LOGINCora's POV:
The forest releases me reluctantly. My paws slow near the edge of the pack lands, breath coming hard and satisfied, chest still humming with the echo of my run. The night clings to me, reluctant to let go, and for a moment I just stand there—ears twitching, heart steady and strong—memorizing the way freedom feels in this body. Soon, my wolf murmurs, content and warm. The shift back hurts more than the first time did. My bones protest as they draw inward, muscles burning as fur melts away into skin. I bite down on the sound clawing up my throat and brace my hands against the side of the pack house until the world steadies. When it’s over, I’m shaking, bare feet planted against cool stone, lungs dragging in air like I’ve forgotten how to breathe any other way. I slip inside through the back entrance, careful, quiet. The house smells different now—richer, layered with dozens of familiar pack scents, but beneath them all is something new. Something electric. The welcome-back party has already started. Voices drift up from downstairs. Laughter. Music. Celebration. I take the stairs two at a time, skin still buzzing, my wolf pacing just beneath the surface. My room feels too small after the forest, but I move quickly, pulling on clothes with clumsy fingers. Every sound feels loud. Every second feels stretched tight. I pause at the mirror. My eyes are brighter. Sharper. Alive in a way they never were before. So this is who I am now. The noise downstairs swells as I step into the hallway, the scent growing stronger with every step I take down the stairs. My wolf stirs, curious and alert, but calm—until— I smelled him before I saw him, and everything inside me went still. The scent wasn’t sharp or aggressive—it was warm, steady, like rain soaking into sun-warmed earth. It slid into my lungs and settled there, filling a hollow I hadn’t known existed. My breath hitched, chest tightening as if my body had recognized something my mind couldn’t yet understand. My wolf stirred, not frantic or demanding, but achingly calm. Certain. Mine. The realization unfurled slowly, spreading through my veins like heat. My heartbeat stumbled, then found a new rhythm, one that matched the pull in my chest. I felt anchored and weightless all at once, as if I’d finally reached the end of a long journey without ever knowing I’d been walking. When I looked at him, the world seemed to soften around the edges, sounds dulling, colors fading until there was only him and the quiet, terrifying truth settling into my bones. I took a step forward without thinking. Then another. My body leaned toward him like it had always belonged there. This was what home felt like—not a place, but a presence. My wolf pressed closer to the surface, not to claim, not to fight, just to exist nearer to him. To be seen. His eyes met mine. Cain. For one breathless moment, I thought he felt it too. Something flickered across his face—recognition, maybe, or regret. My hope bloomed fast and fragile in my chest. Then he stepped back. The movement was small, deliberate, and it shattered everything. “I can’t,” he said quietly, his voice steady even as my world tipped. He didn’t look angry. He didn’t look cruel. That somehow hurt more. “I know what you are to me. But I won’t accept it.” The words didn’t roar. They sank. My wolf whimpered, confusion rippling through me as the bond I’d just discovered pulled tight, unanswered. The scent was still there—warm, familiar, devastating—but now it burned. I stayed where I was, heart breaking in slow, careful pieces, as he turned away from me like fate was something he could simply refuse. And maybe for him, it was. For me, it would always be there—etched into my lungs, my blood, my bones. I couldn’t let him walk away. Not like that. I bolted after him, heart hammering, wolf surging just beneath my skin, urging me faster, insisting he couldn’t leave. “Cain! Wait!” I called, my voice trembling. He didn’t turn. His pace was steady, deliberate, like he could outrun me if he needed to. “Please… talk to me,” I gasped, catching up, reaching out. “Don’t just… don’t just walk away.” The hallway suddenly felt smaller, suffocating, and then I realized we weren’t alone. Eyes. Everyone’s eyes. Members of the pack were