LOGINLena’s POV
Ria arrived the next morning unannounced with pastries and the energy of someone who had already decided to be angry on my behalf. She did that. Showed up physically when she felt the situation required more than a phone call. It was one of my favorite things about her and also occasionally exhausting. She put the pastries on the table, sat down, looked at me and said “tell me everything.” So I did. She listened without interrupting which meant she was taking it seriously. Ria interrupted everything. Silence from her was not peace it was concentration. When I finished she was quiet for a moment. “He cried,” she said. “On the street below.” “After leaving your apartment.” “Yes.” She picked up a pastry, put it down, picked it up again. “Okay so either this man genuinely knew you and is carrying something enormous or he is the most elaborate and committed creep in this city’s history.” “I know.” “The two years of looking is the part that gets me,” she said. “That’s not casual. That’s not curiosity. People don’t spend two years and real money looking for someone like friends do.” “I know Ria.” “So what was he.” “He said more than friends. More than he deserved. And then he stopped talking.” She stared at me. “More than he deserved.” She repeated it slowly like she was tasting it. “That’s a guilt sentence Lena. That’s someone who knows they did something.” My coffee had gone cold. I drank it anyway. “My hands shake around him,” I said. “You know how they shake around loud noises or when someone moves too fast. It’s like that. Except he’s not loud and he doesn’t move fast. He’s actually very still and they shake anyway.” Ria set her pastry down completely. “Your body is recognizing him,” she said quietly. “Don’t.” “I’m serious. You said it yourself. The doctors always said some memories live in the body even when the brain wipes. Muscle memory. Physical responses. Your nervous system might know exactly who he is even if your brain doesn’t.” I didn’t want to think about that. What it meant. What it said about the thing my body was recognizing and whether it was something warm or something it had learned to be afraid of. “He’s coming back today,” I said. Ria looked at me hard. “I want to be here,” she said. “No.” “Lena.” “I need to do this on my own terms. If you’re here I’ll spend the whole time managing both of you and I’ll miss things.” She didn’t like it. I could see her cycling through arguments, discarding them, landing on the one she knew would stick. “If you don’t text me every thirty minutes I’m calling the police,” she said. “I mean it. I will absolutely call the police on your mysterious crying stranger.” “Every thirty minutes,” I agreed. She left at nine. He knocked at ten. Different knock this time. Two instead of three. Like he’d lost one somewhere overnight. I opened the door. He looked worse than yesterday. Like he hadn’t slept at all. His hair was slightly wrong like he’d pushed his hands through it too many times and given up. There were no coffees today. He was empty handed and he looked it in more ways than one. “Can I come in,” he said. I stepped back. He walked past me and stopped in the middle of the living room and turned around and said “I need to tell you something and I need you to hear the whole thing before you react.” My stomach pulled tight. “Okay,” I said carefully. He looked at me with those pale grey eyes and took one slow breath. “Your name isn’t Lena Ashford.” The room tilted slightly. “What,” I said. “That’s not your name. It’s the name on the ID the hospital gave you when you came in without one. Lena was the nurse who found you. Ashford was the street.” He kept his voice level with visible effort. “Your real name is Selene. Selene Voss.” The world went very quiet. Voss. His name was Damien Voss. My supposed name was Selene Voss. I looked at him across my living room and felt something cold move through me from the chest outward. Slow and thorough. Like ice water finding every available space. “Voss,” I said. My voice came out strange. Flat and faraway. “That’s your last name.” “Yes.” “Why do we have the same last name.” His jaw tightened. His hands were at his sides and very still. “Because you were my wife,” he said.Lena’s POVWe left at five.Me and Damien in one car. Cole behind us. Aldene Marsh in contact by phone from the estate because she had made her position on the inadvisability of this clear and had then accepted it was happening and had extracted a commitment that nothing would be done to alert Vorn before the Council could act.I had given her the commitment.I intended to keep it.I was not going to approach Vorn.I was going to look at what he had built in the territory I was responsible for and I was going to talk to Rowan and I was going to understand the complete picture before the Council moved and then I was going to let the Council move.That was the plan.Damien had looked at the plan with the expression of someone who understood the plan and trusted me to keep it and was not going to say any of the things he was thinking because he had learned the difference between thoughts that needed to be said and thoughts that needed to be held.We drove.The subsidiary territory was an
