LOGINFREYA
The meeting was set for the following morning. Orin had booked a private room at the Lodge, which was the closest thing our pack had to a proper meeting venue. It was all exposed timber and stone hearths and the permanent smell of pine resin and old smoke. It wasn't the glass-and-steel corporate environment that the offer had suggested, but I'd specifically told Orin to keep it local. I wanted to see how they would adapt. I arrived thirty minutes early and they were already there. I pushed open the door and stopped. The room had one long table, and at the far end of it sat two people I didn't recognize, and one that I did. His scent hit me before I fully saw his face, then I realized I'd been holding onto it for years without meaning to. He smelled like night air, dark cedarwood, and something underneath it that I couldn’t even name. He was sitting with one arm over the back of the chair like he'd been comfortable here for hours, with his dark curls, bronze skin, and those blue eyes that were already on me before I'd taken two steps into the room. Ethan Morven, the guy who’d saved me from those rogues a few days ago. I stopped walking. "You," I said. "Me," he agreed, and then he smiled slowly, looking too pleased with himself. I looked at Orin, who had the grace to look slightly apologetic. "The acquisition offer is from Morven Holdings," he said. "They’re from the Northern Pack. I just found out this morning." "You could have told me before I walked in." "I thought you might not come," Orin said honestly. He wasn't wrong. I pulled out the chair across from Ethan and sat down, because walking out wasn't something I was going to do. I set my folder on the table and looked at him. "We went to the same school," I said. It was not a question. "We did." He was watching me with that particular expression of his, now attentive in a way that felt like something more than casual interest. "You had a reputation," I said. "Most interesting people do," was his reply. "You bullied half the school." Something crossed his face, just briefly. "I was accused of that," he said, and his voice was a bit more careful than it had been. "There's a difference." I didn't push it. The accusations had followed him for years, and I remembered that. Brian had brought it up more than once, talking about it dismissively, even though it felt to me like he couldn’t stop thinking about it. And I had stopped thinking about it, because it had been convenient to. Because Brian and Ethan's Packs had been competing for territory and it was easier not to complicate things. Right now I wasn't so sure that things were as uncomplicated as I'd thought. "Why do you want my company?" I asked, getting right to it. "Because it's valuable," he said. "The mining territory borders three packs. Whoever owns it controls a significant amount of the regional supply chain." He tilted his head. "And because I knew you were going to need to sell, and I'd rather it be to me than to someone who'd use it as leverage against you." I stared at him for a while. "That's a very convenient version of generosity," I finally said. "I'm a very convenient kind of person." "You're annoying is what you are." He smiled, and it was different from the one he had on in the beginning. Less performative, more real. "There she is." I looked down at my folder and thought about Jane Norwood’s glass shattering on the floor, the cut on my hand, and the picture of Brian with his arm around Lena on a beach, both of them having fun on a vacation that was supposed to be mine. Then I looked back up. "Are you trying to use this acquisition to take shots at Brian's Pack?" I asked. "Because if that's what this is, then I'm not interested in being a piece in someone else's game." "And if I said it was both?" Ethan said, very simply. "Business and personal, together. You get what you need, I get what I want. It's not complicated." "It sounds complicated." "Most worthwhile things usually are." I was still working out what to say to that when he stood, moved around the table without any warning, and crouched slightly to look at my hand where the bandage was still visible on my wrist. He took it in both of his hands without asking. "What happened?" he said. "It's nothing." "Freya." The precise way he said my name made me look up at him. His fingers were light and careful on the bandage. "Brian's mother," I said. "A glass. It wasn't intentional." He held my hand for a moment longer than necessary, and I felt my heart skip a few beats, though I had no interest in examining that closely. I pulled back. "Don't," I said. He looked at me, and for one second there was something in those blue eyes that was not playful at all. He just looked somehow quiet, patient, and very serene. Then he lifted my hand, pressed his lips briefly to the back of it, and said absolutely nothing. I opened my mouth to say something. And then he kissed me. It wasn’t gentle or tentative. It was deep and hard, and my whole nervous system stopped working for approximately three seconds before I got it together enough to pull back. I kept staring at him. He looked way too calm. "We should discuss terms," he said, like nothing had happened. "Ethan—" "We have to talk about the acquisition," he said, and sat back down in his seat, straightening his jacket. "I have a draft of the agreement here if you want to start with the numbers." I sat there for a moment, breathing, my hand still warm where he'd held it. Outside the windows of the Lodge, I could hear the various sounds of the woods, wind in the pine trees, and the distant call of something moving through the darkness at the edge of the territory. My territory, or what was left of it. I picked up my folder. "Show me the numbers," I said.ETHANThe bullet caught me across the upper arm, the pain so intense that it spun me half around before I even understood what happened. I quickly ducked behind an overturned chair, blood already soaking through my sleeve, ears ringing from the gunfire still coming through the hall that the hearing had taken place.Then I saw Freya running straight toward me, completely unprotected, and the pain in my arm became nothing at all compared to the fear slamming through the bond.“Get down!” I shouted, dragging her behind the chair with my good arm the second she reached me.“You’ve been hit,” she said, hands already pressed against the wound, eyes wide and terrified.“It’s just a graze. Freya, look at me, it’s just a graze.”She didn’t move at first, just kept pressing her palm against the wound like she could stop the bleeding through sheer stubbornness alone. Around us, people were still scrambling for cover, and voices were shouting orders, but for a second it felt like the only two pe
