LOGINLogan’s POV
I found my father in his study, going over the patrol reports like he did every morning.
He looked up when I walked in, and something flickered across his face. Surprise, maybe. It had been a long time since I came to talk to him about anything that wasn’t pack business.
“Well.” He set the papers down. “You came to me yourself. Something must really be wrong.”
I didn’t sit. “What’s your plan for keeping Aurora safe?”
His eyes narrowed slowly.
“I didn’t realize you cared so much about your sister.”
“She’s not my sister.” It came out sharper than I meant it to. I made myself breathe.
“And that’s not the point. Having a Silver Wolf in our territory is asking for war. An unmated Silver Wolf. And you’re letting her walk into a school full of strangers like it’s nothing. Is that wise?”
My father leaned back in his chair and studied me.
“What would you have me do, Logan? Lock her up like an animal? Hide her in the east wing and pretend she doesn’t exist?”
I didn’t answer.
I looked at the wall, at the window, anywhere but at him, because I didn’t have an answer that wouldn’t give me away.
He pinched the bridge of his nose and sighed.
“Having her here is good for this pack,” he said. “You know that as well as I do. A Silver Wolf strengthens any bloodline she joins. Every Alpha within five hundred miles knows it too. That’s exactly why we can’t keep her hidden forever.”
“Father…”
He raised a hand, and I stopped.
“We’re going to find her a mate. As soon as possible.” He said it plainly, like he was discussing a trade agreement.
“A mate will protect her. It settles the question before anyone can fight over it. Her mother already agrees. We’ll hold a small gathering, quietly, and choose someone suitable. She’ll be safe here, with us, and with a mate at her side.”
A mate.
The word landed somewhere in my chest and turned to fire. It was going to be over my dead rotting body before I let someone claim what was mine.
“Logan?”
“Fine,” I said. My voice didn’t sound like mine. “Whatever you think is best.”
I left before he could see my face.
I made it halfway down the hall before I had to stop and press my hand flat against the wall.
A mate. Someone chosen for her. Someone who’d stand beside her at gatherings, put a mark on her neck, take her home.
My wolf was clawing at the inside of me, snarling a single word over and over, and I hated how clearly I could hear it.
Ours.
It wasn’t true. It couldn’t be true. She was the disaster I’d been begging my father to send away since the day she walked through our front door dripping rain on our floor.
She was a Silver Wolf, a war waiting to happen, the worst possible thing that could have come into this house.
And I couldn’t stop thinking about her.
Ever since she’d arrived, my whole life had come apart at the seams. I couldn’t sleep. I couldn’t focus.
My own brother was circling her now, putting his hands all over her in the hallway like she was already his, and the thought of it made me want to put my fist through something. I felt like ripping his head out of his useless body.
It would only get worse. Soon every wolf at that school would feel the pull of her. Soon there’d be a dozen of them sniffing around, and I’d have to watch all of it.
The worst part was that she didn’t even hide.
She walked around like she wanted to be seen. Chin up, eyes flashing, daring the whole world to come at her.
It was like she was setting herself out as bait, and it made me furious, because some sick part of me understood it. Some part of me wanted everyone to look, just so I could be the one to make them stop.
I needed to see her.
I told myself it was to keep an eye on the situation. To make sure my father’s precious investment wasn’t getting herself killed.
I told myself a lot of things.
By the time I got to campus, classes had already started.
I walked the long way around, past the building where I knew her morning lecture was, telling myself I was only passing through. I’d just see her through the glass. That was all. I’d see that she was fine, and I’d leave.
I was almost in her hall when I heard two she-wolves, heads close together, whispering as they passed.
“Bianca and her girls went after the Canadian one. In the east corridor.”
I didn’t need to think before my body moved on its own.
I ran shoving through a knot of students, following her scent down the hall, and underneath it I caught something else.
Fear. Her fear, sharp and sour, cutting straight through everything else.
I rounded the corner into the bathroom hallway and stopped.
She was backed against the lockers.
Three of them stood around her, and Bianca had something small held up between two fingers, laughing. Aurora’s hands were out, reaching for it, and her voice was cracking down the middle.
“Please,” she was saying. “Please, you don’t understand, just give it back…”
I had never heard her beg for anything.
The sight of it did something to me I didn’t have a name for. My vision went tight at the edges. My wolf surged so hard I had to lock my jaw to keep him down.
Then her eyes found me.
She went still. For half a second, across all those heads, she just looked at me, and I saw everything cross her face at once. The shame of being caught like this.
The fury that I was the one who’d caught her. And a look of pure hatred like I was the cause of everything.
Her face crumpled, and the tears fell down her beautiful face, and she shoved past Bianca and ran.
