LOGIN
Elera:
The town didn't exist on any map.
Elara had checked three times....once on her phone before the signal died somewhere between the last gas station and the mountains, once on the printed directions her grandmother's lawyer had sent, and once more on the GPS that had given up entirely twenty minutes ago, its screen frozen on a blank stretch of road that supposedly didn't lead anywhere.
But she was here. Wherever here was.
The forest pressed in on both sides of the narrow road, trees so tall and thick they blocked out most of the afternoon sun. The air smelled different up here....cleaner, sharper, like rain and pine and something else she couldn't name. Something wild.
She tightened her grip on the steering wheel, her ancient Honda groaning as it climbed another steep incline. The road was barely wide enough for one car, riddled with potholes and cracks that made her teeth rattle. No signs. No houses. No indication that anyone had driven this way in years.
Her phone buzzed in the cup holder....one bar of signal flickering to life for half a second before disappearing again. No service. No GPS. No way to call for help if she got lost.
You're not lost, she told herself firmly. The lawyer said it was remote. You knew this.
Remote was an understatement.
She'd left the city at dawn, driven for six hours through increasingly desolate stretches of highway, and now she was somewhere deep in the mountains, following directions to a property she'd inherited from a grandmother who'd passed away two months ago. A grandmother she'd loved fiercely but hadn't seen in person since she'd graduated college a year ago.
Guilt twisted in her chest. She should've visited more. Should've made time. But Grandma had always insisted she focus on her life, her career, her independence. She'd been so proud when Elara got the job at the zoo, so excited to hear about the animals she worked with.
"You've always had a way with them, Elara," she'd said during their last phone call, her voice warm and affectionate. "They see something in you. Something special."
Elara had laughed it off. Animals liked her, sure...it's why she'd chosen to work with them....but "special" felt like a stretch. She was just... good at reading body language, at staying calm, at understanding what they needed.
Nothing special about that.
The road curved sharply, and suddenly the trees fell away.
She hit the brakes.
A town sprawled out before her in a small valley, nestled between jagged mountain peaks that looked like teeth biting into the sky. It was tiny....maybe a few dozen buildings clustered around a central square, with more scattered up the surrounding hills. Smoke rose from chimneys. Lights glowed in windows despite the fact that it was barely four in the afternoon.
It looked... wrong.
Not in any way she could put her finger on. The buildings were charming....old-fashioned stone and wood construction, flower boxes in windows, cobblestone streets. It should've felt quaint. Cozy.
Instead, it felt like the town was watching her.
She shook off the creeping unease and eased her foot off the brake, letting the car roll forward. The directions said to drive through the town and continue up the hill on the far side. Her grandmother's cottage was supposedly another mile past the town limits.
As she drove down the main street, she didn't see a single person.
Curtains twitched in windows. Doors stood slightly ajar. But no one walked the streets. No cars were parked along the curbs. The shops, a general store, what looked like a pub, a bakery, were all dark.
It was like everyone had vanished.
Or like they were hiding.
Her heart rate picked up. She pressed harder on the gas, suddenly desperate to get through this place and reach the cottage. Something about this town made her skin prickle, made the hair on the back of her neck stand up.
The buildings thinned out as she reached the far edge of town, and the road narrowed again, climbing steeply into the hills. She glanced in her rearview mirror.
For just a second, she could've sworn she saw someone standing in the middle of the street, watching her car disappear.
But when she blinked, they were gone.
The cottage appeared around a final bend in the road like something out of a fairy tale.
It was small....maybe three rooms total....with stone walls covered in creeping ivy, a sharply pitched roof, and flower boxes overflowing with wildflowers that had gone slightly wild in her grandmother's absence. A white picket fence enclosed a tidy front yard, and beyond that, she could see the forest pressing in close on three sides.
Isolated. Private. Beautiful.
She parked in the gravel driveway and sat for a moment, staring at the cottage. This was hers. This was where her grandmother had spent the last five months of her life, alone up here in the mountains.
Why? she'd asked the lawyer. Why did she move back here?
He hadn't had an answer. Just said her grandmother had left the property to her in the will, along with a small savings account and instructions to "take care of the cottage, and it will take care of you."
Cryptic. Just like Grandma.
Elara grabbed her duffel bag from the passenger seat and climbed out of the car. The air was cold up here.....much colder than it had been in the valley and she pulled her jacket tighter around herself as she walked up the stone path to the front door.
The key the lawyer had given her slid easily into the lock, and the door swung open with a soft creak.
The inside smelled like lavender and dust.
She stepped inside, her shoes echoing on the hardwood floors. The cottage was exactly as she'd imagined it...cozy and cluttered in the way only a grandmother's house could be. Floral curtains. Knitted blankets draped over a faded couch. Bookshelves crammed with old paperbacks and framed photographs.
Her chest tightened.
She set her bag down and moved through the space slowly, taking it all in. The kitchen was small but well-stocked, herbs hanging from the rafters to dry. The bedroom had a wrought-iron bed frame and a patchwork quilt she recognized from her childhood. The bathroom had a clawfoot tub and a window that looked out over the backyard.
And everywhere....everywhere....there were reminders of her.
