LOGINI jumped in front of a dagger for a man who didn’t love me. I know how that sounds. I knew how it sounded then too, somewhere in the back of my mind, but my body was already moving and the wolfbane was already spreading through my blood before I could talk myself out of anything. He held me while I was dying. Said my name like it mattered. And I lay there on that cold floor thinking maybe. Maybe this is the moment he finally sees me. Then Vanessa knelt beside him and they started talking and I realized they thought I was already gone. I almost was. But not yet. I heard every word. I died on that floor knowing the truth about what I was to him. Not a love. Not even a choice. Just a girl who stayed close and never complained and made herself easy to keep around. Then I woke up at eighteen and everything was exactly the same same room, same pack, same people except me. I remember everything. And I’m not the same girl anymore.
View MoreI always thought dying would feel like something.
Not necessarily pain I’d heard people say it goes numb toward the end, that the body has a way of sparing you the worst of it. But I thought there’d be something. Some kind of weight to it. Some acknowledgment from the universe that a person was leaving.
There wasn’t. It was just cold. And then colder.
The Blood Ceremony had been loud all evening. Drums, fire, the whole pack pressed together in the valley below the Blackwood estate while the sky went dark above us. I’d stood near the back the way I always did. Close enough to belong, far enough not to pretend I did. Vanessa was near the front, obviously. White dress, hair down, the kind of beautiful that makes people forget what they were looking at before she walked in.
Zadok stood at the altar. I let myself look at him for exactly as long as felt safe and then I looked at the fire instead.
I’d gotten good at that. Measuring out how much of him I was allowed to want in a single evening and stopping before it became something I couldn’t swallow back down.
Six years. Six years of that particular discipline and I was still terrible at it.
I saw the figure before anyone else did. Hooded, moving wrong through the crowd too deliberate, too focused, cutting through the bodies with a kind of purpose that had nothing to do with ceremony. My eyes found Zadok automatically, the way they always did, and I saw it immediately — his back to the threat, head turned left, three of his guards pulled away to the other side of the valley.
Someone had planned this.
I don’t remember deciding to move. My body just went. Shoved through the last two people between me and Zadok and got there exactly one second before the blade did.
It went in between my ribs on the left side.
The sound I made wasn’t a scream. It was smaller than that this short, surprised thing, like the pain caught me off guard even though I’d technically put myself in front of it. I felt Zadok’s arm catch me before I hit the ground but the impact still jarred through my whole body and then I was down, cheek against cold stone, trying to figure out why I couldn’t pull a full breath.
Wolfbane. I knew what it was almost immediately. It moved differently than regular pain not sharp, not burning, just this slow crawling cold that spread outward from the wound like it owned me. Like it had been waiting for an opening.
“Sandra.” Zadok’s voice above me. His hands on my face, tilting it up. “Sandra, look at me.”
I looked at him. I couldn’t not.
He was afraid. Actually afraid, in a way I’d never seen on his face before, and some stupid part of me — the part that had loved him quietly for six years without asking for anything back — felt something warm move through the cold.
Maybe, I thought. Maybe this is it. Maybe this is the moment.
I know. I know how that sounds. I was dying on a stone floor and I was still doing it — still looking for proof that I meant something to him, still hoping the fear on his face was about me specifically and not just the chaos of the moment.
I couldn’t help it. Loving him had become the same as breathing a long time ago. I didn’t know how to stop even when I was running out of air.
The wolfbane kept spreading. My fingers had gone completely numb and the cold was moving up my side now, slow and patient, and I could feel myself getting heavier in a way that had nothing to do with weight.
Vanessa appeared.
She came from somewhere to the left and knelt beside Zadok and her hand went to his shoulder and I watched his body change — the tension shifting, something in him settling at her touch the way it never quite settled at mine. Even then. Even watching me bleed out on the ground.
They thought I was already gone. I could tell from the way their voices dropped, the way they stopped directing anything at me and started talking to each other. Like I was furniture. Like I was already somewhere they couldn’t reach.
I wasn’t.
I was still there. I was holding onto consciousness with everything I had left because something in me needed to hear it the real thing, the true thing, the version of the story they’d never say out loud if they thought I could hear.
Vanessa said something low that I couldn’t fully catch. His name, I think. The way she said his name was different from how anyone else said it.
And then Zadok said quietly, the way he said things he meant
“She knew what she was to me, Vanessa. She always knew.”
The cold reached my chest.
I laid there and let it.
There was nothing left to fight for, was the thing. No maybe. No perhaps, no possibly, no version of this where I’d misread everything and he’d been secretly loving me back this whole time. Just that one sentence, said so calmly, like it was simply a fact about the world.
She knew what she was to me.
Something in me went very quiet.
