LOGINKristen Vance gave her mate everything and walked away with nothing but a secret growing inside her. After three years of building her life. Her son is the only one she treasures. Until Dylan Cole finds her. Her ex mate older brother. He is everything his brother is not… still, certain, dangerous in a way that does not need to announce itself. He is also the Alpha King. And he is also, by every law of the wolf bond, her second chance mate. But Derrik is coming back. The pack council is making noise about the child. And someone in Dylan's past is not finished with him yet. Kristen must decide, stay broken and safe, or risk everything on a man whose love might be the one thing strong enough to hold all her pieces.
View MorePOV Kristen
The wine glass slipped from my hands!
It hit the marble floor and exploded .... red everywhere, like something had been murdered .... and I just stood there, barefoot in the kitchen doorway, staring at the mess I'd made. The wine spread across the white marble, filling them like it had somewhere to be.
The mess was not the glass.
It was in our bedroom.
My brain was still catching up. My feet had already stopped working. I could hear them .... laughter, low and breathless .... and my wolf, Mira, had gone completely silent inside me. Not sleeping. Not calm. Gone. No warning. No growl. Just .... absence, where she'd been a warm and constant presence my entire adult life.
I forced myself to take one step forward. Then another. My bare feet were cold on the floor and I noticed that distantly, the way you notice small sensations when your mind is refusing to process the large ones.
The bedroom door was open. I hadn't even touched it. Derrik always left it open because he said he felt suffocated with it shut. Five years I had slept in that room, five years I had folded his shirts and learned which side of the bed he couldn't sleep without. Five years of being the perfect mate .... quiet, loyal, invisible when he needed me to be, present when he needed that instead.
And there he was.
Derrik Cole. My mate. My whole stupid heart.
Tangled in our white sheets with Priya.
Priya. My best friend since childhood. Priya, who had cried at our mating ceremony ruining her makeup. We had laughed about it for years afterward. Priya, whose number was still saved in my phone as "My Person.”
They didn't hear me at first.
I stood there long enough to understand, completely and without any remaining hope of misinterpretation, exactly what I was looking at. I watched his hand slide through her dark hair .... the same slow, deliberate way it used to slide through mine in the mornings he was in a good mood .... and something in my chest started moving.
It was Priya who saw me first.
Her eyes flew open and found mine across the dim room, and for one second .... just one .... I saw it. Guilt. Pure, white, naked guilt, the kind that doesn't have time to put on its armor. The kind that shows you exactly how long someone has been carrying a secret by how fast they try to hide it.
Then she looked away.
That was what broke me. Not what I saw. Not what I heard.
That she looked away.
"Kristen .... " Derrik was scrambling upright, sheets tangled around his waist, and his voice had that low, careful tone he used on nervous pack members. Already managing the situation, already assessing the damage. He was already managing me. "It's not.... "
"Don't." My voice came out so quiet that he stopped talking immediately, which told me something about how I must have looked.
Good. He should be quiet. He should be very, very quiet.
I watched myself cross the room. I opened the closet. I noted, from somewhere outside my body, that my hands were completely steady as I pulled down the overnight bag I used for pack trips .... I set it on the floor. I started folding things into it with the careful patience of a woman who has decided that falling apart is a luxury she cannot currently afford. A sweater. My mother's cream colored scarf still smelled like her perfume even three years after she died. The small wooden wolf my father had carved for me when I was six, back when the world still felt like it was made of manageable things.
"Kristen , please.... " Priya had already wrap herself with the sheet. Her voice soft as she called my name in a way that once would have had me moving toward her, hands out, asking what's wrong.
"I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry, it just happened, it was.... "
"How long?"
Silence.
"How long, Priya?"
I heard her swallow. The sound was very loud in the quiet room. "...Eight months."
Eight months.
Eight months ago, I had organized Derrik's birthday party. I had called the caterer and arranged the guest list and coordinated with the pack elders and worried for a week about whether he would like the playlist. Eight months ago, Priya had come over early to help me set up. She had helped me bake his cake from scratch because he said he didn't like store bought. She had licked the icing off the spoon and laughed .... that big, unguarded laugh I had loved since we were children ....
The bag was full. I zipped it shut.
"You're not leaving." Derrick had stood up, dressed fast, and now he was blocking the bedroom doorway with his broad shoulders. He wasn't even thinking about it, probably.
Just his nature trying to find a way solve the problem. His jaw was set. "We need to talk, Kristen . You're my mate. You don't just walk out.... "
"Move."
"I said.... "
"Derrik." I looked up at him then. Actually looked, the way I'd stopped letting myself look because looking cost energy I was always saving for something else.
I walked past him. Down the hall. Through the kitchen, past the exploded wine glass and the red spreading across the white floor, still moving, still patient, still finding its way into every crack.
