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Chapter 6

Author: DarkAngel
last update publish date: 2026-02-04 22:44:21

"You didn't sleep."

Wren looked up from the worktable. Thorne stood in the workshop doorway with two cups and an expression that had given up on pretending to be neutral.

"I slept," she said.

"On the floor," he said. "Against that table leg. For possibly three hours." He set the cups down. "I'm not criticising. I'm stating what I observed."

She straightened in the chair — she'd moved to the chair at some point in the middle of the night, which represented progress — and rolled her neck carefully, taking inventory of what ached. Her back. Her hands, cramped from holding a journal for hours. Her eyes, which had read until the lamp burned low and then read in the growing grey of dawn when the light came back.

She'd read every journal on the shelf.

Not thoroughly — some of the older entries were in a shorthand that would take time to decode. But the shape of them was in her now, the overall architecture: fifteen years of Elara Ashford's work, her methods, her patients, her thinking. A mind she'd never known she had access to, laid out in ink.

"Thank you," she said, taking the cup Thorne offered.

"There's food in the pack house kitchen. You should eat."

"I know." She looked back at the shelves. "Give me a few minutes."

Thorne settled into the other chair without pressing her. He had the gift of patient silence, which she was beginning to think was probably the most useful quality a Beta could have, given who he worked for.

"She was methodical," Wren said, after a while. "My aunt. More than I would have expected. The gift doesn't come with instruction — you find your own way to it. She wrote about that. The learning of it. It took her years to understand why it worked on some patients and not others. She came back to the emotional requirement again and again — kept testing it, kept documenting the failures when the connection wasn't real enough."

"Did she ever encounter something like Sera's condition?" Thorne asked.

"There's a case." Wren found the page she wanted. "A wolf with symptoms almost identical to Sera's. The sickness was further advanced — he was dying when Elara saw him. She worked on him for three months." She paused. "She called it a blood curse. Designed specifically to attack a bloodline — not just an individual, but the inherited life force that passes from parent to child."

"Did he survive?"

"For a time." She closed the journal. "She couldn't cure it. She managed to slow it significantly — extended his life by more than a year. But near the end she wrote that she believed a complete cure was possible. That the technique required refinement she hadn't had time to develop." Wren set the journal carefully on the table. "She died three months later."

The same sickness, she thought but didn't say. The same sickness that had killed her aunt. She sat with that for a moment, feeling the edges of it.

"Do you think you can do it?" Thorne asked.

"I think I can try to do what she hadn't finished." She was honest because she didn't have the energy to be anything else. "I think the gift is still there — I can feel it, which means it's accessible. But I've suppressed it for nine years. I don't know its current range. I don't know how I'll respond to a complex working. And I don't —" She paused. "The connection requirement is real. I can't force it."

"Cain knows that."

"Does he believe it?"

"He believes everything you've told him." Thorne paused. "He's had two years to make peace with the limitations."

Wren looked at the cup in her hands. "What is he offering? Specifically. What are his terms?"

Thorne set down his cup. "I think he'd prefer to tell you himself."

"I'm asking you."

He considered. "Freedom within pack territory — not confinement. You can move freely, access anything in the workshop or the pack library. He won't restrict what you read or who you speak to. He'll provide whatever materials you need." A pause. "He asks only that you try. That you read your aunt's journals, develop the technique, and make a genuine attempt to help Sera. What the outcome is — that's not in his power to demand."

"And if the attempt fails? If I try and Sera dies anyway?"

Thorne met her gaze. "The Alpha is not a man who punishes people for outcomes they didn't control. I've served him for eleven years. I know the difference between the stories about him and the man."

She thought about that. She thought about the courtyard, and Mara, and the grip that could so easily have closed completely — violence used surgically, targeted, stopped when the point was made. Not pleasure in it. Not even satisfaction. Just necessity, executed with the same precision he brought to everything.

"Where is he?" she asked.

"His study. Morning council." Thorne rose. "He'll be finished in an hour."

"Take me when he's done."

❖ ❖ ❖

The study was at the far end of the pack house's upper floor — solid and functional in the way everything about him was solid and functional. A fireplace with a good blaze. A long table covered in maps and correspondence.

He was standing at the window when she came in, and he turned, and she saw the question in his silver eyes before he had time to arrange it out of his face.

"Sit if you want," he said. "Or stand. Either is fine."

She stood. "I've read the journals. All of them, or as much as I could in one night."

He nodded once, saying nothing.

