LOGINI'm at the vanity next morning, working a brush through my long golden hair, watching myself in the mirror and hoping I don’t f—
"I heard you gave Beta Rowan a hard time yesterday," Kael's voice comes from across the room, interrupting my thoughts. I find him in the mirror as he walks out of our closet room dressed already, jacket on, the composed and armored version of himself fully assembled. He's looking at me, but not the way he was looking at me last night. This is the daytime look. Detached. I set the brush down on the vanity. "Really? You have time for his complaints?” "No, I actually don’t," something in his voice cools by exactly one degree, "I've been very busy lately. I don't have time to manage this. You are my Luna, you need to stop acting so childish. Grow up." Childish. "I simply wanted to read a contract before I signed it," I say, my voice even, "That's what's been reported back to you as making things difficult." "You didn't even finish college," Kael says, and his tone has shifted into an impatient tone. Like he can’t believe he has to explain something this obvious, "Why would you need to read a contract yourself? I had everything prepared for you. All you had to do was sign your name. If something comes from me, you need to trust it. Blindly.” Five years ago, I was in my third year of university. I had a plan, built out of my own choices, moving toward something I had decided I wanted. Then everything shifted overnight, faster than I could track. Kael found me. I became his Luna. I signed a contract I trusted blindly because it came from my fated mate... and the woman I'd been building simply stopped being relevant—her degree, her plans, the dreams of an independent life, all of it was folded away because there was no room for it in the life I'd stepped into. "Why is that so difficult?” Kael continues, “Why can't you simply appreciate—" The door opens out of nowhere. Seraphine walks in like she's done it a hundred times—and perhaps she has, during hours I've been elsewhere. She stops when she sees me at the vanity, and something flickers across her face. Not guilt, more like inconvenience. "Alpha, I thought about something else to add into the speech for today," She starts, then glances between us, "Oh. Should I wait for her to leave, or...?" "Nah," Kael easily says, "Say what's on your mind." Of course. I watch it in the mirror, the ease with which he turns toward her. The patience that materializes from nowhere, fully formed, that he could not locate thirty seconds ago when he was talking to me. Seraphine says something about his speech to the Council in today’s meeting and Kael listens with all the attentiveness in the world, because he values what she has to say. I tune out the conversation, pick up my brush and resume the long, even strokes through my hair. I watch myself do it. I keep my face neutral. When they finish and Seraphine leaves, I meet my husband’s eyes in the mirror. "Why is she allowed to come and go freely through our bedroom?" I ask, and my voice comes out light. Almost conversational. Like I don’t care about my husband's entire demeanor transforming the moment another woman entered the room, “Does she do it a lot?” Something uncomfortable moves through Kael's expression before it levels out. "Of course not… not a lot,” he responds, but it sounds like a lie, “She's the person I trust the most. She knew I was still here and needed to pass on something important, so—" "It's fine," I look back at my own reflection, "I was just asking… and to go back to our previous conversation, I think you’d like to know I already finished reading it and I signed it. I left it on the dining table last night. I can start filming whenever you need." I see him recalibrate in the mirror, the irritation retreating, the wheels already turning. "Ah. Good,” he nods, then I can see his shoulders drop as he tells himself this is another of those moments where he has to manipulate me into being happy with him, like we’re actually a couple, "And look, after the show wraps and I mark you—If that’s what you choose, I can arrange for us to visit some of the other packs. You mentioned once that you wanted to travel, right? I will have more time then. Beta Rowan will take more responsibility here and I can meet with the Council in any of their packs, so we can just… have fun.” Once. I mentioned I’d like to travel once, in passing, years ago, and he filed it away somewhere and retrieved it just now like a bargaining chip. He thinks he's being a good husband. And he thinks I’m still going to ask him to mark me? When I have the other choice? He must really think I’m stupid. "We can talk about that later," I say, and draw the brush through my hair one final time, "I'm a little tired this morning.” The silence that follows is different from the ones I'm used to. I feel him looking at me. Assessing me. I don't turn around. I think: I can do this. All I need is to go to that show, be his perfect mate and then fucking leave him."Elara," I manage to say, a few seconds later, since neither of them seems to notice my presence.I expect her to startle. To sit up quickly and look guilty— I don't know why I expect this exactly, but I expect it anyway.She doesn't do it.Instead, my wife turns her head toward me without moving anything else, she looks at me and sighs through her nose like I am a huge inconvenience. Then she turns her head again, looking up at the sky like I’m not here. "What are you doing, Elara?" I push, "Why are you soaking wet? What is going on?""We jumped in the lake, swam a little," she responds, voice calm, "And now we're drying off in the sun. It's not that complicated.”“But wh—““Can you leave?” She interrupts me, “You're fucking up the vibe. We’re connecting with nature and I know you’re not into that, so… leave."I do not leave. I do not move. I just stand here and look at my wife lying on another man's body while they’re supposedly ‘connecting with nature’ and my brain just goes comp
