LOGINCain's POV:
The sun had barely risen, but the Alpha’s mansion was already alive with movement. Guards patrolled the halls in precise rhythm, servants carried trays of breakfast down the marble corridors, and distant laughter and conversation drifted from the common rooms above. I walked through it all, but it felt unreal, disconnected, like I was moving through someone else’s life. My father appeared before me suddenly, silent as a shadow, and I froze. The way he looked at me—the set of his jaw, the sharpness in his eyes—made my stomach turn. “Cain,” he said, low and commanding, “your mother and I have received news…” I sensed the weight behind his tone instantly. The air seemed to tighten, pressing against my chest. “Cora has left the pack,” my father said flatly. His words hit me harder than I expected. I staggered back. “What?” “She left last night,” he repeated, tone final, unwavering. “While everyone slept. No warning. No note. No one knows where she went.” The bond screamed in my chest. I could almost feel her there, beyond the borders, warm and alive, calling to me. Panic and guilt twisted inside me. I should have stopped her. I should have done something, anything. I looked at my mother. Her expression was polite, distant, restrained sorrow barely flickering in her eyes. She didn’t speak. She just nodded, lightly, as if acknowledging that something important had happened… but not really caring enough to act. Aurora, however, leaned against the ornate railing of the grand staircase, her posture perfect, one hip cocked, arms crossed. A faint, almost smug smile tugged at her lips. “Well,” she said, voice airy and condescending, “guess that solves things. Less… complication now.” Her words landed like knives. My chest tightened. She couldn’t care less. The girl who had just run away, alone, possibly in danger… Aurora was completely indifferent. And worse, she looked pleased with herself, like she’d won without even trying. “I… I should go after her,” I muttered, almost pleading to myself, the words raw, unpolished. My wolf stirred beneath the surface, restless, tense, desperate. I could almost taste the forest she had vanished into, feel her heartbeat as it echoed through the bond we shared. “You will not,” my father snapped. His presence was rigid, immovable. The sheer authority in his voice silenced me instantly. “She made her choice. That is her responsibility. You have your duties to the pack—training, leadership, and most importantly, your future with Aurora.” I wanted to argue, to yell, to throw myself out the doors of this golden cage and chase her through the forest—but I knew I couldn’t. I saw it in his eyes. I would never win. “Focus on your training, Cain,” he continued. “Your marriage to Aurora must proceed without hesitation. The sooner you and she are publicly bonded, the stronger the pack will be. That is your duty. Do not fail it.” I nodded, stiffly, trying to swallow the rising panic, the frustration, the guilt. Every word felt heavier than any burden I had ever carried. Duty. Responsibility. Control. All of it meant nothing compared to the thrum in my chest—the bond, alive and screaming, impossible to ignore. I moved to the balcony overlooking the training yard. The pack warriors were already sparring, their movements precise, fast, disciplined. I should have been impressed by their skill, by the power radiating from every strike—but all I saw was emptiness. Every motion felt hollow. Every swing of the sword, every dodge, every clash of steel against steel reminded me of what I had refused, what I had left behind. Aurora’s laugh drifted across the yard, light, careless, oblivious. My stomach twisted. I had chosen her. I had rejected Cora. I had done what was expected of me. And yet… it didn’t feel right. I closed my eyes briefly, trying to breathe through the ache. The mansion’s gold-plated rails, polished floors, and immaculate gardens felt suffocating. I had a life of privilege, power, and control—but it was meaningless without the one thing I wanted and had denied myself. I could almost see her—Cora—alone in the forest, the early morning mist curling around her, her wolf stirring beneath her skin, senses alive, body moving like it had been made for freedom. My wolf growled inside me, frustrated, restless, yearning. The bond pulsed painfully, each heartbeat echoing a truth I couldn’t escape: I had made the wrong choice. I clenched my fists on the railing. My father’s orders, my obligations, my training—they all pressed down on me like iron bands. But beneath it, something far more primal whispered insistently: She is out there. And she is yours. I wanted to move. To run. To defy my father and find her. To claim what had always belonged to me in the only way that mattered. But I didn’t. Not yet. Instead, I stayed on the balcony, watching the warriors below, listening to the distant laughter, feeling the bond scream in my chest, aching, demanding, reminding me that I had lost her—not to another, but to my own fear and obedience. I had chosen duty. I had chosen Aurora. And I didn’t know if I could ever forgive myself for it.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
Devon's POV I had always hated being compared to my brother. Not because Damon was a bad person. Not because I disliked him. The problem was simpler than that. People looked at twins and assumed they were identical. They weren't. Not really. Not where it mattered. Damon was fire. Impulse. Movement. The kind of person who made decisions first and worried about consequences later. I preferred certainty. Facts. Patience. I liked understanding a situation before stepping into it. Damon liked kicking the door open and figuring things out afterward. It had driven our mother insane. Our father too. Me? I had learned a long time ago that trying to keep up with Damon was pointless. He wasn't meant to be followed. He was a storm. Storms went where they wanted. That was why we eventually drifted apart. Not because we hated each other. Because we lived different lives. When Damon left the Blackwater territory years ago, nobody was particular
Cora's POV The first thing I feel isn’t fear. It’s grief. It creeps in quietly, settling heavy in my chest the moment Eric closes the door behind him and leans against it, his jaw tight, his eyes darker than I’ve ever seen them. I don’t need him to say anything. I know. My wolf knows too, sh
Cora's POV Crossing into Lincoln territory feels like stepping into a wound that never healed. The air changes first. It’s subtle, but my wolf feels it immediately, old scents layered with fresh blood, smoke clinging to the wind, fear soaked so deeply into the soil it hums beneath my feet. M
Cain’s POV The silence after battle is worse than the screaming. It settles over Lincoln pack like a suffocating fog, heavy with the scent of blood, ash, and grief. The rogues are gone.....for now.....but they’ve left devastation behind them. Broken walls. Burned homes. Bodies laid out on the s
Eric’s POV The Lincoln pack courtyard is a graveyard of what was and a battlefield of what remains. Smoke curls into the night sky, mixing with the metallic tang of blood and the acrid scent of burnt timber. Warriors move among the wounded, dragging bodies, tending injuries, and murmuring prayer