I opened the front door.
The night air hit me like cold water .... sharp and clean and immediate .... and somewhere under all that silence, under all that careful stillness I had wrapped around myself like armor, I felt it.
Something tearing.
Not breaking. Breaking sounds like it's over fast. Like a clean line between before and after.
I stepped off the porch. I kept walking. The pack grounds moved around me in the dark .... familiar trees and familiar paths I had walked a thousand times .... and they felt suddenly like someone else's memory, like scenery from a life I had borrowed and was now returning without comment.
I didn't stop until I couldn't see the gates.
And finally, alone in the dark, on a road…
I let myself feel the pain.
I pressed my hand flat against my stomach.
Because there was one thing Derrick didn't know yet. One thing I had been waiting three days to tell him, choosing the perfect moment, turning the words over in my head while he slept beside me .... warm and easy and completely unaware that everything between us was about to change. I had imagined how he would react when I told him. I had imagined it so many times.
I was six weeks pregnant.
She noticesJesse notices at nine-fifteen.I am at the coffee station, second hour of the shift, the breakfast rush giving way to the mid-morning lull .... that specific hour of a diner's day when the pace slows enough that the people in it become visible to each other again. Jesse comes to the station beside me to reload the decaf and she glances at me the way she always glances, the peripheral, comprehensive check that she performs so naturally it no longer looks like looking.She goes still.Fills the decaf.Glances again, less peripherally.I do not acknowledge that I have noticed her noticing. I pour my coffee. I cap the pot. I move to head back to the floor."Your posture is different," Jesse says.I stop."What?"She looks at me with the focused attention she brings to
Mira stirsIt is simply a different thing entirely.And the only future available to Derrik that is actually good .... for him, and more importantly for Eli .... is the one where he accepts that and builds something real inside what actually remains.I look at him across the table.And I tell him the honest thing. Not the kind thing .... the kind thing is not always the same as the honest thing, and Derrik has received too many kind things that were not honest things, and I am not going to add to that collection."You should listen to your father this time."The kitchen holds the sentence.Derrik receives it without flinching .... which is new, which is perhaps the truest evidence of the change that has actually occurred in him, the change underneath the changed shoes and the age-appropriate puzzles and the family counselor appointments.
Derrik honestyDerrik reads it correctly this time.At one hour and twenty minutes, the kitchen chair scrapes back and I hear Derrik's voice saying something low .... a goodbye, I think, the same one he gave last time, the quiet version that doesn't require a response .... and then Eli's footsteps heading for the living room and his wolves. Visit concluded on Eli's terms, which are the only terms that matter.I come back to the kitchen.Derrik is still at the table, which is new. Usually he stands when it ends .... stands and picks up his jacket and moves toward the door with the careful efficiency of someone who understands that overstaying is a form of taking and he is trying to stop taking things he has not been given. Today he is still seated. His jacket is on the back of the chair. His hands are around the mug I gave him .... cold now, long past drinking temperature.H
The call with elder Cole Not the silence of a man with nothing to say ...... the silence of a man who was prepared for a different conversation and is now inside a different one and is taking his time deciding how to be inside it. I wait. I am very good at waiting. I let the silence do the work that silence does when you have said something that requires it.When he speaks, his voice has changed.Not the warmth ...... he is too controlled for the warmth to disappear entirely. But underneath it, something different has arrived. Not respect, not exactly. Something adjacent to it. The specific register of a powerful man who has encountered someone he did not fully account for and is, with the graciousness of someone who has been powerful long enough to be able to afford it, acknowledging the miscalculation."You are very direct," he tells me."I have had to be," I answer.Another silence. Shorter. Then "Derrik told me you laid out terms the first time he visited. He told me you enforced
POV KristenDerrik was standing outside my apartment building when I came home from picking up Eli.I stopped dead on the pavement twenty feet away, Eli's warm hand wrapped around two of my fingers.Then Derrik shifted his weight, and my body remembered everything.Three years. I had spent three ye
POV Dylan She ordered black coffee and held the mug in both hands like it was the only warm thing in the room, and I watched her do it and felt Cain settle in my chest the way he only settled when something mattered ...Easy, I told him. Give her room.He acknowledged it without retreating. The w
POV Kristen I did the only reasonable thing a person could do when the Alpha King of all werewolves told her she was his.I laughed in his face.It came out wrong .... too high, too sharp at the edges, the kind of laugh that sounds like it's made of something other than humor and might tip into so
POV Kristen Three years is a long time to disappear.I figured it out.Cedar Falls was a human city, three hundred miles from Silver Blue territory .... far enough that no werewolf would bother tracking a scent that old, small enough that nobody asked too many questions about a young woman startin






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