LOGINI died with my mother's name on my lips and the face of the man who killed her burned into my memory. I woke up two years later in a stranger's body with gentle hands and no past... just a quiet life, a herb garden, and the kind of peace that feels too clean to be real. I did not know who I was. I did not know what I had lost. Not yet. Then I found him bleeding in the forest. And I made the worst decision of my second life... I saved him. His name is Caius. He is the Alpha of Ironblood Pack, the most powerful and feared wolf in three territories. He is cruel in the way that powerful men are cruel... not with raised voices, but with absolute certainty that the world belongs to him. He looked at me with those cold eyes and he saw a healer. A useful thing. He brought me into his pack like a man bringing home a tool he found on the road. What I did not plan for was him. Not the real version of him... the one that shows up at the healer wing at strange hours with small injuries and no good reason to be there. The one who looks at me like I am something he cannot figure out. The one who, for the first time in what I suspect is his entire life, seems to want to be a better man. He is falling for me. And the worst part, the part I will never say out loud, is that I feel it too. My name is Maren. He does not know that yet. But he will.
View MoreMaren
I wake up before the sun does because that is the only time nobody is trying to make me disappear. It is cold at five in the morning, and the floor is harder than it was yesterday. My father hates me, but the water in the well doesn’t care who I am.
The grass was wet against my ankles as I walked toward the outer well. I passed the barracks where the warriors stay. Three of them were passed out on the porch, snoring and smelling like old beer. They didn't have to get up yet. They have ranks. They have names that people like to say out loud. I just have the buckets.
I dropped the rope and heard the splash.
"Still doing the heavy lifting, I see," a voice whispered from the shadows of the kitchen door.
It was my mother, Sera. She was waiting for me. I hauled the bucket up, my arms stinging from the weight. "Someone has to do it, Mom. The kitchen won't run on its own."
"Come here," she said. She pulled me inside the warm kitchen and took my hands. "Maren, your fingers are cold."
"I'm fine," I said. I wasn't fine, but saying it makes the day move faster. "Did he ask about the water yet?"
"No," she sighed, rubbing my hands between hers. "He hasn't asked about anything. He’s too busy preparing for the gathering. Here. Eat this before the others come down."
She pushed a piece of warm bread into my palm. It was soft and tasted like honey.
"You're going to get in trouble if he sees you giving me the good stuff," I said, taking a big bite.
"Let him yell," she said softly. "You worked all night on those inventory logs. You fixed the mess the scouts made. You deserve more than a piece of bread, Maren."
"I'm an Omega, Mom. In Dad’s head, I'm just a mistake. He wanted a son to take his place. He got me instead."
"You are not a mistake," she whispered. She kissed my forehead.
By the time the sun was peaking over the trees, the whole Ashveil Pack was standing in the dirt clearing. This is called the Morning Gathering. It’s where my father, Alpha Aldric, tells everyone how important he is while assigning the chores.
I stood in the back, near the trash cans.
That’s my spot.
"The east fence is repaired," Aldric shouted from the porch. He looked big and strong in his leather jacket. He didn't look at me once. "It was a big job. The wood was rotting and the post was sinking."
I felt a little bit of pride. I had spent six hours in the rain two days ago fixing that post. My hands were still scabbed from the splinters.
"Gage," my father called out.
A tall, thick-necked male wolf stepped forward.
"Good work on that fence, Gage," Aldric said. "It shows leadership. It shows you care about our borders. That is what a real warrior does."
The pack cheered. Gage puffed out his chest. "Thank you, Alpha. It was a tough job, but I got it done."
I stared at the ground. Gage hadn't even touched a hammer. He had watched me work from the shade of a tree while eating an apple. He didn't even offer to carry the nails.
I felt a pair of eyes on me. I looked up and saw Reva. She is a mid-rank wolf, and she’s the only friend I have. She was staring at me from across the circle. She looked like she wanted to punch someone. She barked a short, sharp breath... the wolf way of saying, I see you. This is bull.
I just shook my head a little bit. Don't, I thought. It's not worth it.
"Maren!" my father barked.
I jumped. "Yes, Alpha?"
"The latrines need scrubbing. And the storage shed is a mess. Do them both before noon," he said. He didn't look at my face. He looked at my shoes. "Try not to be slow today."
"Yes, Alpha," I said.
The gathering broke up, and people started moving. I headed toward the shed, keeping my head down. I felt like a ghost.
"I am going to kill him," Reva hissed.
She had followed me behind the storage building. She was vibrating with anger. "I am actually going to rip his throat out. Gage? Gage did the fence? He can’t even spell fence!"
"Keep your voice down, Reva," I said. I started pulling old crates out of the shed. "It's fine. I don't need the credit. The fence is fixed. That’s what matters."
"It is not fine!" Reva grabbed a crate and slammed it down. "You do everything. You run the books, you fix the perimeter, you do the work of five men, and he treats you like literal garbage. He’s your father, Maren!"
"He’s the Alpha," I corrected her. "In this pack, those are the same thing. And he doesn't see a daughter. He sees a failed heir. I'm just a reminder that he didn't get what he wanted."
"He's an idiot," she said. She leaned against the wall and looked at me. Her face went from angry to worried. "Maren, you can't keep doing this. You're exhausted. You look like you're fading away."
