Mag-log inREINA
My father has a tell.
Most people who know him wouldn't catch it. But I've been watching him my whole life and I know the tell. It's in his hands. When things are bad, really bad, he sets them flat on the table in front of him like he's trying to hold something down.
Both hands. Flat on the table.
That's how I know, before he says a single word, that whatever is in the letter he's been staring at since I came downstairs for breakfast is not something either of us is going to recover from quickly.
I pour my coffee, sit down across from him and wait.
My father is not a weak man. I want to be clear about that because what happens next could make him look like one and he isn't.
He is a man who made one terrible decision twenty years ago when he was desperate and young and didn't fully understand what he was agreeing to. He has been paying for it in installments ever since, in sleepless nights and careful conversations and the specific way he flinches every time someone mentions the Cole pack name, like the words have edges.
He's been paying for twenty years.
Apparently the account is still not settled.
"Reina," he says.
Just my name. That's all. But the way he says it tells me everything before the words do.
"Tell me," I say.
He slides the letter across the table.
I read it once, fast and breathe through it.
Then I read it again. Slowly this time. Because the first read I was looking for the part where it wasn't what I thought it was, and there isn't one, so the second read I make myself absorb every line.
The Castillo debt, principal and accrued interest has been called in full. In lieu of financial settlement, the Cole pack will accept one alternative arrangement. Reina Castillo, eldest daughter, will be formally bonded to Alpha Zaden Cole in a legal marriage ceremony no later than thirty days from the date of this letter. Upon completion of the arrangement the debt will be considered paid in full. Failure to comply will result in immediate and total collection by whatever means the pack deems necessary.
Whatever means the pack deems necessary.
I set the letter down very carefully because my hands want to do something else with it and I am not going to give them the satisfaction.
"How long have you known this was coming?" I ask.
My father closes his eyes. "I didn't know it would be this. I knew the debt was being called. I thought… I was trying to find another way"
"How long, Dad?!"
"Three weeks."
Three weeks. He has known for three weeks that his daughter was going to be handed over like a line item in a ledger and he has sat across from me at this table every morning and said nothing.
"Who is he?" I ask, even though I already know. The Cole pack name has been a shadow over this family my entire life. But knowing a name and knowing a person are different things, and I want to hear my father say it out loud. I want him to have to say it.
He looks at me for the first time since I sat down. His eyes are the eyes of a man who knows exactly what he did and has no defense for it.
"The most powerful Alpha in the city," he says quietly. "Maybe in the country. He's…he runs the pack like a corporation. Nobody crosses him twice."
"And I'm supposed to marry him."
"Reina-"
"I'm supposed to walk into a wedding dress and marry a man I have never met who runs the pack that has been bleeding this family for twenty years." I hear my own rise. "I'm supposed to be the payment?"
My father doesn't answer. Because there is no answer. Because that is exactly what is happening and we both know it and the only thing left to decide is whether I am going to fall apart at this kitchen table or whether I am going to be the person I have spent twenty-one years becoming.
I stand up, take my coffee and look at my father, at the hands flat on the table, at the weight in his face, at the man who loved me the only way he knew how and it still led here and I make a decision so quietly that it barely feels like a decision at all.
I am not going to fall apart.
Not here. Not in front of him. Not anywhere anyone can see.
"I need some air," I say. "I'll be back."
He nods, doesn't try to stop me and doesn't try to fix it.
We both know there is nothing to fix.
I walk out the back door into the small garden that my mother planted years ago and never got to finish and I look at the sky and I let myself feel it, the full crushing weight of being twenty-one years old and having your entire future decided in three lines of someone else's handwriting.
Then I breathe out and go back inside.
The dress arrived four days later.
I don't know who sent it. It appeared on my bed while I was at work, a garment bag, white, with a small card attached that has nothing on it except a date and an address. The date is twenty-six days from now. The address is somewhere on the north side of the city that I don't recognize.
I unzip the bag.
The dress is beautiful. Of course it is. It fits perfectly, which means someone took my measurements without my knowledge at some point, and I add that to the list of things about this situation that I am not going to think about too hard or I will stop functioning entirely.
I put it back in the bag and hang it on the back of my door.
I look at it for a long time and make myself another promise. The same kind I made in the garden
I am going in there with my head up.
Whatever he is, cold, powerful, a man who collects human girls as debt settlements without losing a night's sleep over it, I am not going to give him the satisfaction of watching me break.
I am Reina Castillo. I have been surviving things my whole life.
This is just one more thing.
