LOGINRiven
“Where did you get this?”
May’s expression shifted immediately, her smile faltering as she read my face. “What’s wrong? You don’t like it?”
I exhaled slowly, turning the box over in my hands. “The necklace.” I looked up at her. “It looks exactly like your brother’s.”
“Oh!” The worry dissolved into an easy, unbothered laugh. “I noticed a lot of guys go for that style, so when I went to the store, I just asked for that specific one.” She shrugged. “I thought it was nice.”
I nodded once. Then held the box back out to her.
“I’m sorry. I can’t take this.”
Her face fell. “What? Why?”
“Do I need a reason?”
“Riven—”
“I just don’t like it.” The words came out flatter than I intended. The truth was messier than that, and I had absolutely no intention of explaining it to her. “I’m sorry.”
“What if I got a different one?” she asked, her voice small but determined. “A completely different style? You could pick it yourself, even—”
“May.” I heard the edge creeping into my voice and couldn’t stop it. “I don’t want anything. Nothing. Okay?” It came out half a yell, and I watched her flinch, watched her eyes go wide and glassy, tears gathering at the corners faster than she could blink them away.
The guilt hit me immediately.
“I’m sorry,” I said, quieter. “I just — I can’t. It has nothing to do with you.” I glanced up at the sky. The snow was coming down thicker now, settling on her hair and shoulders. “Go home before the weather gets worse.”
I didn’t wait for her response.
I unlocked my bicycle from the rack, pulled my bag across my shoulders, and rode without looking back. The cold hit me full in the face the moment I left the shelter of the arena entrance sharply. By the time I turned onto my street, my fingers were numb against the handlebars, and I was conducting a quiet argument with myself about life choices.
The apartment was a bit dark when I got in. I dropped my bag, kicked off my shoes, and went straight for the heater, cranking it up before I’d even taken my jacket off.
“I could actually die,” I said to no one, shivering hard. “One drop of water and that’s it. Gone.”
I stood in front of the heater for a full minute, just existing. Then the guilt resurfaced: May’s face, the flinch, and the tears she’d been trying to hold back, and I pulled out my phone.
“Made it home?”
I stared at the message for a second, then sent it. She’d be fine. She always was. But still…
I turned the kettle on for tea. I pulled a cardigan from the back of the chair, wrapped a scarf around my shoulders on top of it, and waited. When the tea was ready, I carried it to the sofa, pulled the blanket off the armrest, and dropped into the cushions.
The TV came on to something I immediately stopped paying attention to.
I sat there in the warmth with my tea going cold in my hands and stared at the TV without seeing it. I thought about absolutely nothing for as long as I could manage.
I closed my eyes.
I don’t know when I fell asleep. One moment the TV was on and my tea was lukewarm and I was staring at the ceiling, and the next—
BANG. BANG. BANG.
I was upright before I was fully awake, the blanket sliding off my lap, my heart already going. The banging came again, hard and continuous.
I stared at the door.
I was off the sofa before the second bang.
“Who is it?” My voice came out steady. The rest of me was not.
The banging didn’t stop. It got worse and harder, more willful, the kind of knocking that had graduated into something closer to assault. I grabbed my hockey stick from beside the door, both hands around the grip, and positioned myself.
Then I heard his voice.
“Open the fucking door, Riven.”
I stood very still.
Kael???
I didn’t move for a full three seconds. I just stood there in my cardigan and scarf, holding a hockey stick like that was going to do anything, trying to understand what Kael Dravin was doing outside my apartment at this hour.
The same apartment I’d moved into less than a week ago, which I hadn’t announced to anyone outside my immediate circle, and which my own mother still called “that place you abandoned us for.”
And somehow Kael had found me here.
The banging continued.
I lowered the stick, unlatched the lock, and opened the door.
He came through it like a force of nature.
The first blow caught my left cheek before I’d even fully registered he was moving. The second landed before I hit the floor. I went down hard, the stick skittering out of my hand, and then his weight was on top of me, his knees either side of my hips, one fist pulled back, his face twisted with something that sat right on the edge between fury and something else I didn’t have a name for yet.
The door swung shut behind him.
I looked up at him from the floor. My cheek was already throbbing.
“What are you waiting for?” I said. My voice came out surprisingly even. “Hit me. Isn’t that why you’re here?”
