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Catherine's POV
My presence did not belong here. It never did.
I should have listened to that tight, heavy feeling in my chest when I picked up the folder and told myself this was a bad idea. Instead, I told myself I was being dramatic and that a good Luna did not sulk. A good Luna supported her husband.
So I came.
The moment I stepped into the packhouse, I knew better.
Lightning flashed outside, bright enough to light the hall in a brief, stark glare. For a second, my reflection appeared in a framed picture on the wall, looking pale and tired, hair damp from the rain, a folder pressed to my chest like a shield. I looked like a stranger in my own packhouse.
I shut the door behind me and stepped into the narrow balcony that ran along the second floor.The storm had picked up, sheets of water slanting across the grounds, wind shoving cold air under my clothes.
“…Good thing she did not insist on coming tonight. Seeing her face would have ruined my mood before the event even started.”
I heard Simon’s voice through the open window of his office. Almost immediately, I stilled, one foot half-raised, my body caught between going forward and turning back.
The storm should have drowned their conversation. Yet, Simon’s voice was as clear as day.
Heat surged into my cheeks. The bitterness in his tone slid under my skin.
I sank into a crouch beside the outer wall, staying in the narrow strip of shadow where the broken security camera could not see me.
Then, someone laughed. “That is harsh. She is still your wife.”
“She is my wife on paper,” Simon replied. “You know very well I had no interest in marrying her. My father pushed the match because her family’s territory is useful. If I had actually been given a choice, I would never have agreed.”
The folder in my hand suddenly felt heavier. Lightning cracked across the sky again, so bright that it cast a sharp rectangle of light across the balcony. I pressed harder into the wall until my back ached.
Then a light laugh drifted out from the room. I knew that sound before my mind even formed her name. “Stop,” the woman said. “You can’t drink anymore….”
My stomach dropped. My breath caught in my throat.
Mina.
Simon’s adopted sister. The one who always smiled and hugged me and insisted she only wanted what was best for me. The same girl who convinced me that marrying Simon was the safest decision, who told me that love could grow, that respect mattered more than romance, that I would be protected.
My hand tightened around the folder until the corners dug into my palm. Had she been laughing at me this whole time?
Another voice spoke. “You two look very good together. To be honest, it always felt like she was the outsider. But then again, the two of you have always been close. It was Catherine who came between you.”
For a second I thought I misheard. As if on cue, Mina giggled.
“She should be grateful I tolerate her,” Simon said. His tone had shifted. There was satisfaction in it now. “The marriage certificate is not even real. If her father finds out I never filed it, he will lose his mind.”
Damien laughed in obvious disbelief. “That is dangerous, Simon. Emberfang might not be as strong as Stonehowl but– ”
“It is worth the risk,” Simon interrupted his Beta. “She is a placeholder. Nothing more.”
Anger surged inside me so fast that my fingers acted before my mind caught up. The folder crumpled, then split apart, the rip loud enough to cut through the storm.
Almost immediately, the office went silent.
My heart slammed against my ribs. Someone inside asked if anyone had heard that noise. Another voice answered that it came from the balcony.
I knew the rain could not hide me. The storm could not swallow what I had just done.
I looked down at the torn reports hanging in two pieces between my fingers. The numbers I had triple-checked stared back at me through the jagged tear. None of it mattered now.
The balcony rail was the only direction left.
My mind stopped bothering with careful thought. Panic took control instead when the balcony handle clicked.
And I… I jumped.
Cold air rushed past my face as the ground rushed up to meet me. Rain slapped my skin in hard, cold drops that stole any remaining warmth from my body.
I hit the ground hard and crawled into the bushes. Above me, the balcony doors burst open. Someone shouted that an intruder had been on the balcony and that the scent was fresh. Another voice ordered a search of the grounds.
Rain might blur scent and tracks, but not enough against trained wolves.
My stomach twisted hard. Anger and fear tangled together, pushing me toward one thought. If I stayed here, they would find me. If I ran blindly, I would expose myself.
Simon valued his image above all else. His pride would not allow this to go unpunished.
Thunder rolled again as the memory of Simon’s warning echoed in my head. A Luna who caused problems would be corrected.
I forced air into my lungs and pushed my body up enough to look around. Every option looked like a trap.
I turned toward the path behind the wall, the only route that looked even slightly open. Mud clung to my knees and hands as I moved toward it, but I never made it more than a step.
Suddenly, an arm wrapped around my waist from behind with a grip that felt unbreakable. Another hand clamped over my mouth so quickly that the sound rising in my throat died before it had the chance to form.
My body jerked in shock. I tried to twist away, but the arm around my middle tightened and dragged me back, pressing my spine against a solid chest. The contact knocked any remaining air from my lungs.
I tried to wrench my head free, to bite, to do anything, but his hand remained in place. My shoulder blades pressed into hard muscle. Through the storm and the scent of wet earth, I picked up something new. A clean, sharp scent, unfamiliar yet distinct, cut through the chaos in my mind.
