LOGINAudrey
The holding room chair is not comfortable.
The room is small. Concrete walls, one fluorescent light that flickers approximately every forty seconds in a way that suggests it has been doing this for years and nobody has fixed it because nobody spends enough time in here to find it intolerable. There is a table. There are two chairs. There is a door with a small reinforced window through which I have counted three different warriors peering at me in the last ten minutes with varying levels of professional composure.
I cross my other leg and wait. The door opens soon after.
The warrior who enters is broad-shouldered and sandy-haired, with the specific expression of someone who drew the short straw on an assignment and is determined to carry it out with dignity. He has a notepad. He clicks his pen twice before he sits down, which tells me he has done this before and has a process, which I respect.
He looks at me. I look back.
"Name."
"Audrey," I smile. "Calloway. Yours?"
He writes it down, ignoring my question. "Pack?"
"Ashveil. Originally." I pause. "I'm in transition."
"Transition," he repeats, in the tone of someone writing down exactly what was said and reserving all judgment for later. "And the incident in the boutique on Harwick High Street. In your own words."
"I was defending myself," I say.
"The other party sustained—"
"She tried to slap me," I say. "She missed. Then she picked up a pair of fabric scissors from the counter and came at me with them." I pause. "At that point I made a professional assessment of the situation and responded accordingly."
He looks up from the notepad. "You knocked her unconscious."
"I did."
"And then you cut her hair."
A brief pause.
"She needed a trim," I say. “And she seemed to have it her head when she fell, so less hair would give her less tension on her scalp.”
He stares at me.
"Most importantly, it was uneven," I add. "It was genuinely bothering me. I was doing her a favour."
"Ms. Calloway." He sets the pen down. "You cut off approximately eight inches of a pack member's hair while she was unconscious on a boutique floor."
"The scissors were already in my hand," my tone comes out reasonable. "It seemed wasteful not to."
He picks the pen back up and writes something. I would give a considerable amount to know what it says.
"Is there anything else you'd like to add?" he asks.
"Yes, actually." I look at him. "My dress. The green one. Where is it?"
“You mean the reason for this situation?”
“Yes,” I nod, looking rather serious. “I’m not going through all this just to have it taken away from me.”
He stands without responding, clicking his pen closed, at the same time looking at me with the expression of a man who has processed a great deal of information in the last three minutes and needs a moment away from it.
"Wait here," he says.
"Where would I go?" I say.
He goes to the door.
"Excuse me," I call after him.
He stops.
"My dress," I say. "No one is going to confiscate it, are they? As evidence or something?"
He looks at me over his shoulder. The expression on his face is one I don't have a precise word for — it sits somewhere between exasperation and a kind of reluctant fascination, the way people look at things they cannot categorise.
He leaves without answering.
"I'd also like a lawyer," I call, to the closing door.
No response.
The fluorescent light flickers.
I settle back in my chair, and wait with my eyes closed. At least seven minutes pass before the door opens again.
I take in dark pants first, my eyes trailing up the long length to the leather belt and up the navy polo shirt and a jaw assembled with geometric opinions until I meet silver eyes.
It's him…
He is looking at me with the same quality of attention as before — direct, unhurried, the kind that doesn't perform itself. He takes in the room, the table, the chair, and me, in a single pass.
His expression gives nothing back, as he pulls out the chair across from me and sits down.
"Well," I say, because someone has to. "I didn't expect to be meeting you again under circumstances like this."
Something moves in his expression. "Didn't you?"
"No." I sit slightly straighter. "I'm usually more composed when I meet people for the second time. This is—" I gesture vaguely at the concrete walls, the flickering light, myself in a holding room chair with contraband hair scissors' aftermath on my conscience. "Not my best setting."
"You seem comfortable," he says.
"I'm adaptable," I say. "Are you the lawyer? I asked them to send someone."
He pauses, one beat, slightly too long. "Something like that."
The phrasing, the pause, the way he said it without breaking eye contact tells me he is either a very relaxed solicitor or a very confident one, and either way it bodes well for my situation.
"Good," I say. "Because I have a solid self-defence case, and I'd like to establish that before whoever that woman is uses her connections to reframe the narrative."
"Her connections," he says.
"She's pack," I say. "High-ranking, from the way she moved through that shop. People like that have connections." I look at him. "Do you know Ironhold's pack structure? I'm new. I don't have the hierarchy yet."
"I'm familiar with it," he says.
"Right." I nod. "So you understand the optics. New arrival, first day, altercation with a local. I need someone to make clear that the scissors were her idea, not mine. The surveillance cameras should have captured everything. The haircut was mine, I'll grant you that, but the scissors—"
"You cut her hair," he says.
"I trimmed it," I say. "There's a difference."
"Eight inches."
"She had a lot of hair to work with."
He looks at me for a long moment. Something is happening in his expression that I cannot read — it is not amusement, exactly, but it is in the same postcode as amusement, contained behind a composure that is clearly very practiced and very habitual.
"Walk me through the scissor situation," he says.
"She came at me with them," I say. "I took them away. She was unconscious by that point, and I had the scissors in my hand, and her hair was right there, and it was genuinely uneven. I stand by the decision medically and aesthetically."
"Medically," he says.
"I'm a surgeon," I say. "I have an eye for asymmetry. It's involuntary."
He is quiet for a moment. Then the door opens.
The sandy-haired warrior steps in. The instant he sees the man sitting across from me, his posture changes, completely and immediately. His shoulders drop. His chin adjusts. His notepad goes to his side.
He bows. "Alpha."
The word lands in the room like a stone in water.
I look at the warrior. I look at the man across the table. He is looking at me.
"Alpha?" I repeat. My voice comes out approximately one register higher than I intended.
He nods once.
"Alpha," I say again, because apparently I need to say it twice to make it real.