ZADENThe letter arrived on a Tuesday.Official channels. Pack seal, courier, the kind of formal delivery that announces itself as deliberate. Elias Blackthorn didn't do anything by accident and he certainly didn't send letters by accident. Every word of it would have been chosen. Every implication placed exactly where he wanted it.I read it three times.Then I set it on my desk and looked at it for a while without touching it, the way you look at something you're still deciding how to handle.The language was diplomatic. Of course it was. Elias was too intelligent for anything else, direct aggression leaves evidence, direct aggression can be answered with direct aggression, and Elias preferred games where the board wasn't visible to everyone in the room.What he was proposing was a meeting. On Blackthorn territory. Framed as a gesture of goodwill, a chance to resolve the border tensions before they escalated further, an opportunity for two Alpha families to come to a mutual understa
REINAThe house felt different the next morning.Not quieter exactly. More careful. Like everyone had agreed without speaking to move a little slower and talk a little lessI noticed it the moment I came downstairs.Pack members who usually moved through the corridors without looking at me glanced up when I passed. Like I'd become something they were recalibrating around.I didn't know what to do with that so I made coffee and stood at the kitchen window and looked at the garden and didn't think about Callum.I thought about Callum.That was the thing nobody warns you about betrayal. It's not the anger that gets you. The anger is cleanIt's the smaller things.The memory of laughing at something he said. The easy way he'd talked to me in those early weeks when almost nobody else would, when I was still mapping this place and figuring out who was safe and he'd seemed so uncomplicated, so genuinely warm. The specific comfort of thinking you've read someone correctly.That's what it cost
ZADENI gave them until morning.Damian thought I should move immediately. I told him no. I wanted them to sleep in their beds one last night believing they were safe. I wanted them to come down to breakfast and sit at the table and pour their coffee and feel completely, entirely untouchable.And then I wanted to take that from them.I called the full pack at nine.Not a meeting. A gathering.Callum and Tobias both came.Callum came in talking, easy, relaxed, making a comment to one of the warriors near the door. He scanned the room with the particular casualness of a man who has learned to perform relaxed as a survival skill. His eyes moved over Damian. Moved over me. Found nothing on either of our faces and took that as good news.It wasn't.Tobias came in quieter. He stood near the back. He didn't look for exits…that was interesting. He looked at me directly, just once, and then looked at the floor. A man who has decided something.Reina was there. She stood with Lena near the far
REINASofia called at nine.I'd been sitting on my bed staring at the wall and not thinking about any of the things I was thinking about, and her name on my screen felt like a rope thrown into deep water.I picked up before the second ring."Hey." Her voice was warm"Hey," I said."You sound tired.""I'm fine.""Reina.""I'm a little tired."She made a sound that meant she didn't believe me and was choosing to let it go, which was its own kind of kindness.Then she told me about her week, the university program, a professor she found annoying, a girl in her cohort who'd become something more than a study partner, the way the city looked at night from her window.I lay back on my pillow and listened and let her voice fill the room."You're not talking," she said after a while."I'm listening.""You're being weird.""I'm always weird.""You're being a different kind of weird." A pause. She had good instincts, Sofia. Always had. "Are you okay?I thought about the honest answer. About the
ZADENI heard it at eleven forty-three.It wasn't a sound really. It was like a missing sound.The garden at night has its kind of quiet. I got used to it over the weeks. I would stand at my office window staring out more than I should have.This was different. The silence felt off. Something was wrong, with how quiet it was.My wolf was already moving before I decided to.I was out of my office and through the house in under a minute. The east corridor, the back passage, the garden entrance. Moving fast with the focus of a man who has stopped questioning his wolf's instincts on this specific subject.I came through the garden entrance and saw them.Two figures at the far wall. They are not part of my pack. I know every person in my pack by the way they move and these two people are moving in a completely different way. They are being very careful and deliberate, with a kind of energy that you can tell they have been taught to use when they are sneaking into a place, like this.Blackt
REINASofia did not want to go.I had known she wouldn't. I had prepared for it.I had rehearsed the conversation in my head three times before I knocked on her door Thursday morning and I still felt the weight of it when I said the words."I need you to go home… today."She looked at me from the bed where she had been sitting cross-legged with her phone. "Why?""Because things are about to get complicated here and I need to know you're somewhere safe.""I'm safe here.""Sofia.""There are literally guards everywhere, Reina. It's probably the safest place I've ever been in my entire…""I need you safe so I can focus," I said. "That's the truth. I can't do what I need to do here if I'm watching you at the same time. I can't carry both things at once."She looked at me.Her mouth opened then closed.The argument she had prepared dissolving because I hadn't given her something to push against. Just the truth. Simple and direct and not possible to argue with because it wasn't about rules
REINAThe garden had become my sanctuary.What started as a patch of neglected earth was slowly turning into something alive. I had spent most of the morning on my knees, pulling out stubborn weeds, my hands covered in dirt, sweat sticking my shirt to my back. The sun was warm on my skin, and for a
REINAThe evening air felt heavier than usual.I had learned to move through this house like a ghost, quiet and careful, never drawing too much attention to myself. But tonight, the pack had gathered for some informal dinner, and as Luna (at least in name), I was expected to attend.So I dressed in
ZADENThe house was quiet.Too quiet.I stood in my office long after midnight, the only light coming from the desk lamp that cast long shadows across the dark wood. My side still throbbed from the wound Reina had cleaned earlier. I could still feel the ghost of her fingers on my skin, gentle, trem
REINAThe afternoon light was soft as it filtered through the tall windows of the main sitting room. I had come here to escape the heavy silence of my bedroom, carrying a book I wasn’t really reading. I mostly just needed something to do with my hands, something to occupy my mind so it wouldn’t kee







