LOGINAurora’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 underneath it was a slow, simmering anger, and most of that anger was pointed straight at myself.
I had cried in front of those girls.
I had stood there in the middle of a school hallway and let them push me around until I was begging them for a pill I did not even need anymore. I had let them see me beg, and then I had let them see me run.
No matter what my mother had done to me, no matter how many years I had spent thinking I was something small and broken, the truth was sitting underneath all of it now.
My wolf was an alpha female. A Silver Wolf. We did not bow. We did not cower. We did not let lesser wolves back us into corners and reduce us to tears, because that was simply not in our nature.
It did not matter that I had been dormant all my life. The blood was the same blood, even if the world had not seen it yet.
Which only made it worse that I had been brought to this.
To a girl on a bathroom floor, getting her tears wiped by a boy.
“Was that an earthquake?”
Lucas’s voice pulled me out of my own head.
I blinked up at him. “What?”
“Just now.” He was looking around the corridor with a small frown between his brows. “Did you feel that? The floor was moving.”
I stepped out of his hands and stood up, steadying myself with one palm against the lockers.
The hallway was completely still.
Was that me? I waited for my wolf to answer, the way she had been answering me all morning, low and restless and ready to fight.
But she did not.
She had gone completely silent inside my chest. Not gone, exactly. Just curled up and quiet, like something that had used the last of itself and needed to sleep. And now that I noticed her absence, I noticed something else too.
I was tired.
Not just tired. Hollowed out. My arms felt heavy. The hand I was using to hold myself up against the locker was beginning to shake, and my knees did not feel like they belonged to me anymore.
“Come on.” Lucas stepped closer, his voice softer now. “Let me take you home.”
I nodded.
I think I nodded. I am not entirely sure I had control of my own head at that point.
Before I could say a single thing, Lucas bent down and slid one arm under my knees and the other behind my back, and then I was off the ground entirely, lifted against his chest like I weighed nothing at all.
“Lucas.” My face went hot. “Put me down. People are staring.”
“Let them.”
He started walking, slow and easy, like carrying a girl out of the school in his arms was the most natural thing in the world to him.
We passed two boys near the doors who stopped mid-conversation to stare at us, mouths half open. We passed a group of girls who whispered behind their hands, eyes going wide.
I hid my face against the side of his neck. I could not help it.
“Lucas, seriously.” My voice came out small. “You should not. Everyone is going to talk.”
“Shh.”
He winked down at me, that lazy grin of his pulling back into place, and his arms tightened around me.
“Let them,” he said. “Let them know you are mine.”
Something fluttered low in my chest at the word.
Mine.
It was the same word my own wolf had been whispering for days, only she had been whispering it about someone else, and the strangeness of hearing it now from the wrong mouth made my whole body go still in his arms.
I opened my mouth to tell him not to say things like that. I do not know what I would have said exactly. Maybe I would have laughed it off.
Maybe I would have asked him to be careful with words like that, because girls like me did not know what to do with them.
I do not know, because I never got the words out.
Something warm slid down from my nose and dropped onto the front of his shirt.
I blinked.
I blinked again.
Then I lifted my hand slowly to my face, and when I drew my fingers back, they were red.
“Lucas,” I whispered.
He glanced down at me, that smile still on his mouth. Then his eyes dropped to my hand, and the smile fell off his face like a stone going off a cliff.
“What happened? ” He stopped walking. “Aurora, your nose.”
“I think.” I swallowed. My tongue felt heavy. “I think something is wrong.”
The corridor behind him was starting to tilt sideways. The lights overhead were getting too bright. Somewhere very far away I heard someone gasp, and then someone else, and then a voice that sounded like it might have been a teacher, but none of it was reaching me properly. It was all coming through a long tunnel made of cotton.
“Aurora.” Lucas’s voice was different now. Sharper. Frightened. “Aurora, hey. Look at me.”
I tried to.
His face swam in front of me. Two of him. Then three. Then a brother of his behind both of them with eyes that were not grey but gold, watching us from the far end of the corridor, and I could not tell anymore if Logan was actually standing there or if my own mind was making him up to punish me.
“Lucas.” My voice was a whisper now. “I do not feel good”
“Aurora?”
The world tipped sideways.
The last thing I felt was his arms tightening around me, and the last thing I heard was Lucas shouting my name as if he were calling me from the bottom of a deep, deep well.
Then everything went dark.
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 POVI ran down the hall with tears still spilling over like I had no say in the matter; my mother’s voice kept chasing me, no matter how much I ran.I didn’t care about anything except getting out of that house before I broke completely.I turned the corner and slammed into something hard. It knocked the air out of me. I stumbled back, and a hand snapped around my arm to hold me up.I looked up. And as if my day could not get any worse, it had to be Logan.He stood in the corridor, still in the clothes from his father’s office, his grey eyes fixed on my face. He tilted his head, looking at me curiously.“Why are you crying?” His voice was low. I jerked out of his grip and pressed back against the wall. “Nothing.”He stepped closer. “Who hurt you?”“Nobody hurt me.” My voice wobbled, and I hated it. I hated that he was seeing this. That of all people, it had to be him. “Can you stop acting as if you care about me? I’m fine on my own.”He looked at me for a long moment. Then
Aurora’s POVI took a long bath, scrubbed the day off, and then went to the study to meet my mom.I knocked softly.“Come in.”I pushed the door open, and before I’d even closed it behind me, my mother was up out of her chair and across the room, pulling me into her arms. She held me tight. When she drew back, her eyes were brimming with tears she hadn’t let fall yet.“What’s wrong?” I asked.She just held me, shaking her head, smiling even with the tears brimming in her eyes.“Nothing’s wrong. I always knew you were meant for special things.” Her voice wobbled. “And now that it’s happening, I think I just … I just realised how grown up you are.”Something in my chest softened. I pulled her back in and held her properly.“Look at you.” She laughed wetly into my shoulder. “A healer. You’re both. A Silver Wolf and a healer.”And then she broke.It came all at once, the tears spilling over, her whole body folding in on itself, and I felt the laugh turn into something else against me.“Mo
Logan’s POVI was on the back terrace with a cigarette when Lucas found me.I didn’t smoke often. Only when I didn’t know how to handle my thoughts, and tonight it was clawing at my ribs.Lucas came out and stood beside me at the railing. He’d cleaned up, too.“Hand me a smoke,” he said.I shook one out of the pack and passed it to him. Lit it for him, the flame catching between us in the dark. He took a drag and blew it out slowly, watching the smoke drift over the grounds.For a while, neither of us said anything.“Brother.” Lucas didn’t look at me. “What’s going on?”I didn’t answer.“I know we haven’t been close lately,” he said. “I know that’s mostly on both of us. But you’re keeping me out of something, so I’m asking you straight. What is she?”I took a long pull on my cigarette.“A healer,” I said.“No.” Lucas finally turned to look at me. “It’s more than that. Isn’t it?”I said nothing. That was answer enough.He turned back to the dark and was quiet for a moment.“I feel it,”
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
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
Logan’s POVI 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







