Se connecterIt happened fast. One second Elias was standing at the bar. The next his hand came down hard on the counter and he turned to face her with something in his eyes that was not the usual nothing. "Mate." The word came out low. Rough. Like it surprised him. Liora went very still. "Tell me." His voice was controlled but tight around the edges. "What did you do to me?" "I didn't—" "My heart is racing." He took one step closer. "Throat dry. Body burning up." His eyes searched her face. "What was in that glass?" "It's not—" "Did you poison me?" "No!" "Then what—" "You feel something!" The words came out before she could stop them. Liora snapped her mouth shut. Then opened it again. "You do. You feel something for me. That's why it's working." Elias stared at her. "Answer me," he said quietly. "What was in it." Liora straightened. "No poison. I promise. Just a fun potion mixed with a little alcohol. That's all." "That's all." "It only amplifies emotions and
Sophia had one rule. "Don't overthink it," she said, shoving Liora forward. "Just walk over there and be natural." "Natural," Liora repeated. "Like a normal person." "Right." "Not like someone who just got dumped last night and is now approaching the most powerful Alpha in the North for survival purposes." "That's very specific." "Go." Liora went.She crossed the path with her shoulders back and her chin up and absolutely no plan whatsoever. The little boy — Niko, she would learn his name later, she didn't know it yet — had settled onto the bench beside his father and was now kicking his legs and eating what appeared to be a chocolate croissant with full criminal intent. There was flake everywhere. The bench had one empty space on the other side of Elias. Liora pointed at it. "Is this seat taken?" Elias looked up. And there it was again — that face. Up close it was somehow worse. The jaw. The lashes. The Bay of Naples eyes that gave absolutely nothing away. He
"I regret it." Liora said it to the ceiling of her apartment. Flat on her back on the couch, one arm over her face, still in last night's clothes. "I completely and totally regret it." I told you.* Freya's voice was thin as paper. I told you and you didn't listen and now we're going to die in this apartment and nobody will find us for three days. "We're not going to die." Liora. "Okay, we might die." She pressed her palms against her eyes. "God, I shouldn't have broken the bond. My dad's debts are still sitting there and now I have no mate and you're fading and I just — I ruined everything."Screw the debt. Freya's tone shifted, sharper now, urgent. Liora, listen to me. You need to recharge. Right now. Today. If you don't get energy from your mate soon, I won't make it. And neither will you. "I know." Liora sat up slowly. Her whole body felt heavy. "I know, Freya." She stared at the wall. Then she thought about last night. The club. The warmth that had moved through her chest
The tablecloth moved. Just slightly. Liora looked down. Then she crouched. Slowly. And lifted the edge of the tablecloth. "What the fuck?" The woman under the table froze. Leoric knocked his chair back so hard it crashed into the couple behind them. Half the restaurant turned to look. "Baby — wait. I can explain—" "Explain." Liora straightened up. Her voice was very calm. That was the dangerous kind of calm, the kind that came right before something broke. "Explain what exactly, Leoric?" The woman crawled out from under the table. She took her time about it. Smoothed her dress. Tossed her hair. Then looked Liora dead in the eye with a smile that could curdle milk. "Surprised?" Liora recognized her then. Elowen. Beautiful, polished, entitled Elowen — who had never once looked at Liora without that exact smile. "He's my mate." Elowen stepped closer. "Mine. So why don't you take your broke little self and go?" Liora Freya's voice was barely a whisper now. Don't ma
"What's wrong? Can't even shift now?" The voice cut right through Liora. She pressed her back against the cold wall of the dressing room and tried to breathe. "Pathetic. Weak Omega bitch."That was Danny the club manager. Thick neck, gold rings on every finger, breath that always smelled like cheap whiskey and worse decisions. He stood in the doorway with his arms crossed, looking at her the way people looked at roadkill. Liora's wolf stirred faintly inside her. A flicker. That was all she got these days — a flicker. "I said I'd pay you back." Liora kept her voice steady. "But I'm not going out there and letting drunk men buy my time." Danny stepped closer. "See that VIP booth out there?" He jerked his head toward the curtain. The bass from the main floor thudded through the walls like a second heartbeat. "Tonight, you're going to make sure he has a very good time." Liora didn't move. "Scared already?" His lips stretched into something that wasn't a smile. "It's a wet par







