LOGINFive years ago, Sera Blackwood walked away from the only man she ever loved—and the pack that wanted her dead. Now she's back in Crimson Hollow, and Dante Silverclaw, the alpha who let her go, isn't the same broken wolf she left behind. He's harder. Colder. And he has exactly thirty days to find a mate before the pack council forces him to marry someone else. Someone who isn't his true mate. When a series of brutal murders rocks the supernatural community, Sera finds herself working alongside the man who still owns her heart. But the killer isn't just targeting random victims—they're hunting wolves who know the truth about why Sera really ran. As the blood moon rises, Sera must choose between protecting the secret that could destroy Dante's pack or claiming the second chance at love that might cost them both their lives.
View More"You've got to be kidding me."
Sera Blackwood stares at the weathered sign marking the town limits, her knuckles white against the steering wheel. Five years. Five years since she swore she'd never set foot in Crimson Hollow again, and here she is, driving straight back into the mouth of hell.
Her phone buzzes in the cup holder. She doesn't need to look to know it's another text from Maya.
Please tell me you're at least in the state. Sera, I'm dying here. Literally dying.
Sera's chest tightens. Maya doesn't know the literal meaning of the word, but the desperation in her texts over the past week has been real enough. Her little sister—well, cousin, technically, but they grew up as sisters—needs her. That's the only reason Sera's Toyota is currently crossing into werewolf territory.
The town looks the same. Quaint storefronts line Main Street, their flower boxes bursting with late-autumn blooms. Normal people walk normal dogs. A couple sits outside the coffee shop, laughing over enormous muffins.
None of them know that half the town's population shifts into wolves under the full moon.
Sera's phone rings this time. She punches the accept button.
"I'm here," she says before Maya can speak.
"Oh, thank God." Maya's voice cracks with relief. "Where are you exactly?"
"Just passed the welcome sign. I'll be at your apartment in ten minutes."
"No." The word comes out sharp. "Don't come here. Meet me at the Rusty Anchor. The bar on—"
"I know where it is, Maya." Sera's jaw clenches. "What's going on? Why can't I come to your place?"
Silence stretches for three seconds too long.
"Maya."
"Just... meet me at the bar. Please. I'll explain everything."
The line goes dead.
Sera resists the urge to throw her phone out the window. Instead, she makes a left turn that takes her toward the waterfront, where the Rusty Anchor has been serving cheap beer and cheaper food since before Sera was born.
The parking lot is half-full, which is more than she expected for a Tuesday afternoon. She locks her car and pushes through the heavy wooden door, her eyes needing a moment to adjust to the dim interior.
The smell hits her first—pine, leather, and something wild that makes her wolf stir beneath her skin. Pack scent. Silverclaw pack scent.
Her wolf whines, recognition and longing flooding through her veins.
No, Sera tells herself firmly. We are not doing this.
She spots Maya in a corner booth, her cousin's dark hair pulled into a messy bun, her face pale with stress. Sera weaves through tables of humans nursing afternoon drinks, hyper-aware of the three wolves sitting at the bar who've already clocked her presence.
She slides into the booth across from Maya. "Start talking."
Maya's eyes are red-rimmed. "I'm so sorry. I didn't know what else to do."
"Sorry for what?"
"For lying. You're not here because I need help with wedding planning."
Sera's blood runs cold. "What?"
"The pack council is forcing an alpha binding." Maya's words tumble out in a rush. "Dante has thirty days to choose a mate or they'll choose one for him. The ceremony is four weeks from tomorrow."
The world tilts sideways.
"No," Sera breathes. "He wouldn't—Maya, why would you bring me back for this?"
"Because someone's killing pack members, Sera. Three wolves dead in two months, all of them part of the old guard. All of them wolves who were there the night you left."
Ice slides down Sera's spine. "That's not possible."
"The last body was found three days ago. Jessica Hartwell. Someone ripped her throat out and left her in the woods behind the old paper mill."
Jessica. Sera remembers her—a junior pack member, sweet but ambitious. She'd been one of the wolves pushing hardest for Sera's exile.
"The council thinks it's a rogue," Maya continues. "But Sera, what if it's connected? What if someone knows why you really ran?"
"Then we're all dead," Sera says flatly. "Maya, bringing me back here is—"
The bar door swings open.
Sera doesn't need to turn around. She feels him the moment he walks in—that electric pull that's haunted her dreams for five years. The bond they never completed hums to life, stretching taut between them like a live wire.
Dante Silverclaw stops three feet from their table.
He looks different. Broader through the shoulders, his dark hair longer than she remembers. Stubble shadows his jaw. But his eyes—those storm-gray eyes that used to look at her like she was his entire world—they're cold as winter steel.
"Sera." Her name sounds like gravel in his throat.
She forces herself to meet his gaze. "Alpha."
Something flickers across his face. Pain, maybe, or anger. It's gone too quickly to tell.
"We need to talk," he says.
"I'm talking to my cousin."
"Now."
It's not a request. The alpha command rolls through the words, making Maya flinch. Sera's wolf bristles, but she's not pack anymore. She doesn't have to obey.
