LOGINWinter's POV:
I can't feel the ground.
I can barely feel myself at all.
Alpha Keon's arms are a vice-like grip holding me steadily in place, his bicep hard and warm. Despite the strike behind us, dozens of screams breaking out all around us, all I think about is how good this feels. How right being in his arms feels.
He looks down at me.
His eyes. Up close, they look alive, like his irises are moving, like some sort of live wallpaper. They burn into me like they recognise something I don't. My back pulses, hot enough for my vision to blur at the edges.
He bends down so his breath fans my ears. He licks my ear and I shiver, but the move is so fast it's like he barely moved at all.
“You're mine.”
His words are lower than a whisper, meant for only my hearing, and something in me resonates with them. “Keon…” I have no explanation for why I just called his name, but I blame it on the building migraine in the back of my skull.
“Easy streghetta” Did he just call me little witch in Italian? His grip on my waist tightens. “I've got you.” Goosebumps spread up my back.
I should be screaming at him, clawing at him for taking a part of me without my wish. Instead I lean into his touch. Too many things are happening at once. It's all coming back.
Ari’s scream. Mother's shout. Voices. So many voices. They're overlapping each other, grating against my nerves awfully. My magic is twisting painfully inside me, misfiring, mixing into something that feels a lot like him.
Keon turns quickly. “Move.”
The chaos quiets immediately, the crowd splitting in half. He carries me towards the door he came from, my failing eyesight catching Ari's worry and Mother's fear. No one says anything in disagreement. No one tries to stop him.
The thing I see before everywhere goes dark is tanned hands holding on to the still glowing staff.
It's Derrick, and he's smiling, his canines on display.
The last thing I feel is fear. Our eyes meet.
I pass out.
I woke up in a panic.
Normally, witches rarely dream. Unlike humans that sometimes have sleep induced visions, we witches are more or less in a dull fog that we forget about the moment we open our eyes.
This time, I'm dreaming.
I'm on a huge ship, in the pouring rain. Voices are arguing. My head is spinning. Unable to focus on anything with the way the ship sways left to right. The ship sways a little too much to the right and I fall right into the water.
Witches have never been good with water. That's for mermaids. I can't swim, my arms feel heavier than stone. I try to scream but my voice is gone. My body sinks deeper into the ocean floor, and I drown.
I carry my fear into the real world, my body covered with sweat. My arms are shaking, my chest aching as I try to calm myself. Air burns in my lungs as I breathe, like I've run a mile. My nose picks up on the smell of pine, forest and wolf.
I'm not the chapel.
The ceiling above me is made of several precious gemstones around on carved stone. Dim lights flicker from the lanterns above me. I'm lying on something soft. And warm. Really warm.
I sit up, freezing. It's him. Keon is sitting beside me, watching me.
He's calmer now. Looking less like Zeus and more like a man, and that deception is scary in itself. His elbows are propped up beside him, studying me closely.
“You're awake.” He says.
“Where am I?” My throat is scratchy. I could really use some water right now. Koen gets up, walking towards the table. He grabs the water and throws it at me. I use my magic to stop it. He nods in approval at me leaving me confused. “You're in my quarters.”
My fingers stop opening the bottle. Panic rises in my chest. “Koen, why am I here?” His eyes flicker to my neck, just for a second, before he replies. “Because you're not safe anywhere else.”
My laugh is weak and tired. “Yeah right. You interrupted my wedding. I'm pretty sure “safe” left the room when you walked in.”
The corner of his mouth twitches. It's not a smile nor is it a frown. It confuses me.
“That wedding was never going to happen.” He lays beside me.
I sit up. “You don't get to decide that.”
“Already did streghetta.”
A heavy charged silence engulfs us. I finally address the huge elephant in the room. “Why did you mark me Koen?” His jaw tightens. He traces my skin delicately. He's careful not to touch the mark. “I didn't mean to.”
I raise my brow. “Yeah right. And you expect me to believe that?”
He sighs. “No. But it doesn't matter anyways. The moon chose you.”
A cool breeze passes by. What does that mean?
His eyes have darkened, his eyes looking more alive than ever. It looks like something passed through it.
“It means…” he says quietly, “That no matter how many treaties your people sign or who you marry…”
Our eyes meet.
"You were never going to belong to anyone else. Anyone other than me."
