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Nova’s POV
This evening has a cruel sense of humor. I realize that just as my car starts moving slowly, pushing me forward with every gallop.
I watch as my car dies the way every bad relationship I’ve ever had does—loud, dramatic, and right when I need it least.
Steam curls from the hood in a hiss while I sit behind the wheel
“Perfect,” I mutter, hitting the steering wheel. “Absolutely perfect.”
I lean back in my seat and stare up at the horizon. It looked like evening was setting. It would almost be beautiful if I weren’t stranded in the middle of nowhere with no cell service and a car that decided it was going to stop functioning.
I check my phone anyway—one bar, mocking me. I hold it up like some kind of sacrificial offering. The bar flickers. Then dies.
“Of course. Why would you help me?” I say to the phone, to the desert, to whatever malicious deity is running the script of my life.
I laugh under my breath. It sounds too loud, almost wrong. “This is exactly how girls disappear in documentaries.”
The silence is enormous. The kind that presses against your ears until you start to imagine sounds that aren’t there.
I look out my window, paranoid.
And then I hear a sound.
Low. Rolling. Not the wind.
The kind of sound that lives in your chest before it reaches your ears.
Engines.
I look at my rear view mirror.Headlights are behind me. Then more. Dozens.
They move as one, predatory and beautiful in the kind of way you know will hurt you if you get too close.
I get out of my car.
They don’t pass me. They don’t even slow. They spread out, until I’m swallowed whole in their circle.
Every instinct screams at me to get back in the car, lock the doors, and pray they get back into riding.
Instead, I stay rooted to the spot. Because apparently, I have a death wish.
They reeve their engines, the sound loud and my heartbeat thud violently in my chest, too fast. Dust curls around their tires, stinging my throat.
And then he appears.
The one at the center.
He doesn’t rush. He doesn’t need to. When he cuts his engine, the others follow like they’re tethered to him by an invisible chain. He swings off his bike, boots hitting the floor, heavy and for the first time in my life I understand what gravity feels like.
He’s all big, leather and skin inked with lines I can’t quite read. But his eyes—
God.
They are deep blue.
Not gray. Not pale blue. Blue, just like the pacific ocean.
Those eyes are on me and it feels less like being seen than being cornered.
The sight punches the air out of my lungs.
For a heartbeat, nobody moves.
Then I do the only logical thing my frazzled brain can come up with. I cross my arms, cock my hip, and say, “Well. You all here to fix my car, or is this a highway robbery situation?”
A few of the bikers chuckle, low and rough. But not him. He just tilts his head, studying me like I’m a puzzle piece that doesn’t quite fit.
“Depends,” he says finally, voice deep. “You worth robbing?”
The words slide over me like a match dragged across skin. Taking me up in flames. Dangerous, teasing, forbidden.
I raise a brow, feigning calm I absolutely do not feel. “Depends. You worth the felony charge?”
That earns me a grin from one of the men behind him, a flash of gold tooth in the dusk. But blue eyes just steps closer. The air between us tightens, humming with something I don’t know.
“I’m Cassian,” he says, as if that explains everything.
I should be afraid. A lone girl surrounded by a gang of leather-clad men in the middle of nowhere? Every bad luck story I have ever heard is screaming in my head. But my pulse isn’t beating hard. I am… fascinated.
Stupid. Stupid, Nova.
“You going to tell me yours?” he asks, his voice low enough that it’s for me and me alone.
I lick my lips. “Depends. You planning on rescuing me or killing me?”
His grin is slow. “Maybe both.”
The others laugh, but all I can do is stare at him.
Something about him is wrong. Not wrong like a bad man in the obvious sense—though that too but wrong in a way that doesn’t belong to this world. Those eyes are too deep yet still so light, and for a fleeting second, they don’t just flash blue. They glow.
I blink, and it’s gone.
Great. Now I’m hallucinating.
“Car trouble?” Cassian asks, finally tearing his gaze from me to glance at my sorry excuse for transportation.
“It’s shy,” I say. “Doesn’t like strangers.”
He huffs a laugh and the sound is worst that the silence because it makes me want to hear it again.
He signals one of his men forward, but doesn’t take his eyes off me. Not once. The guy moves toward the car, but Cassian doesn’t stop watching me.
And God help me, I can’t stop watching him back.
You’re not supposed to want this, my brain chants, like some half-drunk mantra. This is the kind of man your mother warned you about. The kind of man who makes girls disappear. The kind of man you run from, not toward.
And yet.
When he steps closer, the space between us closing like a trap, I don’t move away.
I breathe him in—leather, smoke, danger and it’s intoxicating.
“Nova,” I say finally, because my mouth is a traitor. “My name’s Nova.”
His smile like he is right about something. “Figures.”
“Figures?”
“Stars burn out fast,” he says, his voice so soft it’s almost kind. Almost. “But when they go, they light up the whole sky.”
And just like that, I know I’m in trouble.
Big, blue eyed, leather-clad trouble.
