LOGINI didn't come here to steal, I didn't train for four years to steal.
"I would never, Alpha."
"No," he said softly. "I don't think you would."
The Beta cleared his throat. "Alpha—"
"I'm coming." But Adrian's eyes stayed on me for one more heartbeat. "This evening, then."
I fled.
I made it to the servants' wing before my legs gave out. Collapsing against the rough stone wall, I pressed both hands over my mouth to muffle the sound threatening to tear free.
No. No, no, no—
The mate bond was a living thing inside my chest, a golden thread pulling me back toward his quarters, toward him. My wolf paced frantically, whining, desperate to return to our mate.
Our mate who had murdered our entire pack.
"Isora?"
I looked up to find Asher striding toward me, his warrior's training clothes dusty from the morning drills. The concern on his face nearly broke me.
"What happened? Did he hurt you?"
I shook my head, not trusting my voice.
"Then what—" He stopped, eyes widening.
"Your wolf. I can feel her. Kira’s—"
"We need to talk," I managed. "Now. Somewhere private."
Understanding and dread crossed his features in equal measure. "The old storage building. Five minutes."
He left first, and I followed after counting to sixty, my hands shaking so badly I had to clasp them together.
The storage building was abandoned, used only for broken furniture waiting to be repaired. Asher was already there, pacing like a caged animal.
"Tell me," he said the moment I closed the door.
"The bond." My voice cracked. "It snapped."
He froze mid-step. "What?"
"The mate bond. When I looked at him, when our eyes met—" I wrapped my arms around myself, trying to hold the pieces together. "He's my mate, Asher."
"No." The word came out flat, disbelieving.
"Not him. It can't be him."
"You think I wanted this?" The words erupted from me, four years of control shattering. "You think I chose to be bound to the monster who killed my parents? Who slaughtered my entire pack?"
Asher crossed to me in two strides, gripping my shoulders. "We leave. Right now. We pack what we can carry and we run—"
"No."
"Isora—"
"I said no." I pulled away from him, my voice dropping to something cold and hard. "I didn't survive four years in the wilderness, didn't train until my fingers bled, didn't walk into the enemy's fortress just to run away now."
"You can't fight a mate bond." Desperation bled into his voice. "You know what it does to wolves who reject it. The pain, the madness…"
"Then I'll be the first to survive it."
"And what happens when his bond snaps?" Asher demanded. "When he feels the pull toward you? What then?"
"Then I'll be ready." I'll kill him.
"Will you?" He gestured at my shaking hands. "Because from where I'm standing, you can barely keep yourself together."
The truth of it burned. I was coming apart at the seams, my wolf screaming for a mate I could never have, my body aching for a man I needed to kill.
"I'll handle it," I said.
"How? How do you handle being bound to someone you hate?"
"The same way I've handled everything else." I met his eyes, let him see the ice that had kept me alive. "I'll bury it. I'll use it. And when the moment comes, I'll put an arrow through his heart and watch him bleed." Just like my parents bled that night.
Asher stared at me for a long moment, and I saw the exact moment he realized I meant it. That I would rather die than accept this bond.
"I can't lose you too," he said quietly.
"You won't."
"Promise me." His hands found mine, squeezing gently. "Promise me you won't do anything reckless. That you'll be careful."
I wanted to promise. I wanted to give him that comfort. But lies between us had never worked.
"I'll try."
It wasn't enough. We both knew it. But it was all I had.
A knock on the storage building door made us spring apart. A young servant boy poked his head in, eyes wide.
"Sorry to interrupt, but there's a message for Isora. You're wanted back in the Alpha's quarters. He's asking for you specifically."
The bottom dropped out of my stomach. "Now?"
"Right now, miss. He sent me to find you."
Asher's jaw clenched. "I'm coming with you."
"You can't. Warriors don't accompany servants."
"I don't care—"
"Asher, please." I touched his arm briefly. "I need you to trust me."
"That's not the problem." His voice was raw. "I trust you. It's him I don't trust."
"One hour," I promised. "If I'm not back in one hour—"
"I'm coming for you. Pack rules be damned."
I nodded, turned to follow the servant boy, but Asher caught my hand.
"Isora." His eyes searched mine. "Whatever he is to fate, you remember what he is to us. What he took from us."
"I remember," I whispered. "I remember everything."