stepping back from the stairs and the doorway, their conversations gone quiet, replaced by tension so thick it made my chest ache. My parents froze mid-step, my father’s jaw tightening, my mother’s hand rising to her mouth. And then Aurora appeared at the top of the stairs, her eyes sharp, immediately sensing the electricity between us. “Wait… what is going on here?” she demanded, stepping closer. I froze, breath caught in my throat, wolf growling low and confused in my chest. Cain glanced at her, and I could see the flash of annoyance—and fear—cross his face. “Nothing,” he said quickly, too quickly, but I shook my head. “It’s not nothing,” I whispered, letting the bond pulse subtly between us, and instantly the pack noticed. Heads turned, whispers rising as the connection sparked, warm and undeniable. My wolf howled softly in my chest, urgent and raw, and the room seemed to contract around us. Aurora’s eyes widened. “Wait… you’re bonded?” Cain’s shoulders tensed, the lie dying before he even tried. My wolf screamed inside me, excruciating, ripping at my chest like fire, and I stumbled forward, pressing my hands there, gasping for control. “Yes,” I said, voice trembling. “We… we are.” The room was silent for a moment, then murmurs swelled into shocked whispers. My parents were frozen, caught between disbelief and worry. Aurora’s hand flew to her mouth. “Cain,” she said sharply, her voice steady now, demanding. “You have to choose. Now.” His eyes met mine—pain, regret, and something fierce—but his decision was clear. “I… I can’t,” he said. The words were soft but final. “I can’t accept this. I’m sorry.” The moment hit me like a physical blow. My wolf’s howl erupted inside me, pure and unfiltered, and pain shot through my chest, deep into my bones. The bond screamed, pulling tight, desperate, punishing. My vision blurred as if the world itself had narrowed to the agony between us. “Why?” I croaked, voice breaking, my wolf pacing violently beneath my skin. “Why?” He looked away, jaw tight, unwilling to meet my eyes. “I’m protecting you,” he said. “You deserve someone who… won’t destroy you just by being near you.You're too weak to be my Luna.” Too weak? My hands clenched at my chest as the bond flared, stabbing pain and heartbreak tangled together. My wolf whimpered, the agony echoing every pulse of his refusal. Aurora stepped closer, hesitant now, her eyes flicking between us. “Cain… you can’t just—” “I’ve made my choice,” he interrupted. “It’s not yours.” The room felt suffocating. Whispers and glances ricocheted off the walls, my parents’ faces pale and anxious, my sister’s expression tight with frustration and worry, and all I could feel was the searing bond—mine claimed, yet denied, burning hotter than anything I’d ever known. I dropped to my knees, hands clutching my chest as the wolf screamed inside me, pain radiating in every direction, and all I could think was… he left me with this. This bond, this connection, this… ache that would never let me forget him. The pack was watching, Aurora’s voice fading into murmurs of confusion and questions, but I couldn’t hear any of it. All I could hear was him, and the pain, and the fact that what I had finally found—the thing I had waited twenty years for—was gone. And yet… I knew it would never really leave me.Third Person's POV Morning sunlight streamed through the apartment windows, spilling warm patches of gold across the hardwood floor. For the first time in days, Hannah didn't wake with a knot in her stomach. The previous night's vision still lingered in fragments—two moons hanging over an ancient valley, wolves and vampires standing side by side, a woman with milky white eyes speaking of futures yet to come. It had been terrifying. It had nearly killed her. But something else remained with her. A pair of cool arms wrapped around her as she'd shaken uncontrollably. A gentle kiss pressed against her forehead. A quiet voice promising that she wasn't alone. She closed her eyes briefly. The memory made her smile despite herself. Anton noticed. He looked up from the frying pan where he was attempting to make breakfast and pointed the spatula at her. "You're smiling." "I'm allowed to smile." "You haven't smiled before coffee in... honestly, I don't remember.
