LOGINKIERAN’S POV
The report landed on my desk at 6:47 in the morning and I knew before I opened it that it was going to be bad. Cole doesn't come in before seven unless something has already gone wrong.
He sat across from me, both hands around his coffee, and waited while I read.
The document was twelve pages. Medical terminology, progression charts, Ingrid's handwriting in the margins where she'd annotated the parts she wanted me to see clearly. I read all of it. Cole watched me read it and said nothing, which is one of the things I've always valued about him, he understands that some information needs to land before it can be discussed.
I got to the last page. I closed the folder.
"How long has she known?" I asked.
"Three weeks," Cole said. "She wanted to be certain before she told you."
"And you've known for three weeks."
"Yes."
I looked at him. He didn't look away, which is the correct response. Cole has never once flinched from something I needed him to see clearly.
"Severance Sickness," I said.
"Yes."
"Advanced."
"Yes."
I stood and walked to the window. Outside, the territory was already moving, cars, the early shift of pack businesses, the specific grey of a city morning that has never once cared about anyone's diagnosis. I stood there and thought about the word *advanced* and what it meant sitting next to a word like *irreversible.*
"What reverses it," I said. Not a question exactly. More like thinking out loud.
"Ingrid will explain the specifics…."
"Tell me now."
Cole was quiet for a moment. Then: "Reconciliation. With the bond. Not proximity, not ritual. Something genuine."
The word landed like something heavy dropped from a height.
I turned from the window. "She's been gone for nine years."
"Ten," Cole said quietly. "In March."
The night I rejected the bond, my father called me into his office two hours before the ceremony. He was the kind of Alpha who made leadership look like weather — something that simply existed, that you didn't question. He told me that the Navarro boy was a distraction. That an Omega mate would create a vulnerability that other packs would exploit. That an Alpha who let sentiment override strategy was an Alpha who didn't last.
He was standing when he said it. I was eighteen and I had never once successfully argued with him about anything.
I went back to the ceremony. I stood in front of two hundred wolves. I said the words. I said them clearly and precisely, the way my father had taught me to speak — no hesitation, no softness, nothing that looked like doubt.
I have spent ten years calling that strength.
Cole's phone buzzed on the desk between us. He glanced at it and something shifted in his expression, small, controlled, but I've known him for fifteen years and I read it.
"What," I said.
"The attorney filing the Supernatural Rights Act treaty against our territory," Cole said, and there was something careful in his voice, something that was choosing its words the way you choose steps on ice. "They just submitted the lead counsel on record."
"And."
"His name is Eli Navarro."
The room did not move. My face did not move. I am very good at both of those things.
"Eli," I said.
"Yes."
"Navarro."
"Yes, Kieran."
I sat back down. I looked at the closed medical folder on my desk with Ingrid's annotations and the word *advanced* and the timeline that was not generous. Then I looked at Cole.
"He's filing against us."
"He's been building this case for three years apparently. He's…. from everything I can find, he's exceptional. Win rate is…."
"I don't need his win rate."
Cole stopped.
I put my hand flat on the desk. Breathed once.
"There's a family dinner Friday," I said. "My mother's been planning it. New husband, introductions, all of it."
Cole looked at me slowly. "Eli's father is Marco Navarro."
"Yes."
"Who married your mother?"
"Yes."
Another silence. Cole picked up his coffee. Put it down. Looked at the ceiling briefly in a way that meant he was doing the same arithmetic I'd already done and arriving at the same answer.
"So Friday night," he said.
"Yes."
"You'll both be at the same table."
"Yes."
"While he's suing — filing — the treaty case against your territory."
"Yes, Cole."
He was quiet for a moment. Then, very carefully: "What are you going to do?"
I looked at the medical folder. I looked out the window. I thought about a boy who had packed one bag and never looked back, who had apparently spent the last decade becoming someone exceptional, who was currently dismantling pack law from the inside, and who was going to be seated across from me in four days passing bread with his father.
"I'm going to pass the bread," I said. "And then I'm going to figure out the rest."
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
KIERAN'S POVThree years after the treaty signing, the territory was operating in a state of equilibrium I hadn't thought was possible.The enforcement mechanism was stable. Pack members understood their rights. The territorial administration moved smoothly because Reina understood the work in a wa
ELI'S POVTwo years after the treaty signing, the Supernatural Rights Act passed into formal territorial law.Not just the treaty framework anymore — actual legislation that had been drafted by a committee I'd chaired, that established protections across multiple pack territories, that created enfo
ELI'S POVOne year after the bonding contract signing, the Supernatural Rights Treaty had been adopted by seven regional territories and was under consideration by three more.The enforcement mechanism had processed over two hundred cases. The appeals process I'd built was being replicated in other
KIERAN'S POVSix months into Eli's regional coordinator position, the territory was running smoother than it had in years.Not because of me specifically. Because Eli had built the enforcement infrastructure so cleanly that the pack understood the system without needing constant explanation. New ca