Her reading glasses on the side table. Her favorite teacup in the sink. A half-finished knitting project in a basket by the fireplace.
It was like she'd just stepped out and would be back any minute.
Elara sank onto the couch and let herself cry.
***
By the time the sun started to set, she'd pulled herself together enough to unpack and start cleaning.
The cottage wasn't dirty, exactly, but two months of sitting empty had left a layer of dust over everything. She opened windows to air the place out, swept the floors, wiped down surfaces. It felt good to move, to do something productive instead of sitting in her grief.
She found more of her grandmother's things as she worked. A journal tucked into a desk drawer. she didn't open it, not yet. A locked wooden box on the top shelf of the bedroom closet. Photographs she didn't recognize, showing Grandma as a young woman standing in front of this very cottage.
She looked happy. Peaceful.
Had she always planned to come back here? Had she been waiting for something?
Elara shook off the questions and kept cleaning.
As the light faded outside, she realized she was starving. She'd stopped for fast food hours ago, but that had long since worn off. She rummaged through the kitchen and found tea, crackers, some canned soup that was still good.
Good enough.
She made herself a simple dinner and ate it standing at the kitchen window, looking out at the backyard. The forest was dark now, the trees looming like silent sentinels. But the sky above was clear, and as she watched, the moon began to rise.
It was huge.
Bigger than she'd ever seen it, hanging low and golden over the mountains. A full moon. Beautiful and strange and impossibly bright.
She couldn't look away.
Something about it made her chest ache. Made her feel... pulled. Like she was supposed to be outside, under that light.
Don't be ridiculous, she thought. It's just a moon.
But she found herself setting down her bowl and moving toward the back door anyway.
***
The backyard was overgrown but charming, wildflowers and tall grass, a vegetable garden that had gone to seed, and in the corner, a hammock strung between two trees.
She'd always loved hammocks.
Elara grabbed a blanket from inside and the book she'd packed for the trip, a ridiculous impulse buy from the airport bookstore titled How to Train Your Dog and settled into the hammock. She wasn't getting a dog anytime soon, but she'd been thinking about it. Something for company, now that she was living alone.
The moon rose higher, bathing everything in silver light.
The forest was alive with sound....crickets, the rustle of wind through leaves, the distant hoot of an owl. It should've been soothing.
Instead, it felt like the forest was breathing.
She tried to focus on her book, but her eyelids were heavy. The drive had been long. The grief had been exhausting. And the hammock was so comfortable, swaying gently in the breeze.
Just a few minutes, she told herself. Just a quick rest.
She let her eyes drift closed.
***
She woke to the sound of something moving in the dark.
Her eyes snapped open, her heart immediately racing. The moon was directly overhead now, so bright it was almost blinding. The book had slipped from her lap onto the grass.
And there.....just at the edge of the tree line, were two glowing eyes.
She froze.
The eyes moved closer. Slowly. Deliberately.
A shape emerged from the shadows, and her breath caught in her throat.
It was a dog.
No—not just a dog. The biggest dog she'd ever seen. Easily the size of a small bear, with thick black fur and muscles that rippled under its coat as it stalked toward her. Its eyes glowed amber in the moonlight, fixed on her with an intensity that made her stomach flip.
She should've run. Should've screamed. Should've done something.
But she couldn't move.
The dog stopped a few feet away, its massive head tilting to one side. Its gaze dropped to the book on the ground.
How to Train Your Dog.
The dog made a sound.....low and rumbling, almost like... laughter?
No. That was insane. dogs didn't laugh.
Elara swallowed hard, her hands gripping the edges of the hammock. Her voice came out shaky, barely above a whisper.
"G-good... dog?"
The wolf's eyes snapped back to hers.
And for a moment....just a heartbeat....she could've sworn she saw something human in those eyes.
Something wild and furious and utterly, devastatingly amused.
***
[KIERAN]
She just called him a dog.
A. DOG.
Kieran's wolf snarled inside his head, torn between rage and disbelief. Tear her throat out. Show her what we are. Make her understand....
But he couldn't move.
Because beneath the insult, beneath the sheer audacity of this tiny human girl sitting in a hammock in the middle of their territory with a book about training pets....
She smelled like heaven.
Like home.
Like his.
And he had absolutely no idea what the hell that meant.
