LOGIN"You're watching him again."
Wren didn't startle — she'd trained herself out of startling years ago — but she did look away from the far side of the camp, where Cain stood with his warriors in the grey morning light, and found Thorne watching her from two feet away with the mild, knowing expression of a man who had been observing people for a very long time. "I'm watching the camp," she said. "You've been watching the camp for two days." Thorne crouched beside the fire and poured water from a battered kettle into two cups. He handed her one. "I've been watching you watch it." He settled back on his heels. "You've counted the watch rotation twice. You know every name but Fen's — the younger one, on the eastern side — and you've assessed at least four potential escape routes and discarded three of them." Wren looked at him over the rim of her cup. "You're right about which one to keep," Thorne said. "For the record. The creek route, angling northwest. That's the cleanest." He met her gaze steadily. "I'm not telling you this because I want you to run. I'm telling you because you've already worked it out, and pretending you haven't would insult us both." She considered him. "You're a strange Beta." "I've been told." He looked into his cup. "Wren. Can I call you that?" "You have been." "Fair enough." He was quiet for a moment. "I know you have questions I didn't answer well the first night. I want to try again, if you'll let me." She lowered her cup. "Go ahead." "The person who's dying," he said. "I know the Alpha didn't tell you. I also know you've been carrying that question for two days and it's changed the shape of how you're thinking about all of this." He looked up. "Her name is Sera. She's twenty-four. She was a warrior until six months ago — trained, good with a blade, better on her feet than half the men she sparred with. She started collapsing during drills one morning and hasn't fully stood since." He paused. "She's Cain's sister. His only family." Wren received this. Cain's sister. His only family. She thought of the name he hadn't said — the careful omission, the thing he was protecting even in conversation — and understood it differently now. Not strategy. Grief. The particular shape that grief takes in people who have learned that naming what they love out loud makes it more available to be taken. She recognised that shape. She'd worn it herself. "What's wrong with her?" she asked. "No one has been able to say, exactly." Thorne's voice was careful. "It's not any wolf illness the healers have seen. Not a bite or a curse they recognise. She weakens, recovers slightly, weakens more. The fever never fully breaks. The best wolf healer in the region spent three weeks with her and left without answers." He paused. "A practitioner of old magic out of the Eastern territories said it was blood magic. Generational. Deliberate." Wren was quiet. She turned her cup slowly between her palms. "Why does he think I can help?" she asked. "The healer lines have been gone for fifteen years. Whatever gift the Ashfords had — there's no reason to assume I inherited it, or that it's accessible, or —" "Because there were signs," Thorne said. "Small ones. Over the years. A bird you healed when you were twelve — someone noticed. A wound on a pack dog that shouldn't have closed overnight and did. Kaine knew, or suspected. He kept you because having a healer, even a hidden one, even a suppressed one, has political value." Anger moved briefly through Thorne's controlled expression. "He was keeping you in reserve." Wren sat with this. Twelve years old, a broken-winged bird, the warm-gold thing that had moved through her hands without her permission. She hadn't done it on purpose. She'd barely understood what she'd done. She'd kept it so tightly buried afterward that she'd sometimes half-convinced herself she'd imagined it. "Even if I have the gift," she said slowly, "it doesn't work on command. The Ashford healers — what my mother told me, before —" She paused. Started again. "The gift requires emotional connection. I can't heal someone I don't feel anything for. The magic doesn't respond to will. It responds to care." Thorne looked at her steadily. "I know." "Then your Alpha is working from a flawed premise. He can't force me to care about his sister." "No," Thorne agreed. "He can't." He stood, brushing dirt from his knee. "But he can give you time. And space. And reasons." He picked up his cup. "Wren — I've served Cain Voss for eleven years. I've watched him make hard choices most men wouldn't survive making. I've watched him do terrible things for the right reasons and struggle with whether the math held up." He looked at her. "He brought you here because Sera is dying and you're the only hope she has. But the way he's going about it — making sure you're protected, giving you access rather than issuing demands —" He stopped. "That's not how a man treats a tool. Whatever else is true, that much is." He left her with the fire and the cold morning and the shape of her own thinking. ❖ ❖ ❖ They rode until midday, and then the forest opened. It happened gradually at first — the trees thinning, the undergrowth lightening, the quality of the light shifting. Then they crested a long slope, and Wren felt Cain straighten slightly behind her in the way she'd learned meant he was paying attention, and she looked down at what lay below. The valley was wide and ringed by forest, with a river cutting through its centre and the shapes of buildings clustered near the bank. Stone buildings, mostly — grey and solid, built to last rather than to impress. A central square with a stone well. A forge, given away by the distant ring of a hammer. Cottages with kitchen gardens. A market with stalls half-packed for the afternoon. Children running between the buildings. Adults moving with the unhurried purpose of people who felt safe. Wren stared. The stories of Black Hollow had described something built for brutality — a