LOGIN
~SERIS
I stepped out of my car to the sound of chirping crickets. Fear wedged itself into my bones as I took my first steps into the woods. In the distance, the sound of the pack converging at the Lunar Verge reached me. I had to get there before the fate pyre was lit—and before anyone caught me.
I scanned the darkness, looking for any sign of a patrol, but saw nothing. I stood out too much in the open. Pulling off my shoes and tossing them into the car, I ducked into the tree line and began the trek up the slope toward the Verge. The grass muffled my footsteps, calming my frantic heart. Maybe this was the year I would finally make it.
If only the Alpha didn't see me. If he did, the hunt would start early, and I would be the prey.
The noise at the Verge rose as more pack-folk joined the circle. I quickened my pace, lengthening my stride. Counting each step distracted me from my spiraling thoughts. My pulse spiked as the scent of warm ash wafted through the trees. The fire would be lit soon.
A twig snapped—
My head whipped around to see glowing eyes in the darkness. I stumbled as Xena growled, bristling at the realization that we were not alone. I cursed my inability to see in the dark; even with a wolf, it took too long for my eyes to adapt.
I turned on my heel and leapt into a sprint—
Thump!
I slammed into a solid chest. I sucked in a painful breath as I recoiled, stumbling backward. Suddenly, my head was yanked back, my hair caught in a cruel grasp. My blood froze, a shiver raking down my spine.
"Who—" I started to ask, my voice quivering, but I stopped short as I was surrounded.
Laughter shattered the air, mockingly familiar. I stopped breathing.
"Look what we have here." The words were laced with mirth and malice. My eyes finally adjusted to the figures caging me in.
I locked eyes with my ex-best friend and cousin. "Rielle."
She cackled in my face, pulling harder on my hair. "The pack witch tried sneaking into the mate hunt," she sneered, her posse laughing behind her. "I knew you would pull this shit."
I flinched at the tag. I was nothing but a "witch" to them, despite having no magic. In this pack, misfortune was the only magic they recognized, and it followed me everywhere.
"So fucking predictable," Christina added, stepping closer.
"Rielle, stalker much?" I ground out, twisting my hair out of her grip even though it hurt like hell.
"Don't flatter yourself," she spat, standing toe-to-toe with me. "I'm just making sure you don't ruin another occasion."
I smothered the sting of her words and smirked. "Oh, so you're the Alpha's dog now? I hope he gives you treats for all this barking. Or do you just settle for a pat on the head?"
Her face darkened, nostrils flaring wide. "Says the fucking runt."
I feigned a yawn. "This again? Come up with something original, at least." I checked my nails as if I weren't surrounded by girls with murder in their eyes. "But seriously, the obsession is getting weird. If you wanted a date to the Verge, you could have just asked instead of lurking in the bushes. You could have stepped in poop."
Rielle's face hardened before Christina stepped forward. "You won't be laughing when we're through with you."
"I don't doubt that, but at least I'll die with a sense of humor," I countered. "Can't say the same for you."
"If you had any shame, you'd leave this pack," Stella snarled.
"No one wants you," Rielle added, her wolf's growl slipping into her voice.
I swallowed the hurt, a lazy grin curling my lips. "Like Sylus doesn't want you?" I teased. Even though she was his fiancée, he always seemed to want nothing to do with her. The look on her face gave me a flicker of sadistic satisfaction.
But mentioning Sylus was the breaking point. The air suddenly weighed a ton, thick with the scent of fur and musk as they began to shift. Fur sprang from splitting flesh, bones snapping and rearranging in a cacophony of transformation.
I didn't wait. I shifted, too.
Xena pushed forward, and I let her take over. The shift was a blur of heat and agony, but I landed on four paws and raised my head to face them.
For a moment, I cursed my big mouth.
They dwarfed me. I was the reality of being a Howlridge runt—I might as well have been a chihuahua standing before a line of dire wolves.
"We will fight," Xena snarled in my head. "We always do."
Rielle leapt.
I lacked strength, but desperation gave me speed. I dove under her belly, my small frame letting me move where she couldn't. I lunged and clamped my teeth down on her back ankle.
