LOGINKieran had been running patrol for hours when her scent hit him like a fist to the chest.
It stopped him mid-stride, his massive paws skidding in the dirt as his wolf threw its head back and howled inside his mind. The sound was primal, desperate, triumphant...a cry that echoed through every cell in his body until he thought he might split apart from the force of it.
MATE.
No.
That was impossible.
Kieran shook his massive head, trying to clear it, but the scent only grew stronger. It wrapped around him like silk and smoke, sweet and wild and utterly intoxicating. His wolf was going insane, clawing at his control, demanding he find the source now.
He'd been patrolling the northern border of their territory....the side that bordered the old cottage their father had kept hidden for decades. The place none of them were supposed to go near until the debt came due.
But the debt had come due two months ago when the old woman died.
And now someone was there.
Someone who smelled like heaven.
Kieran's lips pulled back from his teeth in a snarl that was half warning, half anticipation. He took off running, his powerful legs eating up the distance between him and that scent. The full moon burned overhead, flooding the forest with silver light and making his wolf stronger, faster, more feral than usual.
Full moons were dangerous for his kind. They brought out the beast, stripped away the thin veneer of humanity they wore during the day. Control became a suggestion rather than a certainty.
And right now, with that scent filling his lungs and his wolf screaming MINE MINE MINE, control was the last thing Kieran had.
He burst through the tree line into the clearing where the cottage sat.
And froze.
There.
In the backyard, bathed in moonlight, lying in a hammock like she didn't have a care in the world....
A girl.
No. A woman. Young, delicate, with long dark hair that spilled over the edge of the hammock and skin that seemed to glow in the moonlight. She was curled on her side, fast asleep, completely unaware that she was being watched by a predator who outweighed her by at least two hundred pounds.
Kieran's wolf surged forward, and he let it, stalking closer on silent paws.
She was tiny. Human, by the look of her...no supernatural signature that he could sense, no pack scent marking her as claimed. Just soft skin and vulnerable flesh and that scent that made him want to bury his face in her throat and never let go.
His father had called her a debt.
A payment owed to their family for protection given decades ago.
But this woman didn't look like a transaction. She looked like she'd wandered into a fairy tale and fallen asleep in the wrong forest. Innocent. Breakable.
Mine, his wolf growled.
Kieran moved closer, his massive body blocking out the moonlight as he loomed over the hammock. Up close, her scent was even stronger...wildflowers and something earthy, something that reminded him of rain and growing things. And underneath it all, something other. Something his wolf recognized even if he didn't.
She stirred in her sleep, her lips parting on a soft exhale.
Kieran's gaze dropped.
And that's when he saw it.
The book.
Lying open on her lap, its title printed in large, cheerful letters across the cover:
HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DOG
For a moment, Kieran could only stare.
Then, despite everything, despite the mate bond screaming through his veins, despite the full moon burning in his blood, despite the fact that he was standing over a sleeping woman in his wolf form like some kind of monster from a nightmare...
He laughed.
It came out as a low, rumbling sound, more growl than anything else, but it was unmistakably laughter. His sides shook with it. His tail....his gods-damned tail...actually wagged once before he caught himself.
How to train your dog.
She had no idea. No idea what she'd just walked into. No idea that she was lying defenseless in the territory of three Alpha Kings who'd been waiting their entire lives for their mate. No idea that the "dog" standing over her was about to turn her entire world upside down.
The sound must have woken her, because her eyes suddenly flew open.
Kieran went perfectly still.
For a heartbeat, they just stared at each other...her wide-eyed and frozen with shock, him looming over her like death incarnate.
Then she opened her mouth.
"G-good... dog?"
Dog.
She called him a dog.
Kieran's wolf exploded inside his head, a tornado of rage and disbelief and something dangerously close to amusement.
KILL HER. RIP HER THROAT OUT. SHOW HER WHAT WE ARE.
No, Kieran snarled back. She's ours. We don't hurt what's ours.
THEN MAKE HER UNDERSTAND!
But he couldn't.
Because she was looking up at him with those huge, terrified eyes, clutching that ridiculous book like it was going to save her, and her scent.....gods, her scent was wrapping around him so tightly he could barely breathe.
She thought he was a dog.
A dog.
The audacity. The sheer, breathtaking nerve.
Kieran took a step closer, his massive head lowering until he was eye-level with her. He could see her pulse fluttering wildly in her throat, could smell the fear spiking through her scent....but underneath it, something else.
