he looked back it was just the steady attention again. Even. Careful. “Is there anything about your time here that should have been logged and wasn’t?” he asked. “Anything that slipped through while I was gone.” “No.” “Nothing you think I should know about.” “Nothing.” He nodded. Slow. The flickering light above us did its thing, off and on, off and on. Somewhere in the main centre a door opened and then closed and then the corridor was quiet again except for the sound of water still dripping off the roof outside from last night’s rain. “Can I ask you something?” he said. My stomach went tight. “Sure.” “And I want an actual answer. Not a polite one.” I waited. He took one step toward me. Not aggressive. Not crowding. Just closing the gap by about a foot and I had to physically tell myself not to step back because stepping back would mean something and I couldn’t afford for things to mean things right now. “You keep looking at me,” he said, “like you’re waiting for me to remember something.” The corridor went very still. Or maybe that was just me. “I don’t know what you mean.” “Yes you do.” He said it the same way he said everything, no heat in it, just certain. That certainty was almost the worst part. “Every time I look at you there’s something in your face that’s waiting. I’ve interviewed a lot of people this week and none of them looked at me the way you do.” “Maybe I’m an unusual person,” I said. “Like I told you.” “Mira.” My name. That was it. Just my name in his mouth the same way it had always been, first syllable first, and I felt it the way I always felt it, somewhere behind my ribs where I had no business feeling things. “What do you want me to say?” “The truth.” “I have been telling you the truth.” “Parts of it.” I looked at him straight. I made my face do the thing I needed it to do. Neutral. Open. A person with nothing behind her eyes except what she was showing. “I have never met you before,” I said. “You are my Alpha and I respect you but there is nothing between us to remember. Whatever you think you’re seeing when you look at me, it isn’t that.” He listened to every word. He didn’t move and he didn’t argue and his expression didn’t change at all. He just took it in. All of it. And then he nodded, once, slow. And he reached out and took the coffee back out of my hand. Gently. No rush. Just wrapped his fingers around the cup and lifted it away and I let him because I was too thrown off to do anything else. He turned and walked toward the door at the end of the corridor. Pushed it open. Cold air came in off the car park, that wet morning cold that sat in your lungs for a second before it warmed up. He stopped in the doorway. Didn’t turn around. “My wolf thinks you’re lying,” he said. The door swung shut. I stood in the corridor alone under the flickering light with the noticeboard full of old memos and the coat hooks nobody used and I did not move for a long time. Both coffees were gone. He’d taken them both with him. My hands were empty and the corridor smelled like rain and burnt coffee and I stood there and stared at the closed door and thought about his wolf. What a wolf felt, an Alpha felt. Maybe not in words. Maybe not even clearly. But he would feel it, that low insistent thing, the same flicker I’d felt when his hand closed around my wrist yesterday. His wolf was talking to him about me and he didn’t know what it was saying and I did and I couldn’t tell him and that was the situation I was living in now. I finally moved. Back toward the main centre, past the front desk where Dani didn’t ask anything, down the hall to my shared office with the filing cabinet that didn’t close right. I sat in my chair. I put my hands flat on the desk. His wolf thinks you’re lying. Not he thinks. His wolf thinks. He’d separated them deliberately, said it like that on purpose. Like he already understood that what was happening was coming from somewhere below his own reasoning. He was smart enough to name the thing even when he didn’t fully understand it yet. He had always been like that. That was the thing I’d loved about him first. I thought about the coffee. Black. No sugar. Wrong in the smallest, most ordinary way possible. And somehow that was the thing I couldn’t shake.MIRA POV“How many did you identify in the second wave?” I said.Caius looked at the list on the desk between us. “Fourteen. Three with direct operational involvement. Four who were functionally useful to those three without understanding the full picture. Seven who had ideological alignment but no active role.”“The seven,” I said. “What happens to them?”“Nothing criminal,” he said. “Most of them have done nothing that crosses into accountability territory. They believed in an idea. The idea was wrong and they were used but being wrong is not a pack offence.” He looked at me. “What happens to them depends on what they do next.”“And the four,” I said.“Useful but uninformed,” he said. “That is the harder category.” He leaned back. “They carried messages, kept schedules, passed along communications. None of them knew the content was linked to attacks on allied packs. But they were part of the infrastructure.” He paused. “I cannot treat them the same as the three with direct involveme
