LOGIN"Everyone get inside! Now!"
Coach Sullivan's voice boomed across the campus as students scattered in every direction. The emergency bell was ringing, a piercing wail that sent everyone into a panic.
"What is that thing?" someone screamed.
"Did you see it? It was huge!"
Noah stood frozen near the gymnasium entrance, his phone pressed to his ear. His father's voice crackled through the speaker, urgent and commanding.
"Noah, listen to me very carefully. Do not go after that thing. You can't kill it yourself. Find safety now. The hunters are on their way."
Noah watched as the white blur disappeared into the woods beyond the campus. His wolf was already stirring, the hunter instinct roaring to life in his veins.
A kitsune. Here. At his university.
"Noah, did you hear me?" Andrew Phillips demanded.
"Yeah, I heard you," Noah said, but he was already moving toward the woods.
"Noah, I'm serious. Stay where you are!"
Noah ended the call and shoved his phone into his pocket. His father could be furious later. Right now, every instinct he had was screaming at him to chase. To hunt.
Kitsunes were supposed to be extinct. His grandfather had told him stories about the hunts, about how dangerous and cunning the fox spirits were. How they deceived and destroyed entire packs.
This one wasn't getting away.
Noah shifted mid stride, his body transforming seamlessly into his wolf form. His clothes tore away as he sprinted across the field and into the woods. The scent trail was fresh, sharp, and intoxicatingly strong.
The kitsune was fast. Faster than any werewolf Noah had ever chased. It weaved through the trees with impossible grace, its nine tails streaming behind it like ribbons of white flame.
Noah pushed harder, his paws pounding against the forest floor. Branches whipped past him, but he barely felt them. His entire focus was on the creature ahead.
And then it vanished.
Noah skidded to a stop, his claws digging into the dirt. He lifted his head, scenting the air. The trail ended here, but the kitsune was gone.
A sob broke the silence.
Noah's ears swiveled toward the sound. It came from behind a massive oak tree, soft and broken.
He approached slowly, his body low and ready. When he rounded the tree, he froze.
Yuna sat curled against the trunk, naked and crying. Her arms were wrapped around herself, trying to cover her body. Leaves and dirt clung to her skin, and her eyes were red and swollen.
"Yuna?" Noah shifted back to human form, shock overriding everything else. "What are you doing here?"
"I don't know," she sobbed, her voice barely audible. "Please, I don't know what happened."
Noah's mind raced. The timing. The scent. The way his wolf had reacted to her before.
"Wait a minute." He took a step back, his eyes widening. "No way. That can't be true."
"Please don't tell anyone," Yuna begged, tears streaming down her face. "I don't understand what's happening to me."
Voices echoed through the woods. Men shouting. Dogs barking.
The hunters.
"Shoot, that's my dad," Noah muttered. "We have to hide. Now."
He grabbed Yuna's hand and pulled her to her feet. She stumbled, weak and disoriented, but he kept her moving. They ran deeper into the woods until Noah spotted a small ravine, just big enough for them to hide in.
"Get in," he ordered, sliding down first.
Yuna followed, her bare feet slipping on the muddy slope. The space was tight, forcing them to press against each other. Noah could feel every inch of her skin against his, warm and soft despite the cold air.
"We need to mask our scent," he said quietly. He scooped up handfuls of mud from the bottom of the ravine and began smearing it over his arms and chest.
Yuna watched him for a second before doing the same, rubbing the mud over her shoulders and legs.
"Here," Noah murmured, reaching up to spread mud across her neck. His fingers brushed her skin, and she shivered.
Their eyes met. The space between them felt impossibly small. Noah's wolf purred despite the danger, despite everything.
"This isn't good," he whispered.
The voices grew closer. Flashlights swept through the trees above them, and the hunters' footsteps crunched on the fallen leaves.
"Spread out! It has to be here somewhere!" Andrew Phillips's voice rang out clearly.
Noah held his breath. Yuna pressed closer to him, trembling. He could feel her heartbeat against his chest, rapid and terrified.