She paused."But I'm not going to fight you," Lysandra continued. "Because that's not why I came here. I came to ask you a question, and I want you to answer it truthfully."Cassian's expression was wary."Why are you so afraid of her?" Lysandra asked. "That's what this is really about, isn't it? Fear. You're terrified of what she represents. You're terrified that she might be stronger than you. You're terrified that she might prove that Auriel was right.""I'm not afraid of anything," Cassian said, but there was a tremor in his voice."Yes, you are," Lysandra said. "You're afraid that if Elara survives, if she thrives, if she becomes exactly what her mother believed she could become...then everyone will know that Auriel made the right choice. That she was right to leave. That she was right to love a wolf. That she was right to believe in something bigger than power and politics."She stepped back slightly."And you can't live with that," Lysandra continued. "Because if Auriel was rig
The Fae Court's inner sanctum was a place of breathtaking beauty.Crystalline structures that caught light from sources that didn't exist in the material world. Gardens where flowers bloomed in impossible colors. Architecture that seemed to defy the laws of physics, with towers that spiraled into dimensions that human eyes couldn't quite focus on.Lysandra walked through it all like she owned it.She wore her formal robes...white and silver, marked with the sigils of House Starwhisper. Her silver and gold hair was braided with precious stones. Her ancient eyes blazed with power that made younger Fae instinctively move out of her way.No one tried to stop her.House Starwhisper was old. Was respected. Was powerful enough that confronting them required Council authorization.Cassian Thornwood didn't have that authorization.His private chambers were in the Tower of Eternal Twilight, a place reserved for the most prominent members of the Court. Lysandra ascended the spiraling stairs with
"I'm going back as formal ambassador," Lysandra corrected. "House Starwhisper has been absent from Court politics for centuries. It's time to remind them of our presence."She moved to the table and placed her hand on the map, right over Cassian's compound."Cassian acted without Council authorization," Lysandra said firmly. "He hired an assassin. He created an ancient poison. He violated the sacred law that no Fae can make war on another without Council consent.""Can you prove that?" Marcus asked practically."I can present evidence," Lysandra replied. "The assassin's testimony before death identified Cassian as the one who hired them. The poison itself is traceable to Cassian's personal magical signature, I can demonstrate that in front of the Council. And I have witnesses...all of you, who can testify to the attempted assassination.""So what are you proposing?" Alaric asked."A formal trial," Lysandra said. "Before the Grand Council of the Fae Court. Present the evidence. Demand
The next morning, the training began in earnest.Elara stood in the courtyard facing all three Alpha Kings simultaneously.Lysandra watched from the sidelines, offering commentary and corrections."Remember," the ancient Fae woman called out, "they're not trying to hurt you. They're testing you. Pushing your boundaries. Forcing you to grow."Alaric attacked first, a straightforward assault, designed to test her reaction speed.Elara dodged, creating a binding spell that wrapped around his legs.He shifted to wolf form, breaking the binding with raw strength, and charged.Instead of shield, Elara moved, just like Lysandra had taught her. She let his bulk pass by her and sent a stunning spell at his hindquarters.It clipped him, and he yelped more in surprise than pain.Then Kieran was there, attacking from the opposite direction, his amber eyes blazing as he tested her defenses from a different angle.Elara created multiple shields, layering them like armor. When Kieran's attack broke
Before Elara could respond, Lysandra moved.The ancient Fae woman was faster than anything Elara had encountered. Her hands glowed with golden light...ancient, powerful, absolutely terrifying.Elara threw up a shield instinctively.Lysandra's spell hit it hard, and the barrier cracked slightly."Don't shield," Lysandra commanded. "Dodge. Move. Fighting isn't about defense...it's about understanding where your opponent will strike and not being there when they do."They moved together through the courtyard...Lysandra attacking, Elara learning to flow around the attacks instead of blocking them.It was exhausting. It was exhilarating. It was exactly what Elara needed."Enough," Lysandra said finally. She was breathing heavily, and there was a sheen of sweat on her ancient features. "You're learning quickly. Your mother learned at the same pace. Brilliant instincts in both of you."Elara was breathing hard, her body glistening with exertion, her silver magic still dancing around her skin
"So instead, I watched from the shadows. I made sure no Fae found you. I ensured that Cassian's assassins never got close. I waited for the moment when you would be strong enough, connected enough, loved enough that you could survive the truth about what you are."Lysandra placed a hand gently on Elara's face, an aunt's touch, tender and protective."Your mother was extraordinary," Lysandra said. "And you, little one, are every bit as extraordinary as she was. Perhaps even more so. Because you have not only her strength and brilliance, but also your father's honor and your wolf's fierce loyalty."Elara felt tears sliding down her face, but they weren't sad tears. They were tears of understanding. Of finally knowing where she came from. Of understanding that she wasn't an accident or a mistake or an abomination.She was the product of love so fierce it had transcended species boundaries. Of a mother who'd given up immortality for her. Of a father who'd fought to his last breath to prot
His mouth moved to her other breast, giving it the same devastating attention. Sucking, licking and worshipping like it was the most precious thing he'd ever touched.Elara's vision blurred with tears from the intensity of it."Please," she gasped. "Please, I can't...""You can." His voice was muf
Elara woke slowly, awareness creeping in by degrees.Warmth. That was the first thing she registered. Not the comfortable warmth of blankets, but the solid, living heat of another body pressed against her back.An arm was draped over her waist, heavy and possessive. Breath stirred her hair in slow,
The words hung in the air like a death sentence."That's why the Fae Court wants her dead," Caspian said, realization dawning. "Not just because she's a hybrid. But because of what she could become.""Yes." Meredith nodded. "The prophecy....the one your father received, it wasn't just about her bei
Elara woke to sunlight streaming through the windows and the smell of coffee.For a blissful moment, she forgot where she was. Forgot about werewolves and mate bonds and three men who claimed she belonged to them.Then she opened her eyes and saw Caspian still sitting in the chair by the window, a c