Not sad , i was past sad. Not even angry, though maybe that would come later if there was a later. Just quiet. The way a room goes quiet when the last person leaves and the door clicks shut and there’s nothing left inside it worth staying for.
The wolfbane finished the rest.
I stopped fighting it. Closed my eyes. Let the cold take whatever was left.
The last thing I felt was the stone floor beneath my cheek.
The last thing I heard was Vanessa saying his name again, soft and relieved, like something that had been threatening her had just been removed.
And then
Nothing.
And then I woke up.
The ceiling was wrong.
Not wrong exactly familiar, actually, too familiar but my brain couldn’t make sense of it for a long dizzy second because the last thing I’d seen was dark sky above the valley and now there was a water stain above my left corner and pale morning light coming through a curtain I recognized and
I sat up too fast. The room tilted. I grabbed the edge of the mattress and just breathed, heart slamming, and looked around at the four walls closing me in.
My room. My old room. The one I’d had at eighteen.
My hand flew to my ribs.
Nothing.
I pressed harder, fingers searching for the wound, for the scar, for anything
Nothing.
The curtain shifted in a draft from the window and I stared at it and my brain started doing something I wasn’t ready for started pulling memories up one by one, not gently, just dumping them like it needed me to see every single one before I could pretend otherwise.
Six years. The dagger. His hands on my face.
She knew what she was to me.
A knock at the door made me go completely still.
“Sandra?” The voice on the other side was one I recognized. One I hadn’t heard in a very long time.
One I’d watched stop breathing.
Sandra’s POVI didn’t sleep well.That wasn’t new exactly I’d had years of bad sleep in the first life, most of it self-inflicted, most of it involving lying awake turning Zadok-shaped thoughts over and over until they were smooth and useless. But this was different. This wasn’t longing keeping me up.It was Vanessa’s hand on his arm.The specific relaxation of it. The absence of performance. I kept turning it over and it kept meaning the same thing no matter which angle I looked at it from she was comfortable with him in private in a way that didn’t match what she showed the pack publicly. And in six years of watching both of them I had somehow missed that distinction entirely because I’d been looking at the wrong person.I’d always watched him. I should have been watching her.I got up before dawn and sat at the window and thought about what I actually knew versus what I’d assumed. In the first life I’d understood their relationship as straightforward — Zadok loved Vanessa, Vanessa
Sandra’s POVHe didn’t follow me back inside.I sat on that bench for another ten minutes after he left, hands folded in my lap, watching the tree line like it owed me something. My heart was doing that thing again — that slow unsteady thing I had no patience for — and I waited until it stopped before I moved.The expression on his face when I’d said should there be kept coming back to me. I’d catalogued every version of Zadok’s face over six years and that particular one didn’t exist anywhere in my inventory. It wasn’t confusion exactly. It wasn’t irritation. It was something closer to — recalibration. Like I’d said something that didn’t fit the model he was working from and he was quietly adjusting.Good. Let him adjust.I went back inside and spent the rest of the morning doing what eighteen year old Sandra would do — helped Dara with the linen inventory, stayed out of my father’s way, kept my head down and my mouth useful. I was good at invisible. I’d been practicing it my whole l
Sandra’s POVNobody told me he’d be at breakfast.That sounds ridiculous. He was the Alpha. He went where he wanted, showed up when he felt like it, and nobody scheduled around him everyone else just adjusted. I knew that. I’d spent six years adjusting.But I’d had maybe forty minutes of being back in this body and I wasn’t ready. That was the honest truth. I’d stood at that window and made my decisions and felt solid about them and then he walked through that door and something in my chest did this slow, horrible recognition thing that I had absolutely no control over.Six years of loving someone leaves marks. Apparently dying doesn’t remove them.I looked down at my plate.“Zadok.” My father’s voice, pulling into something respectful and eager the way it always did around pack authority. “We weren’t expecting you this morning.”“I wanted to check on the household.” Zadok’s voice. Same as I remembered — low, even, the kind of voice that didn’t need volume to fill a room. “After last
Sandra’s POVI didn’t answer right away.I just sat there on the edge of the mattress with my hand still pressed flat against my ribs and my heart doing something violent inside my chest. Three knocks. That pause. That voice.Dara.It couldn’t be Dara. Dara had gotten sick when I was twenty two — something that moved fast and didn’t respond to anything the pack healers tried. I’d sat with her through most of it. Held her hand at the end. Watched her go in a way that was somehow quieter and more devastating than my own death had been, which felt appropriate because that was always how it was with Dara. She made everything feel more real than it actually was.She died two years before I did.So the voice on the other side of that door was not Dara’s voice.Except it was.“Sandra.” Again. A little louder this time, with that specific texture she had when she was trying not to sound worried and failing. “I can hear you moving around. Are you sick?”I stood up. Sat back down. Stood up agai






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