Lightning flashed again, bright enough that for a split second I could see the outline of our bodies reflected faintly in a rain-streaked window. My slight form pinned against a larger one. His head bent toward mine.
His breath warmed the side of my neck as he leaned closer. His grip did not soften, but it did not hurt either. His mouth hovered near my ear when he spoke.
“If you want to live, keep that beautiful mouth of yours shut.”
Catherine’s POVThere was something about power that bent people. I had seen it too many times to pretend otherwise. Fear was the simplest form of it. It pushed people into line, made them lower their heads, made them obey even when every part of them resisted. Fear could control a room, could silence voices, could make grown men hesitate before speaking out of turn.But fear only lasted as long as the threat was present.Money was different.Money did not need to shout. It did not need to raise a hand or make a scene. It worked quietly, steadily, reshaping people from the inside until they no longer needed to be told what to do. It made them choose obedience. It made them justify things they would have once questioned. It turned loyalty into something that could be bought, measured, and replaced the moment it became inconvenient.Fear could force a person to kneel. Money made them stay there, and believe it was their own decision.And men like Simon? He would do everything to have th
Catherine’s POVThe engine had already gone silent, but my hands were still locked around the steering wheel.I didn’t move.The house stood right in front of me, its tall windows glowing with warm light that should have felt like home. Instead, it looked like a place I had just returned to out of obligation, not belonging.My fingers tightened.My palms were damp, and the leather beneath them felt slick as I tried to steady my breathing. It wasn’t working. It felt like my body hadn’t caught up with the fact that I was no longer underground, no longer standing in front of something that could have ended me with a single word.The Beast.The thought alone made my chest tighten again.I had actually gone there.Not just thought about it. Not just considered it out of anger or desperation. I had walked into his territory, sat in that room, and spoken to him like I had the right to be there.My stomach twisted.What the hell was I thinking?A part of me wanted to laugh at myself. Another
Catherine’s POVSo… this is where the rogues live.I followed the person sent to guide me through a maze of damp, lightless tunnels that smelled of rusted iron and stagnant water, feeling the weight of the city pressing down on my shoulders with every stepThe pathway leading underground felt like a descent into another world where the laws of Solaria no longer applied.I had already undergone three separate security checks, each one more invasive than the last, involving silent men with electronic scanners that seemed to peel away every layer of my disguise down to my skin.There was a reason why the Beast was known as the King of Rogues and was silently acknowledged by all packs as a force that could not be tamed or broken.He owned this entire sprawl of concrete and shadow, making him the single biggest threat to the established pack hierarchies who had learned to stay out of his way to avoid a war they knew they could not win.I swallowed hard as the man leading me finally stopped
Catherine’s POVI can’t keep on doing this.The cold condensation from the glass seeped into my palm as I stared at the milkshake before me, the sweet vanilla scent doing absolutely nothing to settle the frantic churning of my stomach.My face heated up until it felt like it was glowing, a deep flush that had nothing to do with the humid afternoon air outside the cafe and everything to do with the memories I couldn't seem to scrub from my mind.I cursed myself under my breath for still recalling every wretched detail of what happened in the study two days ago, the ghost of Ethan’s touch still feeling like a brand against my skin that no amount of scrubbing in the shower could ever truly remove. Speaking of that devil…“Are you even listening to me, or has that milkshake suddenly become the most interesting thing in the world?”The voice interrupted my spiraling thoughts, forcing me to blink and look up at the woman sitting across from me.Samantha was watching me with a look of intens
Catherine’s POVThe doorknob turned, and the world seemed to tilt.Before I could even process the panic, Ethan’s hand was a vice around my waist, hauling me backward. Without saying a word, he dragged me into the narrow, shadowed space behind the towering mahogany bookshelf that lined the far wall.It was a space that barely fit one person, let alone two, and as we pressed into the dark, the smell of old parchment and dust mingled with the intoxicating scent of rain still clinging to his skin.I squeezed my eyes shut, my heart hammering so hard I was certain it would echo off the wood. A bitter thought flickered through the fear. I didn't understand why I was hiding inside my own study, in my own house, like a common thief.I was the one who had built this pack’s wealth, yet here I was, cowering in the dark because my husband’s brother had his hands on me.But before I could linger on that thought, the door creaked open.“That bitch is too calculating,” Simon’s voice spat, the sound
Catherine’s POV“You didn’t have to do all that,” I said, turning my head away the moment the study door closed behind us.Only minutes earlier, Simon had stormed out with Mina at his side, fury rolling off him. He had not left quietly either. He had pointed at me like I was something he intended to deal with later.Mina had followed close beside him, murmuring for him to calm down, but there had been something satisfied in the way she looked back at me before the door shut behind them. The threat lingered long after their footsteps disappeared down the hall.Ethan did not answer me at once.Instead, he reached behind him and shut the door fully.The soft click seemed louder than it should have in the sudden stillness of my study.My shoulders tightened. “You should leave.”He ignored that and stayed where he was for a moment, one hand still resting on the doorknob, as if he had already decided he was not going anywhere. Then he turned and walked further into the room with the same ea