fortress, a stronghold, a place whose architecture reflected its Alpha's reputation. What she saw was a village. A real one. The kind of place where people lived rather than merely survived, which she'd nearly forgotten was a distinction. The cognitive dissonance was sharp enough to overcome her composure. "That's it?" she said, before she'd made the decision to speak. "That's Black Hollow?" "Did you expect skulls on pikes?" The rumble in his chest behind her might have been many things. She was increasingly certain it was amusement. "No," she said, because saying yes would concede too much. She felt it again — that almost-laugh that wasn't quite a laugh. She stored it next to all the other things she'd catalogued about him: he moved very quietly for his size; he always positioned himself with his back to a wall or tree; he never raised his voice to get what he wanted; and he found things funny that were only funny if you understood them, which implied he thought she understood them. She wasn't sure how she felt about being understood. The column moved down into the valley. As they entered the village, the transformation was immediate: conversations died mid-sentence. Children stopped their games. Every wolf in sight turned to watch, and the watching had layers — curiosity, wariness, and underneath both of those, something she hadn't expected. Hope. Raw and poorly hidden, the hope of people who'd been waiting for something they needed badly enough to forget to conceal the need. A young warrior came running up, barely twenty, face bright with the return of his Alpha. He stopped when he saw Wren. Looked at her. Looked at Cain. "You're back," he said, with the understatement of someone who had many more urgent questions. "And you found — that is — who is —" "Wren Ashford," Cain said. "Treat her accordingly." He swung down from the horse and lifted Wren down after him — his hands at her waist, a clean impersonal lift, setting her on the cobblestones with a care that was so practiced it felt unconscious. She stepped back to put proper distance between them, and heard the murmur that moved through the crowd like wind through wheat. Ashford. Like the healers. Is she actually — can she really — what if she can't? Cain didn't need to raise his voice. He simply looked at the crowd, and the crowd went quiet. They moved through the village and into the pack house, and Wren catalogued every inch of it: the exits, the windows, the positions of the guards, the layout of the corridors. Stone floors, old stone walls, iron fixtures worn smooth. High ceilings. Fires in stone hearths that had been burning for years. A place that had been lived in for generations by people who intended to keep living in it. Cain walked ahead, and she watched the way the pack moved around him: not scrambling the way Blood Moon wolves scrambled for Kaine, but shifting with a natural deference that looked like respect rather than fear. Two things that looked similar from a distance and felt entirely different up close. He stopped outside a door at the end of a long corridor. His hand found the handle. And something in his bearing changed — a shift in how he held his shoulders, a fractional lowering of the rigid control — and she had the sudden, strange certainty that whatever was behind this door was the only thing in the world that could reach through the armour. "Before I show you your room," he said, "there's something you need to understand." Wren stopped. Looked at the door. Looked at his hand on the handle. "What I'm about to ask of you, I have no right to ask. I know that." He said it without apology or performance — just statement. "I know you owe me nothing. I know the way you came here wasn't what I'd have chosen if there'd been another way." A pause. "There wasn't another way." "Open the door," Wren said. He pushed it open. The room beyond was dim, curtains drawn against the afternoon light. Simply furnished, with the scent of something floral — lavender, placed deliberately, to cover or to comfort. And in the centre, in a massive bed that dwarfed the figure lying in it, a young woman. Wren stood in the doorway. She felt it before she understood what she was feeling: the gift, that golden warmth she'd buried for nine years, stirring in her chest with the urgent pull of a compass finding north. The wrongness was the thing it was responding to — not pain exactly, but an absence, a hollowing, the sensation of a living body that had begun quietly and steadily to unmake itself. She was young. Even through the pallor, the papery skin, the dark hair spread dull against the pillow — young. Twenty-four, Thorne had said. Younger than she looked now. A body that had been strong once, that had wanted very much to keep being strong, and was losing the argument. "This is Sera," Cain said. His voice, when he said her name, was the first time Wren had heard anything human in it.Elara learned to sit up in her fifth month.Not all at once—in stages, the incremental mastery of a new configuration of her own body. First the supported sitting, with a hand behind her, and then the leaning, and then the brief unsupported moments that ended in a topple that she regarded with philosophical interest rather than distress. By the end of the week she was sitting for several minutes at a time, occupying herself with whatever was within reach, with the specific focused attention of someone who had recently discovered that the world contained things and was still cataloguing them.Wren sat on the floor with her and watched her catalogue.She had been doing a great deal of this. Sitting on the floor, specifically—she had found that the floor was the right height for a child who was not yet standing, that meeting the child in the child's actual space rather than pulling the child up to the adult's space produced a different quality of interaction. Elara regarded