Cole’s POVAldene Marsh sat across from me in the war room at two in the afternoon and I put everything I had built on the table between us and she put everything she had built on the table and we spent three hours going through both sets of documentation with the specific focused attention of two people who had been working the same problem from different ends and were now meeting in the middle.She was good.Better than I had expected which was already high given her introduction to the estate that morning.Her financial reconstruction was thorough in the places mine had been thin and mine was thorough in the places hers had been thin and together the picture that emerged was considerably more complete than either of us had managed separately.At four thirty she sat back.Looked at the combined documentation.“The network has a name,” she said. “In the internal communications. It is referred to consistently as the Vorn arrangement.”“Elias Vorn,” I said. “Who founded it.”“Who found
Lena’s POVShe pulled up at eleven forty three.Two hours and twelve minutes after the call.She had driven fast which I had not asked her to do and which told me something about the specific weight she had been carrying and how ready she had been to put it down somewhere.I was at the front door when she got out of the car.She looked at me across the distance between the car and the steps.She looked like someone who had cried on the drive and had stopped crying and had made the decision that whatever came next she was going to walk into it with both feet.I went down the steps.She met me at the bottom.We stood there for a moment.“I should have told you,” she said. “When the investigation started. When Vane’s name came up and I knew there was a network being examined. I should have told you then.”“Yes,” I said.She held my gaze.She had been expecting me to soften it and I had not and the not-softening was its own kind of respect.“I was afraid,” she said.“I know,” I said.“I h
Lena’s POVI went to the library.Closed the door.Stood at the window for exactly ten seconds doing the breathing that I had learned in the months after the hospital when everything had been new and overwhelming and the breathing was the thing that kept the floor under my feet.Then I called.It rang four times.“Selene,” Orla said.Her voice was careful in the way it got careful when she knew from the ring or the time or some instinct built from twenty four years of waiting that something significant was coming.“I need to ask you something,” I said. “And I need you to tell me the truth even if the truth is difficult.”A pause.“Yes,” she said.“Did you know anyone connected to Brennan Voss before I came back?” I said. “Not through me. Not through this pack. Through the northern pack or through Calder Vane or through anyone in that network.”The silence on the line was not the silence of someone thinking about an answer.It was the silence of someone deciding how much of an answer t
Lena’s POV She came on a Wednesday morning without calling first. I heard the car on the private road and looked at the time which was eight forty three and looked at Damien who was across the kitchen table with his coffee and Eli who was beside him working through breakfast with the focused attention of someone fuelling up for important work and neither of them had called anyone and I had not called anyone and Mara appeared in the kitchen doorway and looked at me and said “Do you know who that is?” I went to the window. The car was unfamiliar. Dark. Council plates. Not Maren’s usual driver. I looked at Damien. He was already standing. “Stay with Eli,” I said to Mara. She gave me the look that said she had been staying with people in this house long before I arrived and would continue to do so without being told but acknowledged the instruction with a nod. I went to the front door. Damien was a step behind me. The woman who got out of the car was someone I had not seen befo
Damien’s POV I found her in the library at eleven at night. She had the notepad in front of her and three separate documents spread across the desk and the expression she wore when she was not writing but composing, when the thing on the page was still forming and she was not ready to commit it to words yet. I came in and sat in the chair across from her. She did not look up immediately. I waited. After a moment she said “I am trying to write a letter to Vera Wren and I have started it four times.” “What is the problem?” I said. “Every version I write,” she said, “sounds like a Luna writing to a pack member. Official. Positioned. And that is not what this is.” I looked at her. “What is it?” I said. She put the pen down. “It is one person writing to another person who kept records for four years not knowing if they would ever matter,” she said. “That is what it is. And I want her to know that they mattered and that she is seen and I cannot find the version of that that does
Lena’s POVEli had a question.I knew this before they asked it because I had learned the particular quality of Eli’s silence when something was being processed. The stillness that preceded significant output. They had been doing it for twenty minutes over breakfast while Damien talked to Cole abou
Ria’s POV I was not supposed to still be here. My original plan had been three days. Maybe a week. Come out to this impossible estate, confirm my best friend was safe, meet the werewolves, have the various reactions that meeting required, and go back to my apartment and my job and my life. That h
Damien’s POVThe letter arrived on a Monday.Official Council seal. Heavy paper. The kind of correspondence that did not come unless something had shifted in the larger landscape of pack politics and the shift required formal acknowledgment.I read it twice before I brought it to Selene.She was in
Lena’s POV Spring came to the estate slowly. The way it always does in places that have been cold long enough to forget what warmth feels like. Not all at once. A degree at a time. The grounds going from dead winter grey to the tentative yellow-green of things deciding to try again. I watched it