The hunters passed directly overhead. One of them stopped, sniffing the air.
"I've got something. This way!"
But they moved in the wrong direction, following a false trail. Minutes passed that felt like hours. Finally, the voices faded into the distance.
Noah waited until he couldn't hear them anymore before moving. He climbed out of the ravine carefully, scanning the area.
"We're safe now," he said quietly. "Let's go."
He shifted back into his wolf form and lowered himself so Yuna could climb onto his back. She hesitated, then wrapped her arms around his neck. Her bare skin pressed against his fur, and Noah forced himself to focus on getting them back safely.
He took a route through the back of campus, avoiding the main areas where students and hunters would be gathered. By the time they reached his dorm building, the sun was starting to set.
Noah's room was on the top floor, away from most of the other students. He shifted back and unlocked the door, ushering Yuna inside quickly.
"Bathroom's there," he said, pointing. "I'll find you something to wear."
Yuna nodded and disappeared into the bathroom. Noah heard the shower start a moment later.
He pulled out a pair of sweatpants and an old t shirt from his dresser, setting them on the bed. Then he grabbed his own clothes and quickly got dressed.
His phone buzzed with messages from his father, but he ignored them. He needed time to think. To figure out what the hell was going on.
Yuna was a kitsune. The creature his family had hunted to extinction. The enemy he was raised to kill on sight.
And she was his mate.
The bathroom door opened, and Yuna stepped out wearing his clothes. They were far too big on her, the sleeves hanging past her hands, the pants pooling around her feet. She looked small and vulnerable.
"Thank you," she said quietly.
Before Noah could respond, an announcement blared from the speakers outside.
"All students must report to the main field immediately. This is mandatory. I repeat, all students to the main field."
Noah and Yuna looked at each other.
"They're going to question everyone," Noah said grimly.
Yuna's face went pale. "What am I supposed to say?"
"Nothing. Let me do the talking." Noah grabbed a jacket and tossed it to her. "Put this on. And whatever happens out there, stay close to me."
"Why are you helping me?" Yuna asked, catching the jacket.
Noah met her eyes, his expression hard. "Because if I don't, you're dead. And I might be the one to kill you"
"An artificial Binding," Margaret said, and the way she said it, flat and precise as a line drawn in stone, told Yuna exactly how serious this was.It was seven in the morning and Margaret was on speaker on Yuna's phone, Noah sitting on the edge of Yuna's desk, Camille cross legged on her bed, all of them still in the slightly unfinished state of people who hadn't had enough sleep. Rebecca had joined by phone from her apartment."Is it possible?" Noah asked."It's theoretically possible the way many dangerous things are theoretically possible," Margaret said. "The Binding is a neurological and supernatural mechanism. It runs through royal bloodline DNA, but the mechanism itself, the way it creates and maintains connection, is not unique to genetics. It could, in principle, be replicated if you understood it precisely enough.""And if Caine has someone who understands it precisely enough," Rebecca said."Then he doesn't need to control Yuna. He doesn't need to appear to align her with
They were back at Andrew's estate by midnight.Andrew, to his credit, did not say anything about the hour. He opened the door, looked at their faces, and made coffee.Rebecca was already there, having driven from her apartment in West Hollywood. She sat at the kitchen table with her hands around a mug, her expression doing the careful thing it did when she was managing more information than she was comfortable with."Tell me everything Tyler said," Yuna said, sitting down."He called from a gas station somewhere in the valley. He'd taken a bus from Malibu." Rebecca's voice was steady. "He said the atmosphere in the property changed around noon. Caine received a message, Tyler didn't know how, and then Caine assembled everyone and told them the council had voted to maintain Yuna's status.""How did the others react?" Noah asked."Mostly neutral. Some relieved, some disappointed. But then Caine said something else." Rebecca looked at Yuna. "He said the vote didn't matter because the rea
