LOGINPOV: Cain
I have spent twenty years making myself into something that does not want. It is, I think, the most useful thing I have ever done. A man who wants is a man with an opening, and openings get people killed — my people, specifically, because my people are my responsibility, and so my wants died a long time ago and I learned to call it strength.
She walked into that hall, and my wolf tried to get out of my skin.
Twenty years. One inhale.
I spend the night after the ceremony in the kind of controlled fury that looks, from the outside, like perfect stillness. Bryn, who has served as my Second for six years and knows me better than anyone alive, takes one look at me in the morning and stays three feet away and does not ask questions. This is why she is good at her job.
The Alpha Council meeting is mid-morning. All four of us around a table with the King and his advisors, going through the Selection's protocols with the thoroughness of men who have done this before. I have read the documents. I know the timeline. I am not listening to the documents.
Rose sits across the room during the opening portion — candidates observe the first session, a tradition, another opportunity for assessment on both sides. She sits with her hands folded and her expression neutral and she does not look at me once. I watch her not look at me, and I am more unsettled by this than I would be if she stared.
Luca is talking to her after the session, which I notice with a feeling I refuse to name. Dorian is watching her from the window with that careful analytical expression that means he has already concluded something and is deciding whether to act on it. Rafe is not in the room.
I engineer a moment alone with her in the garden that afternoon. Not accidentally. I am not a man who does things accidentally.
She is sitting on the stone bench near the eastern wall, reading. She does not look up when she hears me coming. She finishes her sentence first, and then she looks up, and her expression gives me absolutely nothing.
You felt it, I say.
A pause. She says she does not know what I mean.
That is a lie.
Is it? She tilts her head slightly. You are very certain for a man who has known me for thirty-six hours.
I have known you since the moment you walked into that hall and my wolf tried to get out of my skin.
She holds my gaze for a moment. Something moves behind her eyes — not surprise, she had clearly been expecting this conversation — but something else, something more complicated. Then she says: That sounds like your problem, not mine.
She stands, closes her book, and walks back toward the Cradle. I let her go.
It costs me more than any battle I have ever lost.
Alone in the garden, I allow myself the honest version of my own assessment. I have felt attraction before. I have felt the kind of territorial possessiveness that sometimes comes with proximity to someone your wolf finds interesting. I have never felt this — this bone-level recognition, this absolute infuriating certainty. And what makes it stranger is the texture of it. It is not the sense that she belongs to me, which is what I would expect from pack bonding instinct. It is the sense that I belong somewhere that she is. The distinction matters. I turn it over and do not know what to do with it.
I go back to my chambers. I try to work. At midnight, I am still at the desk when Bryn knocks and comes in with the expression she wears when she has information she would rather not have.
What? I say.
The candidate who withdrew last night, Bryn says. I overheard two of the King's household guards talking this morning. In the eastern service corridor. They thought they were alone.
And?
They did not say family illness. Bryn is careful with this, precise. The phrase they used was managed.
I set down my pen. Managed.
Yes.
I sit with that word. Managed. It is not the vocabulary of illness or departure. It is the vocabulary of problems being solved. I do not know what it means precisely. I know it is not good. I know it concerns a young woman who entered a royal Selection and no longer appears to be in it.
I tell Bryn to find out everything she can about the previous Selection — the one four years ago, the heir who died, anyone who can be reached quietly. She nods and leaves.
It is past two in the morning when I finally move to the window. I am not sure what draws me to look at the old wing — the closed section of the palace that has been shuttered since the last Selection —, but I do look, and there is a light there. A single light, moving slowly behind the glass.
I watch it. Someone is moving through the old wing at two in the morning, which is closed, which should be empty.
As I watch, the figure stops. Turns. And looks directly at my window.
From this distance, I can see nothing of their face. They stand perfectly still for a long moment, looking at precisely the spot where I am standing, as if they knew I was there. Then the light goes out.
I stand in the dark for a long time after that. Something has already started that I do not have the full shape of yet. I can feel it the way I feel weather changing — in the chest, in the instincts, in the particular quality of stillness before something breaks.
I go back to my desk. I do not sleep.
