FAZER LOGINZoey
By the time I reach the end of the west corridor, my hands are numb from cold and my brain feels like it’s been running on fumes for days. Someone asks me what day it is earlier, and I blink at them like they’ve asked me a trick question. Monday? Thursday? Full moon? I don’t know. The days blur together when all you do is unlock doors, flip breakers, bleed radiators, and drag furniture around until your shoulders ache and your lungs burn. “Zoey,” someone calls down the hall. “Did you check the south wing yet?” “I did,” I shout back without stopping. “Hot water works. Lights too. One of the windows doesn’t close all the way.” “Of course it doesn’t,” the voice mutters. I don’t bother correcting them. Everything in this place is half-broken and forgotten. Just like the people who live here. The boarding school looms around me, all long corridors and high ceilings, built for children who were meant to grow up safe. Now it houses the ones no one wants to deal with. The unranked. The inconvenient. The ones who don’t fit cleanly into the pack’s story of strength and dominance. I get the smallest room because I’m the easiest to ignore. It’s at the end of the hall, where the heat barely reaches and the pipes scream in winter. If I need the bathroom at night, I have to walk past six doors and a flickering light that makes the shadows stretch wrong. I learned a long time ago to keep my shoes close and my robe within reach. “Lowest of the low,” Dion once laughed. “Fitting, don’t you think?” I shove that memory down and move on. Basement doors. Storage rooms. Empty apartments that still smell like dust and old fear. I chase a raccoon out of one crawlspace earlier, heart pounding like I’d just survived something epic. I almost laugh at myself afterward. This is what bravery looks like for me now. By the time I finish my last check, the sky outside has turned that bruised purple that means evening is coming fast. Wolves are arriving in waves now, their scents bleeding into the air. чужие. Strangers. Power rolling off them in thick currents that make my skin prickle. They’re excited. I hear it in the way they talk. In the way laughter carries too loud, too sharp. In the way someone says, “Finally,” like war is a party they’ve been waiting for. I don’t feel that way. I feel wrong about all of this. About the council meeting. About how fast everyone jumped at the chance to unite, to fight, to spill blood. It felt rehearsed. Too eager. “You’re overthinking,” Emma told me earlier when I tried to say something. “This is what we’re supposed to do.” Maybe. Or maybe this is how people convince themselves violence is necessary. I don’t say that out loud. I know better. By the time I reach my room, my shoulders are tight and my head aches. I pause with my hand on the door, staring at the peeling paint like it might offer answers. Someone laughs nearby. A group of girls from my pack drift past, talking fast and loud. “Did you see the guys from Silver Shadow?” one of them says, practically vibrating. “I swear one of them looked at me like he already knew how I taste.” Another giggles. “Please. I call dibs.” “They can’t do anything,” a third says, lowering her voice anyway. “Not officially.” “That’s never stopped anyone.” Their laughter trails off down the corridor. I wait a beat, then grab my towel and robe. I need a shower. I need hot water and steam and something that isn’t thinking. The bathroom door is heavy, old wood swollen from decades of moisture. I push it open— —and freeze. Sound hits first. A broken gasp. A low growl that vibrates through the room and straight into my spine. “Oh… fuck—yes…” The girl is sitting on the edge of one of the sinks, skirt pushed high on her thighs, head tipped back until it thumps softly against the mirror. Her eyes are closed, lips parted, breath shaking like she’s barely holding herself together. A man stands between her legs. I don’t recognize him, but his presence fills the room. Broad shoulders. Dark hair damp with sweat. His hands are locked on her hips like he’s afraid she’ll disappear if he lets go. “Say it again,” he murmurs, voice rough and low. “I didn’t hear you.” She whimpers, fingers tangling in his hair. “Don’t stop. Please don’t stop.” The sound crawls under my skin. I should back away. I should apologize. I should close the door and pretend this never happened. I don’t. I stand there, breath caught, heat pooling low in my stomach in a way that makes me dizzy. I’ve seen sex before. I’ve heard it through walls, through tents, through open doors at full moon gatherings. This is different. This feels… intimate. Possessive. Like something dangerous is unfolding and I’m not supposed to witness it. He makes another sound against her skin, and she arches toward him, nails scraping his shoulders. “Oh god,” she gasps. “You’re going to ruin me.” A shiver rips through me. My foot shifts without permission, the faint scuff loud in the silence between breaths. Her eyes snap open. They lock onto mine instantly. For half a second, no one moves. Then her lips curve slowly, deliberately, into a smile that feels like a challenge. She doesn’t pull away. She doesn’t cover herself. She tightens her grip around his neck instead. “Well,” she says breathlessly, eyes never leaving mine. “Looks like we have an audience.” He turns. The moment his gaze hits me, the room tilts. Something slams into my chest, sharp and electric, like my body recognizes him before my brain can catch up. His eyes flick over me, slow and assessing, then narrow just slightly. “Who are you?” he asks. My mouth opens. Nothing comes out. The girl laughs softly. “She’s watching,” she says, dragging her thumb along his jaw. “Does that bother you?” His attention never leaves me. “Not really.” My skin burns. My pulse is loud in my ears. “I— I’m sorry,” I manage, finally. “I didn’t mean to—” “Don’t apologize,” the girl interrupts. “You didn’t interrupt anything.” She tilts her head, studying me like I’m something curious. “Have you never seen a mating before?” My throat tightens. “I have.” “Then what’s the problem?” There isn’t one. That’s the terrifying part. He steps back from her just enough to look at me fully. “You should leave,” he says, not unkindly. “Before this gets confusing.” Confusing. As if it isn’t already. I nod too fast, turning toward the door on unsteady legs. My body feels overheated, hypersensitive, like every nerve is awake and screaming. Behind me, I hear her laugh again. Soft. Victorious. “He’s mine,” she says clearly. “Just so you know.” Mate. The word isn’t spoken, but it lands anyway. I step into the hallway, heart racing, skin buzzing, knowing one thing with terrifying clarity. Something just woke up inside me.Wesley “But the child of such a powerful witch and the beta of his pack? She’s unique. Of course, they would want that. They would want that powerful blood.”