Curiosity.
She wasn't screaming. Wasn't running.
She was looking at him.
And then....gods help him...she slowly sat up in the hammock, the book tumbling to the ground forgotten, and reached out one trembling hand.
"It's okay," she whispered, her voice shaking but soft. Soothing. Like she was trying to calm a spooked animal. "I'm not going to hurt you."
You're not going to hurt ME?
Kieran wanted to laugh again. Wanted to shift right here and now and show her exactly how wrong she was. Wanted to grab her by the throat and make her understand that she was the one in danger, not him.
But he didn't.
Because her hand was still extended, hovering in the air between them, and his wolf was suddenly, desperately curious about what would happen if she touched him.
Don't, he warned himself. Don't let her.....
Her fingers brushed against his fur.
The world exploded.
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
Elara stood at the window of their private suite, watching the Shadowmere territory spread out beneath her.Three days of recovery had transformed her from barely conscious to functional. The soreness was fading. Her strength was returning. And most importantly, the nightmares about the poison had stopped coming every time she closed her eyes.She was still weak, still needed help getting out of bed, still couldn't train or use magic at full capacity, but she was alive. And that was more than enough."You should be resting," Alaric said from behind her. His hand settled at the small of her back, warm and possessive."I am resting," Elara replied. "Standing and looking out the window is resting. It's better than staring at the ceiling.""Fair point," he conceded.Kieran emerged from the bathroom, freshly showered, his amber eyes scanning her to make sure she was still upright and stable."Lysandra's waiting in the sitting room," Kieran reported. "She said whenever you're ready, she has
Nothing. Just darkness and pain and the sensation of her body betraying her."Garrett tried to kill you with poison," Alaric said flatly. "A custom poison created by Cassian Thornwood. It was delivered through a scratch that the first assassin inflicted, the one who tried to poison you the day before. It was a delayed activation poison, designed to kill you at the moment of your greatest triumph."Elara felt cold rage settle in her chest. Not at being nearly killed...that she could understand from a political standpoint. But at Cassian. At her own uncle. At the man who'd orchestrated her death before she was even born."We're going to make him pay for this," Kieran said, his voice low and dangerous. "Every drop of blood you shed. Every second of pain you experienced. He's going to answer for all of it.""Not yet," Elara said, and the Alpha Kings looked at her in surprise. "Not yet. First, I recover. First, I rest and let my body heal. And then..." she looked at each of them, "....then
Elara's first sensation was pain.Not the sharp, searing agony of the poison coursing through her body, but a deep, aching soreness that seemed to radiate from her very bones. Her entire body felt like it had been torn apart and reassembled incorrectly.Her eyes felt heavy. Like they'd been sealed shut for days. She tried to open them, but the lids barely cooperated.A groan escaped her throat.Immediately, movement."She's waking," Kieran said, his voice rough and tight. "Mara, she's waking."Elara managed to get her eyes open a crack. Everything was blurry, shapes and shadows that slowly came into focus.Alaric was the first face that cleared into recognition. He was directly above her, dark eyes intense, jaw clenched so tight she could see the muscle working."Welcome back," he said, his voice carefully controlled. "How are you feeling?"Elara tried to speak, but her throat was completely raw. All that came out was a scratching sound.Caspian was immediately there with water, holdi
She looked back at Elara."When she realized she was carrying a child, a hybrid child that the Fae Court would declare an abomination, Auriel came to me. She was terrified. Desperate. Certain that if the Court discovered her pregnancy, they would take the child and kill her."Alaric felt his blood run cold."What did she ask you?" he demanded."She asked me to make a blood oath," Lysandra said. "A magical binding. She said: 'If they don't survive the coming attack. If they take her and she fall. I need you to promise...swear it by the old magic, that i will take care of her daughter. Raise her. Protect her. Love her as I would have.'""You swore it," Caspian said. It wasn't a question."I did," Lysandra confirmed. "By the old magic. By blood and bone and soul. A promise that cannot be broken, only fulfilled."She looked at the Alpha Kings."I've been watching her since the moment she arrived in your territory. I was the unknown watcher that confused your securities. I was present at e
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
"I'm not going to ask you to....""We'll see." His eyes gleamed. "Now get in bed. You need sleep."Elara wanted to argue. Wanted to tell him she wasn't tired, that she didn't need him watching over her like she was a child.But she was tired. Exhausted, actually. And the bed looked incredibly invit







