MasukElias's POVMac found me at the edge of camp, watching the last of the tents come down, and the look on his face told me before he said a single word that whatever news he was carrying wasn't good."Scout just rode in from the eastern trade road," he said, keeping his voice low enough that it wouldn't carry to the men coiling rope a few yards off. "Word from IronVale is already three days old by the time it reached us, but it's clear enough.""Tell me.""Easton's mating ceremony happened. Two nights ago. Public, full clan in attendance." He hesitated, and that hesitation was answer enough that I braced myself before he finished. "He rejected Rosalie in front of everyone. Chose Brenda Trent instead. Announced her as his Luna on the spot."Something cold settled low in my stomach, spreading slowly outward until it reached my fingertips."Rejected her," I repeated flatly, like saying it out loud might make it make more sense. It didn't."That's not the worst of it." Mac's jaw tightened.
Rosalie's POVI woke the second time with a clearer head, and a clearer head meant a longer list of questions I intended to get real answers to.Daylight filtered faintly through a gap in the tent flap, gray and thin. My ribs still ached, but the sharp, stabbing pain from before had dulled into something manageable, and my thoughts, at least, had stopped sliding around like loose gravel.Elias was there again. Of course he was. Sitting on the same low stool, elbows braced on his knees, like he hadn't moved from that spot in hours. Maybe he hadn't."You're still here," I said, my voice steadier than it had been the night before."Where else would I be?""I don't know. That's rather the problem." I pushed myself up slowly this time, testing my body before I trusted it with my full weight, and when the tent didn't spin, I counted it as a small victory. "You still haven't told me anything useful. Where exactly are we?""A camp near the northern border," he said. "We're breaking it down to
The name meant nothing to me. I turned it over anyway, waiting for some spark of recognition, some memory that might explain the way my pulse kept stuttering every time his eyes landed on mine. Nothing came. Just the name, unfamiliar, and the strange, unsettling awareness of him sitting close enough that I could feel warmth radiating off his skin even through the thin blanket someone had draped over me."Found me where?" I pressed. "You said the Abyss. That doesn't make sense. I was on the northern road."Something shifted behind his expression, not quite a lie forming, but a careful decision about how much truth to hand me. I recognized that look too. I'd spent two years learning to read exactly that expression on Easton's face before he told me something designed to keep me calm and compliant rather than something honest."There was a breach," Elias said finally. "The Abyss opened along the northern border. My unit was sent to seal it. You were caught in the fallout somehow, I don't
Rosalie's POVPain woke me before anything else registered.It started deep in my ribs, a dull, throbbing ache that pulsed in time with my heartbeat, and for one disoriented second I thought I was still lying in the dirt at the edge of that black canyon, waiting for teeth to close around my throat.I sucked in a breath and it rattled, catching somewhere in my chest, and the taste of dust and blood coated the back of my tongue.Move, something in me insisted. Get up. Run.But my body wouldn't listen. My limbs felt like they belonged to someone else, heavy and distant, and when I finally managed to peel my eyes open, the world came at me in broken, blurry pieces. Canvas above me, sloped and dim. Lamplight, low and orange, flickering somewhere off to the side. The sharp, clean smell of something medicinal cutting through the mustier scent of old fabric and dirt.Not the palace. Not the northern road. Not the ice, or the crowd, or Easton's cold, disgusted face.Somewhere else entirely.I
Elias’s POV Mac went very still. His eyes flicked to the cot, to her sleeping face, and something clicked into place behind them, recognition, the same slow-motion horror I'd just gone through myself, except from the outside looking in. "The girl from the canyon." "Yes." "The girl who doesn't have a pack scent, who we found half-buried in rubble at the edge of the Abyss, on the same night…" He stopped himself. I watched him do the math anyway, watched his jaw tighten as he arrived at the same conclusion I had, minus however many extra hours I'd had to sit with it. "On the same night as Easton's mating ceremony," he finished, quieter. "Yeah." "Elias." He said my name like a warning, like he already knew where this was going and wanted to head it off before I said anything he couldn't unhear. "Tell me you're joking." "Do I look like I'm joking?" He studied my face a beat longer, then swore under his breath, dragging a hand back through his hair. "Does she know?" "No." I looke
Elias's POV"No. No, no, no."I said it out loud like that would somehow make it less true, like the word itself could shove the fact back into whatever locked box it had crawled out of.My mate. Easton's girl.I pressed the heel of my palm against my sternum, right over the place where that phantom pull kept tugging, and for one insane second I actually considered that I was losing my mind. Head trauma, maybe. I'd taken a hit from one of those Abyss things earlier and hadn't noticed. That would explain it. That would explain literally anything better than the alternative.My wolf did not agree. My wolf was still on its feet inside my skull, chest puffed out, absolutely delighted with itself, staring at me like I was the slow one in the room.Mate, it said again, quieter this time, almost gentle, like it thought I just hadn't heard it right the first time."Shut up," I muttered, and pushed off the support pole before my legs decided to fold underneath me too.I made myself look at her







