LOGINI should have blocked the number – the number I didn’t give him, the number he stole from my phone while I was asleep, which is a fact that should disturb me more than it turns me on.
And underneath the text from yesterday is today’s command sitting in my inbox like a landmine:
"You’re sitting in my lap next time.”
I sit in the back row and wait for him to show up.
This is strategic. This is calculated. This is me taking control of a situation that has been spiraling since a belt buckle woke me up at two nights ago.
The back row is far from the professor, close to the exit, and surrounded by enough empty seats that nobody will be near me when Knox walks in, which means nobody will be close enough to notice whatever he’s planning to do because I’m not naive enough to think he isn’t planning something.
He walks in eleven minutes late wearing the same leather jacket and the same expression he wears every time he enters a room, which is the expression of a man who knows exactly where you are before he opens the door and is just deciding how long to let you believe otherwise.
He scans the lecture hall, finds me in the back row, and I watch something shift in his face that’s not quite a smile but carries the same energy as one.
He walks up the stairs and past every other available seat and stops at my row and puts his hand flat on the desk in front of me.
“Move.”
I stare at him. The professor is already mid-sentence and two students in the row ahead of me have turned around to look at the guy with the tattoos and the leather jacket who’s standing over a girl like he’s about to repossess her.
“Knox, sit down–”
He leans in close enough that I can smell leather and that warm, unnameable thing underneath it, and his mouth is right at my ear when he says, “Sit in my lap or I’ll put you there, and I promise you’ll like my version a lot less than if you just do what I say.”
The lie detector in my body – which has been fully operational and completely useless since the night he walked into my room – knows that I would absolutely like his version. But the two students are still looking and the professor has paused mid-sentence to glance toward the back row, so I stand up and step aside and Knox drops into my chair and spreads his thighs and looks up at me with his arms open like this is perfectly normal, like we’re at a movie theater and he’s saving me the good seat.
I sit on his lap because the alternative is making a scene, and that’s the excuse I’m going with, and I will die on that hill even though my body is already melting against him before I’ve fully settled my weight. His arms wrap around my waist from behind and pull me flush against his chest and I can feel every inch of him pressed against my lower back – hard already, thick through his jeans, and radiating heat that seeps through my skirt and into my skin.
He shifts my weight in his lap. The motion is subtle enough that it looks like he’s just adjusting, getting comfortable, but the angle presses me directly against the rigid length of him and the friction of the denim through my underwear makes my breath catch in a way I have to disguise as a cough.
He does it again. Slower this time, rolling his hips upward in a lazy grind that drags me across him, and his arms are tight enough around my waist that I can’t squirm away even if I wanted to, which I don’t, and I’ve stopped pretending otherwise because my hips are already rocking back against him in tiny involuntary movements that match his rhythm.
His mouth finds my ear and he starts talking, low and constant, this running commentary that has absolutely nothing to do with whatever the professor is saying about post-colonial narrative structures.
He tells me he can feel how warm I am through his jeans. He tells me he’s been thinking about the sound I made when he put his fingers inside me yesterday and that he got hard in his morning lecture just from the memory of it. He tells me what he wants to do to me when we get home tonight in enough detail that my face is burning and my nails are digging into his forearms and I’m biting the inside of my cheek to keep from whimpering because his hips haven’t stopped that slow, devastating grind and the seam of my underwear is pressing against my clit with every pass.
“You’re wet,” he says, and his voice has gone rough at the edges in a way that tells me he’s not unaffected even if he’s better at hiding it. “I can feel it through my jeans.”
I should be mortified. I am mortified. I’m also so close to cumming on my stepbrother’s lap in the back row of a 200-person lecture hall that I can feel my toes curling in my sneakers, and the mortification is just making it worse because every time I think about where I am and what I’m doing my body responds with a fresh wave of heat that makes my inner walls clench around nothing.
The professor turns to write something on the board and Knox thrusts up once and his arm tightens around my waist to keep me from jolting upward.
I cum so hard that my teeth sink into his forearm through his jacket sleeve because it’s the only thing close enough to muffle the sound that tears out of me. He holds me through it, rocking gently now, slow little movements that drag out every last ripple until I’m boneless against his chest with my head tipped back against his shoulder and his heartbeat thudding steady against my spine.
He sits through the rest of the lecture with me in his lap like nothing happened and I can feel him still hard against me the entire time, which means he didn’t finish, which means this wasn’t about him, which means I’m in significantly more trouble than I thought.
After class he walks me to The Grind House and sits in the corner booth and doesn’t order anything and watches me work my entire shift on legs that feel like they’ve been replaced with something less structurally sound than legs. Every time I look over he’s watching me with that steady grey gaze and every time I look away I can still feel it on the back of my neck like a hand.
I’m wiping down the espresso machine when my phone buzzes in my apron pocket.
Tomorrow I want you without underwear. Don’t test me.
