LOGINCADEN
He stopped holding back.
That was the decision. Simple. Final. Ash wanted a real fight, and Caden was done being careful about it.
He came in fast and low and felt Ash read it and adjust, and they hit each other in the middle of the ground with enough force that the watching wolves went audibly sharp all at once. Back and forth across the dirt, neither of them clean, neither of them giving anything free. Ash was quick in a way that kept surprising him, kept finding angles that shouldn't have been there, and moved like someone who'd learnt to fight in spaces where losing wasn't an option.
Caden liked that. He didn't want to like it.
He went for the finish on the next opening and came in too hard from the right. Ash moved to counter, but her boot caught a wet patch of dirt, and she lost her footing.
Caden caught her jacket before she hit the ground.
Momentum did the rest.
They went down together, hard and fast; he got his arm out in time to take the impact, and they rolled once and stopped with Caden's weight fully across Ash's chest, one hand braced in the dirt beside that jaw, knees either side, close enough that their breath hit the same air.
Dead silence on the training ground.
Caden looked down.
Ash looked up.
Neither of them moved.
"Get off," Ash said. Flat. But something underneath it that wasn't flat at all.
Caden didn't move.
He told himself it was because he was making a point about the footing. About how the fall didn't count. That was what he told himself, and it was not entirely a lie, but it was not the whole truth either because the whole truth was that something had happened when they rolled, and he was still working out what.
Ash was softer than expected.
That was the first thing his body registered, and it registered it wrong, registered it in a way that made no sense for a sparring partner, his hands reading something through the uniform that didn't line up with everything else. The chest under his forearm. The way the body beneath him was built. His wolf had gone completely still in a way it only went still when it was paying very close attention.
He looked at Ash's face.
The jaw. The mouth. That lower lip was slightly swollen from where it had caught something in the second exchange, the skin there dark pink and soft-looking in a way that made something in the back of his head go very quiet and very focused all at once.
What.
He moved his eyes up. Ash was watching him with those grey eyes and an expression that was working hard to stay neutral and not entirely succeeding, something moving underneath it that Ash clearly didn't want him to see.
The scent hit him again.
This close, it was everywhere. Under the dirt and the cold air and the sweat of the fight, something else entirely, something that had been sitting wrong in his memory since the courtyard and was now sitting very wrong in a way that pulled at him low and specific and insistent.
His wolf shoved forward so hard he felt it in his back teeth.
What is that?
He'd smelt thousands of wolves. He had a catalogue in his head going back to childhood, every pack he'd visited, every alpha he'd met, every wolf he'd trained beside. He knew what male wolves smelt like. He knew the specific register of it, the particular weight.
This wasn't that.
This was something else underneath the mask of it. Something that his wolf was trying to climb toward and his brain kept refusing to finish the sentence about.
"Get off," Ash said again. Different this time. Tighter.
Caden realised he'd been staring at the mouth again.
He stood up.
Got off the ground and put distance between them and stood there with his heart doing something it had no business doing after a training trial, and his wolf still pressed hard against the inside of his chest like it wanted to go back.
Ash got up. Slower than usual. Didn't look at him directly.
"What are you doing?" Ash said.
"Fight's over." Caden kept his voice level. He was proud of that. "You slipped. I caught you. Doesn't count."
"So what, it's a draw?"
"It's nothing." He picked up his jacket from the ground. "Come back when you can shift. We'll finish it properly then."
Something moved through Ash's expression. Fast. Gone before he could read it.
"Right," Ash said.
Caden turned to walk off the ground.
He took three steps and stopped.
Turned back.
He didn't plan what came out next. It arrived from somewhere his better judgement hadn't approved.
"Do yourself a favour." He kept his eyes forward, not on Ash. "Shower before I get back to the dorm; you still reek."
He walked off the ground.
Behind him he heard Ash say nothing.
He kept walking and got himself to the far side of the training ground and stood there with his back to the field and his hand pressed flat against the stone wall and tried to run a straight line of thought from beginning to end but couldn't.
What was that?
Not the fight. The fight he understood. The fight was the first genuinely interesting thing that had happened to him since arriving at Vordrak, and he'd think about it differently later.
The other thing.
The softness he'd felt. The mouth he'd looked at twice. The scent that was wrong in a way that was starting to feel less like wrong and more like something he didn't have the right word for yet.
He didn't like boys.
He'd never liked boys.
He'd been certain about that.
His wolf pressed forward again, slow and insistent, and somewhere in the back of his head a thought started forming that he refused to let finish.
He pushed off the wall.
Walked back toward the dormitory block and told himself, firmly, that he was tired. That the lunar pull was messing with his instincts. That whatever had just happened on that training ground was a product of proximity and adrenaline and nothing else.
His wolf didn't agree.
His wolf wanted to go back.
His wolf wanted to press its nose to that neck and stay there until it figured out what that smell was, until it placed it and until it knew.
Caden walked faster.
Get it together.
He had a shower to take and a training record to update and absolutely no business thinking about his roommate's mouth.
None.
He was almost convinced.
