LOGINI didn’t have all the answers, but I had a glimmer of hope, and that would have to be enough. I took one last look at the trees around me, the silent witnesses to my pain, before turning back toward the pack’s territory. I walked slowly, each step measured, trying to hold onto that tiny spark of resilience. By the time I reached the outskirts of the village, the first light of dawn was breaking through the horizon, casting a soft, pink hue over everything.
I hadn’t been missed. No one had come looking for me, but that wasn’t surprising. It wasn’t the first time I had wandered off, and everyone knew that the “wolfless warrior,” as they mockingly called me, wasn’t exactly a threat to herself or anyone else. I was just the sad girl with no wolf, the one they pitied more than they respected. I slipped into the small, rundown cabin I called home, hoping to catch a few hours of sleep before the day officially started. My bed creaked as I lay down, the mattress lumpy and uncomfortable, but it was mine. I pulled the thin blanket over myself and closed my eyes, trying to block out the memories of the night. But sleep didn’t come easily. My mind kept replaying Marcus’s rejection, the sneers of the pack, and the crushing weight of my own inadequacy. Eventually, exhaustion won, and I drifted off into a restless slumber. The next morning, I woke to the sound of voices outside. It was still early, but the pack was already up and about, preparing for whatever tasks needed to be done that day. I dressed quickly, pulling on the same worn clothes I always wore—a plain shirt and pants that had seen better days. As I stepped outside, the cool morning air hit me, refreshing and crisp, though it did little to chase away the heaviness that still lingered in my chest. I didn’t have a particular destination in mind, so I wandered aimlessly through the village, trying to avoid the places where I knew the others would be. I wasn’t in the mood to face their stares or endure their whispers. But, as fate would have it, I couldn’t avoid them for long. I was walking along the dirt path that led to the training grounds when a group of young warriors passed by. They were laughing and joking, their spirits high as they made their way toward their morning drills. I recognized them—Lukas, Darren, and a few others, all future leaders of the pack, all strong and confident in their abilities. Unlike me. As they approached, I kept my eyes on the ground, hoping they would just walk past. But of course, they didn’t. Lukas, the ringleader of their little group, slowed his pace and glanced at me with that infuriating smirk he always wore. He was tall, broad-shouldered, and everything a young wolf should be. His blond hair was tousled in a way that looked effortlessly cool, and his blue eyes sparkled with mischief—mischief that was usually at my expense. “Hey, look who it is,” Lukas said loudly, his voice dripping with sarcasm. “The wolfless wonder. Out for a morning stroll, Emily?” I ignored him and kept walking, but he wasn’t done. He stepped into my path, blocking my way, and the others quickly gathered around, forming a loose circle that I couldn’t easily escape from. “What’s the matter?” Lukas continued, tilting his head in mock concern. “Not going to say good morning? That’s not very polite.” I met his gaze, trying to keep my expression neutral, but I could see the challenge in his eyes. He wanted a reaction. He lived for it. But I wasn’t going to give him the satisfaction. I’d learned that much, at least. I shifted to the side, trying to move past him, but Lukas held out his arm, a cup of water in hand. The movement was so fast, I barely registered it before the water was sloshing over the rim, splashing onto my shirt. “Oops,” he said with a faux gasp, his eyes wide with exaggerated surprise. “My bad. I didn’t mean to do that. Must be hard being you, huh? No wolf to protect you, no strength, no power. What’s going to happen to you now, huh, Emily? What’s the ‘wolfless warrior’ going to do?” The others Laughed, and I felt my cheeks flush with anger and embarrassment, but I held my tongue. I wouldn’t give him what he wanted. Not today. “What’s wrong, cat got your tongue?” Darren chimed in, grinning as he leaned closer. “Oh, wait. Not even a cat would want you, right? Too weak, too useless. What do you even do all day, Emily? Hide in your little shack and cry about how you’ll never be like us?” The taunts hit their mark, each one a reminder of everything I lacked. But I refused to let them see how much it hurt. I kept my expression blank, my body tense as I waited for them to get bored and move on. It was a routine I had perfected over the years—endure the mockery, don’t react, and eventually, they’ll leave. But Lukas wasn’t quite done. He took a step closer, towering over me, his voice dropping to a low, threatening tone. “You think you’re better than us because you keep your mouth shut? Is that it? You think we don’t see the way you look at us, with those sad little eyes? We’re the future of this pack, Emily. We’re the ones who will lead, who will protect. And