LOGINIn the club, the music pounds against the speakers like an angry woodpecker trying to demolish a tree. Al yells her order over the noise, and the bartender hands her two shots in return. She shoves one in my direction, and before I can decline, a guy jumps in front of me and shoves the glass filled with dark-gray liquid away. “She's not allowed to drink that,” he says to the bartender, who nods and reaches for the glass.
I grab it before he does and turn to stare at the boy with the audacity to tell me what I can and cannot drink. I immediately recognize him. It’s the same guy Gaston fought earlier. Holy mother of all that is hot! The boy—excuse me, man—in front of me looks even more gorgeous than he did earlier. Under the flickering lights, his face is chiseled to perfection, with a square jaw, high cheekbones, magnetic sapphire-blue eyes, and a set of full yet firm lips pressed into a tight line. I avoid staring at the muscular torso hiding behind the gray shirt and dark jeans he's wearing. Get a grip, Mar! Good looks aside, I won't have anyone boss me around—even if he looks like a walking centerfold model.
“What's in this?” I ask Al, whose eyes are bugged out in apprehension.
“It's a potion—an herbal drink—called Edge. He’s right. You probably shouldn’t drink it.” She glances at the jerk in front of us with unease. His presence has her looking like an anxious kitten. I look him up and down again and notice he's even taller than I’d thought. His thick and wavy short hair looks more like the color of milk chocolate. It’s that rich and silky. A gratuitous second glance tells me that his body isn't just toned; it's moored with large and tightly wound muscles that would easily break any opponent in half. The ones on his left arm flex behind his gray shirt when he spreads an open palm, waiting for me to place the drink in his hand.
“Give me the glass. It's an order,” he adds, as though that's supposed to make me jump. I nod and smile because I find the words more amusing than anything anyone has ever said. He relaxes, thinking I'll comply.
I chug the entire drink and smirk at him. I slam the glass on the bar, but not before staring him down as I lick the rim of the glass and then stick my tongue out at him. The drink tastes like rancid toilet water, and I swear I'll barf at any moment, but I won't give him the satisfaction. “Mmm, delicious! Oh, and in case you were wondering what just happened—I don't take orders.” I shove past him. “Let's go dance,” I say to Al. Her mouth pops open in shock, and there's a hint of fear in her silver eyes. I pull her toward the dance floor and don't bother looking at the jerk behind me.
“Are you insane? Do you know who he is?” she whispers harshly.
“Yeah, he’s a guy used to telling people what to do. Stop worrying so much, and dance. We came here to have fun,” I remind her. She eases up after a few minutes and bops to the beat.
“I knew you were different, but I had no inkling you were crazy.” Al twirls toward a guy already dancing with another girl. I watch her successfully cut in while the girl whose dance partner she stole scowls at her. A large guy, about a foot taller than my five feet four inches, approaches me.
“You're bold,” he says with a smile. “No one talks to Phantom that way.”
“Are you asking me to dance, or are we using the dance floor to discuss little things that don't matter?”
The guy smiles and takes my hand.
“Let me answer that for Josh. You will decline the offer to dance and disappear before I make you disappear.” Recognizing the voice behind me, I roll my eyes. My potential dance partner drops my hand like it’s covered with lethal wasps and vanishes through the crowd.
“Do you always boss people around, or am I getting the royal treatment tonight?”
“You are getting the royal treatment, princess.”
I sigh and turn around to rid myself of his presence but stop dead in my tracks when he says, “Your hostility is excessive toward me—have we dated?” There's enough mirth in his facial expression for me to know his words are sarcastic.
Annoyance fills my chest. “Trust me, had we dated, you definitely would have remembered. Besides, you're not even close to being my type.”
He cocks an eyebrow at me and guffaws—he actually guffaws. “Now I know you're lying. Princess, I'm every girl's type.” He flashes an arrogant smirk. I seriously hate good-looking guys who know they’re good looking. “Besides my irresistible charm and my excessive good looks, I'm royalty—I’m, in fact, next in the line of succession.” He all but spells it out.