Aurora's POVI woke up and stretched, my spine cracking in three places, my wolf still curled up and sulking from yesterday's breakdown. The light through the curtains was too bright. I rolled out of bed and padded to the bathroom. Brushed my teeth. Splashed water on my face. The girl in the mirror looked tired; my silver hair was tangled, my eyes still puffy from crying. I made a face at her. She made one back.Then I walked to the wardrobe. I stood there for a long minute, staring at my clothes. The oversized sweaters. The soft leggings. The simple dresses I had brought from Vancouver, the ones that said Don't look at me, I'm nobody special. They hung there like a wardrobe of apologies.I pulled out a grey sweater and held it up. No.I threw it on the floor.A blue dress. No. A pair of worn jeans. No, no no. I was pulling things out faster now, the pile growing at my feet, my breath coming shorter. Everything looked too plain. Like the old Aurora, the weak one, the girl who let
Lucielle's POVMy heart clenched with worry as I watched Aurora run.She moved like something hunted … pale hair flying, green sweater swallowed by the crowd, her silver eyes wide and wild. The door slammed behind her, and the sound echoed in my chest like a stone dropped down a well.I wanted to follow her. I wanted to stand up and push through the staring bodies and find her, hold her hand, tell her it would be okay even though I knew it wouldn't. But my feet stayed glued to the floor. My hands stayed wrapped around my bag strap, white-knuckled and trembling.Running will bring attention to me. I couldn’t risk that. I had to force myself to remember that being seen was what killed people like me.The hall emptied slowly. The councilman's voice had stopped, but his words hung in the air like smoke … protected at all costs, rare and special, keep your distance. I watched the students file out; I could smell their jealousy from a mile away.Behind me, two boys whispered, their eyes
Aurora’s POVThe professor dismissed us with a wave of his hand, but before anyone could stand, he added, "Everyone proceed to the main hall. There will be an address."The room erupted in murmurs. "What's happening?" I asked, pulling the green sweater tighter around me.Jenny shrugged, but her movements were sharper than usual, her jaw tight. "Dunno. It’s a council thing, probably."We filed out with the crowd, Lucielle trailing behind us like a shadow. By the time we reached the main hall, my heart was already beating too fast.The space was enormous, filled with tiered seating, a raised stage, windows that let in pale afternoon light. We found seats near the middle, and I tried to ignore the gap that opened around us …two empty chairs to our left, three to our right, like we were surrounded by an invisible wall no one wanted to cross."Sit with us," Jenny said to Lucielle, patting the chair beside her. Lucielle slid in, her bangs falling forward to hide her face.Then the side d
Aurora’s POVLucas drove me to campus the next morning, his grin easy and bright in the sunlight. I tried to match it. I tried to feel the warmth he always offers and let it settle in my chest where Logan's coldness had been living rent-free.I failed. It seems Logan’s coldness was more than Lucas' warmth.The car pulled up to the main gates, and I saw Guards in Shadowpine colours, stationed along the perimeter, their eyes scanning the crowd. One of them spotted our car and straightened. Then he bowed.I blinked. "What's happening?" I asked."It’s the new security," Lucas said, his voice losing some of its lightness. "Dad orders them after the falls."The guard approached as I stepped out of the car. He was older, grey at the temples, his weathered face breaking into a smile that crinkled the corners of his eyes."Miss Aurora." He reached into his pocket and pulled out something small and woven. "My child said I should give you this bracelet. She made it herself. She'll be happy if y
Aurora’s POVI was standing at the kitchen island, tearing into a sandwich. I couldn't even taste it because of how angry I felt when Vincent stepped in from the hall.He moved quietly for an Alpha; most alphas like announcing their authority from far away. But I didn’t hear him until he was already leaning against the doorframe.“Aurora.” His voice was gentle. “I know you are angry. But we really need to talk.”My wolf stirred, lifting her head from where she’d been sulking in my chest. Control yourself, she whispered. You are acting out of place because of your emotions.I bit into the sandwich harder than necessary. Chewing hard before I Swallow. I didn’t look at him, but this was just because of my own stubbornness.Vincent sighed. He crossed the room and sat on the stool across from me, his big hands folding on the marble like he was bracing for something.“Listen to your mother,” he said. “She only wants what’s best for you.”I laughed. It came out ugly and short, crumbs falling
Aurora’s POVLogan set me down just inside the back door, his hands lingering a second too long on my waist before he let go.I didn’t look at him. I didn’t look at anyone. I walked straight past the kitchen where my mother’s voice was already rising … baby, wait … and up the stairs with my spine so straight it hurt.I closed my bedroom door behind me and turned the lock.Then I stood there in the dark and listened to my own heart hammering against my ribs like it wanted out.“Baby.” My mother’s soft voice came through the woods. “Aurora. Please. Can we talk?”I didn’t answer. I walked to the bathroom, turned the shower on as hot as it would go, and blasted music from my speaker until the walls shook. I stood under the water until my skin turned pink and my fingers wrinkled, and I cried again … because I was too tired to hold them in anymore.I didn’t come out until the water ran cold.I fell into bed still damp, undressed, and slept like I’d been drugged. I woke up, and the sun was
Aurora’s POVWho knew pack gatherings could be this enjoyable?I didn’t expect to have as much fun as I did yesterday. At one point, I didn’t want it to end. I managed to make more friends than I ever had combined in my life.I laughed more than I had since we left Vancouver, and I fell asleep that
Aurora’s POVMy head felt so heavy, I was not even sure it still belonged to me.Where am I?I opened my eyes slowly, but the room I had expected was not there. There was no ceiling. No walls. No light came from anywhere I could see. There was only darkness in every direction, soft and endless, st
Aurora’s POV“I am fine, Lucas.”I forced a smile onto my face and pushed his hand gently away from my cheek. “Really. I am not crying anymore.”And the strange thing was, I wasn’t.My face was still wet from before, but the tears had stopped now that the worst of it had passed, all I felt undernea
Logan’s POV I didn’t even realize when my wolf had pushed his way to the surface.His eyes were mine now, gold and burning, the line between us so thin I could barely tell where he ended and I began anymore. I let out a growl low in my chest, and the sound of it dropped the whole hallway into sil







