LOGINShe loved him in silence for years. Tonight the Alpha would choose his Luna, and Haydee told herself she came only to watch. Then Cole Shade kissed another woman, and the mate bond snapped into place. The whole pack heard her gasp. Cole scented the truth and rejected her anyway, in front of everyone. "A mistake of the Moon Goddess is still a mistake." The rejection nearly killed her. Silvercrest's golden new Luna tried to finish the job, sending warriors into the dark to make sure Haydee never crossed the border alive. She crossed it anyway. And the wolf who caught her was the one creature Silvercrest had taught her to fear: Hunter Grear, the savage Alpha of Nightfall, the enemy whispered about since childhood. Hunter doesn't want her gratitude. He wants to know why a banished orphan carries a crest the world believes it buried eighteen years ago. A black moon, split by silver fire. The Moonborn mark. Proof of who Haydee was always meant to be. Now the man who threw her away wants her again, and the bond in her chest can't tell the difference between love and damage. The Luna who tried to bury her is still hunting the truth. And the rival Alpha who should have killed her is the only one who has ever seen her as worth protecting. Cole rejected his fated mate. He's about to learn what that mate can do. She was nobody. She was never nobody.
View MoreHaydee
The gown didn't fit.
I'd known it the moment Ginni handed it to me, her eyes doing that careful slide away. The look people give you when they don't want to watch you realize something awful. The shoulders sat wrong, drooping toward my arms, and no amount of pinning had fixed it. I wound a thin ribbon through my hair and told myself it was fine.
It wasn't fine.
But I was here anyway.
The Luna Ceremony Hall was packed. Every wolf in the Silvercrest Pack had dressed in their best. High-born families claimed the tiered seats closest to the dais. Betas in silver-trimmed collars stood mid-hall. At the edges, where the candles gave less light, the servants and low-ranking wolves gathered in a quiet cluster.
That was where I stood.
I had arrived early to secure a spot against the wall. Not the front. Never the front. I had no right to the front, and I had stopped pretending otherwise a long time ago.
Around me, the other low-ranks murmured their excitement. Who would Cole choose? Had anyone seen the candidates? Had anyone caught the Alpha's eye?
I didn't join in.
I had loved Cole Shade in silence for so long that the secret had become part of my body. I carried it like the ache of my never-woken wolf: constant and dull and buried so deep I'd stopped noticing it most days.
Most days.
The past few weeks had been different.
Something had been building in my chest. A warmth, low and persistent, like the first ember of a fire someone else had lit. I'd told myself it was nerves. The pack's collective anticipation bleeding into me. The way the moon had been sitting heavy in the sky, full and watchful.
I'd almost believed it.
A hush moved through the hall.
Cole walked in.
He didn't need to announce himself. The room changed the moment he crossed the threshold. Conversations stopped mid-word. Every head turned.
He was dressed in black. Broad shoulders, set jaw, dark eyes moving across the crowd with a cold and sweeping assessment that made every wolf in Silvercrest stand a little straighter.
My throat tightened.
That warmth in my chest turned sharp.
I pressed my hand flat against my sternum and breathed.
Cole stepped onto the dais. His Beta, Marco, followed two paces behind. The elders arranged themselves in a formal line. The ceremony music began with low strings, old and ceremonial, and the hall went perfectly, reverently silent.
I watched his face.
He wasn't happy. He was performing calm, which was something else entirely. I'd watched Cole Shade long enough to know the difference. There was a stillness around his eyes that wasn't peace.
But that wasn't my concern. I'd been telling myself that for years. I was very good at it. Tonight I needed it to be true.
I was nobody. I had known that since I was old enough to understand what the word meant. An orphaned low-rank who filed papers and ate alone and had spent years training herself not to want things she couldn't have. I was so good at it. I had been so careful. And I was standing here anyway, in a dress that didn't fit, hoping for something I would never say out loud.
Cole raised one hand.
The music stopped.
"Tonight," he said, his voice carrying the hall without effort, deep and certain, "I name my Luna."
The warmth in my chest spiked. I pressed my fingers harder against my ribs.
It's nothing. Stop it.
"The woman who will stand beside me. Who will carry the pack's future. Who will wear the silver crown of Silvercrest."
He paused.
Every wolf in the hall held their breath.
I held mine.
"Tara-Lee Rainhart."
My heart sank at the name, then squeezed painfully in my chest making it hard to breathe. I had known. Of course I had known. Cole Shade was not going to turn to the edge of the room and find me in my borrowed dress and say my name. I had known that. I had prepared for it. I had told myself, over and over, that I was here only to witness.
Knowing didn't help at all.
