LOGINMeghan's POV
Julien’s body tenses almost instantly, his expression hardening as he takes a step forward.
I’m not even looking at either of them anymore.
My eyes stay fixed on the floor, heartbeat pounding so hard I can hear it over the music. The edges of the room suddenly feel too sharp, too loud, too crowded.
Julien is saying something now, his voice raised, aggressive enough that nearby conversations are starting to fade out around us, but the words blur together in my head before I can process them.
Because all I can focus on is the tension.
The feeling of being trapped in the middle of something I never meant to start.
The man beside me still hasn’t moved. His hand remains lightly against my waist, grounding instead of restraining, steady in the middle of all the chaos unfolding around us.
But the air feels wrong now.
Heavy.
Closing in.
I can’t breathe.
And then suddenly
I’m gone.
One second I’m standing there, the next I’m shoving through bodies, ignoring the startled looks and voices calling after me as I push toward the exit.
Cold air hits me the second I burst outside.
I keep moving.
Fast.
My boots slam against wet pavement as I walk, then jog, then practically run without any direction at all. I don’t know where I’m going, only that I need space. Quiet. Air.
The rain has stopped.
The streets still glisten beneath the streetlights, reflecting gold and white across the pavement. Cars hiss past on soaked roads while distant music spills faintly from bars behind me.
But out here
It’s quieter.
And I can finally breathe again.
Barely.
I wrap my arms around myself as I keep moving, lungs pulling in sharp breaths that still don’t feel like enough.
"What the hell just happened?"
The question loops violently in my head.
Julien.
That guy.
The way my body reacted the second his arm wrapped around my waist.
Like I knew him.
Which is insane.
I’ve never seen him before in my life.
I slow when I reach the water, shoes scraping against the damp concrete near the harbor. The wind coming off it is freezing, tangling my hair around my face as I pace back and forth trying to settle the storm under my skin.
The city lights ripple across the dark water.
I inhale deeply.
Exhale shakily.
Then do it again.
The cold usually helps me think.
Tonight it doesn’t.
Because every time I close my eyes, I can still feel the warmth of that hand on my waist like it’s still there.
“Just stop thinking about him, Meghan,” I mutter to myself, frustrated enough that my voice sounds sharp in the empty night air.
I drag both hands through my damp hair and start pacing again along the harbor.
“Just another guy who wanted to get into your pants.”
The words should feel true.
Easy. Simple.
But they don’t.
Because it wasn’t like that.
And somehow, horrifyingly, my body knew it.
If any other guy had grabbed me like that, especially a stranger, I would’ve snapped immediately. I would’ve shoved him off me, cussed him out, made a scene if I had to.
But him?
The second his arm wrapped around my waist, every panic alarm in my body had gone quiet instead of louder.
Like I knew he wouldn’t hurt me.
Like some stupid buried part of me trusted him automatically.
My chest tightens painfully.
He felt so confident. So sure.
Safe.
Home.
The word hits me so hard I physically stop walking.
Home.
And suddenly I’m crying.Not soft tears.
Not pretty movie tears.
Ugly, gasping sobs that rip out of my chest so fast it feels like I’ve been holding them in for years without realizing it. My knees nearly buckle as I press a hand over my mouth, trying to muffle the sound even though there’s no one around to hear me.
Because home?
I’ve never really had one.
Not a real one.
Sure, there was the foster system. A rotation of houses, strangers, temporary bedrooms with walls that never felt like mine. Then being adopted at twelve, which everyone acted like was some kind of miracle.
Like I’d been saved.
I laugh bitterly through the tears.
Saved.
Nothing about that house ever felt safe.
Nothing about it ever felt like love.
Just rules. Fear. The constant feeling of walking on glass while pretending everything was normal enough to survive another day.
Even now, years later, I still flinch at certain tones of voice. Still apologize too quickly. Still brace myself when people get too close too fast.
The wind off the water cuts through my clothes, icy against my damp skin, but I barely notice anymore. I’m shivering hard now, arms wrapped tightly around myself as I try to force the tears back down.
This is ridiculous.
One random guy at a bar should not be unraveling me like this.
I pull my phone from my purse with numb fingers, needing something familiar, something practical to focus on.
The black screen stares back at me.
“Great,” I huff shakily. “Of course it’s dead.”
I tilt my head back toward the sky, exhausted.
If this night gets any worse, I might actually lose my mind.
By the time I finally stop pacing, the city has gone quieter around me. Fewer cars. Less noise spilling from downtown.
Probably close to three in the morning.
The girls are definitely worried sick by now.
I wipe under my eyes aggressively before taking a long breath and forcing myself to move.
“One night won’t kill you,” I murmur quietly, trying to convince myself the entire walk back to the apartment.
Trying to convince myself tonight wasn’t as important as it felt.
That the stranger with dark eyes and steady hands didn’t just crack open something inside me I’ve spent years trying to keep buried.