"Getting angry doesn’t change the rank board, Reva," I said, wiping sweat from my forehead. "I know my place. I survive. That’s the game."
"No, but it makes me feel better to scream about it," she muttered. She looked around to make sure no one was listening. Her voice got very low. "Maren. My mother stayed late at the Alpha’s house last night to clean the dinner dishes."
"Okay?" I asked. "Did she find more wine he hid from the Luna?"
"No," Reva said. She stepped closer. "She heard him talking to the Alpha from the Ironblood Pack. They were on the phone for an hour."
I felt a cold shiver go down my back. Ironblood was a mean pack. They were big and they liked to fight. "Why would he be talking to them?"
Reva chewed on her lip. "My mom heard a word. One specific word."
"What word?" I asked.
"Mating," Reva whispered. "He was talking about an arrangement. A trade."
I went very still. My heart started beating like a trapped bird in my chest. "A trade? For what?"
Caius"Are you still here?" I asked, walking into the infirmary late. I didn't need to ask, of course. I knew she'd be here. Senna looked up from a pile of reports. Her eyes were tired.I sat in my usual chair, the one by the window. It had become my chair. I didn't say anything else right away. She didn't either. The room just felt quiet, but not the bad kind of quiet. I watched her for a bit. She was writing something down, her brow a little crinkled. She had a way of focusing that made you feel like nothing else mattered. I felt that sometimes too."My mother died when I was fourteen," I said. It just came out. I wasn't planning on saying it. I hadn't said it to anyone in a long time. I hadn't wanted to. Senna stopped writing. She looked at me, really looked. "My father died six months later," I went on. "Not from grief. He trusted and he was too soft." She just watched me. Her face was calm. Senna just listened. "I ran the pack for three years before I was old enough to formally c
Senna"I’m going to be direct with you," Dax said.He didn't knock. Or say good morning... he just walked into the infirmary and shut the door behind him. The sound of the latch clicking felt very loud in the quiet room.I didn't stop what I was doing. I was organizing the little glass bottles of willow bark and mint. My hands were steady, even if my heart was starting to beat a little too fast. I didn't look at him yet."You are usually direct, Dax," I said. "It is one of the things I like about you.""Set that down, Senna," he said. His voice was not mean. It was just very flat. "This isn't a medical visit. I didn't come here to get my self checked."I set the bottle down. I turned around and wiped my hands on my white apron. I looked at him. He was standing by the door with his arms crossed. He looked tired, but he also looked like he had finally solved a puzzle and didn't like the outcome."Okay," I said. "I am listening.""I have enough now," Dax said. He stepped closer to the ta
Senna"He’s different when you’re in the room," Lyra said.She didn’t look up from the little white notes she was putting on the medicine jars. She just said it. The sun was coming through the high windows of the infirmary. I kept my head down. I was busy crushing dried leaves into a fine green powder."Who is?" I asked. I knew who she meant, but I wanted her to stop talking.Lyra gave me a look. It was the kind of look a teacher gives a kid who is pretending they can't read a big word. "You know who," she said.She smoothed a note down with her thumb. She was very careful with her work."The Alpha," she said. "Caius. He looks like he’s paying attention differently when you are there. Like the room gets smaller when you walk in. Like everyone else is just a blur and you’re the only thing with clear lines.""He is the Alpha, Lyra," I said. I tried to make my voice sound like my heart wasn't beating too fast. "He has to pay attention to everything. That is his job. He watches the doors,
CaiusThe air in the compound tasted weird today. Nothing was out of place, but everything felt really wrong. I looked at the gates and wondered who had died while I was gone.Dax met me at the entrance. He looked the same. His uniform was tight. His face was a mask of discipline. He held a tablet in his hand and stood tall. This was the man I trusted most with the security of the Ironblood pack."Alpha," Dax said. He bowed his head just enough to show respect but not enough to look weak. "The patrol inspection went well?""It was routine," I said. I didn't look at him. I looked past him at the courtyard. "Anything to report here?""Nothing, sir. The North gate had a small issue, but we fixed it by noon. All patrols are back.""And the administration building?" I asked. I don't know why I asked. My feet wanted to walk that way.Dax blinked. "Everything is normal there. The clerks left an hour ago. Why do you ask?""The air feels heavy," I said. I started walking toward my quarters. "D
SennaRhea has been acting weird for three weeks. Every time I look up from my herbs, she is staring at me with big, nervous eyes."Do you need something, Rhea?" I ask. I am counting dried lavender.Rhea jumps. She is holding a long piece of paper with our supply list on it. Her hands are shaking j
MarenMy hands shook just a little. Not enough to mess up the stitch, but enough that I felt it. This was the last night here.Mama sat across from me, her head bent low over the white fabric. It was the dress for tomorrow. The ceremony dress. She’d been working on it for three days, quiet-like, no
MarenI wonder if my father knows I have a face, or if he just sees a space where a son should have been.He walks heavy, his boots digging into the dirt, while he shows off the Ashveil borders to Alpha Caius. I followed five steps behind them because I was told to. Not because my father wanted me
MarenMy stomach felt like a knot. A really tight one, pulled like a rope until it hurt. I tried to breathe slow, like Mom always told me. In, out. You are strong. You are loved.But Mom wasn’t here. She was just a feeling in my chest now, a silver thread around my heart that only I could see. And






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