“Every minute she stays here, she’s in danger,” I mutter, staring at the door, knowing she’s on the other side. Waiting. Does she know? Can she guess?“What are you suggesting?”“Dad,” I groan, closing my eyes. “Don’t make me say it.”“There’s no escaping this. If I could, I would take it from you, I swear, I would. But it has to be done. She can’t stay here. Not only does it put her in greater danger, but it endangers the pack if these invasions increase. We can’t allow that.”“Unfortunately, that’s the double-edged sword we all carry, those of us who choose our mates instead of waiting for Fate to decide. There’s always a chance of something going wrong.”“There’s always a chance of something going wrong for anyone, for any reason.”“That’s also true.” He strokes his jaw, finally letting out a
Wesley But she’s unharmed. At least she’s unharmed.“What were you doing with them?” Thorne demands, nearly breaking us apart.“Stand down!” I bark before I can stop myself.I know it. But that isn’t going to stop me. “Back the fuck away, Thorne. Before I rip your fucking throat out.”Falcon manages to pull him aside, and the two of them have a quiet, tense conversation while I turn back to Zoey. My Zoey, my mate. I must have imagined what I thought I saw. There’s no way it was real. I refuse to believe it.“What did they do to you? What did they say?”“Have them turn them off,” I shout to the nearest guard before pulling her in for a tight hug. I cover her ear with one of my hands while pressing the other ear to my chest. I sense her worry and confusion. Her wolf is in a frenzy. I look over my shoulder to find Falcon watching us. I don’t know what to say.There’s no pretending it wasn’t real. She was here, standing before countless numbers of them.
ZoeyI wish Dad could understand that. I don’t want him starting trouble, showing up at the drop of a hat, and checking on me all the time. I don’t think Connor would like it much, and I know Wesley wouldn’t. I want everybody to get along. Is that so much to ask?It isn’t me that disturbs them. It’s the sound of singing.They stop, both of them turning their heads in the direction the sound came from, before running off. But they don’t seem afraid, just startled, and maybe they found another tree they like better.I stay where I am, also searching for the source of the sound. It’s beautiful—light, happy sounding. And it calls to me. It pulls me forward. I want to know who it’s coming from. What makes them so happy. Who taught it to them.I walk carefully, watching my step, always following the sound. It gets a little louder all the time, and the warning in my chest gets louder, too. Stronger. If I’m not careful, I’ll end up shifting here and now. I don’t know why that seems like a ba
Zoey“You’re getting much better. You write almost as well as I do.” Little Micah beams up at me, clearly proud of his work period. “Have you been practicing when I wasn’t here?”“A little,” he whispers.“You’re a wonder with them.” I’m surprised when Clarissa speaks up as she passes. She sounds positive and encouraging for once. “If you’re at all interested in making this a permanent situation, I would be more than happy to have you here. Unless…” She bites her lip, her features pinching like she worries she might have said too much.Unless what? What’s on your mind?”“I don’t want to presume. What with you being the mate of the alpha’s son. This must seem pretty low-level. I know you were looking for something to do to fill the time, and—”“I’m so glad. Because I’m not sure I could handle any of them if I told them you weren’t coming back.” It feels like we’ve reached an understanding, the two of us, and that warms me, as well. Is it this easy being accepte
Wesley Then, somehow, the pleasure doubles, triples when she parts her thighs, running her hands along the insides before cupping herself. Nothing in the world could pry my eyes away from the sight of her delving into her pussy, sliding up and down the length of her slit before focusing on the bundle of nerves protruding from beneath its hood.“Such a good little wolf, pleasing me like you do,” I grunt before thrusting deeper. “That’s right. Play with yourself. Play with yourself and imagine it’s me.”Her moans send vibrations running through my cock, my balls, and I’m in danger of losing myself again. Instead, I focus on her, the way she moves over her clit in tight circles with one finger while, with the other hand, she thrusts two fingers deep up her cunt. When she pulls back, I note the way her fingers glisten, and I can’t help it; I pull at her arm, raising her fingers to my lips and sucking them in time with my thrusts. She squeals and moans, her hips beginning to
Wesley There’s nothing in the world like the feeling of closing my bedroom door and shutting out everyone and everything else.“I didn’t know what was happening to me.”“Neither did I,” I remind her with a shaky, soft laugh. “I didn’t know what I was going to do, what was wrong with you, or if there was any way to fix it.”“I didn’t mean to scare you.”“And do you still want me?”I pull back, searching her face for any sign that she’s joking. Because she must be. There’s no way she could ask a question like that while she’s in my arms, and I’m kissing her and, yes, stiffening against her because if there’s one thing my wolf wants more than anything, it’s to sink deep inside her and remind both of us she’s ours. Always ours.There’s nothing but sincerity shining from her eyes. “Even now that you know who I am and who I came from. I understand if you’ve changed your mind.”Her smile is like the sun breaking through storm clouds, lighting up her face. “







