Se connecterCiara's POV
"Just like that?"
"Just like that." I held his gaze, refusing to let him see how my hands trembled beneath the sheets. "You need me to be your weapon. I need protection. It seems a fair exchange."
"Fair." He tasted the word like wine. "How... pragmatic of you."
His voice was even. I couldn't tell what he was thinking.
"I am not a child," I said, though part of me felt exactly like one—lost and frightened and desperately out of my depth. "I know this is not about love. You have your reasons for wanting this marriage, and I have mine for accepting. That is enough."
"Is it?" He leaned closer, bracing one hand on the headboard above me. This close, I could see the flecks of silver in his black eyes, like stars in a night sky. "You do realize what you are agreeing to, do you not? Marriage to the bastard son. The one your precious pack considers beneath them. Your reputation, already in tatters, will be completely destroyed."
"My reputation is already gone," I said quietly. "Kaden made sure of that."
Something shifted in his expression.
"So you would rather be the bastard's wife than the rejected bride," he murmured.
"It is the only choice I have."
He studied me for a long moment, his expression unreadable. Then he straightened and crossed to the window, hands clasped behind his back as he looked out over the grey winter grounds.
"There are conditions," he said finally.
"I expected as much."
"You will conduct yourself with discretion. Whatever you think of this arrangement privately, publicly you will be my chosen bride—not a refugee I took in out of pity." He glanced back at me. "People will assume what they like. Let them. What matters is the story we present."
"Understood."
"And you will not go looking for sentiment where there is none." His tone was not unkind, only precise. "I am not Kaden. I will not pretend affection I do not feel, and I expect the same honesty from you."
Something about that steadied me. Pretending was exhausting. The thought of not having to was almost a relief.
"First," he continued, "you must return home."
My stomach dropped. "Now?"
"Yes, Ciara." He glanced back at me. "No matter what agreement we have reached, the pack has rules. A highborn she-wolf cannot simply disappear into my household without proper procedure. I must speak with the Alpha first, make my intentions known officially. And you..." His lips curved into something that was not quite a smile. "You must face your family."
"They will not let me leave again."
"They will have no choice." He opened the door and called into the hallway. "Marcus!"
A stern-faced man appeared within seconds, bowing slightly. "My lord?"
"Prepare the carriage. Miss Ciara will be returning to her father's house." Draven's eyes found mine again. "I will be visiting the Alpha soon. By afternoon, your father will understand that you are no longer his to dispose of as he sees fit."
Marcus bowed again and disappeared.
I pushed myself up straighter in the bed, ignoring the protest of my still-recovering body. "And if something happens before then? If he—"
"Nothing will happen." Draven's voice was iron. He studied me for a long moment. "You chose this path, Ciara. Now walk it. You are stronger than you realize."
---
The carriage that brought me home was fine—too fine for someone like me. Black lacquer with silver trim, the Stormclaw crest deliberately absent from its sides. Marcus had helped me inside with careful formality, as if I were already someone who mattered.
Now the carriage stopped in front of my father's house. Through the window, I could see the steps where I had knelt three nights ago. Someone had swept away the snow, erasing all evidence of what had happened there.
How convenient.
Marcus opened the door and offered his hand. "Miss Ciara. Lord Draven will send word when arrangements are finalized. Do not fear—he will not be long."
I nodded and stepped down, my legs still weak but steadier than they had been. The healer's work had been thorough, and two days of rest had helped. I was not the half-frozen girl who had collapsed in the snow.
But I was not sure who I was now, either.
The carriage pulled away, leaving me alone at the bottom of the steps. I stared up at the familiar door, at the frosted iron handles and the chipped paint along the lower frame that my father had never bothered to fix. I had stood on these steps a thousand times. Returned from lessons, from pack gatherings, from the market with my stepmother's endless lists.
I had always walked through that door as someone who belonged to this house.
Today would be different.
I took a slow breath and started to climb.
The moment I stepped through the door, a porcelain vase hurtled through the air and shattered at my feet, shards exploding across the stone.
"How dare you!" My father roared as he stormed out onto the landing, his face mottled red with rage. "How dare you show your face here after what you have done!"
I froze, my hand gripping the railing. For a moment—just a moment—I was that obedient girl again, the one who would bow her head and accept whatever punishment he deemed appropriate.
But that girl had died in the snow.
"Father," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "I live here."
"You lived here!" He descended the steps toward me, his fist raised. "Before you humiliated this family! Before you disgraced the name I gave you!"
His hand came down.
I moved.
Years of training in combat forms, dismissed as unnecessary for a Luna candidate, suddenly proved their worth. I twisted aside, and his fist met empty air. The momentum carried him forward and he stumbled, catching himself on the railing.
The shock on his face was almost worth everything that had happened.
"You..." He straightened, eyes wide with disbelief. "You dare to dodge? To resist?"
