LOGINNEAH
The sound of screeching tires. Metal folding like paper. Glass exploding everywhere. My body flying forward but my hands grabbing nothing but air. Then impact. Hard and sudden and final.
I jolted up in bed gasping for air. My chest was heaving and my shirt was soaked through with sweat. The room was dark. My room. I was in my room. I was safe.
But I could still smell it. Burned rubber and gasoline and something metallic that I knew was blood but could never say out loud. The smell lived in my nose like it had moved in permanently. Three years and it hadn't faded one bit.
My door flew open and Caleb was there before I could even catch my breath. He didn't say a word. He never did. He just climbed under my blanket, pulled me against his chest, and held me. His heartbeat was steady under my ear. His scent was familiar and warm, like pine and something sweet that I could never name. My breathing slowed. The smell of the crash faded. My eyes got heavy.
This was our routine. Every night. Same nightmare, same scream, same rescue. I hated that he had to do this. I hated that I needed it even more.
By morning the nightmare had loosened its grip enough for me to function. I dragged myself downstairs still half asleep and dropped into my seat at the kitchen island.
"Another rough night, sweetheart?" Aunt Diane set a plate in front of me loaded with eggs, bacon, toast and fruit. She asked like she didn't hear me screaming from across the house. I loved her for that. She always gave me the choice to talk about it instead of forcing me.
"Yeah. Getting worse actually. I don't know why." I shoved a forkful of eggs in my mouth so I didn't have to say more.
Diane and Marcus didn't have to take me in. When my parents died, every blood relative I had found a reason to say no. Too young to live alone. Too old to raise. Too expensive. Too much trouble. Diane didn't even hesitate. She was at the hospital before the doctors finished telling me my parents were gone. She held me while I screamed and she signed every paper they put in front of her and she brought me here.
I owed her everything. So I swallowed my moody teenager impulses and gave her a smile that said I was fine even though we both knew I wasn't.
"You ready or what?" Caleb's voice echoed from somewhere in the house. Loud and dramatic as always.
"Almost. Your mom is trying to feed me enough food for a small army. I can't just leave it."
He appeared in the doorway already dressed with his backpack slung over one shoulder and a piece of toast hanging from his mouth. "Mom, she's human. She doesn't burn calories like I do. You're going to have to roll her to school."
"Did you just call me fat?" I grabbed the closest thing to me, which was a strawberry, and threw it at his head. He caught it without even looking. Stupid werewolf reflexes.
"I'm saying you're well fed. There's a difference." He grinned at me with that annoyingly perfect smile. I couldn't deny that my best friend was good looking. All the wolves here were. It had to be genetic. Caleb had dark brown hair that always looked messy on purpose, warm hazel eyes that could charm anyone, and a body that screamed future Alpha. He was over six feet tall and built like he was carved from stone.
But I had never once felt anything romantic toward him. He was my brother. My twin in every way the universe would allow. The idea of us being anything more made both of us want to throw up.
"Your fan club is going to be waiting at school," I said as we headed for his car. A big black truck that growled when he started it. Boys and their toys.
"Don't remind me." He groaned.
The fan club was a group of girls who had been chasing Caleb since he turned eighteen and came of age to find his mate. None of them were his mate. They all knew it. They didn't care. And most of them hated me because I lived with him, ate with him, rode to school with him, and apparently that meant I was sleeping with him.
I wasn't. Never had. Never would. But rumors don't need truth to survive in a pack full of bored teenagers with super hearing.
The worst part was the insults had gotten meaner lately. Dead parents. Being human. Being beneath them. All fair game apparently. I never told Diane about the worst of it. She would burn this school to the ground and I didn't need anyone fighting my battles for me.
We pulled into his parking spot and sure enough, the welcome committee was already there. A cluster of girls in too tight clothes and too sweet smiles, all angled toward the driver's side like magnets.
"Showtime," I muttered.
"Shut up." He took a deep breath and got out.
I had to physically push through the crowd to get past them. One of them, Janelle, made sure to bump my shoulder hard enough to knock my bag off. I picked it up without looking at her. Not worth it. Not today.
Caleb didn't fight them off for me. He knew better. If he stepped in it would just make things worse. He just made sure they didn't actually block my path or put their hands on me in any real way. It was a system we had worked out over the last two years.
"Let's go, Neah. The guys are waiting." He threw his arm around my neck and pulled me away from the crowd. "Seriously, what am I going to do without you when you leave for college? Who's going to protect me from them?"
"That's your mate's job. Find her already so I can retire."
He laughed but it didn't reach his eyes. We had this conversation a hundred times. He didn't want me to leave. I didn't want to talk about it anymore.
The guys were waiting by the main entrance. And by guys I mean three of the best looking men I have ever seen in my life, standing in a row like they were posing for a magazine cover they didn't know about.
Shane spotted us first and his whole face lit up.
"Neah! Looking amazing as always. I swear you get prettier every time I see you."
"Shane, you saw me yesterday at training when I almost broke your nose."
"That was pretty too." He winked.
Before I could respond, Miles grabbed my bag from my shoulder and slung it over his own. Theo just nodded at me, which was basically a full love confession from him.
We walked into school together. Our little group. My found family.
I didn't know it then, but it was the last normal morning we would ever have.
Because somewhere across three territories, an Alpha I had never met was about to make a decision that would drag me into a world I wasn't ready for.
And nothing, not my training, not my plans, not even Caleb, would be able to stop what was coming.