As soon as I see the lake, I know what’s going to happen. When I was young, I was too much of a prude to strip down at the lake back home. And Adrian was always too much of a good guy to make me feel bad about it. So we developed the system of jumping in whatever we were wearing, which was deeply impractical and deeply fun at the same time. And something we did almost every day for a long, long time. Which is why I'm not surprised when Adrian doesn't slow down at all. I have just enough time to take a full breath before we hit the cold-as-fuck water.I go under, feel my feet find the bottom, and push up hard, breaking the surface gasping."Fuck! Oh, god," I let out, which is all I have for a moment, and then I notice two figures running toward us from the bank and have one panicked second before I realize they're production staff with long microphones, sprinting to catch whatever we say. I ignore them completely and turn back to Adrian, who surfaces a second later."Holy shit," he
As soon as the cameras start rolling, Mariah leads me to Adrian’s cabin before going back to work. I knock on the front door, then I stand there for long enough that I start feeling like an idiot, rehearsing reasons to be here in case Paulie answers, but then the door opens and it's Adrian."Hey, Ella," he says, taking a small step back like he wasn't expecting me at all, which he probably wasn't, "What's up?""Not much. I'm bored and I need to just get away for a bit. Want to skip communal breakfast and go somewhere, just us?"I watch his expression move through confusion, intrigue, and then settle into something that looks like genuine delight. His smile starts growing. Slow and unstoppable."Just like back in the day, huh?" he finally asks, and looks over his shoulder once—a quick, guilty glance at his wife, the one he’s totally going to sneak away from—then he steps out and pulls the door shut behind him, "Let's go. Fast."We walk away fast, then faster, and then we're basically
The need to be with Kael is still present the next morning, along with the general discomfort of being pregnant with a baby who needs something I don’t have. I give the need ten minutes of aggressive ignoring while I brush my teeth and it does not go away, and then I give it ten more minutes while I get dressed, but it does nothing. So… that’s when I make the executive decision to simply do what my body and soul both want.Of course Kael is not in the cabin, so I ask our assistant producer to show me where his temporary office is.Once I’m right outside his door, I start second-guessing this executive decision. Because what if he just tells me to leave? What if I’ve walked all this way at almost eight in the morning to be dismissed in under sixty seconds, which would be on-brand for him and devastating for my dignity?But then I think about the kisses. I think about the fact that I was not alone in any of them. He was there, present, involved and wanting it as much as I did. He was
"Alright. I'm going to need everyone to act distracted," the main producer says, then turns to me, "Elara, you need to be a little more emotional than normal, alright? Please."He continues with more instructions for me and once he's done, he counts down on his fingers until the livestream resumes.I take a deep breath. And then I go off on Kael.He helps me by bringing up the comment again and I let myself feel more than I normally would, firing back at him about whatever I can reach for. In the background I can hear Danielle Drover's voice addressing the public from the studio, smooth and reassuring, telling everyone it was a false alarm, just rumors, nothing to worry about, because everything is perfectly fine!Meanwhile, I shove Kael in the chest."—and I'm sick of you!" "Stop acting insane," Kael mutters, low enough that it sounds private, "They're about to resume full broadcast, Elara. Let it go.""No! I hate that you only care about your image and never about my feelings!" I s
My heart is going crazy as I watch people on the screen yelling and fleeing in every direction, but I can't actually see anything happening—no rogues, no visible threat, just the loud chaos of a crowd that has decided something is very wrong and is acting accordingly. It's the fear that spreads fastest, always. The thing itself comes second.Kael is out of his seat before I've fully processed what's happening.He walks straight to the screen as if being physically closer to it will grant him more information, which is not how screens work, but apparently it's an alpha instinct because Adrian does the exact same thing two seconds later. Now they're both standing there, side by side, arms crossed, watching the feed with intense energy. They are clearly very used to being in charge of situations and not being in charge of this one is visibly bothering both of them in identical ways.Beside the screen, the main producer is still murmuring into his earpiece. I watch him carefully, becau