She had the full conversation over three days.Not three days of continuous conversation—three days of returning to it, in the spaces between Elara's rhythms, in the specific time that new parenthood created between the sleeping and the feeding and the particular kind of stillness that settled over a house when both the child and the other parent were asleep and she was the one still awake, thinking.The argument for accepting was simple: power given to someone who would use it well was power worth having. The High Healer seat would allow direct intervention in Council decisions at the moment they were being made rather than in the aftermath. It would formalize what had been informal—the healer network's political influence—in ways that made it more durable and more resistant to being dismantled by whoever came next.She was good at this. She had been doing it for two years. She had demonstrated she could do it.The argument against accepting was also simple: Elara w
Elara ate constantly.This was, Maret had assured her, correct and expected and the sign of a healthy child who was growing at the rate healthy children grew. Wren knew this. She had read about it and she had been told about it and she had, in the abstract, understood that a newborn's primary occupation was feeding.The abstract had been insufficient preparation for the reality.The reality was: Elara ate, and then Elara slept, and then Elara ate again, and the intervals between these two activities were shorter than Wren had imagined and the activities themselves were longer, and the net effect was that Wren's experience of the first three weeks was organized almost entirely around the rhythm of a small person who had no knowledge of schedules and no interest in developing any.She loved it.This surprised her. She had expected to love Elara—that part she had anticipated, had understood theoretically that the bond between a mother and child would be significant and real. She had not
Labor started at three in the morning on the fourteenth of April.She had been expecting it for two weeks—had been in the specific late-pregnancy state of constant awareness, the body's increasing impatience with itself, the gift reading the child's state several times a day in the involuntary way it had developed as the pregnancy progressed. She had known it was close. She had not known it would start at three in the morning.She lay in the dark for twenty minutes, timing, confirming.Then she woke Cain.He went from asleep to fully present in approximately two seconds, which was the Alpha's specific capacity and had startled her the first dozen times she had seen it and no longer did. He read her face. He understood."Now," he said."Now," she confirmed.He was already reaching for his clothes. She watched him move with the specific controlled urgency of a wolf who has been planning for exactly this moment and is now executing the plan—the calm that was
The storm started on a Thursday evening.She knew it was going to be a significant one—had been tracking the sky's quality since midmorning, the specific way the light had changed, the stillness that preceded certain kinds of weather. She had grown up in territory where the weather announced itself in advance and she had not lost the ability to read it.She was in the main building when Cain came to find her."They're moving," he said.She had been expecting this since the message she had sent to Thorne three days ago. Vex's remaining followers—somewhere between twenty-five and thirty-five wolves, the count variable depending on the intelligence source—had been consolidating toward Black Hollow for the past week. The specific quality of their movement had changed after the village attack. They had lost most of their resources and all of their coalition backing. What they had left was commitment to the idea—the specific dangerous commitment of people who have lost the
She designed the strategy in the sanctuary's library with Pei and Lira and the list of every territory where Purist sentiment had been reported in Thorne's intelligence network.The list was longer than she had hoped and shorter than she had feared. Twenty-three territories with some level of documented Purist presence or sympathy—ranging from active supporters to wolves who had expressed disagreement with the sanctuary's model without organizing against it. She had learned to distinguish between opposition and threat, and most of the twenty-three were opposition rather than threat.What she was designing was not a response to opposition. It was a response to the specific mechanism by which opposition became threat: the story that healers were dangerous. That story found purchase in communities where the direct experience of healing was limited—where wolves had heard the doctrine second-hand without having a countervailing personal experience to weigh against it.The ans
The days that followed blurred together in a frenzy of preparation.Black Hollow transformed from a peaceful village into a fortress. Defenses were rebuilt and reinforced with new walls, new trenches, new obstacles designed to slow an invading force. Patrol schedules were rewritten from
"Again."Wren pushed herself up from the hard-packed dirt, her arms shaking with exhaustion. Every muscle in her body screamed in protest, begging for rest, for mercy, for just one moment without pain. Sweat dripped into her eyes, blurring her vision and stinging like fire. Her lungs burned with ea
"Enough."Cain's voice cut through the tension like a blade through silk. He stood at the end of the hallway, silver eyes blazing with cold fury. His presence filled the space, commanding and absolute, leaving no room for defiance.The widow's hand dropped to her side. Her body trembled, but not wi
"Hold steady."Cain's voice cut through the wind like a blade. Sharp. Final. The kind of voice that made wolves straighten their spines and soldiers check their weapons.Wren gripped the saddle harder. Her fingers were white from holding on so tight. Her back hurt from sitting for so many hours. He