A heavy, intoxicating wave of scent flared from him—something fierce, protective, and entirely feral—answering the silent, desperate call my body was putting out like it had a mind of its own.It wasn’t just attraction.It was recognition, acting like a green light to the instinct claws-deep in my mind and snapping the last thread of restraint I had left.Losing that final grip on logic, I arched into his touch, my hands traveling up his chest to tangle in his shaggy hair.I didn’t wait for permission.I didn’t wait for him to finish his warning.I pulled him down, bridging the final inch between us, and pressed my lips directly to his.The moment our lips met, it was like something inside me detonated.A violent jolt of electricity snapped through the darkness, turning the simmer inside me into an absolute explosion, stealing the breath straight from my lungs.Ollie groaned against my mouth, a sound that was half-surrender and half-agony, low and broken, like it hurt him to stop.For
Meghan's POVThe darkness of the room didn’t hide the heat; it only made it more concentrated, trapping it under the heavy blanket. Every inch of space where our skin was close, even through clothes, felt charged.I held my breath, terrified that if I exhaled too loudly, the fragile peace Ollie had settled into would shatter. But the fire inside me wasn’t peaceful. It was a sudden, demanding pressure, tightening in my chest and making my pulse hammer against my ribs.It wasn’t steady anymore.It was building.Layering.Like something inside me was pacing, restless and awake in a way it hadn’t been before.I shifted slightly under the blanket, but the movement only made it worse—like my own skin was too sensitive to exist inside itself. My thoughts started to blur at the edges, slipping between awareness and something heavier, instinctive, pressing forward.He must have felt the sudden shift in my energy, or maybe he could hear how shallow my breathing had become. In the dark, I heard
Meghan's POVThe week before Christmas break felt like the first time I could actually breathe again.Not because everything was fixed.Not because everything made sense.But because it had stopped actively falling apart.Ollie stayed close the entire time.Not in a hovering way.Just… present.Like a constant I was still getting used to having.The apartment slowly went back to normal in the way things do when people are trying not to talk about something too loudly.Anya stopped crying every time she looked at me.Mostly.Kylah stopped asking questions she already knew we couldn’t answer yet.Mostly.Shane stopped pretending he wasn’t watching both me and Ollie like he was trying to solve a problem with missing pieces.Definitely not mostly.And me?I stopped feeling like I was going to disappear if I blinked too long.Mostly.My wolf was quieter now.Not gone.Just settled.Like she’d done what she came to do and was now… watching.Waiting.Observing Ollie the same way I was.Which
Meghan's POVI took another sip of coffee just to give myself something to do with my hands.Ollie was still watching me like he was waiting for something important.Like I was about to break again.I wasn’t.At least… I didn’t think I was.“I don’t really understand all of it yet,” I said slowly, setting the mug down. “But when I shifted—there was this place.”His expression shifted immediately.“Place?”I nodded.“It wasn’t the apartment. It wasn’t anything real in the normal way. It was like…” I hesitated, searching for the right words. “Like everything I’ve ever painted at some point got pulled together into one place.”Ollie didn’t interrupt.Just listened.That made it easier.“It was a forest,” I continued. “But not just a forest. It was frozen and alive at the same time. There was a lake that looked like glass, and the trees were all covered in snow, but the sky was moving like it was breathing.”My fingers tightened slightly around the edge of the counter as I remembered it.
Meghan's POVThe kitchen felt too normal for what we were talking about.Coffee brewing.Steam rising.Morning light filtering through the blinds like nothing in my life had just cracked open and rearranged itself again.Ollie leaned back against the counter, mug in hand, like he needed something to do with his body while he talked.I stayed on the counter where he’d left me, watching him.Waiting.There was a tension in him I hadn’t seen before—not the protective kind he always carried around me, but something older. Something layered. Like he was standing at the edge of a story he wasn’t used to telling out loud.He exhaled slowly.“Okay,” he said. “I guess I should start from the beginning.”My wolf stirred quietly at that.Not restless.Just attentive.Listening.Ollie glanced at me once, then away again like it helped him speak.“I’m from the Bluemoon Pack.”I blinked.That wasn’t what I expected.“Pack,” I repeated slowly.He nodded once.“And so are Adrien, Luca, Shane… all of
Meghan's POVWhen the crying finally slowed, it didn’t stop all at once.It faded.Like a storm losing strength instead of ending.My breathing was still uneven, my hands still gripping Ollie’s shirt like it was the only solid thing in the room, but the sharp edge of it—the panic, the overwhelm—had dulled into something quieter.Tired.Empty.Real.Ollie didn’t move away when it softened.He just stayed.One hand at my back, the other steadying my shoulder like he was making sure I didn’t slip out of myself again.Minutes passed like that.Not rushed.Not awkward.Just… held.Eventually, I pulled back slightly.Not fully.Just enough to see him.His eyes were on me immediately.Like they always were.Like I was the only thing in the room worth tracking.My chest tightened in a way that had nothing to do with pain anymore.It was different now.Sharper.Clearer.Because I could feel it.Not just emotionally.Instinctively.The bond didn’t feel like something new.It felt like something
Meghan's POVSnow crunched beneath my feet.Cold air filled my lungs.I froze.The landscape stretched endlessly around me.A frozen lake reflected moonlight like glass.Towering pine trees lined the shoreline.Mountains rose in the distance.The sky glowed with streaks of silver and blue.I knew t
Meghan's POVThe door clicked shut.And somehow that sound was worse than hearing them speak.Because they were gone.Actually gone.Which meant there was nothing left to focus on except the chaos they'd left behind.The room tilted.Not physically.At least I didn't think so.But suddenly everythi
Meghan’s POVThe knock echoed through the apartment again.Sharp.Controlled.Patient.Like whoever stood on the other side already expected the door to open eventually.Silence settled over the room.Heavy.Uncomfortable.My pulse pounded in my ears.No.No.No.For a second I couldn't move.Could
Meghan's POVThe second hand on the classroom clock seemed determined to ruin my life.Tick.Tick.Tick.Three more minutes.Not that I was counting.Okay.I was absolutely counting.My pencil tapped against the desk as I reread the same answer for the fourth time.The words blurred together.At thi







