LOGINBlack Hollow sat in a valley between three ridges, tucked beneath the mountains like it had grown there instead of being built.
Old brick storefronts lined Main Street. Yellow light glowed in fogged windows. Smoke drifted from chimneys and disappeared into the rain. The whole town looked smeared and ghostly through the windshield, like a memory that had been left out too long in bad weather.
I passed Hollow Market first.
The sign still hung crooked over the door. Mr. Calloway used to stand behind the counter with his suspenders and his permanent frown, calling me “Frost girl” like it was an accusation instead of a name.
I wondered if he was still alive.
Knowing Black Hollow, probably. Spite preserved people here.
Next came the diner.
The red vinyl booths were visible through the steamy windows. One booth in the back had a tear along the seat where Damien once caught his pocketknife when we were sixteen. He blamed me. I blamed his inability to sit like a normal person.
He bought me fries after.
Stole half of them.
Then kissed the salt from my fingertips under the table like he had every right to be sweet.
My throat tightened.
No.
Not tonight.
I kept driving.
The church steeple rose above the rooftops, black against the cloudy night. The church itself had burned years ago, but no one ever rebuilt more than the bell tower.
That was Black Hollow for you.
Keep the haunted part.
Ignore the ashes.
I passed the bakery alley where three older girls once told me no alpha would ever want cursed blood.
Joke was on them, apparently.
An alpha had wanted me.
Then he rejected me in front of fifty people.
So, you know.
Very romantic.
The road led me toward the far end of Main Street, where the green neon sign for Hollow Creek Bar & Grill buzzed through the rain.
I should have gone straight to the hospital.
I knew that.
But visiting my mother meant questions. Her fear. Her secrets. Her pale hand gripping mine while she told me everything except the thing I actually needed to know.
And going straight to the Frost house?
Absolutely not.
Not yet.
I needed ten minutes.
One drink.
One second to breathe before the town got its claws into me.
The bar parking lot was half full.
Trucks.
Motorcycles.
One police cruiser near the side entrance.
Of course the bar was busy.
Of course half the town would be there.
Of course my first stop back in Black Hollow would include an audience, because apparently my life had never met a private humiliation it liked.
I parked near the edge of the gravel lot and turned off the engine.
For a moment, I just sat there.
Rain drummed against the roof.
My reflection stared back at me in the dark windshield, pale and tired, with damp curls escaping the loose knot at the back of my head. My eyes looked too sharp. Too guarded. Like the last six years had carved out every soft part and left behind someone who knew better than to expect kindness.
Good.
Kindness was unreliable.
Whiskey, at least, usually did what it promised.
Somewhere beyond the edge of town, a wolf howled.
The sound slipped under my skin.
My wolf lifted her head.
I shoved the feeling down and stepped into the rain.
Cold mountain air hit instantly, sharp with pine, smoke, wet gravel, and memories I did not want.
The bar door waited beneath the buzzing green sign, old wood swollen from years of storms.
I reached for the handle.
That was when I saw it.
Carved into the frame beside the entrance.
Three claw marks.
And above them, a small crooked crown.
My Queen “My queen.” The words did not sound like a greeting. They sounded like a claim. The ruined entry hall went so still I could hear water dripping from the broken ceiling into a puddle near my boots. One drop. Then another. Then another. Damien stepped forward. A growl rolled from his chest, low enough to make the floor tremble. “Call her that again.” The silver-eyed man looked at him. Not annoyed. Not threatened. Barely interested. “Thorncroft.” Just the name. Nothing more. Still, Damien reacted like he had been struck. His shoulders locked. The bond snapped tight between us. Anger. Recognition. A flash of something inherited and old. I looked at him. “You know him?” Damien’s mouth tightened. “No.” The journal opened. BLOOD KNOWS BLOOD. I slowly turned my head toward him. “Try again.” Damien’s jaw flexed. Kael moved closer, blade angled downward but ready. His face had gone sharp in a way I had not seen before. The new man smiled faintly at Kael.