“Okay...”
“Okay? That's it?” He seems astounded I'm not impressed—maybe even offended. Typical royal. They expect praise for having a title most of them don’t even merit.
“I'm sorry, should there be more? Would you like a cookie, grand applause, or will a pat on the shoulder suffice for a title you didn't earn?”
He gazes at me, puzzled, but a heart-stopping playful grin marks the edges of his lips. I stare back at him, and for the second time tonight, I notice he is unrealistically good looking. His description of himself—excessively good looking—may be accurate. Seriously, he's a little more than beautiful, which won't be a problem, because I'm not in the market for a boyfriend—or a jerk.
“Are you always this feisty, or am I getting the royal treatment?”
A surge of dizziness followed by nausea washes over me like an angry tidal wave. I open my mouth to answer him but instead stumble. My vision blurs with scattered red dots that make it impossible to see. What the heck was in that drink? The pleasant smell of sage and cedar engulfs me as someone with powerful arms lifts me off the floor. I try to claw at their shoulders, wanting to get them off me. The last thing I need is to end up at a deranged weirdo's house with all of my clothes missing. Panicked, I gasp, struggling to suck in air. Whatever was in the drink is making it impossible to breathe. I swallow the knot in my throat and use my last breath to call for Al. The tiny red dots consuming my vision turn black, making the weight of my body vanish.
Phantom’s POV The conference room hums with fluorescent light, the buzz overhead mixing with the restless murmur of reporters. The air is thick with perfume, ink, and anticipation. Cameras flash like lightning, each burst ricocheting off the paneled walls, momentarily blinding. The microphones on the long table hiss and crackle, amplifying every cough, every shuffle of paper. I stand at the podium, no longer a prince answering to another’s crown—now king. Every word I speak carries the weight of my people, every silence is dissected. Calm is my armor, restraint my weapon. “King Phantom,” a voice cuts through the noise, sharp, insistent. “Can you confirm who your chosen mate is?” The air tightens. Reporters lean forward, pens poised, cameras ready to capture the moment. My heartbeat is steady, deliberate, a drum I refuse to let them hear. I let the silence stretch, savoring the tension. Then I allow a faint smile to curve my mouth. “The revelation will be made when it’s time.
I place a tray of Halo‑Halo on the table, the colors gleaming like jewels in glass. Another of my grandma’s recipes, perfected by Marja, who insists dessert is the glue that holds family together. The sweet chill of shaved ice and fruit seems almost ironic, considering the heat of the questions hanging in the air. “May we please get to the part of this evening where one of you explains who or what originally created werecreatures?” Anna asks, her tone impatient but curious, eyes flicking between us like she’s waiting for someone to finally spill the truth. “Once upon a time, there was a—” “No you don’t,” Shaw cuts in, interrupting me with a smirk. “This isn’t a fairy tale, so it shouldn’t be told as one. Which is why I’m telling her the story.” “And you think you can teach Anna about the history of werecreatures better than I can? You’ve been a werecreature all of what… five minutes? You know what, Shaw? Go ahead. Impress us with your epic storytelling skills.” I cross my arm
By late afternoon, I try calling Phantom. Once. Twice. Three times. Each ring stretches like a blade across silence, cutting deeper when no answer comes. My pulse thrums, uneven, tethered to a voice that refuses to break through. Shadows curl at the edges of my thoughts, whispering possibilities I don’t want to name. Breath catches in my throat, fragile, as if the air itself resists filling my lungs. I tell myself he’s busy, that Rome emergencies can’t wait. But the quiet on the other end feels heavier each moment I don’t hear from him. I toss my phone onto the bed, muttering, “Fine. Ignore me. I’ll just host a supernatural dinner party and not overthink about you.” The sarcasm doesn’t soothe the ache, but it makes me laugh, and laughter is better than panic. The sound echoes in the empty room, brittle but defiant, like I’m daring the silence to break. By evening, I overhear Shaw and Israfil bickering outside the mansion Phantom had the keys sent to me before he left. The note sai