MIRA POV“The Alpha’s mate,” Orion said. Casual. Just in passing, in the war room, referring to me to someone who had asked who I was.Like it was the most ordinary description in the world.Like it had always been true.I looked up from my file and he looked at me with that face he had, the one that gave nothing away, and then he went back to whatever he was saying to the other person and the session continued and that was that.The first time.After that it started appearing everywhere. Not announced. Not pointed at. Just present, the way things were present when a pack had made a collective decision and was now living it out in the small ways. A wolf she did not know well stopping her in the corridor and saying something about the Alpha’s mate having a good read on the eastern situation. Someone in the administration team copying her on a communication that went to Caius because she was now on that list.She had not noticed the exact moment it started. That was the thing about pack
MIRA POV“I know,” Sable said.I stared at him.We were at his kitchen table. His place this time, not mine. He had made food the way he always made food when something significant was about to be talked about, like his hands needed something to do while his face decided what to say. The ribs were fully healed. The eyebrow had a small scar now that he would have forever and had completely stopped caring about.“I told you something,” I said.“Yes,” he said. “And I said I know.”“I told you I am moving in with him,” I said. “Into his apartment. That is a significant piece of information that I expected to land in a specific way.”“Mira.” He looked at me with the expression he had when he thought I was being slower than usual about something obvious. “He has been in my living room four times this month.”“He has been in your living room because you two have been …”“Because he keeps coming by,” Sable said. “On various pretexts. And every single time he is here and you walk into the room
MIRA POV“What do you want?” he said.I looked up from the file I had been reading. We were in his apartment, the evening version of it, dinner done and cleared away and both of us doing the thing we had started doing in the evenings which was working in the same space without it needing to be discussed.“What do you mean,” I said.“In the next year,” he said. He had set his own file down. Both hands on the table, giving me his full attention the way he did when the conversation mattered. “Where do you see yourself. What do you want.”I looked at him.“I know what I want,” he said. “I am not asking you to tell me what I want. I want to hear what you want separately. Before my answer is in the room.”That landed in a specific way.He had thought about how to ask this. He had been careful about the order of it, making sure I got to answer first without his version already sitting there shaping mine. That was so him that I had to take a second before I could respond.“Give me a day,” I s
MIRA POV“Everyone already knew,” Dani said.I looked up from the supply form I was signing off. She was in the doorway of my old shared office, leaning against the frame the way she always leaned against frames, coffee in hand, the expression of someone delivering information they had been sitting on for a while and had finally decided was too good to keep.“Knew what,” I said.“About you and the Alpha,” she said. “All of us in the centre. We knew something was happening weeks before anything official. Before you were in the war room or the council sessions or any of it.”I put the pen down. “How.”“Mira.” She gave me the look she reserved for things she considered obvious. “He came in for his post-mission check the day after he arrived. He sat in that exact chair you are sitting in right now. And then a week later you walked in here looking like someone had pulled the floor out from under you and you sat at that desk for forty minutes staring at a two page file.”I stared at her.“W
MIRA POV“How are the mornings?” Sophia said.“The shimmer has been gone for two weeks,” I said. “No visual symptoms at all since the Tuesday I told you about.”“And the phantom reaching?”“Less frequent,” I said. “It used to happen every morning. Now maybe twice a week. Sometimes less.”She made a note. Her office was the same as it always was. The heater, the paper smell, the notebook with its careful handwriting. She had refilled her tea before I arrived and it was still steaming on the desk between us. Mine was the same.“Good,” she said. “That is the expected trajectory.” She set the pen down. “The physical symptoms are resolving the way they should. That is not why I asked you to come in today.”I waited.“I want to ask about the other kind,” she said. “Not headaches or vision. The psychological end of it.” She looked at me steadily. “Whether you can still distinguish fully between your own emotional baseline and the echoes of what you were carrying.”I had been thinking about t
MIRA POV"What exactly is a Memory Wolf?"The council member who asked it was somewhere in his sixties, grey at the temples, with the kind of face that had been doing this job for a long time and was not hostile but was very, very careful. He said it the way he said everything. Measured. Like he wa
MIRA POVI was going to tell him today.That was the decision I had walked out of Sophia’s office with. This evening. Before he reached it on his own. I was going to sit across from him and say it plainly and not make him come to me with that weight and no context.I had the words. I had been build
MIRA POV“Replacement” I said.Sophia did not write anything. She just looked at me.“That was the plan. Not force. Not breaking my ability open or trying to pull the transfer out by pressure. He knew that would not work.” I kept my eyes on the window. The grey afternoon outside had not changed. St
MIRA POV"Start wherever feels right," Sophia said.She had her small notebook open on the desk between us. Her pen was already in her hand. Not hovering, not ready to pounce. Just held, easy, like she had all the time in the world and had decided to give it to me.Her office was the same as the la