She let out a surprised, high-pitched howl and spun to catch me—but I was already gone, darting toward Christina's foreleg. I nipped and dodged, biting every limb I could find. They snapped at me, but their jaws only met air. It was like trying to swat a housefly.
Then, my heart stuttered.
A full-body chill washed over me as my heart struggled to find its rhythm. That moment of hesitation was all they needed.
Rielle's massive paw slammed into my side, sending me flying. A thick tree broke my flight with a sickening crunch. My small, broken body rattled as I hit the dirt.
The impact jarred my very soul. I gasped for air that wouldn't come. My chest felt crushed by an anvil. My weak heart pounded like a war drum, trying and failing to keep me conscious.
"Seris, please, hold on," Xena's voice was a faint whisper. "The heart... it's too much..."
Through the pack mind-link, laughter echoed. They stood over me, watching me wither.
"Look at the little rat," Christina’s mental voice sneered.
"Give it up, Seris. You were never meant to survive the night," Rielle added.
The world began to tilt. My heart wasn't racing anymore—it was failing, its broken beat echoing in my ears.
I'm going to die today.
I felt teeth close around the scruff of my neck, dragging me away just as the darkness embraced me fully.
My eyes snapped open. Pain needled through my bones. I gasped for air, but my ribs felt pinned. I tasted blood as I counted every heartbeat—I was still fading.
I was barely conscious, but I had to move. I rolled, despite the searing heat rippling through me. I needed to know where they had dumped me.
I twisted, my eyes catching a flicker of flame in the distance. The fate pyre had been lit. I was too late.
Xena howled in pain. We needed a mate. That was the only reason I’d come—she was wilting. Without a bond to stimulate her, I would lose her permanently. Now, I’d have to wait another year... if I survived the night.
I watched the fire flicker and go out.
Then came the rumble. A vibration in the soil against my cheek. My blood slowed to a crawl. I knew that sound. The pyre going out meant the Goddess had released the pheromones. The hunt had officially begun.
The rumble grew into a thunderous roar of paws and a choir of howls. They were pheromone-drunk, driven by a primal madness to find their mates.
And I had been dumped right in their path.
~SERISCaleb was cuddled up with the stuffed toys that Sylus had miraculously provided, and I did not have it in me to wake him up. Even if every second in this house made my pulse skitter.So I watched him, fighting back the urge to call Sylus. Ever since he had stepped past me and out of the office corridor, he had not returned.The entire day had been a complete, nerve-wracking ordeal. The lingering moment in the car still sat like a sour taste at the back of my throat. My chest was still tight.Then Robert’s attempt at blackmail, and then Sylus—I recalled how I had counted down the seconds until he came out of that office, fully prepared to see blood staining his crisp suit. Sylus had always been lethal; mercy was not a word in his vocabulary. But instead of a corpse, Robert had been left a sniveling mess until he could finally gather himself and crawl away. Whatever had happened between them in that room had utterly broken the man. He couldn’t even look me in the eye when he
~SYLUS“Take a seat, Mr. Lane,” I said, sitting on the corner of the desk, dangling one leg over the edge while the other remained firmly rooted.“This is my office—”“Sit,” I ordered, not raising my voice.But by the way his knees buckled, he could feel the absolute weight of my Alpha aura.His mouth twisted into a tight scowl, but he obliged. “What can I do for you, Mr. Hawkins?”I shrugged, nonchalant despite the fire scorching my blood. “Plenty.”“Oh, really?” His gaze sharpened.“Tell me about Penelope.”I watched his face drain of all color. “Wh—what?” he stumbled over the singular word.“Or Louisa. Maybe Angie,” Disgust rippled through me, Varg growling in my head, begging me to rip him in half. I had poured over the egregious details of each case the moment I realized Robert would be a problem. Only for me to find out the man might as well be the devil himself. “Oh, I almost forgot Roena.”With every name I mentioned, the whiter he became. Still, the bastard dared to