She leans back in the booth, crossing her arms. "I don't take orders from you, Dante. Not anymore."
His jaw tightens. "There's been another murder. We found the body twenty minutes ago."
Maya gasps. "Who?"
"Thomas Crane."
The name hits Sera like a physical blow. Thomas had been Dante's beta. His best friend. And one of only five wolves who knew the real reason Sera fled Crimson Hollow.
"Outside," Dante says, his eyes never leaving Sera's face. "Unless you want to have this conversation in front of witnesses."
Sera stands, her legs somehow steady despite the panic clawing at her chest. She follows Dante through the bar, acutely aware of every eye tracking their movement.
The afternoon sun feels too bright after the bar's darkness. Dante leads her around the side of the building, into an alley that reeks of old fish and garbage.
He rounds on her the moment they're alone.
"What the hell are you doing here?" The control in his voice is razor-thin. "I told you never to come back."
"Maya called. She said—"
"I don't care what Maya said." He steps closer, and Sera's traitorous body responds to his nearness, her skin heating despite her best efforts. "You left, Sera. You made that choice. You don't get to just show up—"
"Someone is murdering the wolves who know our secret," she interrupts. "Or did that escape your notice?"
"You think I haven't noticed?" His voice drops to something dangerous. "Four wolves dead, and every single one of them was in that clearing five years ago. Someone is tying up loose ends."
"Then you need me here. I'm a loose end too."
"Exactly." Dante's eyes flash gold—wolf rising to the surface. "Which is why you need to leave. Tonight. Get in your car and drive until you hit another state."
"No."
"That wasn't a suggestion."
"And I'm not pack," Sera shoots back. "You can't order me around anymore, Alpha. I stopped being yours the night you let them exile me."
The words land like a slap. Dante flinches, actual pain crossing his face before he locks it down.
"I was trying to save your life," he says quietly.
"By letting them drive me away? By not fighting for—"
"By keeping you breathing." His hand shoots out, gripping her wrist. The touch sends electricity racing up her arm. "They wanted you dead, Sera. The council, the old guard—they wanted your head on a spike. So yes, I let you go. I let you hate me. I let you believe I didn't fight, because if they suspected for one second how much you still meant to me, they would have hunted you down and finished it."
Sera's breath catches. Five years of anger, of hurt, of believing Dante chose his pack over her—and now he's saying he did it to protect her?
"I don't believe you," she whispers.
His grip tightens. "I don't care what you believe. I care about keeping you alive. And that means—"
A wolf's howl splits the air.
They both freeze.
The howl comes again, closer this time. It's a distress call—pack members in danger.
Dante releases her wrist, already moving toward the sound. "Stay here."
"Like hell."
He spins back. "Sera—"
"I'm still a wolf, Dante. I can help."
"You're not pack. You're not trained for—"
A scream cuts him off. Human. Female. Coming from the direction of the marina.
They run.
Sera's wolf surges forward, lending her speed. They round the corner of the harbor master's office to find a scene of chaos. Two wolves—Silverclaw pack members by their scent—have cornered a third wolf against a stack of lobster traps. But the cornered wolf is wrong. Its fur is matted, its eyes feral and yellow. Foam drips from its jaws.
"Rabid?" Sera asks, but she already knows the answer.
"Something worse." Dante shifts as he runs, his clothes tearing as gray fur erupts across his body. His alpha wolf is massive, easily twice the size of a normal wolf.
The rabid wolf launches itself at the pack members. Dante intercepts mid-air, jaws closing around the creature's throat. They hit the ground in a tangle of fur and teeth.
The other pack wolves join the fight. Sera shifts without thinking, her rust-colored wolf smaller but faster. She darts in, harrying the rabid wolf's flanks, giving Dante openings.
It's over in seconds. The rabid wolf goes limp in Dante's jaws.
But as its body hits the ground, Sera sees something that makes her blood freeze.
A symbol carved into the creature's shoulder. Three lines intersecting in a pattern she recognizes.
She shifts back to human, not caring about her nakedness. "Dante. Dante, look."
He shifts, his eyes following her pointing finger. When he sees the symbol, his entire body goes rigid.
"No," he breathes. "That's not possible."
"What is it?" one of the pack wolves asks.
Dante doesn't answer. He's staring at Sera, and in his eyes she sees the same horror she feels crawling through her gut.
Because that symbol means the murders aren't random.
Someone knows what they did five years ago.
And they're not just killing wolves.
They're sending a message.
"We need to go," Dante says, his voice hollow. "Right now. Both of us."
"Go where?"
He meets her eyes, and in them she sees the truth that's about to shatter both their worlds.
"To the place where it all started. The clearing in Blackwood Forest."
Sera's heart stops. "Why?"
"Because Thomas left me a message before he died. He said if anything happened to him, I needed to dig beneath the old oak tree."
"What's buried there?"
Dante's jaw clenches. "The proof of what really happened the night you were exiled. The evidence we've spent five years hiding."
He reaches for her hand, and this time she doesn't pull away.
"Someone's found out, Sera. And they're going to use it to destroy everything."