He says nothing.
"You're—" I stop. I look at the warrior, who is standing very correctly by the door with the expression of a man watching a situation he has decided not to involve himself in. I look back. "You let me think you were the lawyer."
"You assumed I was the lawyer," he says. "Those are different things."
"You said something like that."
"Which is not a confirmation."
"It is absolutely a confirmation adjacent—" I stop to breathe. “Wait— you— you're the regional alpha?”
"Yes."
I shoot to my feet. "Of Ironhold??"
"Yes."
"Zamir Vaughn."
"Yes."
"You're my arranged husband."
He stands as well. "I am.” The corner of his mouth moves. "Though I'd suggest," he says, "that my wife probably shouldn't call me Alpha."
Short Hair Lady has a smile that doesn't reach her eyes.Funny how I'm finally getting a good look at her tall, fair skinned frame."Luna, I'm Samantha Caine." She says through her teeth, even though we both know she wants nothing more than to take a swing at me. "You look beautiful.""Thank you," I say pleasantly. "So do you."Her smile stays exactly where it is.The five women behind her are quieter — watchful, taking their cues, the social mathematics of a group that has a leader and knows it. One of them — younger, brown-eyed, with the uncertain expression of someone who hasn't fully committed to the dynamic yet — gives me a small, genuine smile when Samantha turns to organise the procession.Samantha walks beside me, guiding me through a corridor, a turn, and then double doors that Mrs. Pelham holds open as we approach. In the fifteen steps between the turn and the doors, Samantha manages the following: a comment about the dress — “Such a bold choice, green, very brave” — a quest
Audrey"Holy mother of—” I clamp a hand over my mouth, my heart trying to exit my chest through my ribs, as I stare at the man in my doorway who is currently pressing one large hand over his left eye."Oh—" I start forward. "I didn't — you can't just—""I'm fine," he says."You're not fine, you just took a—""I'm fine."He straightens, and takes his hand away from his eye. The eye in question is already angry — reddening at the outer edge, the specific bloom of a bruise that has made a decision and intends to follow through on it.“Yeesh!” My surgeon brain takes over completely and I cross the room and reach for his face.He steps back."I heard you talking," he says. His voice is even. The evenness costs him something. "I came to inform you of the bonding ceremony. This evening."I stare at him."The ceremony," I say. "Is this evening?""Yes.""And you came to tell me… at midnight?""Yes.""By opening my door without knocking?"A pause that contains a great deal of information follows
ZamirShe smells like green things.Not perfume. It's like flowers and earth but not a specific scent… it's faintly warm, the kind of thing you catch once and then your nose goes looking for it again without asking permission.‘Interesting,’ my wolf says, from wherever he sits when he's paying attention."Eyes on the road," I say, under my breath.‘I am not the one driving.’Audrey is in the passenger seat with the green dress folded across her lap and her gaze on the coastal road, and she has not attempted conversation once since we got in the car, which is — unusual.Every other woman tried to start some kind of conversation. She is sitting next to me, completely unbothered.‘She's not performing,’ my wolf observes.She's not. That is the thing. She is simply sitting there, looking out the window with those grey-green eyes, one hand resting open on her knee like she hasn't got a care in the world, which — given that she spent the afternoon in a holding room after knocking someone unc
AudreyThe holding room chair is not comfortable.The room is small. Concrete walls, one fluorescent light that flickers approximately every forty seconds in a way that suggests it has been doing this for years and nobody has fixed it because nobody spends enough time in here to find it intolerable. There is a table. There are two chairs. There is a door with a small reinforced window through which I have counted three different warriors peering at me in the last ten minutes with varying levels of professional composure.I cross my other leg and wait. The door opens soon after.The warrior who enters is broad-shouldered and sandy-haired, with the specific expression of someone who drew the short straw on an assignment and is determined to carry it out with dignity. He has a notepad. He clicks his pen twice before he sits down, which tells me he has done this before and has a process, which I respect.He looks at me. I look back."Name.""Audrey," I smile. "Calloway. Yours?"He writes
Audrey"Is that everything, ma'am?"The driver is standing at the boot of the car — black, expensive, sent from Ironhold without ceremony the way you'd send a van for furniture — and he is looking at the three terracotta pots I've just handed him with the expression of a man who was briefed on luggage and was not briefed on this."Carefully," I tell him. "The tall one is Napoleon. He tips."He adjusts his grip on Napoleon without comment. I appreciate that.The rest of my things are already loaded — two bags, a medical kit, my laptop case, and my mother's urn wrapped in the grey cashmere scarf I bought in Edinburgh two winters ago because it was the softest thing I'd ever touched and I decided I was allowed one expensive soft thing. I buckle the urn into the back seat first, then the cacti, arranged across the middle seat in the order they've always lived on my windowsill. Napoleon by the window. Julius in the centre. Cleopatra on the inside, nearest the urn, because she's the smalles
Zamir"How bad is the victim?"Jason drops into the chair across from my desk with the particular economy of movement he uses when the answer is going to take a while — one ankle crossing the opposite knee, forearms on the armrests."Stable," he says. "As of an hour ago. The surgical team at Ashveil General got to the haematoma before it herniated." He pauses. "Apparently the neurosurgeon on shift was exceptional. I'm told he should have a full recovery.""Good." I turn from the window. "And the hunters?""Three confirmed in the vehicle that hit our delta. One didn't survive the impact." Jason's jaw tightens briefly. "The other two scattered on foot. We have trackers on both trails.""And the infiltration point?""South perimeter. They came through the forestry access on Kellan Road — the section we flagged for reinforcement in March." His eyes meet mine. "The section that hasn't been reinforced yet.""Who's responsible for that timeline?""Colt submitted the contractor schedule. Ther







