ログインEvelyn
He took my hand and led me back toward the pack house.
The celebration was everywhere — spilling out of the courtyard and into the paths between buildings, firelight and music and the warm, unguarded noise of people who had finally stopped being careful with each other.
We moved along the edges of it, close to the buildings, slipping between shadows and pools of gold light.
EvelynHe took my hand and led me back toward the pack house.The celebration was everywhere — spilling out of the courtyard and into the paths between buildings, firelight and music and the warm, unguarded noise of people who had finally stopped being careful with each other.We moved along the edges of it, close to the buildings, slipping between shadows and pools of gold light.I felt giddy.Not the sharp, restless energy of the past weeks. Not the tension of councils and negotiations and history balanced on a knife’s edge.This was different.Lighter and heavier all at once.The feeling of something inevitable finally arriving.His hand was warm around mine, steady and certain, and through the bond I felt him — focused, grounded, all that Alpha intensity that usually stre
RafeThe feast lasted well into the evening.Tables had been moved outside to take advantage of the long summer light — spread across the main courtyard and spilling into the surrounding paths, laden with everything the kitchens had been preparing for days.Fires lit at intervals. Music from somewhere — I didn't know who had brought instruments but the sound of it carried across the settlement like something the air had been waiting to hold.All four packs and the Order moving through the same space without the careful choreography of diplomacy. Just people. Just the particular noise and warmth of many lives occupying the same moment.I stood at the edge of it and watched.Specifically, I watched Evelyn.She had been moving through the celebration for the past hour without stopping — not working exactly
EvelynThe signing table had been set up at the head of the Great Hall.A long document — pages of carefully negotiated terms, every clause hammered out across two days of debate — lay open at the center. Quills and ink at each position. The Ironridge seal ready to be pressed in witness. The hall was fuller than it had been even during the council. Word had spread through the settlement before dawn and pack members had come — not summoned, simply drawn. Warriors and elders and families and children who'd been kept back from the formal proceedings but who understood that today was different.I stood beside Rafe at the head of the table and felt the full weight of it.Not fear. Not anxiety. Something larger and quieter than either — the particular feeling of standing at the end of something that had cost everything and being able to see, finally, that the cost had been worth it.Miriam called the room to order."We are gathered to witness the signing of the Peace Treaty," she said, he
RafeThe debates continued through the morning and into the afternoon.I had expected them to be harder than they were. Not easy — nothing about this was easy — but there was a quality to the disagreements that surprised me.They felt like problems being solved rather than battles being fought. Like people who had decided, somewhere underneath all the careful positioning and the centuries of grievance, that they actually wanted this to work.That was new.That was everything.The human-wolf relationship question took another hour. Bryn of Silvermoon pushed further — she wanted specific language around information protection, around the rights of wolves to decline interaction with humans without it being treated as aggression, around what happened when a relationship formed and then broke badly across the speci
EvelynThe Great Hall had been transformed overnight.The long tables rearranged into a formal council configuration — a wide rectangle with space at the center, every seat designated by pack insignia placed carefully by Elder Miriam before dawn.Blackthorn at the head. Silvermoon and Graywater along the sides. The Order opposite Blackthorn, flanked by the Ironridge emissaries who sat apart from everyone, positioned to observe the full room without belonging to any side of it.I took my seat beside Rafe and felt the weight of everything settle around me like a cloak.This was different from the assessment. That had been about me. This was about everything.Aldren opened his journal. Corren's pen was already moving. Varen sat with her hands folded, eyes moving steadily around the room.Rafe stood.&nb
RafeThe settlement had never felt so full.Every guest quarter occupied. Every common space carrying the low hum of voices in languages and accents that hadn't mixed under one roof in living memory — if ever. Silvermoon wolves sharing a fire with Graywater warriors. Order soldiers navigating the unfamiliar rhythms of pack life with the careful attention of people trying very hard not to make mistakes. The Ironridge emissaries moving through it all with the quiet efficiency of observers who'd learned long ago that the most useful thing they could do was stay out of the way and watch.I stood at the edge of the main hall's entrance, taking it in.Tomorrow the Great Council would begin. Every relevant power in this region, seated at the same table, deciding whether what Evelyn and I had started was worth building into something permanent. The weight of it sat across my shoulders like a physical thing — not crushing, but present. Undeniable.Cassian appeared beside me. "You should eat
RafeThe war room was already buzzing when Cassian and I pushed through the heavy oak doors. Elders, warriors—every head turned. For a moment, silence pressed down like a weight. Their eyes scanned me, not the wreck of an Alpha they’d seen before, but
RafeI woke up with a start, lungs burning as though I’d been drowning. For the first time in what felt like forever, my head was clear. The fog that had clung to me, thick as chains, was gone. I could think. I could breathe. And with that clarity came the sharp sting of reality. Evelyn was still g
EvelynThe days had blurred together until time itself felt like a cruel trick. I tried to keep count, tried to cling to something as simple as the rhythm of meals—thin bread, watered broth, sometimes a strip of meat—but even that blurred. By my reckon
RafeI jolted awake like I’d been shoved into my own body, clutching my temple with a groan. My skull throbbed in sick, pounding waves, my vision stuttering between light and shadow. My mouth was dry, my tongue like ash, my lungs dragging in air that tasted of smoke and herbs. For a moment, I didn’