They move to positions, Elena at the front door, Dante and Sera at a broken window facing the back. Through gaps in the walls, Sera sees figures moving in the darkness. The Order came prepared, dressed in tactical gear, carrying assault rifles.Hunters who know how to kill supernaturals."Ready?" Elena calls softly."Ready," Dante confirms.Elena throws open the front door and runs, shifting into a silver-gray wolf mid-stride. Gunfire erupts immediately, bullets tearing through the night.Sera and Dante burst through the back window. Sera's rust-colored wolf hits the ground first, immediately attacking the nearest hunter—her jaws close on his arm, making him drop his weapon.Dante's alpha wolf is right behind her, massive and deadly. He takes down two hunters before they can react, his supernatural speed overwhelming their human reflexes.But there are too many. For every hunter they take down, two more appear. Silver bullets whiz past Sera's head. One catches her shoulder, burning li
Two weeks pass in a blur of planning, training, and desperate diplomacy.Sera stands in the conference room of the Chicago vampire court, trying not to fidget under the cold gazes of five master vampires. They're old, centuries old—and they regard her with the barely concealed disdain that ancient predators reserve for younger species."So the wolves want our help," Master Valentina says, her accent thick with old-world Italian. "How interesting.""We're asking for an alliance," Sera corrects carefully. "The Crimson Order threatens all supernaturals, not just wolves.""The Order has been threatening us for centuries. We've survived by staying in the shadows." Master Chen—no relation to David Chen, apparently vampires just really like that surname—leans back in his ornate chair. "Why should we risk exposure now?""Because the shadows won't save you this time." Sera pulls up the intelligence Elena provided, projecting it onto the wall. "These are Order operations planned for vampire ter
Sera's mind reels. Dante's mother has been dead for fifteen years. Everyone knows the story—she died in a car accident when Dante was eleven. There was a funeral. A grave.But she's standing right in front of them."This isn't real," Dante says, his voice hollow. "You're dead.""I'm very much alive." The woman, Dante's mother, takes a cautious step forward. "I know this is a shock—""A shock?" Dante's laugh is bitter. "You died. I buried you. I mourned you for fifteen years.""You buried someone else. A woman who looked enough like me to pass a quick inspection." Her voice is gentle, sad. "I'm so sorry, Dante. I never wanted you to believe I was dead.""Then why?" The pain in Dante's voice breaks Sera's heart. "Why let me think?""Because I had to disappear. The Crimson Order was coming for me. For all of us. If they'd known I survived, they would have used you to find me." Dante's mother's eyes shine with unshed tears. "I did it to protect you. To keep you safe.""Safe?" Dante's hand
Dawn breaks cold and gray over the inter-pack council building.Sera watches from the hotel window as transport vehicles arrive, guards, officials, and witnesses. Today, Victoria Silverclaw will die for her crimes."You don't have to go," Dante says from behind her. He's already dressed in formal black."Yes, I do. As Luna, I need to witness this.""As my aunt, I wish you didn't have to."Sera turns. Despite everything Victoria did, she sees the pain in Dante's eyes. He's about to watch his last living relative die."We could stay here," she offers. "Send Marcus as our representative.""No." Dante's voice is firm. "I need to be there. The pack needs to see their alpha standing strong, even when it's hard."They dress in silence and head downstairs. The hotel lobby is full of wolves from various packs, all here to witness the execution of a traitor. Some look satisfied. Others look troubled.Agent Morrison meets them outside. "Ready?""No," Dante says honestly. "But let's get this over
The inter-pack council building looms like a courthouse from another era, all marble columns and imposing architecture designed to make wolves feel small.Sera adjusts her borrowed suit jacket for the fifth time. "I hate this.""I know." Dante straightens his tie, looking equally uncomfortable in formal wear. "But we need to make a good impression.""We're testifying about murder and corruption. What kind of impression is that?""The honest kind." He takes her hand. "Come on. Morrison's waiting."Inside, the building is all polished floors and echoing hallways. Agent Morrison meets them at security, looking official in her Task Force uniform."You ready?" she asks."As we'll ever be," Dante says.They're led to a hearing room that looks more like a courtroom. Five alphas sit behind an elevated desk—the inter-pack tribunal. Sera recognizes Alpha Morrison from Montana (Sarah's father, apparently), but the others are strangers.Victoria sits at a defendant's table, flanked by lawyers and
Sera wakes to sunlight streaming through unfamiliar windows and Dante's arm heavy across her waist.For a moment, she panics. Years of sleeping alone, always ready to run, have trained her body to react. Then memory floods back. The mill. Victoria's confession. The pack vote.Dante. Finally, completely, undeniably hers.She turns carefully, not wanting to wake him. In sleep, he looks younger, the weight of alpha responsibility smoothed from his features. There's a scar on his collarbone she doesn't remember—one of many changes five years have carved into both of them."Stop staring," he mumbles, eyes still closed."How did you know?""I can feel you. Always could." He opens his eyes, and the heat in them makes her breath catch. "Morning, Luna."The title sends a thrill through her. "Morning, Alpha."His hand slides up her spine, pulling her closer. "We have three hours before the tribunal.""Then we should probably get up.""Probably." He kisses her neck. "Or we could stay here."Sera






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