you? You’ll always be nothing. No wolf, no mate, no purpose. Just a sad little orphan.” His words were like daggers, each one piercing deeper than the last. But I didn’t flinch. I couldn’t. Showing weakness would only make it worse. So, I stood there, silent, as the laughter of the group surrounded me, mocking, cruel, and relentless. Finally, after what felt like an eternity, Lukas shrugged and stepped back. “Come on, guys. Let’s go. We’ve got better things to do than waste our time with someone who’s never going to matter.” And just like that, they were gone, their laughter fading as they walked away, leaving me standing alone on the path, water dripping from my clothes and shame burning in my chest. I watched them go, a mix of anger and sorrow churning inside me, but still, I didn’t cry. Not here. Not where they could see. Instead, I took a deep breath, wiped the remaining water from my face, and continued walking. There was nothing I could do about them. Nothing I could say or prove that would change their minds. So I had to focus on what I could control—myself, my actions, my determination to keep moving forward, even when it felt like the whole world was against me. --- After the encounter with Lukas and his gang, I made my way back to the village, my clothes still damp, but my resolve hardening with each step. There was no time to dwell on their cruel words or the sting of their laughter. The day was just beginning, and as much as I wanted to hide away, I had responsibilities to attend to—chores that, more often than not, made me feel more like a servant than a member of the pack. For as long as I could remember, I had been the one tasked with the most menial jobs around the village. It started as soon as I was old enough to carry a bucket or sweep a floor. The other kids had been given real responsibilities—training, hunting, learning the skills that would one day make them valuable members of the pack. But me? I was given tasks that no one else wanted to do. It was one of the many unspoken rules of the pack: those who didn’t contribute weren’t worth protecting. And without a wolf, I was already at a disadvantage. So, I worked hard, every day, to prove that I could still be of use, even if it meant doing the jobs that no one else wanted. I reached the communal kitchen, where breakfast was already being prepared for the rest of the pack. The scent of cooking meat filled the air, making my stomach growl, but I knew better than to help myself before the others had eaten. Instead, I went to the side door, where a large pile of dirty dishes awaited me. No one was around to see, but I could imagine the looks I would get if I hesitated—disgust, pity, or worse, indifference. With a sigh, I rolled up my sleeves and got to work, scrubbing each plate and pot with practiced efficiency. The task was monotonous, but at least it allowed my mind to wander. As I worked, I tried not to think about Lukas and his friends, or about the fact that while they were out training, I was stuck here, doing chores that felt more like punishment than a contribution.Emily's POV I woke before he did. That was unusual. Rollins was a light sleeper, the particular vigilance of an Alpha who had spent enough years responsible for a sleeping pack that his body had simply stopped allowing deep rest as a default. Most mornings I surfaced to find him already at the window or already dressed, the space beside me still warm but empty. This morning his breathing was slow and even and his arm was still across me and the grey pre-dawn light was coming through the shutter gaps and I lay still for a while and simply let him sleep. He had earned it. We both had. After a while I eased out from under his arm without waking him, dressed quietly in the grey light, and went up to the wall. The stone was cold under my palm on the stair rail. That same cold it had always been. Indifferent to everything. The keep had burned and held and broken and come back together across more years than either of us had been alive, and the wall stairs were the same temperatur
Emily's POV He found me in the bath chamber. Not intruding, he knocked, which he always did, which was one of the small things about him I had catalogued without meaning to, the way you catalogued things that mattered without deciding they mattered. The particular courtesy of a man who understood that a closed door was a closed door even when the person behind it was his and had always been his. "Come in," I said. He opened the door and leaned against the frame. The fire in the corner had been going long enough that the room was genuinely warm, the rare deep warmth that made the stone walls feel like something other than stone. Steam from the bath. The smell of the herb oil Mia had left on the shelf three weeks ago that I had not used once during the countdown because there had been no evenings that felt like evenings. No nights that belonged only to themselves. Tonight did. Rollins looked at me the way he had been looking at me since the contingency. Not with relief, relief imp
