LOGINELI'S POV
"Yes," I said.
A breath on the other end. "What did he say."
"That I should step back from the treaty. Personal proximity to the matter." I paused. "He knows about the family connection."
Silence. Then, quietly: "I didn't tell him."
"I know."
More silence, and it was different from the silence at dinner — less performance, less careful management of space between us. This was the silence of two people who have put their weapons down for thirty seconds because something more urgent arrived.
"There's a leak in my inner circle," Kieran said. "I've suspected it for a few weeks. I didn't move fast enough on it."
"Cole?"
"No." The certainty in his voice was immediate, no hesitation. "Not Cole."
"Then who."
"I don't know yet." A pause. "But Draven doesn't just want the treaty stalled. He's been pressuring me to kill it from my side. Has been for months. I keep returning his calls late and giving him nothing."
I leaned back in my chair. The case file was still open on the desk in front of me. "Why are you telling me this."
"Because you need to know it."
"I need to know a lot of things, Kieran. You could have started three years ago."
The words came out cleaner than I intended. Not cruel, just accurate. I heard him absorb them.
"I know," he said, which was not the response I expected. I expected deflection. Alphas deflect. It's the thing they're best at after intimidation and taking up space in rooms. Instead he just — received it. Like he'd been holding a tab open for it for a while and it had finally come due.
I said nothing.
"The treaty," he said. "You've been building it for three years."
"Yes."
"And you knew my territory would be the sticking point."
"I knew someone in your position would make a calculation that the treaty costs you more than it gives you, and that calculation would be wrong, and I intended to prove that."
A short exhale. Almost a laugh, except nothing about this felt like laughing. "You intended to take me apart in court."
"I intended to win," I said. "The taking apart was going to be incidental."
This time the silence had something different in it. Something that had no name I wanted to give it right now.
"I need to meet with you," Kieran said. "Not family dinner, not a deposition, not anything on record. I need to sit in a room with you and talk."
"About the treaty."
"About several things."
My hand was flat on the desk. I was aware of it. I was aware of my own heartbeat in a way I am usually not, which was useful data I did not enjoy collecting.
"Give me a reason," I said.
"Because Draven has a network I can't dismantle alone. Because you've spent three years building the legal architecture he's trying to collapse and you know where every beam is. Because if we come at this from opposite sides he wins and the treaty dies." A beat. "And because I owe you a conversation I've been avoiding for ten years, and I'm out of time to keep avoiding it."
I should have said: *let's keep this professional.* I should have said: *have your legal team contact mine.* I should have said any of the things I had prepared myself to say, the ones I'd written into my own behavior like case notes, practiced until they were just reflexes.
Instead I said: "When."
"Tomorrow. There's a place I use — private, not pack territory, no governance board connections. I'll text you the address."
"I'll be there at nine."
"Thank you," he said.
I almost told him not to thank me. That this was strategy, not generosity. That I was doing this because Draven had a source inside Kieran's circle and that made us temporarily aligned, not because I had any interest in the conversation Kieran mentioned.
I didn't say any of that.
"Goodnight," I said instead.
"Goodnight, Eli."
I hung up and sat with the silence afterward.
---
Drea called at eleven.
"I found something," she said, no preamble. "In the governance board's procedural filings for the last quarter. There's a delay tactic built into the review process that Draven hasn't used yet but has clearly been setting up. If he invokes it, we lose sixty days minimum."
"How do we block it."
"We'd need Kieran's territory to formally request expedited review. Which requires him to support the treaty on record." She paused. "Has he given you any indication he'd do that."
I thought about his voice on the phone. The exhaustion underneath it. The way he'd said *I owe you a conversation* like it had weight he'd been carrying for a while.
"He called me tonight," I said.
A pause. "Okay."
"We're meeting tomorrow."
A longer pause. "Eli."
"It's strategy."
"Of course it is."
"Drea."
"I'm not saying anything," she said, in the tone she uses when she is saying everything. "I'm just noting that you answered when he called. And you took the meeting."
"He has information about the leak. And we need him on record."
"Both true," she said. "Also both things you could have gotten through his legal team." A beat. "I'm not warning you off. I'm just — watching."
"I know you are."
"Good." Her voice softened by a fraction. "Be careful with yourself tomorrow."
"I'm always careful."
"You're always precise," she said. "It's not the same thing."
She was right. I knew she was right the second she said it, and I didn't argue, because arguing with Drea when she's right is just an exercise in taking longer to arrive at the truth.
After we hung up, I looked at the first page of the case file again.
*Because it's right.*
Tomorrow I was going to sit across from Kieran Voss and be a lawyer. I was going to think about jurisdiction and procedural timelines and the sixty days Draven wanted to steal from us.
That was the plan.
I closed the file and went to bed and did not think about his voice, and the thing that had been removed from it, and what that meant.
Not for long, anyway.
