LOGINCADEN
He'd seen nerve before.
Vordrak attracted it. Every intake had at least one wolf who mistook audacity for ability, who confused being unafraid with being ready. They lasted about four minutes in a real trial before the ground taught them the difference.
He'd watched Ash Darvin drop two opponents in under three minutes combined and call his name across a silent training ground without blinking.
That wasn't nerves.
He didn't have a word for it yet.
"Voss." Drax looked at him across the ground. Not asking permission. Checking his read.
Caden uncrossed his arms and walked forward.
Behind him, the trainees broke into sound all at once, sixty wolves recalculating everything they thought they knew about the morning.
"He's lost his mind." Someone to his left said.
"Challenging Voss on day two. Who does that?"
"Thirty seconds. Maybe less than that; that is what I give him before Voss finishes him. Someone laughed."
Caden stopped in the centre of the ground and looked at the wolf standing across from him.
Ash Darvin. Both feet planted. Hands loose. Weight slightly back. Caden ran his eyes over the stance the way Drax had taught him at sixteen, what they'd been taught.
What he saw didn't match a packless freshman from a regional merit intake.
Not even close.
"You sure about this, kitten?" he said.
"The bar's set pretty low," Ash said, "if this counts as crazy."
One person in the watching line laughed. Then silence.
Caden rolled his right shoulder and moved forward.
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He went easy first. Not condescending. Diagnostic. He wanted to see where the training broke down, where instinct swallowed technique, where the real ability ended and where she was lacking in combat.
The instinct didn't take over.
Ash slipped his first grab clean. Not scrambling out of it. Reading it two beats early and simply not being where Caden's hand expected. He adjusted. Went lower. Got a grip on the jacket and felt the weight shift under his hands, and then Ash had turned inside the hold, and for one half second, Caden's own balance became the problem.
He reset. Stepped back.
Looked at Ash.
The training ground had gone quiet in a different way than before. Before was the quiet of people waiting for something to end. This was the quiet of people watching something they hadn't prepared for.
He came again, faster, and Ash met him instead of slipping; took the contact; redirected it; and they went back and forth across the dirt in a string of exchanges that each answered the one before it. Every adjustment Caden made got read. Every opening he created got ignored, like Ash already knew it was a setup.
Caden hadn't worked this hard in a trial in two years.
He got the takedown on the next exchange. Clean. Ash went down on one shoulder, and Caden had the arm locked and his knee in the dirt before the dust settled.
Stillness.
Then from the ground, flat and unbothered: "Are you going to stay there or let me up?"
Caden looked down.
Ash looked straight back up at him. Grey eyes. No fear in them. Just genuinely, completely unintimidated, lying in the dirt with one arm locked at a bad angle, looking at him like this was a mildly inconvenient pause in the conversation.
Something moved in Caden's chest.
He didn't know what it was, and he didn't examine it. He let go and stood up.
Ash was on both feet before he'd fully straightened. Rolled her shoulder once, checking the joint, and turned back.
"Again."
"You're down one."
"I know," grey eyes steady. "Again."
His wolf pressed forward. That low restless push it did when something had its attention and wouldn't let go. He put it back down and moved.
This time, Ash came straight at him. Inside his reach before Caden had his weight set, and for three full seconds, they were pressed together, chest to chest, close enough that Caden could feel the difference in how this person was built under the uniform. Something that didn't sit right against every other body he'd grappled in four years at Vordrak. Something his hands registered, and his wolf lunged toward all at once.
He didn't have time to pull that apart.
Ash shoved him off his chest, swept his left leg, and Caden hit the ground.
He lay there for one second. Grey sky above him. Dirt under his palms.
The training ground went off without a hitch. Sixty trainees all at once, Drax calling the point over the top of it, Rhen's voice somewhere in the chaos, saying something that got swallowed entirely.
Caden got up.
Ash was two feet away. Not celebrating. Not playing to the crowd. Just watching him stand with those grey eyes and that expression, she still hadn't cracked.
"One each," Ash said.
Caden looked at the dirt on his jacket.
He could feel his wolf at the surface now. Pushing. Insistent. He kept it back. Not now, he doesnt need it to finish this.
"Your footing slipped on the sweep," he said. "You know it did."
Ash looked at him.
"I know."
"I don't want to win because you tripped." The words came out before he'd cleared them. "That's not a real victory."
A beat of quiet between them while the training ground noise went on around them.
"Then stop testing me," Ash said. Low. Just for him. "You've been at sixty per cent since this started. We both know it. Come at me like you mean it or don't come at all."
Caden stared at this wolf.
Day two. No pack. No name anyone recognised. Standing in front of him with dirt on one shoulder and a split lip that was already closing, telling him to stop holding back.
His wolf shoved forward hard enough that he felt it in his jaw.
And underneath the cold and the sweat and the dirt, underneath sixty other wolves and the mineral smell of old ground, he caught it again. That scent. Wrong and right at once, familiar in a way he couldn't place, pulling at something in him that had nothing to do with the fight and everything to do with something he hadn't figured out yet.
This close, it was stronger than it had ever been.
This close, it was almost a problem.
Drax's voice cut across the ground. "Last round. Finish it."
Caden didn't move his eyes from Ash's face.
"Yeah," he said quietly.
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
NOVACentral Square held every year of the academy plus the full senior staff.She knew before she reached the square that something significant had happened. The quality of the movement around her was wrong, sixty wolves all orienting toward the same point with a specific urgency that had nothing
ZIONHe noticed it on a Tuesday.Not because he was looking for it. Because he had spent two years studying Caden Voss and knew every configuration of how that man moved through a room, the configuration had changed.It was small things first. The way Caden positioned himself at morning drills, alw
CADENHe had kissed her once before.She'd been barely conscious, the kiss lasting only seconds before sleep claimed her, and he'd sat in that chair by her window for the rest of the night, with the weight of what those seconds had done to him and no idea whatsoever what to do about it.It was noth
CADENHe got her to the senior block in four minutes.The inner room he had been using since his first year. Stone-walled, separate from the main dormitory corridors, accessible through the library reference section. Nobody came here without being brought here. He had used it for planning, for meet