CHAPTER 97NOVA'S POVThe smell of smoke reached us long before the village did.It was smoke, burnt timber and ashes. But beneath all of it, there was shouting.No shouting, no cries for help, no barking dogs, no children laughing as they chased each other through the dusty streets.There was nothing. And Cassian knew that he just had to check it out. He had to make sure the people there were actually safe. That was what mattered at that point. Our convoy slowed as the eastern village emerged through the morning mist.My stomach tightened. I'd seen cities destroyed before. This wasn't destruction. This was abandonment.Cassian climbed off his motorcycle before the engine had fully died. Jason and Killian were right behind him, already barking orders to the rescue team."Check every building.""Look for survivors!""If anyone's trapped, call immediately."The wolves scattered, but I stood frozen.The village looked... normal. At least from a distance.The roofs were blackened, severa
CHAPTER 96CASSIAN'S POV"Did anyone move them?" I ask one of the omegas, and he shakes his head, as he barely looks at me. It is one of the moments where I am not proud of the fact that they are scared of me. This one feels different. "No, Alpha."I look across the courtyard again. The motorcycles stand exactly where they have been when they roared to life in the middle of the night. But they are cold and lifeless now. It is almost like the whole thing is a fucking dream. Mechanics have inspected every engine before dawn. Nothing is wrong.No tampered wires. No hidden devices. No signs that anyone has even touched them.It should be reassuring. Instead, it makes the whole thing worse.The stories have already started spreading through the compound. Some wolves whisper that the machines have answered Nova's power.Others claim they have witnessed an ancient omen. By breakfast, someone swears they have seen silver eyes reflected in every mirror on the eastern wall.I dismiss the mech
CHAPTER 95NOVA'S POVBy breakfast, every corridor in the compound carries whispers. By lunch, those whispers have divided into sides. By sunset, the pack no longer feels like one family.It feels like a cracked mirror. But to be honest, I have seen this coming. No one argues openly.Hell, that would have been easier.Instead, conversations stop when certain people enter the room. Wolves who have supposedly trained together since childhood suddenly choose different sparring partners. Long tables that once echoed with laughter develop invisible borders.Some sit together, some deliberately do not. I watch one young scout carry his tray toward a familiar group, hesitate halfway, and quietly turn to eat alone.Across the room, an older warrior notices me looking and lowers his gaze to the floor.He isn't angry. I wish he is. He looks guilty instead. As if my existence has become a question he doesn't know how to answer."They're talking about a vote," Jason murmurs beside me. I don't ask
CHAPTER 94KILLIAN'S POVPeople like to imagine guilt as a sharp thing. A knife, a bullet or single wound that changes everything. They are wrong. Real guilt is quieter. It is a pebble slipped into your boot by someone you trusted. You keep walking because you have no choice, and with every mile the stone rubs the skin raw until pain becomes so familiar that you mistake it for part of yourself.I have been walking with mine for twenty-three years. The abandoned watchtower overlooks the entire valley, its upper platform open to the wind and the fading light of evening. Once, scouts had stood here to warn of invading armies.Now only crows keep watch.I climb the worn spiral staircase carrying a small wooden box tucked beneath one arm.No one knows about the box. Not Cassian, not Jason, not even Beatrice.Some burdens become so old that sharing them feels impossible. At the top, I set it on the cracked stone ledge and open the lid. Inside lie a bundle of letters tied with faded blue th
CHAPTER 93 BEATRICE'S POVThe eastern cliffs have always concealed more than stone. Most wolves know them only as jagged walls overlooking the sea, battered by relentless wind and salt spray. Hunters avoid the area because the paths are narrow and treacherous. Children are warned away with stories of collapsing ledges and wandering spirits.The stories serve their purpose. They keep curious people from finding what lies beneath.I carry the lantern ahead of me, its warm glow painting shifting patterns across the tunnel walls.Nova follows in silence.She has not asked where I am taking her. After what we hear about the coalition going into the pack, this is what is best for her. To prick her curiosity. Perhaps she has grown accustomed to discovering that every answer in her life lives underground. Behind us, the hidden entrance seals with a muted click.Stone meets stone. The world outside vanishes. For several minutes, the only sounds are our footsteps and the distant rush of waves
CHAPTER 92CASSIAN'S POV As dawn creeps over the road leading away from the riverside shrine, the woods seem to hold their breath.Then riders emerge. Not dozens. They are in hundreds.Gray cloaks drape over armor bearing the crests of allied packs, their banners furled but unmistakable. They advance in disciplined columns until the narrow forest road disappears beneath a wall of horses, motorcycles, and armed escorts.No battle cry announces them.No arrows fly. Their confidence is its own weapon. They believe they will not need to fight.Jason exhales slowly. "This is coordinated."Killian's hand rests near the hilt of his blade but does not draw it. "They're here to negotiate."Beatrice says nothing. She simply counts.One envoy, three scribes, twelve elite guards, forty outriders hidden among the trees.She is always counting and calculating The lead envoy dismounts and approaches with measured dignity, carrying a scroll bound in crimson ribbon.He bows. He doesn't bow deeply th
CHAPTER 27NOVA'S POVI owe Cassian.Fuck, I owe him with my life.He still leans over, taking my hand in his as he leads me out of the room to follow the manager and Nate. I turn back one more time, taking in the sight of the children.Even I can’t believe how careless I was. How wicked I was. Nob
CHAPTER 26CASSIAN'S POVIt isn’t supposed to break me, seeing Nova like that. But it does. I can feel her pulse beating in sync with mine.I look at her right in front of me, and her knees seem to buckle as the lady in charge leads us through the hallway.The sound of children screaming their lung
CHAPTER 25Nova's POVMy hands tighten around Cassian as he rides like his life depends on it. It doesn't matter. I can barely stop smiling. I love having my hands around this man.I can feel his abs underneath his shirt, and it takes a lot for me not to slip my hands beneath it.I’m supposed to be
CHAPTER 24NOVA'S POVI don't even wait to hear more from the priestess as I head out of her lair. I can already sense Cassian, so it doesn't take me anything to locate his office.My hands are balled into fists as I raise my knuckles to rap at the door.“Come in,” I hear another voice say, and I i