KIERAN'S POVEight years after the treaty, I made a decision about the Alpha position.It came to me quietly, not as crisis or dramatic revelation, but as the simple understanding that I'd been running the territory for twenty years and I was ready to do something else.I was sitting in a governance board meeting when Director Draven asked about territorial succession planning and I realized I didn't have an answer because I'd never let myself think about stepping down.That evening, I mentioned it to Eli without preamble."I want to transition the Alpha position," I said. "Within the next few years."He looked up from his curriculum notes. "To who.""I don't know yet. That's the work I need to do." I paused. "But I don't want to do it forever. I want to do it until it's stable and then step back.""The way I did with the regional oversight.""Yes," I said. "Except I want to have already trained my replacement before I hand it over. I don't want to just leave it for someone else to fi
ELI'S POVSeven years after I came back to the territory, I stood in the new education center and looked at what we'd built.Three classroom spaces. An administrative office. A library of enforcement frameworks and territorial implementation guides. The building was designed to be accessible to pack members from multiple territories, with housing available for those who needed to stay while taking courses.Reina and I had designed it together. Cole had helped establish the curriculum standards. Kieran had secured the funding from the territorial governance board.It was the first permanent structure dedicated entirely to education and enforcement coordination in the northern territories.I walked through the empty classrooms and understood that this was completion in a way the treaty signing hadn't been. That had been the legal framework becoming real. This was the framework becoming something that would teach and sustain itself beyond any individual person's involvement.Kieran found
KIERAN'S POVSix years after the treaty, I received a call from Alpha Reina Cross asking for a private meeting.Not in her territory or mine — she requested neutral ground, which meant she wanted to discuss something that required confidentiality. We met at a small restaurant outside pack territory and she ordered coffee and looked at me with the direct assessment that had characterized her since the beginning."I'm stepping back from the western territory," she said.I set down my coffee. "Why.""Because I've been running it for twelve years and I want to do something else." She paused. "I want to move into education. I'm interested in what Eli's built with the curriculum and I want to help expand it."I understood immediately what she was saying. Reina was one of the strongest Alphas in the region and she was proposing to step back from active leadership to focus on teaching."Does this have anything to do with the treaty," I said."Everything to do with it," she said. "The treaty c
ELI'S POVThe first month as territorial counsel felt different than every other position I'd held.Not because the work was harder or more complex — it was actually simpler than the regional oversight had been. But because I was doing it as part of the territory's structure rather than as someone operating in parallel to it.I had an office in the administrative building. I attended governance meetings. I reviewed territorial decisions from a legal perspective. It was work I'd been doing informally for years, just now with a title and formal authority.Reina came to my office the second week."I need your opinion on something," she said without preamble. "The pack member who filed the bonding dispute last month wants to appeal the ruling. The appeal came through the regional enforcement office, but it's originated from someone in our territory."I pulled up the case file. "This is a clear violation of the appeals protocol. The appeal should have come through the territorial coordinat
KIERAN'S POVFive years after the treaty signing, the territory was stable in ways that felt permanent.Reina was managing the Beta position better than Cole had, which was not a criticism of Cole — it was just that she'd brought her own innovations to the work and the territory had evolved because of it. Eli was teaching four days a week and handling appeals coordinator work two days a week and had stopped trying to fill the remaining hours with additional projects.We'd built a life that actually resembled a life instead of a series of professional obligations.It was Sienna who brought up what nobody had explicitly discussed yet.She came to the administrative building on a Tuesday when Eli was there teaching a curriculum session and asked to speak with both of us privately. When we were in my office with the door closed she said:"I want to formally acknowledge something that's been happening quietly for years."I looked at her."Eli is bonded to you, which means he's part of this
ELI'S POVFour years after the treaty signing, I received a letter from the governance board requesting my presence at a formal ceremony.The Supernatural Rights Act was being recognized as the foundational framework for five regional territories. The enforcement mechanism was being held up as a model for how other regions should structure their implementation. My name was going to be publicly credited as the architect of the system.Kieran read the letter and looked at me."How do you feel about it," he said."Overwhelmed," I said honestly. "The work was never supposed to be about recognition. It was supposed to be about making the system work.""The system does work," he said. "And part of why it works is because you built it." He paused. "You can accept recognition without that changing what the work means."The ceremony was held at the governance board's main office, which had been expanded three times since I'd taken the appeals coordinator position. The building was packed — ter
ELI'S POVThe bonding became official three weeks into January when Kieran filed the documentation with the territorial governance board.It was a formality — we'd already signed the contract, already made the commitment — but watching his name and mine appear on official pack records still landed
KIERAN'S POVWinter came early that year.The territory had an early snow in November and I watched Eli experience it from the administrative building window — he'd come for a Tuesday enforcement meeting and stayed late to review some territorial governance documents and when he looked outside at t
KIERAN'S POVThe contract took two weeks to negotiate.Not because there were significant disagreements — there weren't. Eli and I had moved past the point of testing each other's positions. But because he wanted it done right, which meant every detail documented, every expectation clarified, every
ELI'S POVThree months after the bonding case ruling, the enforcement mechanism had processed twenty-three cases.Drea and I had hired two additional attorneys and were still overbooked. The territorial cooperation framework Kieran and I had drafted had been adopted by four other northeastern terri