Tara-Lee moved from the gathered candidates and walked toward the dais. She was beautiful. Dark hair, perfect posture, a gown the color of cream that cost more than I'd earn in a year. High-born, well-connected, every single thing Silvercrest wanted. One glance at her, and you understood immediately why he’d chosen her.
The hall erupted.
I didn't move.
Cole turned to face her. His expression opened. Not into love, not quite, but into a certainty close enough to be mistaken for it. He cupped her jaw. Tara-Lee tilted up her chin.
He kissed her.
The world split open.
The warmth in my chest didn't spike. It detonated. It ripped straight through me, white-hot and enormous, and in one clarifying and terrible instant I understood what it had been.
The mate bond.
It had been the mate bond for weeks.
And as Cole kissed another woman in front of every wolf in Silvercrest, it snapped fully into place with the violence of a bone breaking.
The sound that came out of me wasn't a word. It wasn't even a cry. It was a gasp, short and raw and involuntary, and in the silence around it was deafening.
Heads turned.
One. Then ten. Then the whole room.
Cole drew away from Tara-Lee. His nostrils flared. His eyes swept the hall once and found me without searching, like a predator locates a sound. Immediate. Certain.
He knew.
I watched it move across his face and I watched him decide.
Three seconds. Maybe less.
"A mistake of the Moon Goddess," Cole said, his voice quiet and absolute, "is still a mistake."
The rejection hit me like a wall.
It was physical. Real. It tore straight through my chest, through the bond, through whatever fragile thing had been alive in me for weeks, and it took everything with it.
My legs gave out.
The floor came up.
Around me I was dimly aware of voices, of the careful distance people put between themselves and the spectacle I had become. No one reached for me.
Why would they? I was nobody.
The last thing I saw before the dark took me was Tara-Lee.
She stood on the dais with Cole's hands still at her waist, watching me crumple, and she was smiling.
HaydeeI found him in his study.He was at the map table with a candle and a document he set down when I came through the door, and he gave me his full attention without saying anything. Waiting for me to begin. Which was somehow something I found irritating.I closed the door."You announced I was your future Luna," I said. "In front of Cole. In front of his entire contingent. In front of your pack. In front of every wolf in that courtyard.""Yes.""You touched my face.""Yes.""You did both of those things without asking me. Without any conversation. You positioned me as a political asset and then dressed it as protection and presented it to the yard as a done thing." I met his eyes. “I did not agree to any of it.”He didn't flinch. He didn't reach for an explanation or an apology. He stood at the map table and held my gaze steadily."No," he said. "You didn't.""Then explain it
HaydeeThe courtyard waited.Every wolf in it understood the mechanics. A withdrawn rejection required acceptance to take effect. The bond could not be rebuilt unilaterally, meaning Cole could not simply decide to reclaim what he had thrown away. Haydee Raine had to choose.I understood the mechanics too.I stood in the middle of Nightfall's courtyard with the bond pulling at my sternum like something with fingers, with Cole's raw and broken four words still hanging in the air, with Hunter at my left and Tara-Lee at Cole's right and every warrior from both packs watching me, and I understood exactly what was being asked and what it would cost either way.I had loved Cole Shade for four years.I had watched him lead the pack with a steadfast hand, unwavering authority, and the kind of command that deepened my love for him the more I was exposed to it. Day after day, for four years. Never once did he look my way.
HaydeeHunter came to the balcony doorway, his attention settling on me."You don't have to come down," he said.Which meant: coming down would matter. Which meant: he wanted me to, and was giving me the choice, and both of those things were moves in something I was only partly following.My eyes went to Cole in the courtyard below. At Tara-Lee beside him, composed and watchful. At the Silvercrest warriors in their silver-trimmed gear standing behind their Alpha on someone else's ground.I thought about the stone floor of the feast hall. My knees hitting it before my mind caught up. The laughter moving through the room like water finding the lowest point."I'm coming down," I said.***The courtyard felt different at ground level.Larger, somehow. Or maybe it was the weight of every pair of eyes in it settling onto me as I walked through the gate with Hunter at my left side. Nightfall wolves alo
HaydeeI heard the horns before anyone told me what they meant.Two short blasts from Nightfall's outer wall. Not alarm, but announcement. Something significant at the gate. I was in the courtyard with my soup bowl from yesterday still sitting on the south bench, which made me feel slightly guilty. Around me Nightfall wolves were moving with a purpose that told me this was not routine.Bastian, Hunter’s Beta, appeared at my elbow."You may want to come with me," he said."What is it?"He regarded me with professional patience. "Who do you think just showed up?"***They put me on the balcony overlooking the outer gate.I understood, standing there, that this had been planned. The position was too deliberate: high enough to see everything, visible enough to be seen. Hunter had not told me what he intended. He had simply had someone bring me a clean Nightfall tunic and trousers that morning, dark






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