~SERISI paused, my hand resting on the edge of my briefcase. I didn't want to be anywhere near him, let alone behind closed doors, but I wouldn't let him think he intimidated me.“Of course, Mr. Lane,” I replied calmly.I didn't sit back down. Instead, I stood my ground on the opposite side of the long mahogany table, crossing my arms and looking at him with cool indifference. I could see the immediate twitch in his jaw—the fact that I refused to sit, refused to take a subordinate posture, bothered him immensely. It stripped away his illusion of control, and in the quiet room, the silent battle of wills began anew.“What do you have to say for yourself?” he asked.I raised a quizzical brow. “What are you talking about?”He took a deep, shuddering breath. “In whose car did you come in today?”Maya had told him, and it hurt me more than it was supposed to.“How is that relevant to this conversation?” I returned.He rose, and my heart leapt into my throat, but I did not show it
~SERISI smoothed down my clothes. “It's okay, Maya,” I managed to say, my voice breathy as I pushed the door open and stepped out onto the solid pavement. “Are you hurt?”“No, no, I’m fine,” she murmured, though her eyes kept lingering on the dark interior of the car, entirely captivated by the sheer, imposing presence of the man behind the wheel.Sylus didn't get out of the vehicle, but he rolled his window down the rest of the way. His golden eyes narrowed into dangerous slits as he fixed a freezing glare onto her. “Watch where you are walking,” he said, his deep baritone laced with a subtle, predatory edge that made Maya visibly flinch. “Next time, you might not be dealing with someone who has the reflexes to spare your life. Pay attention.”“Y-yes, sir. Of course,” Maya squeaked, nodding frantically.Desperate to break the heavy spell and get away from the scorching heat of Sylus's gaze, I grabbed Maya's arm. “Come on, let’s get inside. We're both late.”Without looking back
~SERIS I was running very late, and I had no choice but to take Sylus’s offer. He drove me to work. I had to report to Silverline—and to Robert.Just to distract myself from the fact that Sylus was just a few yards away in an enclosed space with me, I let my thoughts drift to the other headache in my life.The professional one.I had not spoken to Robert since our last scuffle when Sylus had interrupted the moment. That had almost been a month ago.Now, I had to report back about the current state and stage of the partnership with Dynamis. The only consolation was that it would be a meeting with the shareholders and other partners.I was happy for any way I would not be alone with the man.He came after I had become well-situated with the company after three years, after his brother, the original president, had been bought out for a lucrative sum and put his brother in.I still missed the kind, gentle Ronald. As much of a perfectionist as he was, he had his head in the game, a
~SERIS I opened my eyes to a stream of soft sunlight caressing my skin. Stretching, I yawned, pulling the pillow closer and cuddling in.Sleep drifted me further away into a peaceful abyss.“You have to wake, Seris,” Xena whispered, the sound like wisping, fading smoke in my head.My eyes flew open as I bolted upright in an instant, my head ringing with a maddening, shrill ache.My eyes darted about the strange room, my heart jumping into a sprint in my chest. The curtains were unfamiliar, the bed was the wrong softness, and the scent that wafted throughout the space made every hair on my body stand straight.I spiraled, leaping up with my pulse pounding.All I could smell was Sylus—the wickedly decadent scent of a man who haunted me like a figment of a waking nightmare.Even before my eyes could fully adjust, I raced out through what I could only assume was the outline of a door.I found myself in a long, winding hall with no idea where to go. Right or left?I had to find
~SERISThe world narrowed to the point where his chest met my back.My breath caught, six years of living like a ghost in the human world—all shattered by two words whispered against my skin.Wife.I cowered, Xena's head bowing within my mind as his crushing, dark authority flooded every fiber of m
SERIS~“My son broke the hijacker’s spine?” I stuttered out.The principal exchanged glances with the officer. “Yes, your five-year-old son launched the hijacker out of the bus.”My heart dropped. No, it was too early. Maybe at eighteen, but at five, he was far too young.I schooled my features
SERISSix years later…“Make sure you eat your lunch, it's your favorite,” I said, planting a kiss on Caleb’s forehead. “I love you. Enjoy your trip.”His amber eyes gleamed up at me, lips curling into a lopsided smile. “I love you too, Mom.”A familiar ache speared my heart. Caleb was looking
SERIS~“You have to wake up, Seris.” Someone shook me, rattling my bones.My eyes sprang open, agony threading through my body in an instant. Panicking, I looked around to see my uncle and Lily standing over me, their faces carved with worry.“Uncle—” The word died on my lips as I let out a shar