The Storm Goes SilentThe Hollow King roared.This time, the sound did not come from below the house.It came from everywhere.The mountain.The woods.The road.The sky.It rolled over Black Hollow like a living thing and shook every broken board in Frost Ridge.The rogues screamed.Not in pain.In answer.The house lurched beneath us.Damien rose from one knee and staggered slightly.I caught his arm.He looked at my hand.Then at me.Neither of us moved away.Not yet.The bond still burned from what he had done.Chosen to kneel.Chosen to make an old oath his own.Chosen to give me something that was not possession, not command, not apology.Trust.I hated how badly that mattered.Outside, the rogues scrambled backward from the porch.One by one, they vanished into the trees.Not fleeing.Repositioning.That was worse.Kael stepped into the entry hall, silver blade still in his hand. “He felt that.”“The king?” I asked.“Yes.”“What exactly did he feel?”Kael’s gaze moved to Damien
On His KneesThe storm was kneeling.That made no sense.Rain could not kneel.Wind could not bow.Clouds did not lower their heads in respect to girls who had spent the last six years trying to avoid hometown trauma and emotionally unavailable alphas.And yet, outside Frost Ridge, the rain hung still in the air.Thousands of silver drops suspended beyond the shattered windows, catching moonlight that had not been there a moment ago.The rogues lay flat in the mud.The trees had gone still.Even the house held its breath.The only thing moving was the bond.It pulsed between Damien and me like a second heartbeat.Gold.Silver.Wound.Oath.Want.Choice.I looked at Damien.He stood in front of me, bloody and rigid, trying to turn his body into a wall between me and every ancient thing that wanted a piece of me.Typical.Infuriating.Almost sweet.The floor beneath him glowed.He looked down.So did I.The crown-and-claw symbol burned silver beneath his feet.Then the claws vanished.O
The Bond BurnsAgain.The whisper rose from beneath the floorboards like smoke.Soft.Hungry.Pleased.Damien stepped farther away from me.I hated that I noticed.I hated that part of me wanted to grab his shirt and drag him back.The bond between us burned.Not like before.Before, it had been raw. Damaged. A torn thread pulling at scar tissue.Now it felt alive.Too alive.Gold heat twisted with silver light, wrapping around something inside me that had not been awake a few minutes ago. My wolf paced beneath my skin, but she was not alone anymore.Something stood behind her.Tall.Still.Crowned in branches and flame.I pressed a hand to my chest.“What did we do?”Damien’s face had gone pale. “I don’t know.”The house groaned.Kael stepped through the ruined doorway, rain dripping from his black coat. His silver eyes moved from Damien’s mouth to mine.Then to the floor.Then back to me.His expression hardened.“You fed it.”Damien turned on him with a snarl. “Careful.”Kael did n
The Kiss That Broke Six YearsThe floor split open beneath us.Not wide.Not enough to swallow the whole room.Just enough to remind me Frost Ridge could still change its mind.Damien grabbed me around the waist and hauled me back against him as the crack tore through the entry hall, silver light spilling upward from somewhere below.I hit his chest hard.The air left my lungs.His arms locked around me.Outside, Kael shouted something in a language I did not know.The house answered with a groan.The mountain answered with another roar.Apparently everyone had opinions.Damien’s breath was hot against my ear.“Hold still.”I would have laughed if my heart had not been trying to claw out of my chest.“Excellent plan. Very heroic. What’s step two?”“Survive.”“Love the ambition.”The crack widened.A blast of cold air rushed up from below, smelling like wet stone, old blood, and something rotten beneath snow.The journal slid across the floor toward the opening.“No!”I lunged for it.
I Hated Missing YouThe one that made her leave.The words moved through the broken house and found every wound in me.For a second, no one spoke.Not Damien.Not Kael.Not me.Even the rain seemed quieter.I stared at Damien through dust and silver light and six years of everything we had never said.“The one that made me leave?” I repeated.Damien’s throat moved.The alpha of Black Hollow looked away first.That told me enough.“No,” I said softly. “Look at me.”His eyes came back to mine.Gold.Tired.Guilty.Still beautiful enough to make me angry.“What truth?”Kael shifted near the doorway.Damien’s gaze cut to him. “Leave.”Kael raised one brow.“I served queens before your bloodline learned to crawl. You do not command me.”Damien’s claws slid out.The journal snapped open.TRUTH. NOT TEETH.I almost laughed.Almost.“Even the book is tired of both of you.”Kael’s mouth twitched.Damien’s did not.But his claws retracted.Progress.Tiny.Exhausting.I looked at Kael. “Give us
Damien Hears Nothing “Good girl.” The words slid out of the dark in my mother’s voice. Soft. Pleased. Wrong. Every inch of my skin went cold. Damien turned sharply toward me. “What?” I stared at him. “You didn’t hear that?” “Hear what?” The question should not have scared me more than the
Don’t Say My NameMy mother’s voice came from upstairs.“Lena?”Soft.Frightened.
The House on Frost RidgeFrost Ridge appeared through the fog like something the mountain had tried to bury and failed.The house waited at the top of the hill, black against the storm, its windo
Dead Things Shouldn’t WatchEvery dead crow opened its eyes.Not slowly.Not one by one.All at once.Dozens of small black heads turned toward the truck, silver eyes catching in the headlights like coins at the bottom of a grave.I stopped breathing.Damien’s hand tightened on the steering wheel u