DAY ONE — NEAH**I stand in the clearing with Aldara.Three days to master power that took ancient Lunas decades to understand.No pressure."Show me projection," Aldara says. "Maximum range."I focus. Let the golden energy build. Then release it in a directed wave.The light shoots across the forest. Over trees. Through clearings. Miles and miles of concentrated life force.At the edge of Iron Valley territory, flowers bloom. Injured deer heal. A dying tree straightens and grows new leaves.Three miles. I just projected healing three miles away."Good," Aldara says. Not impressed. Analytical. "Now simultaneous targets. Heal multiple subjects at once."She gestures to ten wolves scattered across the training ground. All carrying minor injuries from sparring.I reach out. Not with my hands. With my awareness. The new ability the stone gave me.I can see them. Really see them. Not just bodies. Th
LIAMI can't breathe.Neah emerges from the tunnel and my breath stops completely.She looks like herself. Same face. Same build. Same stance.But more.Golden veins trace patterns across her arms. Glowing faintly beneath her skin like living circuitry. Her eyes are pure liquid gold. Not flickering. Not shifting. Completely transformed.When she moves, it's with a grace that's almost otherworldly. Fluid. Precise. Like gravity affects her differently now.Kain goes silent inside my mind. Then drops to his belly. Not in submission. In reverence.Our mate is no longer wolf or human or hybrid.She's something else entirely.Neah walks toward me. Each step causes flowers to bloom where her feet touch the ground. The air shimmers around her. Life force radiating in waves I can feel even in human form.She stops three feet away. Studies my face."I'm still me," she says. Voice layered. Multiple tones speaki
NEAHDawn breaks over Iron Valley.I stand at the entrance to the tunnel. Fifty feet below, the lunar stone waits.Behind me, everyone I love has gathered. Silent. Watching.Liam stands closest. His hand in mine. The bond thrumming between us. Fear and love and trust all tangled together.Caleb is beside him. Vanessa's hand on his shoulder. My twin. My brother. Ready to follow me into hell if I asked.Theo, Shane, and Miles stand in a line. My warriors. My family. Theo has the earpiece ready. Shane's trying to smile. Miles holds the leather cord he braided for Caleb's baby.Micah and Sera flank the entrance. Gold eyes glowing faintly. My fellow hybrids. My foundation. They know what I'm about to face better than anyone.Elena and Diane stand together. Mother and surrogate mother. Both crying. Both trying to hide it.Aldara waits at the tunnel entrance. Ancient. Powerful. The guide who brought me this far."Are you
LIAM---I'm waiting when Neah comes back to our room.She's been gone for hours. Making peace with everyone on her list. Healing wounds. Mending fractures.I felt it all through the bond. The grief with Diane. The love with Elena. The brotherhood with Caleb. The loyalty with the boys.Every conversation another piece of armor stripped away. Every truth another step toward wholeness.Now it's my turn.She closes the door behind her. Leans against it. Exhausted but lighter somehow."Hey," she says."Hey yourself.""I saved you for last.""I noticed.""Not because you're least important. Because you're the most. And I needed to get the rest out of the way before I could do this right."She crosses the room. Sits beside me on the bed. Takes my hand."We need to talk," she says."I know.""About tomorrow. About the bonding. About what comes after."I nod. Can't speak. T
NEAHI find them in the common room.Shane, Miles, and Theo. My original circle. The warriors who became brothers. The boys who saw a grieving human girl three years ago and decided she was worth protecting.They're playing cards. Some game with complicated rules that Shane keeps changing whenever he's losing."That's not how this works," Miles says patiently."It's exactly how this works. House rules.""Your house rules change every hand.""Adaptation is key to survival."Theo just shakes his head. Doesn't argue. Knows it's pointless.I stand in the doorway watching them. Memorizing. Just in case tomorrow doesn't go the way I hope.Theo notices me first. Always does. "Neah."The other two look up immediately."Hey," I say. "Can I join?""Always," Shane says. Grins. "Fair warning though. I'm winning.""You're cheating," Miles corrects."Semantics."I sit. They deal me in.
NEAHI find Caleb at the training building.Our place. Where we've sparred and argued and cried and laughed since I was fifteen and he took it upon himself to teach me how to fight like a wolf even though I'd never shift.He's not alone. Vanessa stands beside him. Hand in his. United front.Good. That's good. Because we need to do this right."Hey," I say."Hey yourself." Caleb gestures to the mats. "Want to sit?""Yeah."We settle on the floor. Cross-legged. The way we used to when we needed to talk about something serious.Vanessa sits beside Caleb. Close but not crowding. She's learning. So am I."I need to say something," I start. "To both of you. Before tomorrow. Before everything changes.""Okay," Caleb says.I look at Vanessa first. "I was wrong. When you first arrived. I assumed the worst. Assumed you were trying to replace me. Assumed Caleb would forget about me the moment he found his mate. That wasn't fair to you."Vanessa's eyes widen slightly. "Neah—""Let me finish. You
LIAMI stand in the war room staring at Nathan Price's file.Every piece of intelligence we have paints the same picture. A brilliant scientist unraveling at the seams. A man who spent twenty years creating something extraordinary, only to watch it exceed his control.And now he wants it for himsel
NEAH"Let him go," I say.Liam's head snaps toward me. "Absolutely not.""We let him walk. No one dies. We regroup and find another way."Vance's smile is cold. Victorious. "Smart girl.""I'm not done talking." I take a step closer. The golden light pulses in my hands. "You walk out of here. You re
THEOThe figure in the doorway steps into the light.Jax.Relief floods through me. Not the traitor. Just Liam's third-in-command checking on the war room situation."You look like you've seen a g
NEAHI wake up in a medical tent.The smell hits me first. Antiseptic. Blood. Sweat. Pain. I can smell all of it. Distinguish between fresh wounds and healing ones. Between wolf blood and human blood.My senses are sh