"There's a case from twelve years ago that matches Sera's symptoms almost exactly. My aunt worked on it for three months — she couldn't cure it, but she slowed it significantly. Near the end, she believed a complete cure was within reach if she'd had more time." Wren paused. "She died before she could finish."

Something moved in Cain's face at the word died. "I know," he said.

"I want to try." She said it clearly. "Not because I owe you anything. Not because you took me from Blood Moon. I want to try because my aunt spent fifteen years trying, and because the gift is part of what I am, and I have spent most of a decade running from that, and I am tired of running from it." She held his gaze. "And because Sera is twenty-four years old and she doesn't deserve to die."

The silence lasted two seconds. Three. She watched him hold himself very still in the specific way he held himself still when he was feeling something he hadn't authorised.

"What do you need?" he asked.

"Time with the journals before I touch her — at least a week, probably more. Time with Sera herself — to talk, not to heal, just to be in the same room, because the connection has to be real or it won't work. Your pack healer's notes on her case. And —" She paused. "I need you to understand that the outcome isn't mine to guarantee."

"Understood."

"And I need you to understand that if I tell you I can't do something yet, or that pressing will damage the working —"

"I'll stop pressing," he said.

"Your word on it."

He looked at her. Something shifted in the set of his jaw — the careful process of a man who gave his word rarely and therefore gave it well. "My word on it," he said.

Wren nodded. She turned to go.

"Wren."

She stopped. Turned back.

He was looking at her with an expression she still couldn't fully read — whatever it contained, she hadn't developed the vocabulary for it yet. "I owe you an apology," he said. "For the way I brought you here."

She held his gaze. She thought about the tin behind the stone and forty-seven dollars and a hand-drawn map and three more weeks.

"Yes," she said, "you do." She let the beat settle. "But I don't need you to make it pretty. I just need you to mean it."

Something that might, in another face, in another life, have been a smile moved at the corner of his mouth. "Noted," he said.

She left him in his study, and went to meet his sister.

❖ ❖ ❖

Sera was awake, propped higher against the pillows than she'd been yesterday, with an inch more of curtain open and a lamp burning on the table beside her. She watched Wren cross the threshold with an expression of clear, direct interest that reminded her, startlingly, of Cain.

Different in almost every other way — warmer, more mobile, the emotions moving openly across her face the way they moved invisibly across his. But that directness. That quality of paying attention that was itself a kind of intelligence.

"You stayed," Sera said. "I wasn't sure you would."

"I said I'd try," Wren said.

"People say a lot of things." Sera considered her. "You also look like you slept on a floor."

"I slept in a workshop."

"That's worse." A faint smile. "Pull up that chair."

Wren pulled up the chair and sat, and for a long time neither of them said anything, which was fine. The gift didn't require conversation — it required presence, real presence, the kind that couldn't be faked. She let herself be there, in the room, with this young woman who smelled of lavender and sickness and something fiercer underneath both of those things. Something that hadn't given up yet.

"You're not trying to heal me," Sera said eventually.

"Not today," Wren said. "Today I'm just here."

Sera was quiet. Then: "That might be the most honest thing anyone has said to me in six months."

Wren looked at her. "What have the others been saying?"

"That I'll be fine. That help is coming. That things are going to be better soon." Sera's voice was even. "They mean it kindly. Cain means it more desperately than kindly. But." She shrugged, and the shrug cost her something — a brief tightening around her eyes before she smoothed it away. "I'm a warrior. Or I was. We're taught to read the room."

"What does the room say?"

"That I'm running out of time." Sera met her gaze without flinching. "What does your gift say?"

Wren thought about the answer honestly. "That you're not gone yet," she said. "That whatever's doing this is settled — established. It's going to require more than I've done in nine years." She paused. "But it's not finished, either."

Something moved through Sera's face — not quite relief, more like the careful unclenching of something held rigid for too long.

"Then I suppose," she said, "we'd better get started."

Outside, in the corridor, Wren could hear the pack house going about its afternoon — voices, footsteps, the ordinary sounds of a community moving through its day. She sat in the chair by Sera's bed and let the gift find its footing, let the connection begin in the small and unremarkable way that all real things begin, and thought: this is where it starts. Not in a dramatic moment. Here. A chair. A window. Two women who had each survived what should have broken them.

The gift stirred. Warm and tentative. The first true movement it had made in nine years.

And Sera, watching her face, smiled — a real one, the smile of someone who had been afraid for so long that relief felt almost like joy — and said: "There it is."

Wren hadn't realised her hands were glowing softly until she looked down at them.

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