NOVAHe found her where she always ended up.The small hidden space behind the tall hedges. The Japanese bridge, the decorative stones, and the small waterfall went on regardless of everything else. She had been coming here since he showed it to her weeks ago, when the rest of the academy felt too loud and she needed the specific kind of quiet that the library did not always provide.She heard him come through the hedge opening and did not turn.He sat beside her on the bench.Neither of them said anything for a moment.The banquet was finished. The ceremony was finished. Her father had left without speaking to her again, which was not the resolution she had imagined as a child lying awake in the Greyveil Pack house thinking about this moment, but it was honest, and honest was something she had come to value above comfortable.She would deal with her father. Not tonight. But eventually, and on her own terms."Gregor sent a formal message," Caden said. "The three-pack proposal has been
NOVADrax was at the podium when she came through the door.He looked at her once. That steady, unremarkable look he gave everything. In it tonight she found something she recognised for the first time, something that had been there since day one and that she had been learning to read without knowing that was what she was doing.He stepped back from the podium.He gestured.She understood.She crossed to the front of the room. Caden fell into step beside her without being asked. Zion came from the far side and stood on her other side, and the room settled into quiet around them with the specific quality of sixty wolves who understood something significant was about to happen and were choosing to be still for it.She looked out at the room.At Rhen near the front, his expression carefully neutral and entirely warm underneath. At Zion beside her, who had known her secret for three days and had spent those days deciding how to say it without using it. At Mira, near the far wall, who had
NOVAHe was in the entrance hall.Alpha Casen Greyveil looked exactly as he always had. Broad through the shoulders, rigid in his posture, he had the bearing of a man who had never once questioned whether his authority was legitimate. He had the same expression he had worn in the training yard the day she beat seven men, and he waved his hand. Arranged. Decided.He looked at her.She watched him take in the dress. The loose hair. The academy building around her and the sounds of the banquet behind her. She watched him process it and arrive at something colder than surprise. Recalculation."You're really here," he said."Yes.""Graduated.""Tonight. With honours."Something crossed his face that he put away fast. "Come home. Now. Before this goes further.""No."He studied her like a problem he expected to solve the same way he always had. Nova did not move. She had already decided this conversation was no longer about permission. It was about stating what was already finished.He look
CADENHe found her after the formal portion ended.The room had loosened, conversations free-flowing, wolves moving between tables, the structured evening opening into something genuinely celebratory. He found her near the east window with a glass in her hand and the specific thoughtful expression she wore when something had settled in her and she was sitting with the feeling of it.He stopped beside her.She looked at him."Tell me," she said. "About Gregor."He had been composing this since the meeting three days ago. Not the political details; those were straightforward. The other part. The part that was about what he had done and why."I met with him the day after the rescue," he said. "Two hours. I let him say everything he had come to say, and then I told him I was not honouring the personal arrangement."She went still."He pushed back," Caden said. "I expected that. I had a proposal ready. A three-pack territorial agreement that creates better structural stability for the nort
NOVAThe hall had been transformed.Long tables with formal settings and flowers she did not recognise filling the air with something warm. Every lamp was burning so that the stone walls held the light. Sixty wolves in formal attire filling the space with conversation and the specific warm noise of a gathering that was celebrating something genuinely earned.She stood in the doorway and let it land.She had never had a room full of people celebrating her before.Rhen appeared at her elbow. He looked at the dress first. Then at her face. His expression did something complicated that he managed before it fully arrived."Before you say anything," she said."I was going to say that you look like yourself," he said. "Just the version you don't usually let people see."She looked at him.He looked back with that honest expression that had no performance in it, and she thought about everything he had been to her since day one. The east block stairwell. The track in the cold morning with the
ZIONHe found her in the courtyard twenty minutes before the banquet.He had been in the senior block getting ready, or rather sitting in the senior block not getting ready, because the formal jacket was on the chair and he was sitting on the bed thinking about what he intended to say tonight and whether he was going to say it.He went outside for cold air, and she was sitting on the low wall in the dark green dress with her hair loose and her hands in her lap and her face doing that particular quiet it did when she was sitting with something she had not yet resolved.He stopped.She looked up."Don't say anything," she said."I wasn't going to say anything," he said. He sat beside her on the wall and looked at the courtyard in the evening light. "You look different.""That's saying something.""I said different. Not a compliment. Not a judgement. Just an observation." He sat with her for a moment. "How are you?""Strange," she said. "Graduation feels like something I was working towa
MIRAShe found her coming out of the boutique.The corridor was empty at this hour, everyone else occupied with preparations for the banquet, and Ash Darvin came through the door with a dress bag over one shoulder, moving with that walk Mira had memorised in the basement corridor of The Hollow. The
CADENThe meeting with Alpha Gregor lasted two hours.Caden sat across from him in the formal meeting room of the senior block and let Gregor say everything he had come to say, all of it, without interrupting. The gratitude. The reaffirmation of the arrangement. The political case for the northern
CADENHe had known about the Gregor arrangement for fourteen months.He had agreed to it in a council room in the Crown Pack territory with four senior wolves present and the northern alliance balance sheet in front of him, and he had agreed to it because the political situation required stability
NOVAShe went to the training ground.Not because there was a session scheduled. Because the training ground was the one place she could put her body through something physical enough that her head had no choice but to go quiet and focus on the immediate problem of not falling over.She ran the per







