LOGIN**POV: Selene**
She was not going to cry.
Selene Callum had not cried since she was nine years old and she was not about to start tonight in front of the entire Silvermoon Pack because of some brown-haired omega who had no business breathing the same air as Caden Silvermoor.
She stood at the edge of the ceremony grounds and watched Caden walk back toward his father and she kept her face completely smooth. Blank. Beautiful. She had practiced that face in the mirror for years and it had never failed her. It was not going to fail her now.
But inside.
Inside was a different story entirely.
She had been so certain. That was the part that burned the most, the part that dug into her chest and twisted. She had spent three years positioning herself beside Caden. Three years of calculated smiles and perfectly timed touches and making herself indispensable to his world. She knew his schedule. She knew his habits. She knew the way he took his coffee and the specific silence he needed after a hard training session and the rare occasions when something almost like warmth crept into those grey eyes.
She knew him.
And the Moon Goddess had given him to Aria Voss.
Aria Voss. Who wore clothes that did not fit properly and ate lunch in corners and flinched every time someone raised their voice near her. Aria Voss who had spent three years at Crestmoon Academy being exactly what she was, a nothing, an omega, a girl shaped like an apology.
Selene pressed her nails into her palm until the sting grounded her.
"Selene." Owen appeared at her side, the man the goddess had assigned to her, his face carrying that careful hopeful expression that made her stomach turn. He was not ugly. He was not cruel. He was ordinary in every single way that mattered and she could not stand to look at him. "I know tonight was not what either of us expected but maybe we could talk. Get to know each other. The bond does not have to be"
"I already rejected you," she said without looking at him. "That is not a conversation. That is a closed door. Do not stand near it again."
She heard him walk away.
Good.
She turned her attention back to Aria who was standing with that loud-mouthed friend of hers, Mara, near the edge of the grounds. Selene watched the way Aria held herself, spine straight despite the trembling Selene could see in her hands from twenty feet away. She watched the way Caden had stepped in front of Aria when Bren the warrior had opened his mouth. She watched the way Caden's eyes had found Aria across the grounds without even trying.
The bond.
She understood it intellectually. She had studied it the way she studied everything she considered a threat. The mate bond was primal, chemical, written into wolf biology at a level deeper than thought or choice. It pulled. It demanded. It did not care about three years of carefully constructed proximity or the plans of a girl who had worked harder than anyone to earn her place.
It did not care about deserving.
That was the injustice of it. Selene had deserved Caden Silvermoor. She had earned him with every calculated day, every social ladder she had climbed, every lesser wolf she had stepped over to position herself exactly where she needed to be. She was the daughter of Marcus Callum, pack elder. She was the most desired girl at Crestmoon Academy. She was everything a future Alpha needed standing beside him.
And the goddess had chosen an omega who could not even look people in the eye.
Her phone buzzed in her hand.
She looked down at the screen. An unknown number. A message that was only four words long.
"I can help you."
Selene stared at it for a long moment. Around her the ceremony grounds were emptying, pack members drifting back toward their homes carrying their joy and their shock and their gossip about the omega who had been chosen. Nobody was watching her. Nobody ever watched the person who did not get what they wanted.
She typed back one word.
"Who are you?"
The response came immediately.
"Someone who wants what you want. The omega was removed. The bond is broken. The pack was disrupted. We have more in common than you think, Selene Callum. Think about it tonight. I will be in touch."
She should have deleted it. She knew that. She was smart enough to know exactly what kind of message that was and exactly what kind of person sent messages like that in the dark after a pack ceremony.
She did not delete it.
She looked across the grounds one final time. Aria was leaving now, Mara's arm around her shoulders, the two of them disappearing into the tree line. Small. Quiet. Unremarkable.
Caden was watching her go.
That was the detail that finished it. That single detail, Caden's grey eyes following Aria Voss into the dark, pulled something loose inside Selene's chest and let something colder and harder take its place.
She looked down at her phone.
She saved the number.
She told herself it was just information. Just a contact. Just an option she was not committing to yet. She was not a fool and she was not reckless and she was not the kind of person who burned things down without a plan.
But she was also not the kind of person who lost.
She had never lost anything in her life.
She was not about to start with Caden Silvermoor.
She slipped her phone into her pocket and walked off the ceremony grounds alone, her head high, her face smooth, her heart a locked room full of something dangerous that had not yet decided what shape it wanted to take.
Behind her, the moon hung full and bright and completely indifferent.
It had already made its choice.
Now Selene was going to make hers.