Emily's POV The letter from Voss arrived on the fourth morning. Not the formal alliance correspondence, that would come through the proper channels, through Liam and the council table and the careful diplomatic language that turned decisions made in cold yards and waystation rooms into documents that would sit in the archive for a generation. This was something else. A single page, written in the border captain's angular hand, forwarded from the waystation with a note that said only: She asked me to pass this along. Voss herself had written it. Short. Four sentences. The kind of writing that came from a woman who had spent fifty years saying exactly what she meant and had no patience left for anything that wasn't that. The current reached my pack again last night. Not the way it did the first time, when none of us knew what it was. Quieter. More like remembering something we already knew. I wanted you to know that we feel it, and that it is good, and that what you built has not g
Emily's POV The training yard was running again by the second day. Not the consolidated drill of two hundred wolves from four territories, all of them moving with the focused intensity of people preparing for something. Just Ironclaw's own. Fifteen warriors in the morning rotation, Aldric's replacement at the count, a man named Corran, broad and quiet, who had been on the inner patrol for six years and had taken the promotion without ceremony because that was the kind of man he was. I watched from the upper window while I ate breakfast, which was the first time in three weeks I had eaten breakfast at a window without reading the tree line while I did it. I noticed that. The not-reading. The way my eyes went to the yard instead, to the ordinary movement of people doing their ordinary work, and stayed there without looking past them for something coming. It was a small thing. It didn't feel small. Mia found me in the east corridor around the third hour, carrying a basket of dried
Emily's POV The keep was still dark when I went up. Not asleep, a keep of this size never fully slept, there was always a sentry's cough somewhere, always the low groan of the outer gate settling in the cold, but quieter than it had been in months. The specific quiet of a place that had been held under sustained pressure for a long time and had finally been allowed to breathe. I pulled my cloak tighter and climbed the wall stairs alone. The stone was cold under my palm on the rail. That same cold it had always been, indifferent to everything that had happened around it. The keep had burned and healed and held and broken apart and come back together, and the wall stairs were still exactly the same temperature at the fourth hour of the morning that they had always been. There was something honest about that. I had stopped expecting the world to mark the things that had marked me. The wall walk was empty. I went to the northern corner. The one that faced the tree line. The sky abo
Emily's POV The keep felt quieter than it should have. Not empty. The allied wolves were still thinning out gradually, packs returning to their own territories in the measured way of people who had stayed as long as the work required and were now going home. There were still voices in the outer yard and fires in the hearths and the ordinary sounds of a large household finding its rhythm again after weeks of being something else entirely. All of it was there. I heard none of it properly. I had come back inside after Lira's departure and walked the inner corridor to the east wing without a clear purpose, the way you walk when your body needs to move and your mind is somewhere it cannot fully name yet. The sealing was done. The First Power was settled. Lira was on the road with the current reaching her cleanly for the first time, and somewhere beyond the outer wall the tree line stood empty and ordinary and entirely itself. We had done it. All of it. We had held. I knew that. And
As the weight of my decision settled over the room, I turned to the gathered pack members and elders. “This gathering is dismissed,” I announced. “We’ll discuss the necessary changes in the days to come.” The tension in the air was palpable as everyone began to disperse, murmuring
Rollins' POVThe next morning, I woke up early, my mind already weighed down by the meeting I knew I had to face. I left my quarters and headed straight to the council room where the elders were waiting for me. As I entered, their stern expressions did nothing to ease the knot of tension in my chest.
The realization hit me like a lightning bolt, and for a moment, I just stood there, dazed and awestruck by what had just happened. The wolf inside me, my wolf stirred, and I felt a deep connection, a bond that I had never known was possible. It was like finding a part of myself that I had been se
(Emily's POV) I stopped, waiting as he closed the distance between us. My heart pounded in my chest, not from fear, but from the intense curiosity and confusion that his presence always seemed to stir within me. “Alpha Rollins,” I greeted him, my voice steady despite the whirlwind of emotions insi