His fist stayed where it was, hovering, not falling.
Instead, his hand dropped to my chest and grabbed a fistful of my cardigan. His knuckles were white.
“What did you do to make my sister cry?”
I laughed briefly and genuinely. “I asked her to leave me alone. That’s it.”
“You made her cry—”
“Isn’t that what you wanted?” I yelled, the evenness finally cracking. “You spent more than twelve minutes with your hand around my throat telling me to stay away from her. I stayed away. Now you’re here because she cried about it?”
His jaw tightened.
Then his fist connected with my face again.
I let my head drop back against the floor and breathed through it slowly. In and out. I could feel my lip had split. The pain was clean at least, honest in a way the rest of this wasn’t. I ran my tongue along my lower lip and tasted blood.
The room went quiet.
I heard Kael exhale above me. I also felt some of the tension shift in the weight pressing down on my hips.
“Wipe that off,” he said. His voice had dropped.
“What?” I asked.
“The blood. Wipe it off.”
I looked up at him.
And then I felt something against my stomach. Something that hadn’t been there a moment ago, or maybe it had and I hadn’t noticed or let myself notice. I looked down slowly.
Kael’s joggers were sitting forward in a way that left absolutely nothing to interpretation.
The silence shattered.
“What in the fuckery is that?!”
I shoved him off with both hands and scrambled backward across the floor until my back hit the sofa. Kael went with the momentum, sliding off me and ending up against the opposite wall, his back to the door, one knee bent, completely unbothered in a way that was frankly criminal given the circumstances.
My heart was going so fast I could feel it in my split lip.
“What the fuck,” I said again, quieter this time. More to myself than to him.
Kael looked at me. Then down at himself. Then back up.
“What?” He tilted his head, something dangerous and almost amused moving across his face. “Never seen a phallus or what?”
“And why should I even want to see that in the first place?” I scoffed.
He scoffed back at me, and I watched his hand drop slowly to his lap. My eyes widened as he palmed himself through the fabric like I wasn’t sitting four feet away watching it happen.
I quickly looked away so fast I nearly gave myself whiplash.
“Get out,” I said. My voice came out too high and too fast. “Get the hell out of my apartment. Right now before I call security.”
RivenMy back hit the hospital wall as I took another step away from the four alphas closing in. My heart was hammering so hard I could hear it in my ears.“Do not come close,” I said, my voice shaking. “Don’t come any closer.”They kept moving anyway, slow and predatory, eyes dark as they breathed in my scent. The open cut on my finger was making everything worse — my pheromones spiking uncontrollably because of the vampire syndrome.One of them smirked. “Look at his neck. He has a mark.”The others paused, narrowing their eyes. Another one tilted his head. “Yeah… it seems like he’s already taken. Fresh mark too. Let’s get out of here.”They stopped advancing. After a few tense seconds, they turned and walked away, muttering among themselves. I stayed pressed against the wall until they disappeared around the corner.Only then did I let out a long, shaky breath. My hand came up to touch the fresh claiming mark on my neck. It was still tender, but right now it felt like the only thing
RivenWe stood at the door for a long moment, reluctant to let go. Kael leaned in and kissed me deeply, slow and full of promise, his hand cupping the back of my neck right over the fresh mark. When we finally pulled apart, he rested his forehead against mine.“I’ll call you later,” he whispered.I nodded, smiling softly. “Drive safe.”He kissed me one last time, then watched as I stepped inside and closed the door. The second I was alone, I slumped onto the couch, a stupid, lovesick smile spreading across my face. Everything from last night replayed in my head — the way he fucked me on the counter, the way he marked me, and the way the bond had flared between us like a living thing. I reached up and touched the mark on my neck. It was still tender and warm and sent a spark of heat through my whole body. I let out a small whimper, thighs pressing together at the memory.My eyes drifted to the band-aid on my finger. It was already peeling at the edges. I shook my head with a quiet laug