Keon's POV: The torch fell back into place with a heavy, metallic thud as the massive oak doors slammed shut behind us. This room, its history ran deep into the very bedrock of our territory. It was a space built on ancient foundations, a chamber designed for a past that our ancestors had tried to bury. Four Clans. One table. Some clans had stood the test of time, adapting and surviving the turning of the ages, while others had vanished completely into ash and memory. Yet, through the rise and fall of regimes, one thing had remained completely constant. The table remained. Carved from a single, gargantuan slab of black granite, its polished surface formed an enormous, intricate compass. North. East. West. South. Time and centuries of heavy use had weathered the edges smooth, but not even the turning of the world had managed to shift its direction. Legend claimed that before the Great Wolf-Witch War, the stone compass had turned freely, spinning on a mystical axis to refl
Keon's POV:Sleep had become a courtesy I occasionally extended to my body. Nothing more.The dawn hadn't yet broken, but the palace was already beginning to stir beneath my window. Guards changed shifts below in practiced, rhythmic silence, their armor clinking softly in the heavy air. Life continued. It always did, entirely indifferent to the wreckage left in its wake.I rested both hands against the cold stone railing of the balcony, leaning my weight forward and letting the rain-soaked wind strike my face. The icy droplets bit into my skin, but it still wasn't enough to drown out her scent.Gods. Even after washing. Even after changing clothes twice. Even after forcing myself to stay on the absolute opposite side of the palace, away from her wing of the castle, she lingered. Not on my skin, where the physical trace could be scrubbed away, but somewhere deep beneath it. The bond pulsed quietly beneath my ribs, simply existing.I closed my eyes, a heavy sigh escaping into the dark
Winter's POV: Neither of us spoke for several minutes. The fire had burned lower in the hearth, leaving the room bathed in soft amber and silver where the moonlight slipped through the curtains. Somewhere outside, rain tapped gently against the stone balcony, a rhythmic, soothing backdrop to the storm that had just settled between us. Sabrina broke the silence first. "...Can I see it?" I looked up, momentarily taken aback by the request. "The mark," she clarified, speaking carefully this time, as if handling something incredibly fragile. "The soulmate mark." For a heartbeat, I simply stared at her. The secret had been hidden under layers of fabric and concealment charms for so long that revealing it felt like exposing a raw nerve. Then, without a word, I nodded. I stood from the chair, suddenly very aware of my own body again. Derrick's oversized shirt hung loosely around my frame, the soft fabric brushing against my thighs as I turned around, turning my back to her. "It isn'
Winter's POV I lowered my eyes, watching the moonlight ripple faintly across the surface of the nearly finished tea in Sabrina’s cup. The pale liquid caught the silver light, trembling slightly with every heavy breath I took. I had never narrated this to anyone other than Mother, and now that it was finally out in the open, the space between us felt entirely rearranged. "I don't think I told you everything," I murmured, my voice barely carrying over the crackle of the hearth. Sabrina had just taken another bite of the berry dessert. She paused mid-chew, her sharp gaze locking onto mine as she slowly swallowed. She set her spoon down with deliberate care, the soft clink against the ceramic sounding remarkably loud in the quiet room. "Considering we've spent the last hour discussing what might become the greatest diplomatic headache of the century," she said, her dry tone laced with a sudden, underlying tension, "that's a rather concerning sentence. What didn't you tell me?" I dr
Winter's POV I pause as a sudden realization chills me. "Did he—" She nods, her expression turning somber. "Keon told me about your second attack. He knew I needed to understand the full scope of the danger we're dealing with if I'm going to help get it out." She takes another bite from the dish tray, chewing thoughtfully before continuing. "As I was saying. The first thing Derrick asked when we arrived was about you. Not the treaty, not the perimeter security, not the casualty report. You. Wonder why?" I tilt my head in confusion, my brows furrowing. I think about what she'd just said earlier, trying to piece the puzzle together, but the logic feels just out of reach. "I don't get it. Why would a scent marker make him drop his guard?" She sighs. "Sometimes I forget you're not a werewolf. In our world Winter, you don't live in a world governed by instincts you can't see, smell or feel. Wolves rule, live by, and establish dominance by their senses, one of which is the sense of
Winter's POV Neither of us spoke for a while. The tray of food sat untouched between us, its warmth slowly giving way to the cool night air drifting through the open window. Somewhere outside, crickets sang beneath the moonlight, their steady chorus filling the silence neither of us seemed eager to break. Sabrina was the first to move. She reached for the bowl of soup, took a careful spoonful, then frowned. "It needs more salt." I blinked, momentarily thrown off by the mundane complaint. "That's your conclusion?" She looked at me over the rim of the bowl, her sharp gaze cutting through the dim lamplight. "My conclusion is that if I'm going to contemplate the possible collapse of diplomatic relations between two kingdoms, I'd rather not do it over bland soup." Despite everything, a genuine laugh escaped me, cracking the icy wall of anxiety that had been building in my chest all evening. "There she is," I murmured. "There who is?" "Sabrina." She smiled faintly,
Winter’s POV: I immediately pull on the torch and open the door again just as it is about to close. To my frustration, when I open the door again, there's nothing there. Dammit. Keon.” I exhale slowly. “Please tell me you saw that?”
Winter’s POV: The air still feels thick long after Keon’s voice breaks the silence. Sabrina groans dramatically. “Great. The lovers have officially arrived. “We’re not-“ I start, but Sabrina’s already leaving. She's on her feet, dusting her legs with her face towel. She places the towel on t
Winter's POV: The heavy metal door slams shut behind us, leaving behind the wolves. Her grip on my wrist is firm but not tough. She takes a few steps forward, prompting me to follow her. I cautiously follow, leaving a little distance between us. The hallway we pass by this time, I didn't see
Winter’s POV: I watch Keon’s back as he rages out of the training room, the punching bag a wrecked pile on the floor behind him. His strength was unparalleled. I catch his eyes in the mirror, a dark shade of red. He seems upset. It makes me feel bad somehow. Should I go a