Hannah's POV The vision began with a heartbeat. Not mine. Someone else's. Slow. Ancient. Powerful. It echoed through my head once. Twice. Then the world disappeared. --- At first there was only darkness. The kind that existed before the first sunrise. Before kingdoms. Before wolves. Before vampires. Before history remembered itself. Then Light. A valley stretched before me, untouched by civilization. Mountains pierced the clouds in the distance while an enormous silver lake reflected the moon overhead. Except... There were two moons. One white. One crimson. A shiver raced down my spine. This wasn't a dream. This wasn't the future. This had already happened. Somehow... I was watching the past. People emerged from the forest. Not ordinary people. The first thing I noticed was the silence. No conversations. No laughter. Only purpose. On one side stood wolves. Dozens of them. Massive. Powerful. They shifte
Atreus POV The summons arrived before sunrise. Most people imagined vampire politics as dramatic declarations delivered by cloaked messengers. Reality was considerably less theatrical. A single black envelope rested on the desk in my study when I woke. No servant had seen who placed it there. No guards had sensed anyone entering the estate. The crimson seal pressed into the wax bore only one symbol. A sun encircled by thirteen stars. The Council of Daywalkers. There were only two reasons the elders convened the full council. War. Or prophecy. I broke the seal. A single line had been written in elegant handwriting. The council gathers at first light. Attendance is required. No signature. There didn't need to be one. --- The council chamber lay beneath one of the oldest buildings in Los Angeles. From the outside, it appeared to be nothing more than an abandoned cathedral swallowed by time. Inside, it was another matter entirely. Ancient ston
Hannah's POV Anger was exhausting. I'd always imagined it would feel powerful. Instead, it felt heavy. Like carrying a backpack filled with rocks everywhere I went. The worst part wasn't even the anger itself. It was how much energy it took to stay angry at someone I still loved. Every morning I woke up determined to hate Atreus a little more. Every night I went to bed remembering something that made hating him impossible. The way he'd laughed when Anton accused him of being suspicious simply because he never blinked enough. The patient way he'd explained vampire history because I'd been genuinely curious. The afternoon we'd spent at the beach, arguing over whether seagulls were evil. His terrible sense of humor. The quiet smile he'd always worn whenever I started rambling about books. Those memories refused to disappear. I hated them. Mostly because they made me smile. And smiling felt dangerously close to forgiving him. I wasn't ready for that.
Atreus POV I called Hannah six times. She answered none of them. The first time, I told myself she needed space. The second, I reminded myself she had every right to ignore me. By the sixth call, I stopped trying to justify it. She wasn't ready to speak to me. Maybe she never would be. The thought sat heavily in my chest as I lowered the phone and stared out through the floor-to-ceiling windows of my office. Morning sunlight poured into the room, bathing the city below in warm gold. Normally, I enjoyed mornings. Daywalkers always did. It reminded us that we were different from the rest of our kind. Today, I barely noticed it. The text I sent to her was on delivered. I had sent only one text. I'm sorry. Nothing more. No explanations. No excuses. Nothing that demanded a response. She'd read it an hour ago. She hadn't answered. I deserved that. A knock interrupted my thoughts. "Come in." The office door opened. Tyler stepped inside.
Hannah's POV If there was one thing I had learned over the past three years, it was that pretending was easier than feeling. Pretend I wasn't homesick. Pretend I didn't miss my family. Pretend Damon's death hadn't left behind questions I could never answer. Pretend I was fine. Eventually, if I pretended long enough, I almost believed it. So naturally, I tried the same thing with Atreus. It lasted exactly one morning. I woke before sunrise after spending most of the night staring at my bedroom ceiling. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw him. The way he'd smiled after kissing me. The warmth of his hand against my cheek. Then the look on his face when the vampire elder had asked the question. Does she know she's your soulmate? I groaned and buried my face beneath my pillow. "I hate you," I muttered. Unfortunately, my heart didn't seem to agree. A knock sounded on my bedroom door. "Hannah?" Anton. "I'm alive." "Good." "You've been in there for
Cora's POV The sunlight barely pierced the horizon when I woke, my chest tight, pulse racing. My heart thudded erratically, as though it had been running for hours. Sweat clung to my hair, and I couldn’t shake the vivid fragments of the dream. I was small, barely more than a child, running thro
Eric POV The call comes just after dawn. I’m already awake when my phone vibrates on the bedside table, the low buzz cutting through the quiet like a warning. My wolf lifts its head immediately, alert, instincts sharpening before my mind fully catches up. Anton’s name flashes across the scree
Cora's POV The world didn’t stop ringing after the fight. It faded slowly, like sound sinking underwater, clashing metal, snarls, screams, the crack of bones dissolving into a distant hum. By the time the fires were put out and the wounded were being tended to, exhaustion settled into my bones
Cora's POV The pack doesn’t sleep that night. Lincoln territory hums with restless energy, warriors moving between buildings, patrols doubling, weapons being sharpened under torchlight. The scent of fear and adrenaline hangs heavy in the air, mingling with ash and iron. War is coming. And