POV: RoseThe change, when it came, was not dramatic. There was no light, no detonation, none of the qualities I had described once to Wren when explaining what the bond's completion had felt like, a settling rather than an event, deeper this time, older, the specific quality of something finding its proper shape after eight hundred years of being almost but not quite formed.I felt it land in my chest alongside the other five, a sixth compass point, distinct from all the others, carrying a quality I did not have an immediate name for, something that felt less like a single person's presence and more like the accumulated weight of patience itself, settling finally into a place that had been built for it before any of us existed to receive it.Dorian was already at the mural, lamp raised, examining the paint."It has not changed," he said, after a long moment. "The image is identical to what we found. Five joined hands. A sixth figure at the edge.""Perhaps it was never meant to change
POV: LucaI watched Rose consider the question for longer than I expected her to, and I understood why, because the question the woman in the second chair had asked was not small, and answering it quickly would have disrespected the size of what was actually being decided."What is your name," Rose said finally.The woman in the chair was quiet for a moment."I do not have one," she said. "I have never needed one. I have always simply been what remained, without anyone needing to address me directly until tonight.""Choose one," Rose said. "The way Ash chose theirs. I am not going to decide what to call you, and I am not going to keep speaking to you as though you are simply a function of the design rather than something that has, by your own account, accumulated enough awareness over eight hundred years to ask whether you belong."The woman considered this with visible care."Mira," she said eventually. "Not after anyone specific. The word simply feels correct, the way Ash described
POV: RoseWe did not have to wait long to learn what the woman meant.Three nights after her second waking, I woke in the dark hours before dawn to a feeling I had never experienced in four years of carrying the bond, all five points, Cain and Rafe and Luca and Dorian and Ash, suddenly and simultaneously pulled toward a single direction, the way a compass needle swings when it finally finds true north after spinning uncertainly.The direction was the old quarter.I dressed quickly and went to the door, and found Cain already there, his hand raised to knock before I opened it, the bond having woken him the same instant it woke me."You felt it too," he said."All five points," I said. "Pulled the same way, all at once."We gathered the others within minutes, the speed of people who had spent four years learning to move quickly when the bond gave warning, and we went to the old quarter together, all five of us, Saren following because Saren always seemed to know when something required
POV: CainI did not like the plan, and I told Rose so directly, the way I had told her things directly since the first night in the carriage."Every time we have gone to that room expecting answers," I said, "we have come back with more questions than we started with. The buried room gave us the third mirror and the warning about the watcher. The upper room gave us the mural and the second chair and, indirectly, the discrepancy that nearly convinced us Dorian was the watcher himself. I do not trust that room to give us a clean answer simply because we need one.""I do not expect a clean answer," Rose said. "I expect the truth, whatever shape it takes. That has always been worth more to me than a comfortable answer that happens to be wrong."I could not argue with this, because it was, in every important way, exactly correct, and exactly like her.We went that evening, the same configuration as before, Rose first, myself second, Dorian with the lamp, Rafe and Luca at the street, though
POV: DorianI did not sleep that night, and I do not say this as a figure of speech. I sat in the office with Rose until the lamp burned out entirely, and then we sat in the dark for a while longer, because neither of us wanted to be the one to say that the conversation needed to end before either of us had anything resembling an answer.What I knew, by the time the window began to grey with the first suggestion of morning, was this. Three years ago, on a date my own access log claimed I had entered the record-keeping office, Selene's independent log showed nothing. My own notebook, the one I had never let leave my possession, had a single blank page where every surrounding page was filled.I did not remember the day.This was the detail that frightened me most, more than the discrepancy itself. I have a precise memory. I have built my entire usefulness to this structure on the foundation of remembering things accurately, cross-referencing them, catching the small inconsistency that e
POV: RoseWe built the list over four days, working at night, after everything else the day required had been finished, in the office with the window, the door locked, the lamp turned low enough that anyone passing in the corridor would assume the room was empty.Dorian approached it the way he approached every document, methodically, ruling people out before he allowed himself to consider ruling anyone in. Cain was eliminated within the first night, not because I asked Dorian to spare him, but because the access records showed, conclusively, that Cain had never once been alone in any location where the design's deepest secrets were kept. He had always been with someone, the position he occupied, between Rose and whatever threat existed, meant he was never unsupervised in the buried room, never alone in the old quarter, never given the specific kind of unwitnessed access the watcher would have required.Rafe was eliminated on the second night, for a different reason. His nineteen days
POV: RoseI woke before the palace did.This was not unusual — I had been waking before the palace since I arrived, in the cold hour when the night had not yet committed to morning, and the building made sounds that had nothing to do with its inhabitants. Settling sounds. Old stone conversing with
POV: CainI was not a man who frightened easily. This was not bravado; it was the result of a fairly thorough inventory of the things capable of frightening me and the quiet elimination of most of them over the course of twenty-eight years.The book had frightened me.Not its existence. Not even wh
POV: CainThe girl had good instincts.Cain had known it from the first morning — the way she'd moved through the Selection breakfast like water finding its level, touching nothing, disturbing nothing, learning everything. He'd watched her from across the room with the particular attention he gave
POV: RoseThey arrive, all four of them, in the space of about twenty minutes. Rafe I invited. Cain followed Rafe's scent through the corridor with the territorial instinct of a man who has spent too long circling the edges of a situation and finally decided to come in. Dorian was already in the ha







