LOGIN
My father did not come to collect me from the airport.
Neither did my sister. After seven years away from Black Moon Ridge, I should have expected that. Still, as the taxi pulled away and left me standing alone outside the black iron gates with one suitcase and a heart full of stupid hope, something inside me cracked. Just a little. Just enough to remind me why I had stopped hoping in the first place. The gates loomed above me, twisted metal shaped into wolves and crescent moons. Beyond them, the pack road curved through thick pine forest toward the house I had once called home. Black Moon Ridge. The place where I was born. The place I was sent away from. The place that never asked me to come back. I stepped through the open gates. The air smelled of rain, pine, damp earth and wolf. My wolf stirred faintly beneath my skin, weak and restless, like she had been asleep for too long. I was three weeks from my eighteenth birthday and still had not shifted. Victor Vale called it a delay. Vivian called it unfortunate. Bianca Mercer had once called it tragic when she thought I could not hear her. One more family disappointment to add to the list. A sleek black car rolled up behind me. I moved aside, expecting it to pass. Instead, it slowed. The back window lowered, and Vivian Vale looked out. My older sister was only sixteen months older than me, but she had always seemed years ahead. She shifted first. Trained first. Sat beside Ezra Blackthorn first. Learned how to smile like a Luna before I had even learned how to stop flinching when Father said my name. She was beautiful in the way girls in stories were beautiful. Effortless. Polished. Untouchable. “Aurora,” she said. One word, and suddenly I was thirteen again. The awkward little sister. The quiet one. The disappointing one. “Vivian,” I said. Her gaze swept over my wrinkled cardigan, my travel-creased skirt, my loose braid and my single suitcase. “You should have told us your flight changed. Someone would have collected you.” “I sent the details to Father’s office.” Vivian’s smile stayed exactly where it was. “Well, you know how busy Father is.” Yes. I knew. Victor Vale was always busy when it came to me. A second face appeared beside Vivian’s shoulder. Bianca Mercer. Pretty, elegant, and cruel in the quiet way that never left bruises anyone could see. “Back from boarding school at last,” Bianca said. “How sweet.” I tightened my grip on my suitcase. “Bianca.” Her eyes dropped. “Just the one bag?” “The rest is coming.” “Of course.” The way she said it made my cheeks burn. Vivian leaned closer to the window. “We’re late for my Luna preparation meeting, but I’ll see you at dinner.” My stomach tightened. “Dinner?” Her smile brightened. “Yes. Ezra will be there.” Ezra. The name hit harder than it should have. Ezra Blackthorn. Nineteen, almost twenty. Alpha heir of Black Moon Ridge. Vivian’s boyfriend since they were children. The boy the whole pack already treated like their future Alpha. The boy everyone said would one day make my sister Luna. I had not seen him in seven years. I did not know why hearing his name made my pulse stumble. Vivian noticed. Of course she did. Her eyes narrowed for half a second before the window slid back up. The car drove away, leaving dust in my face and silence in my chest. By the time I reached the pack house, my palm ached from dragging my suitcase. Two guards stood at the doors. One stared at me for a moment too long, as if trying to remember where he had seen me before. I kept my head down and walked past him. Inside, the entrance hall smelled of polished wood, smoke, old stone and pack. It should have comforted me. Instead, it felt like walking into a room where everyone had already decided I did not belong. “Aurora.” I stopped. Victor Vale stood at the base of the staircase. My father. The Beta of Black Moon Ridge. Second only to the Alpha himself. He looked the same as he had the day he sent me away. Tall, cold, perfectly dressed, with silver beginning to thread through his dark hair. His eyes moved over me with the kind of disappointment that did not need words. I lowered my gaze automatically. “Father.” “You’re late.” Not welcome home. Not you’ve grown. Not I missed you. Just late. “My connecting flight was delayed,” I said. “You were expected before lunch.” “I’m sorry.” The apology slipped out before I could stop it. Victor’s mouth tightened. “You will attend dinner tonight. You will dress appropriately. You will smile when spoken to. And you will not make Vivian’s night about you.” My chest tightened. “I wasn’t planning to.” His eyes hardened. “You rarely plan trouble, Aurora. Yet somehow it finds you.” Before I could answer, the front doors opened behind me. The entire hall changed. Every wolf went still. Power rolled through the room, deep and commanding, raising the hair along my arms. Alpha blood. My breath caught before I even turned. Ezra Blackthorn stepped inside. For a moment, all I could do was stare. He was not the boy I remembered. He was taller now. Broader. Dark hair wind-tossed, jaw sharp, grey eyes unreadable. He carried himself like someone already used to being obeyed, like the pack had been carved into his bones and he had never once been allowed to put it down. Future Alpha. Vivian’s Alpha. His gaze found Victor first. Then me. Ezra stopped. It was barely anything. A pause. A tightened jaw. A flash of something wild in his eyes. But my body noticed. Worse, something inside me noticed. My