Phantom’s kiss still tingles on my lips as I step out of the car, his gaze burning into my back until I vanish into the chaos of school. My pulse thrums, tethered to him even as lockers slam, sneakers squeak, and gossip ricochets down the hall. After last night, the noise feels cartoonish, like the world forgot how heavy everything feels when you’re caught between kingdoms and secrets. Shadows cling to the corners, whispering what I can’t say aloud. The classroom hums with chatter, voices overlapping like static. I spot Israfil and Anna, my pulse skipping, breath catching in my throat. “Seriously, people, I miss one day of school and all hell breaks loose?” I announce, referring to the witch‑made earthquake I heard rattled the halls while I played hooky. Apparently, that’s what tipped my mom off to my absence. I stride toward them, nerves buzzing under my skin. Training this summer was not only in another state but left me with little free time. Months have passed since I’ve se
The drive feels shorter than it should. Phantom’s hand rests near mine on the gearshift, steady, unyielding, as if promising it will be okay. My mother’s voice still echoes in my ear, agitated and disappointed, but his presence beside me tempers the dread. The stuffed coyote sits in the backseat, silent witness to the collision course we’re on. The house looms as we pull into the driveway. Porch light blazing, curtains drawn tight, the air heavy with expectation. Phantom kills the engine, leans back, and studies the front door like it’s a battlefield. His grin flickers, restrained but confident. "Ready?" he asks, voice low, magnetic, carrying that dangerous calm that makes my pulse thrum. I swallow, nerves tangling with the remnants of heat still clinging to my skin. "She might not like you right away." His eyes narrow, shadowed but steady. "She doesn’t have to. You do." 🐾👑🐾👑🐾 The door swings open before we knock. Mom stands framed in the light, arms crossed, ga
The rest of the morning unfolds without a hitch. No shadows of Rome, no ghosts of justice against Canum pressing against the walls. Just sunlight, bright and clean, spilling across the kitchen tiles as Phantom leans against the counter of his Airbnb rental, arms folded, watching me burn pancakes on the stovetop. "You’re terrible at this," he says, entertained, tone teasing yet amused. I flip the misshapen pancake onto a plate, grinning. "You’re welcome to try." He doesn’t move, doesn’t reach for the spatula. Just smirks, magnetic, as if the challenge itself is hilarious. "Happy to hire a chef. I don’t cook much. But I do excel at making commands." "Then command the syrup," I shoot back, tossing him the bottle. He catches it one‑handed, effortless, and for a moment the heaviness that haunted us in Rome dissolves into easy conversation and joy that feels too good to be true. His laugh is low, restrained, but it lingers in the air like music, filling the space with warmth.
My brain is supposed to be sharp, advanced—werecoyote instincts honed to perfection. But when it comes to matters of the heart, I’m just as foolish as any teenager. Proof? Edison’s clammy palms sliding across my back. “I know this is all for show, but I like you,” he murmurs, voice low, sticky w
My stomach claws at itself, twisting, tearing. Acid scorches my throat; I retch into porcelain, praying for escape from my own body. The sound ricochets—metallic, hollow—like the palace itself is listening, every tile a witness to my collapse. Breath splinters, pulse hammering bone, desperate to br
“You look even better up close,” he drawls, that Midwestern accent curling around the words. “Huh?” “You’re the girl of my dreams,” Jared Beaumont says matter‑of‑factly. That has to be the worst pickup line I’ve ever heard. “You can’t be serious. Who has that line ever worked on?” Only
Alfie arrives at my door four hours later. It’s a quarter past seven, the sun sinking behind a horizon of clouds in a rosy‑gold wash. “Your Highness,” he says with a bow. “Alfie, it’s Maryelle. And please—don’t do that. I’m not a royal, and it’s strange when you bow for me. Really awkward.” H