RivenI woke up slowly the next morning, body heavy and deliciously sore. My neck throbbed where Kael had marked me, and between my legs I felt the deep, used ache from how thoroughly he had fucked me last night. The sheets smelled like him… like us.I sat up, blinking. The room was tidy. Clothes were folded, the floor was clean, and even the mess we’d made on the bench last night was gone. Kael had changed me into one of his soft shirts while I slept. I smiled despite the soreness, warmth blooming in my chest.He wasn’t in bed. I got up carefully, wincing a little, and padded out of the room.I found him in the kitchen, shirtless, wearing only low-slung sweatpants, humming quietly as he made coffee. The morning light caught on the fresh mark I’d left on his shoulder last night. He looked up when he heard me and smiled, soft and warm.“Good morning. You’re awake.”I nodded, smiling back. I glanced around the quiet house. “Your dad and May… they’re not home?”“They headed out earlier,”
KaelI thought it was time.Riven had been through enough, and so had I. After everything that happened, I wanted our families to start healing too. So one evening, I brought it up while we were lying in bed.“I think you should come with me to visit my dad,” I said softly, tracing circles on his arm. “Just dinner. No pressure.”Riven tensed immediately. He looked nervous, almost shy, biting the inside of his cheek. “I don’t know, Kael… what if he doesn’t like me? What if it’s awkward?”“He already knows about us,” I reassured him, kissing his temple. “And he’s been asking about you. Come on. For me?”He hesitated for a long moment, then sighed. “Okay. I’ll go.”***The dinner was at my family home. The table was full — Dad at the head, May beside him, and Riven sitting right next to me. At first, things were surprisingly smooth. Dad and Riven clicked faster than I expected. They talked hockey, strategies, and even old games. Dad laughed at one of Riven’s jokes, and I felt something w
RivenThe stadium was electric.Thousands of fans filled the seats, chants echoing off the walls as the Vipers faced off against one of the league’s strongest teams. I sat in the stands, hood up, heart hammering in my chest. I wasn’t playing tonight. Coach had given me the night off after everything that had happened but I couldn’t stay away. I needed to see Kael play.The game was intense. Fast-paced, physical, every shift full of energy. Kael was on fire. He skated like a man with something to prove, threading passes, throwing checks, and scoring two beautiful goals. Every time he flew down the ice, my chest tightened with pride and nerves.When the final buzzer sounded, the Vipers had won 4-2. The crowd erupted. I stood up with them, clapping hard, a wide smile breaking across my face after what felt like forever.Then, over the speakers, I heard Kael’s name called.“Kael Dravin, you can now come to the ice.”The arena quieted a little as Kael skated to the middle of the rink, stil
RivenWe decided to go back to the hospital together. Kael’s hand found mine as we stepped out of the locker room, fingers lacing tightly. We didn’t hide it. We walked through the parking lot like that — two rival hockey players holding hands in public. People recognized us almost immediately. Phones came out, cameras flashed, whispers spread. But we didn’t care. Not anymore.We got into a taxi. The whole ride, Kael kept his thumb stroking the back of my hand. It felt like the only thing keeping me grounded.When we reached the hospital, I saw my father standing in the hallway. The moment our eyes met, I looked away, jaw tight. All the hurt from before came rushing back.Kael squeezed my hand gently. “I know your father disappointed you. He pissed you off. But just… give him a chance. Please.”I looked at Kael for a long time, then at my father, who was watching me with regret in his eyes. I sighed heavily.Dad walked up slowly and took my other hand. His voice cracked.“I’m sorry, Ri
KaelThe first thing I noticed was the sterile smell and the steady beeping of monitors. My eyes fluttered open to a white ceiling and unfamiliar walls. The dull, throbbing pain in my side reminded me exactly where I was — a hospital room.Dad was sitting right beside the bed, looking exhausted but
RivenThat morning, I woke up to a few soft knocks on my front door.I froze in bed, heart jumping. Then I heard May’s cheerful voice from outside.“I was asked to get some suppressants for you. I’ve left them right outside. Have a good day!”I cleared my throat, trying to make my voice sound diffe
KaelI stared at the screen, my pulse kicking up.Me: Are you sure you’re on heat? Have you experienced it before?Riven: No.Me: Then what makes you think you’re on heat?The typing bubbles appeared, disappeared, then appeared again. When the message came through, I had to read it twice.Riven: I
KaelThe evening air was cool as we piled into the big team bus headed for Millbrook. The guys were already loud — some talking shit, others with headphones on, a few half-asleep before we even left the parking lot. I greeted a couple of them as I climbed aboard and dropped into the seat next to Ol