At nine that evening, Yuna sat on the floor of her room with the Binding open and reached through it carefully. She found each of the survivors in turn, touched the connection briefly. Owen. Diane, warmer now. Sophie, back with Patrick. The others, scattered and alive.She did not reach toward the gaps where Tyler was.She told herself she'd given him time and she meant it.She went to bed at ten and lay in the dark thinking about her mother's letter, about the phrase love that did not waver, and at some point she actually slept.Morning arrived with the particular clarity of days that will matter.She dressed and looked at herself in the mirror. Noah had said wear something that looks like yourself. She wore jeans and a clean white shirt and the royal bracelet and the small modified silver charm Noah had made her, now worn openly because the official distribution was no longer mandatory since the Victor threat had been neutralized.She looked like herself. Exactly herself.Camille ap
Margaret arrived at eight the next morning in a car that looked like it had been borrowed from someone practical, wearing a grey coat and carrying a single bag. She looked at the campus with the expression of someone who had agreed to something and was committed to it regardless of their feelings about the environment."Take me somewhere without students," she said when Yuna met her at the gate.They used Andrew Phillips's estate, which was an hour's drive but had the advantage of a proper meeting room, secure perimeter, and the kind of privacy that a university common room couldn't offer. Andrew met them there with Noah, Sandra Morrison who had driven from San Diego, and Diane who had flown from Colorado overnight.The fact that Diane had gotten on a plane without being asked was, Yuna thought, its own testimony.Margaret and Andrew Phillips regarded each other when they entered the room, two people with decades of history on opposite sides of the same events. It was a moment that de
Yuna showed the message to Noah at seven in the morning and watched his expression go through several things in quick succession."Caine," he said."Has to be. He wanted me to know before the review that he thinks it's already decided." She put the phone down. "It's psychological.""Is it working?""A little," she admitted. "Which means it's very good psychological."Noah looked at the message for another moment, then handed the phone back. "Don't reply. Don't acknowledge it. That's what he wants, he wants you reactive.""I know.""I'm going to find out what was submitted to the council today. My father's contact said end of morning." He looked at her across the small table in the campus coffee shop where they'd met early, both slightly underslept, both operating on the particular alertness of people who have learned that threats don't observe reasonable hours. "How are you?""Ask me after Camille's meeting with Megan."He reached across the table and tipped her chin up briefly, just
Noah told her everything on the phone before he'd even left the Malibu city limits.Yuna sat on her bed and listened, her knees pulled to her chest, the Binding humming with something unsettled that had started the moment he described Caine's face when he said six months is reasonable."He's not going to honor it," she said when Noah finished."No," Noah said. "He's not.""Then why agree at all?""Because agreeing costs him nothing and gave me a reason to leave without pushing further." She could hear the engine of his car in the background, the movement of highway. "He wanted me gone before I could spend more time observing. He was managing me."Yuna was quiet for a moment. "Sophie's coming back?""She's already with Patrick. She wants to call you herself." Noah paused. "Tyler's staying. I don't think he's a lost cause, but he needs time, and pushing him will make it worse.""I know." She pressed her fingertips to the bracelet on her wrist. "What did you actually see in there? Beyond
"Okay, explain to me one more time why we're voluntarily running laps at six in the morning."Camille bent over, gasping for air, her face red from exertion. Two weeks had passed since the hunter council meeting, and life had settled into something almost resembling normal.Almost."Because Coach S
"You're telling me I have to write an essay on symbolism in Romantic poetry after everything we just went through?"Camille stared at her laptop with something between disbelief and exhaustion. Three days had passed since the battle at the amphitheater. Three days of recovery, police statements, an
"Hey." Noah's voice was soft. He sat beside her on the motel bed. "You were screaming.""Sorry. Didn't mean to wake you.""I wasn't sleeping either." He reached out and took her hand. "You don't have to do this, you know. We could run. Change the plan. Disappear.""And spend the rest of our lives l
"This is it?"Camille stared at the run down cabin with obvious skepticism. The lake house was more of a shack than anything else, weathered wood and broken shutters, surrounded by overgrown weeds and pine trees."I said it was remote, not luxurious," Noah said, helping Yuna off the stolen sedan th