Dear Ink lovers🌸💞 If you're reading this, you made it through the fire. And I don't just mean the flames that burned Nightfall Pack. I mean the flames of betrayal, of heartbreak, of watching characters you loved fall apart and get back up again. I mean the flames of a story that never promised you a happy ending—only a truthful one. This book was never meant to be soft. It was never meant to be safe. It was meant to feel real—raw, broken, and achingly human, even in a world of wolves and curses and fated mates. When I started writing this story, I knew exactly how it would end. Not because I wanted it to end that way, but because that's what the characters deserved. Adrian's death was never a punishment—it was a completion. He spent twenty years running from his curse, hiding from himself, pushing everyone away because he was terrified of hurting them. In the end, he didn't die as a monster. He died as a man who had finally found something worth dying for. He died as a ma
🪷ISORA🪷 Six months had passed since the fire, and I was still standing. The pack had found its rhythm again. The warriors trained in the courtyard, their swords clashing and their voices calling out commands. The servants moved through the halls, their footsteps soft on the stone, their hands busy with their tasks. The children played in the gardens, their laughter echoing off the walls like a song that had been missing for too long. Life had not stopped. It had simply continued, the way it always did, the way it always would. Garrick had stepped into the role of acting Alpha with a steadiness that I admired, his presence filling the spaces that Adrian had left behind. He had not tried to replace him. He had simply held the pack together, the way Adrian would have wanted. Olivine had become his anchor, her green eyes always finding him across the room, her hand always reaching for his when she thought no one was looking. I watched them sometimes, the way they moved around ea
🪷ISORA🪷 The journal trembled in my hands as I stared at the third page. The tears were already falling, blurring my vision, but I could still see it clearly. A two year old baby girl sitting on the steps of a house, her dark hair a mess of curls, her hazel eyes wide and innocent. The baby who had smiled at the beast. The baby who had made him shift back for the first time. The baby who had been me. My fingers shook as I turned the page. Another drawing. A girl in a plain gray dress, standing in his study, her eyes burning with hatred. The first day I had walked into his pack. The first day he had seen me. The day I had tried to kill him. I remembered that day so clearly, the way he had looked at me, the way he had asked me to look at him, the way the bond had snapped into place before I even knew what was happening. I turned the page again. Me in the bathroom, water dripping from my hair, my body wrapped in a towel. He had been watching me, drawing me, memorizing me. I had n
🪷ISORA🪷 The fire was still burning. I was sitting on the cold ground, my knees pulled to my chest, my eyes fixed on the flames that were consuming him. The rain had stopped hours ago, but the sky was still dark, and the air was thick with the smell of smoke and ash and grief. I had been sitting here for hours, watching the fire burn, watching the flames lick at his body, watching the last traces of him disappear into the sky. My hands were numb from the cold, my face was raw from the tears, and my throat was raw from the screaming, but I could not move. I could not look away. I could not do anything except sit here and watch him burn. His face was still there, through the flames, through the smoke. I could see his eyes, his lips, the scar on his jaw. I could see the way he had looked at me when he said I love you. I could see the way his hand had fallen from my face. I could see the way the light had faded from his eyes. I reached for him, my hand stretching toward the fire, tow
🪷ISORA🪷 The healer's hands were still on Adrian's chest, his fingers pressed against the place where his heart should have been beating. I watched his face, watched the way his eyes darkened, watched the way his jaw tightened. "The wizard." The healer said, his voice low and urgent. "The tether was bound through him. Azrian used his magic. If the wizard dies, the bond might break." I did not wait to hear the rest. I was already on my feet, running toward the dungeon, my legs carrying me faster than I had ever moved. The rain was still falling, soaking through my clothes, mingling with the tears that were streaming down my face. I did not feel any of it. I could not feel anything except the hollow emptiness where the bond used to be. The absence of him was a physical weight, pressing down on my chest, making it hard to breathe. My lungs burned and my legs screamed and my heart was pounding so hard I could feel it in my throat, but I did not stop. I will not let him die. I b
🪷ISORA🪷 I watched Adrian fall to his knees, and something inside me snapped. Kira had been pacing beneath my skin since the moment Azrian appeared at the gates, her fury building with every taunt, every laugh, every time my mate's blood spilled onto the stone. But when I saw Adrian stumble, when I saw him struggle to rise, when I saw his hand pressed against his side and the blood seeping through his fingers, I could not hold her back any longer. "You promised me his death." Kira's voice was a snarl in my head, raw and ancient and filled with years of grief. "You swore on our parents' ashes. Now take it." I did not think. I did not hesitate. I shifted with the speed of light, my bones cracking and reforming, my body surging forward before my mind could catch up. My white wolf was faster than anything I had ever known, a streak of silver and fury that crossed the distance between us in the span of a heartbeat. The ground blurred beneath my paws, and the wind roared in my ears, an
Killian's growl ripped through my chest."She's not yours." The words came out in a register I did not produce often, cold and lethal and absolutely without ambiguity, and Azrian heard all of that and the smile that followed was the worst one he had."The bond doesn't lie, dear brother." He was sti
🐺ADRIAN🐺"You're staring like you've seen a ghost."The smile had not moved from his face since he spoke the first words, the same smile it had always been, wide enough to read as warm from a distance, empty enough to understand correctly up close. He tilted his head to the side, the specific ges
🐺ADRIAN🐺The moment my feet touched the soil of Winterfell I felt him.A full, immediate, specific pull that arrived the instant contact was made with the ground and did not diminish as I moved further into the forest. it intensified, focused, the kind of pull that only exists between two things
🐺ADRIAN🐺"This is going to be a disaster, do not take her with you." Killian growled angrily in my head.Killian had been at this since yesterday evening, since the moment I told Garrick we were moving out and the decision became concrete rather than planned, and he ha