FREYAThe hearing room felt like a courtroom built by people who wanted a show, not the truth. There were rows of chairs, both packs sitting on opposite sides like it was some kind of game, and at the front, a long table where Ethan and Brian would each get their turn to talk.I sat in the front row with one twin against my chest, his weight the only thing keeping me steady. My stomach was in knots, and not just because of my kids this time. I kept replaying the photos from this morning over and over, even though I’d already told Ethan I believed him. Believing and feeling that his words were true weren’t the same thing, and right now I had neither.Annie sat beside me, one hand resting on my knee, ready to grab me the second I looked like I might break down.“You don’t have to be strong every single second,” she whispered. “Just get through the next hour.”“One hour at a time. That’s all my life has been lately.”Ethan went first.He stood tall, hands steady on the table, and told th
ETHANFreya didn’t sleep much that night, and neither did I. I watched her toss for an hour before she finally gave up and just lay there staring at the ceiling, one hand resting on her belly like she could somehow guard the last twin through sheer will alone.“We still have the ceremony tomorrow,” she said quietly, not looking at me.“Do you want to push it back?”“No.” She finally turned her head. “I want one good thing to happen this week, Ethan. Just one.”So the next afternoon, despite everything, the pack gathered for the naming ceremony for the twins. Gemma had insisted we still hold it, saying the Moon Goddess didn’t wait for convenient timing, and nobody argued with her.It should have been simple. Lanterns, a circle of pack members, the twins wrapped in soft blankets while the elders sang the old chants over them. But the air was thick with tension nobody bothered hiding anymore. Half the families who came stood at the edges instead of the center, watching me like they were
FREYAThe world went silent and loud at the same time.“He’s gone,” someone said, and I didn’t even know who. I just heard the words and felt my whole body go cold.I was already moving before I finished thinking. Ethan grabbed my arm for half a second, just long enough to look me dead in the eyes.“We’ll go find him together right now.”I didn’t answer with words. I just shifted, right there in the hallway, clothes falling away as fur spread over my skin. It hurt less this time. Maybe because fear had already burned through every other feeling I had.Ethan shifted beside me, and then we were running, two wolves crashing through the safe house doors and into the trees behind it, noses down, hearts slamming. I could feel him through the bond the whole way. The forest was dark, but my baby’s scent was the only thing that mattered right now. It was faint but there, pulling me forward like a rope tied straight to my ribs. Ethan stayed close to my left, his shoulder brushing mine every fe
ETHANI would never forget the sight of Freya mid shift, fur catching the emergency lights, claws out, every inch of her built around one single purpose: protecting our pups. It was breathtaking. It was also the most terrifying thing I’d ever watched, because I knew exactly what it cost her body to force herself to shift that fast after everything she’d already survived.She fought like hell. I fought beside her, and together we got the twins and our oldest clear of the smoke and into the hands of guards I trusted with my life. By the time the chaos settled and the building was declared clear of any actual device, Freya had shifted back, and then she broke down completely in my arms.“I almost lost him,” she kept saying over and over, shaking against me. “I almost lost him.”“You didn’t. You didn’t lose any of them. You were incredible.”I meant every word of it. I’d fought in real battles against real armies, and I had never once seen anything as fierce as Freya standing over our pu
FREYAI woke up in a hospital bed with Ethan’s hand wrapped around mine and the sound of a baby crying somewhere close by. The voice sounded weak. Too weak.I sat up so fast my head spun. “Which one?”“Our boy,” Ethan said quietly. “He’s holding on. But the doctors say he needs more care than we can give him here.”They let me hold him for a few minutes before the doctors took him back for more tests. He was so small, smaller than his brothers, his little chest working too hard for every breath. I held him against my chest, heart shattering with every weak cry, and I would have promised him anything in that moment to make it stop.“We need to move quickly,” the head doctor said. “There’s a neutral clinic two hours from here. They’ve got equipment and specialists that can actually treat this.”“I’ll arrange transport,” Ethan said immediately. “I can have a secure convoy ready in an hour.”My phone buzzed before he’d even finished the sentence. It was Brian.I almost didn’t answer. I an
FREYAMy shoulder felt like it was on fire, but I didn’t care about that right now. I cared about the laptop Orin had set up on the kitchen table and the clock ticking down in the corner of the screen.“Transfer complete” didn’t always mean done. There was still a little time left, and if we moved
ETHANBrian was alive.I kept reminding myself of that while the doctor worked on him. The shot had gone through his shoulder cleanly, missing the artery. He'd lost a lot of blood but he was stable. He was going to be okay, which meant he could finish telling us what he'd started.I stood outside t
FREYAI wasn't supposed to be out there.Fen told me to stay in the inner building. He'd said it twice. Ethan had looked at me on his way out and hadn't said anything, which I'd thought was him trusting me to use my judgment.I used my judgment, so I followed them out. By the time I got to the main
ETHANI didn't sleep.I drifted in and out for maybe an hour or two before I gave up entirely and went to the war room. The maps were already spread all over the table. Fen had been up all night marking positions."The east side's been holding," he said when I walked in. "The west side is messier.