**POV: Aria**They drove back to Silvermoon territory as the afternoon settled into evening, the day's events sitting between them in the quiet of the vehicle with the particular weight of something significant that had not yet been fully processed.Caden drove. Aria watched the landscape pass and thought about Lena Hartley standing in her kitchen, the air around her changing without her understanding why, the particular recognition in her eyes when Aria had told her own story.I always knew something was different.She had said the same thing to herself, in different words, for seventeen years. Had felt it without having language for it, had carried it without knowing what she was carrying.Now Lena would not have to carry it alone.They arrived at the inner boundary as the first stars were appearing, and the familiar warmth of the territory settled around Aria as they crossed the gate. Home. Completely and entirely home in a way the cottage at the eastern border had always been, but
**POV: Aria**The air around Lena Hartley changed completely.Not dramatically, not with the visible physical shift that came with a wolf fully shifting form, but with the particular quality that Aria had come to associate with something ancient and significant responding to threat. The kitchen felt different. Warmer. More present somehow, as if the room itself had become more real.Lena looked at her parents with wide eyes. "I did not do anything," she said. "I just stood up.""I know," Aria said. She kept her voice completely calm. "Stay exactly where you are. Do not be afraid of what you are feeling."Outside the house, through the window, Aria could see Caden moving toward the perimeter with two Silvermoon warriors, coordinating with Alpha Thane's people who had been positioned precisely for this possibility. The three operatives Zane had identified were approaching from the northeast, moving fast now, no longer making any pretense of simple observation.This had become something
**POV: Aria**The meeting with the Hartley family was scheduled for three days after Selene's initial visit.Aria spent those three days preparing carefully, drawing on everything she had learned about approaching someone whose world was about to expand beyond what they had known. She thought about her own experience, about what she had needed most in those early days.Honesty. Steadiness. People who did not rush her.She intended to offer the Hartley family exactly that.The morning of the meeting, Zane brought something that complicated everything before it had properly begun.He found Aria and Caden at breakfast with the expression that had become familiar over months of difficult information arriving at inconvenient moments."Vesper sent a message this morning," Zane said. "Through her most secure channel. She has received intelligence suggesting the Northern Voice knows about the planned meeting with the Hartley family today."Aria went still. "How.""Vesper does not know," Zane
**POV: Caden**Kael Draven requested a second meeting the same morning Selene was with the Hartley family.The request came through the pack guard formally, the same channel as before, and Caden read it with the particular attention he gave to anything involving Kael. The wording was different this time. Less urgent than the first meeting, more deliberate, as if Kael had spent the weeks since their initial conversation deciding exactly what he wanted to say and how to say it.Caden brought it to his father first.Alpha Ryker read the request and was quiet for a moment. "He has been cooperative in custody," he said finally. "More cooperative than I expected, honestly. No resistance, no attempts to communicate outside approved channels, no demands.""Which is itself interesting," Caden said. "Kael Draven built a two-year campaign against this pack with considerable sophistication. A man like that does not simply accept custody without some larger calculation behind it.""No," Alpha Ryke
**POV: Selene**She had been careful.That was the thing Selene kept coming back to as she sat in her quarters inside the Shadowfang camp on the fourth morning, watching Kael's warriors move across the grounds with the focused efficiency of people who had been preparing for something for a long time and were finally within reach of it.She had been careful and precise and she had not rushed anything and yet the rock through Mara's window sat uncomfortably against everything she prided herself on.She had not ordered that.That was the part that kept nagging at her like a stone in her shoe. She had not told Kael to move yet. She had been explicit about that in their last exchange. Her terms. Her timing. She had made that the foundation of everything they had agreed to and he had confirmed it with three words and she had believed him.She took out her phone and opened the encrypted channel."The window," she typed. "That was not sanctioned."His response took four minutes."A show of pr
**POV: Aria**The days following the formal recognition settled into something Aria had not experienced before inside Silvermoon territory.Ease.Not the careful managed calm of a pack holding itself together through difficulty, or the focused purposeful energy of a community working toward something urgent. Simply ease. The particular quality of a place that had resolved something significant and was now simply living in the aftermath of that resolution.Pack members greeted her differently in the corridors. Not with the careful deference that had begun developing after the mating ceremony, but with something warmer and more genuine than deference. Recognition. The particular warmth of people who had decided, collectively and without announcement, that someone belonged among them.It was different from being acknowledged. Being acknowledged was formal, official, and recorded in council minutes. What was happening now was more fundamental than that. It was the pack simply treating her
**POV: Aria**Mara grabbed her so hard when she walked through the door that Aria nearly lost her footing.She held on just as tightly.They stood in the middle of Mara's small living room and held on to each other and neither of them said anything for a long moment because sometimes the only langu
**POV: Aria**She did not sleep again.She lay in the enormous bed and stared at the ceiling and thought about the figure in the tree line and Mara's disconnected number and the voice note that had cut off mid-sentence and she arranged all of it into every possible explanation she could think of an
**POV: Aria**Mara never called back.Aria tried three more times before dinner and reached voicemail every single time. She told herself it was nothing. A dead battery. Poor signal on the edge of pack territory where Mara lived. Mara was always forgetting to charge her phone and always laughing ab
**POV: Aria**She packed everything she owned into one bag.That was the part that hurt the most. Not the leaving. Not the uncertainty sitting on the other side of it like something she could not see clearly enough to prepare for. Just the simple and quietly humiliating fact that everything Aria Vo