"Yes." The word came out cold, final. "I dare."
So this was what it felt like to fight back.
It wasn't as hard as I'd feared.
Ciara’s POVThe next day.I was coming back from a session with Serafine, my hair still loose, when movement in the entrance hall below caught my attention. I stopped at the railing, looked down and saw a woman.She was tall. Dark-haired, with an elegance that came from years of knowing exactly what effect she had when she walked into a room. She wore deep green, simply cut, and she moved like someone who had never once doubted that she deserved the space she occupied.The guards at the entrance were practically falling over themselves. The older one on the left — the one who had never once smiled at me without prompting — was grinning like she'd just said the funniest thing he'd heard all year. She laughed with them, easy and warm, her hand resting briefly on the younger guard's arm, and every single one of them stood a fraction straighter without noticing they were doing it.I stood at the railing and watched this for longer than I should have.A maid came around the corner behin
Draven's POVMarcus left the report on my desk at midnight with a single line written beneath his summary in his precise, economical hand: *This one is worse.*I read it twice before I set it down.Corvin. Junior aide, twenty-three years old, attached to the council offices for the past fourteen months. The kind of young man who blended into the background of every meeting he attended — quiet, efficient, forgettable. The kind that nobody watched because nobody thought there was anything to watch.The leaks that couldn't have come from Wren pointed directly to him. Meeting schedules that Wren wouldn't have known. Internal correspondence from council sessions. Details about pack resource allocation that lived in exactly one set of documents — the ones that passed through the council offices before they reached anyone else.Corvin had access to all of it.I sat back and let that settle for a moment. Two informants. One a guard with gambling debts and a contact at a tavern. The other a co
Kaden’s POVMy father was still in the chamber when I turned back. He was standing at the window, hands clasped behind him."A word," he said, without turning.I closed the door and waited.He turned and looked at me for a moment before moving to his desk and settling into his chair with the deliberate ease of a man choosing his next words carefully."I've been in correspondence with the Ashvale Pack," he said. "Their Alpha has a daughter. Well-bred, politically connected, the kind of match that would consolidate our eastern alliances considerably." He slid a folded document across the desk toward me. "I'd like you to consider it."I stared at him."You're not serious."His eyes came up. "I am entirely serious.""It has been weeks," I said. "Weeks since the engagement with Ciara ended. You want me to begin courting someone else in the same breath?""The pack cannot wait on your emotional timeline, Kaden—""This isn't emotional." The words came out sharper than I intended. "This is bas
KADEN'S POV The council chamber smelled of old wood and political anxiety, which in my experience were rarely separable. I arrived exactly on time, which meant my father and both senior council members were already seated and had been for long enough to exchange whatever preliminary conversation they hadn't wanted me present for. Councilman Thorne sat to my father's left, his hands folded neatly in front of him. As always, his expression revealed nothing. The man had spent so many years in politics that even his silences felt deliberate. Every reaction was measured, every glance considered. He gave away nothing he wasn't prepared to lose. Across from him sat Elder Cassian. Older. Sharper around the edges. Less interested in appearances. Cassian had survived the reigns of four Alphas, which told me more about him than any title ever could. Men like him did not last because they were agreeable. They lasted because they were useful. And because they knew the differenc
CIARA'S POVDraven stood there with a tray balanced against his hip — bread, stew, the quiet routine he'd built without ever announcing it as a routine."How did training go?" he asked, stepping past me into the room."It changed everything, actually." I shut the door behind him. "Serafine told me the heat isn't separate from my wolf. It never was. She *is* the power. Every time it's surged — the heat I've been describing to you for weeks — that was just her, surfacing."He set the tray down and turned to look at me with real interest. "So when you've been afraid of losing control—""I've been afraid of her. Yes." I sat across from him, still working through it myself. "And every time I pushed it down, told myself to calm it, I wasn't managing some wild force. I was silencing her."Draven went quiet, watching me with the kind of stillness that meant he was actually turning it over rather than waiting for his turn to speak."That changes how you'll have to think about training," he sai
CIARA'S POVThree weeks in, I started to feel the difference.The power used to arrive without warning — a flood, sudden and total, no space between feeling fine and feeling like my skin couldn't hold what was underneath it. Now there was a moment before. A low warmth sitting just beneath my sternum, like a coal that hadn't caught yet.My wolf, stirring before she surfaced."There," I said, sitting up straighter. "Right there — do you see it? Well, you can't see it, but something just happened. I felt her before she rose. A breath of warning. Maybe two." I pressed my palm flat against my chest. "She's awake right now. I can feel her."Serafine's hands stilled over the herbs she'd been sorting. She looked up properly this time. "Describe it. Don't simplify it for my benefit."I frowned, trying to find the actual shape of the thing rather than a tidy version of it. "Before, it felt like something happening to me. Like she would surge up out of nowhere and I'd just be carried along by it