DOMINIC’S POVI go straight to The Grind House because I know it’s where Ivy goes when she needs to remember who she was before we disassembled the architecture of her safe boring life.She’s behind the counter wiping down the espresso machine with mechanical focus while her mind runs calculations it can’t solve. The dark circles under her eyes tell me she slept as poorly as my son did last night, which means the bond is transmitting his fear into her nervous system on a frequency that doesn’t have an off switch.I don’t sit in my son’s booth. I sit at the counter where customers sit, where the interaction is transactional and public and carries none of the energy that has defined every other conversation we’ve had since the first Thursday.“I’m not here for that,” I say, because I saw the slight lean forward and the breath change that mean her nervous system has registered my proximity and begun the arousal cascade that my voice triggers in her, and the cascade needs to stop because
Knox drives past the apartment and past every familiar turn until the roads get narrow and the streetlights thin out and we’re climbing a hill that I’ve been on once before.He parks the bike at the top and kills the engine, and the silence that replaces the motor is the specific silence of altitude. The skyline spreads out beneath the ledge in a grid of lights that looks like something a person designed to feel permanent, but the permanence is now a lie because the tribunal that ended two hours ago has the authority to erase every memory I’ve built since the engagement dinner, and the city below me would still be there and I wouldn’t know why I was looking at it.Knox sits on the concrete ledge with his legs hanging over the edge and his hands gripping the lip and his body is doing the thing it does when the wolf is pressing close enough to the surface that the human shape starts to blur. His shoulders are broader than they were at dinner, with his hands gripping the concrete with a
Knox’s hand tightens on my neck and the bond floods with something that feels like a growl being suppressed through the connection. I put my hand on his thigh under the table because the last thing we need right now is Knox shifting in a tribunal chamber and proving Viktor’s point about humans destabilising pack wolves.The elders deliberate. I can’t hear them – they’ve moved to the far end of the room and the conversation is conducted in voices low enough that even Knox’s wolf ears are straining – and the waiting is its own form of torture, because the people discussing whether to erase me are standing twenty feet away. They're just standing there making a decision that will determine whether I wake up tomorrow knowing that Knox Voss exists or wondering why there’s a silver scar on my neck that I can’t explain.Viktor raises his hand, and the deliberation stops.“The tribunal is split,” he says, and his voice carries the authority of a man who expected the split and engineered it. “I
IVY’S POVThe days between the pack meeting and the tribunal are the longest of my life, and I measure them in the many different ways Knox’s body changes as the countdown progresses. His sleep gets shorter, his grip tighter, his wolf pressing closer to the surface until the gold in his eyes stops flickering and starts STAYING, a permanent amber ring around the grey that he can’t retract even when my mom asks him at breakfast if he’s feeling okay because his eyes look “different.”He isn’t getting enough sleep.He’s getting approximately ninety minutes a night, and I can always feel him awake through the bond because it sends a low constant hum of alertness that pulses against my spine in the cage-grip while I lie there pretending to sleep.My mom makes him soup – the same chicken noodle she made me when I was twelve and had the flu – standing at the stove with her wooden spoon and her concerned face and her belief that warm broth can fix anything.She sets the bowl in front of the ma
KNOX’S POVEvery wolf in the Black Fang compound is staring at Ivy, and every wolf in the Black Fang compound is going to lose their eyes if they don’t stop.I’m noting all the stares by proximity and intensity, and I see the specific angle of their attention on the mark on her neck that glows faintly under the bar lighting like a neon sign that reads TAKEN in a language older than speech.The prospect at the door looked too long. The enforcer by the pool table looked longer. The she-wolf at the bar – one of Mara’s friends, the one with the jaw scar and the attitude problem – looked at Ivy’s throat and then at me and then back at Ivy’s throat with an expression that I filed under “deal with later,” because I can only dismantle one threat at a time, and the threat sitting at the head of the long table in the back room is the one that requires my full attention.Viktor Voss looks like what he is – the assumed Alpha of a bloodline that includes my father and myself.He is a man in his la
“You lied to me,” I say, and my hips slam down hard enough that his head tips back against the couch. “You said you didn’t touch him.”“I didn’t hit him–”“You grabbed his FACE.” Another slam. His jaw clenches and his hips buck upward meeting my downstroke and the collision sends a spike through my pelvis that makes my teeth clench. “You left a bruise on my best friend’s cheekbone and LIED about it.”“He kissed you–”“And I pushed him away.” I release one of his wrists and my hand fists in his hair and PULLS – hard enough that his neck stretches and his throat is exposed. “I pushed him away and brushed my teeth and washed my face for you, and you STILL came home and fucked me through the mattress like I was the one who needed punishing.”His freed hand grabs my hip and tries to take control of the pace, but I slap it away sharply.The slap makes his eyes go FULL gold and his grin widens into something feral and delighted because the aggression is doing to him what his aggression does
I can’t look at my mother over breakfast and I can’t look at Dominic over breakfast and I’m running out of places to look because the kitchen is small and my toast is only so interesting.The guilt from last night is sitting in my chest like a stone that grew teeth overnight.She’s glowing. That’s
Knox stops pretending on a Tuesday morning by pulling me into the shower while my mom is downstairs making French toast, and the sound of her humming through the bathroom floor – some song from the nineties that she always hums when she’s in a good mood – provides the soundtrack to her fiancé’s son
His voice is quiet enough that I have to hold my breath to hear it.“I tried to stop wanting you the way I’ve stopped everything else my wolf has wanted for two decades. I can suppress the shift. I can suppress the hearing and the scent and the eyes. But I cannot suppress YOU. My soul won’t let you
DOMINIC’S POVI push two fingers inside her and curl them forward with the same precision I bring to everything, except that here – in this room, on this couch, under these curtains, beside the pillow June arranged four times before she was satisfied with the angle – the academic architecture that