wolf stirred beneath my skin, sharper than she ever had before. Not awake. Not shifted. But close enough to make my knees weaken. Then his scent reached me. Not the way I remembered. When we were children, Ezra had smelled like forest air, clean soap and the leather training gloves he never remembered to put away. Now he smelled different. Cedar smoke. Storm rain. Dark earth after midnight. Something warm and dangerous threaded underneath it, something that made my chest ache and my fingers curl around my suitcase handle. I took one step back. Ezra’s nostrils flared. His eyes darkened. Across the hall, Vivian appeared in the sitting room doorway, Bianca at her side. “Ezra,” Vivian called, smiling like the name belonged to her. And it did. It had always belonged to her. Ezra was Vivian’s future. Vivian’s Alpha. The boy she had loved since they were children. So why was he looking at me like that? Why did the air between us suddenly feel too thin?Victor was already seated when I walked in.Of course he was.The meeting room was on the upper floor of the pack house, a long table of dark wood, high windows that let in the early grey light, and chairs arranged with the particular deliberateness of a man who understood that where people sat told you everything about what they believed.Victor sat at the head.Darius sat to his left with his hands folded on the table and his face arranged into that careful stillness I had stopped mistaking for neutrality.Maren sat beside Darius. She did not look at Victor when I entered. She looked at me.Two senior wolves I recognised but did not know well sat further down. The Beta pair, Luca had said. They watched me cross the room with expressions I could not fully read.Vivian was already seated on Victor's right.She did not look up when I came in.Ezra stood at the window.Not seated. Standing, with his back partially to the room and his arms loose at his sides, looking out at the ridge the
I did not sleep.I lay on top of the covers in the dark and stared at the ceiling and listened to the house settle around me and thought about three words written in black ink at the bottom of a page someone had tried to bury.Moonfall Alpha claim.My wolf turned the words over and over the way she turned over things that were already true and simply waiting to be confirmed.I had Alpha blood.I did not know how I knew that. There was no proof. Not yet. Just a transfer record and a sealed file and a name my wolf had recognised before my mind caught up.But I knew.The same way I knew the ridge. The same way I knew Ezra's wolf before I understood what that pull meant. The same way I had always known, somewhere beneath everything Victor had told me about myself, that the story he was telling was not the whole one.I was not just Liora's daughter.I was not just the girl with the disputed birth record and the blank where a father's name should have been.I was something Victor had been a
Ezra did not leave.That was the thing I kept coming back to as Luca disappeared around the corner and the corridor settled back into its particular brand of loaded silence.He had every reason to.Victor would be looking for him. Darius would want a conversation. The pack would be processing what they had witnessed and someone with authority needed to be visible and calm and in control of the narrative before it wrote itself.Ezra stayed.He leaned against the wall beside me, close enough that his shoulder almost touched mine, and looked at the far end of the corridor with an expression I had learned meant he was thinking through something he had not yet decided to say out loud.I let him think.The cold from the stone walls had settled into my bones somewhere around the time Victor had told me to step back and I had said no, and I was only now beginning to feel it properly. My hands were not entirely steady. I pressed them flat against my thighs and hoped he did not notice.He notic
He did not let go of my arm until we were three corridors from the hall.Then he did, and the absence of his hand was somehow louder than the noise we had left behind."Are you hurt?" he asked."You already asked me that.""You gave me a very unconvincing answer."I stopped walking.So did he.The corridor was empty, lit by candles burning low in their brackets, the kind of light that made everything look like it was happening at the edge of something. The sounds of the hall were distant now, muffled by stone and closed doors, and out here it was just the two of us and the cold and whatever had been building between us since the night I had walked back through Black Moon Ridge's gates."I am not hurt," I said.Ezra looked at me.Not the controlled, careful look he used in front of other people. The other one. The one I had started noticing and wished I could stop noticing because it made it considerably harder to think clearly."Victor is going to come for you," he said."I know.""No
Nobody moved.That was the first thing.A hall full of wolves, pack-bonded and ceremony-primed and standing in the presence of something none of them had words for yet, and not one of them moved.Then Victor did.He crossed the dais in three steps and placed himself between me and the stone with the controlled precision of a man who had been managing disasters quietly his entire life. His back was to the pack. His voice, when it came, was low enough that only those nearest the front would hear it."Step back, Aurora."My wolf did not even flinch.Neither did I."Step back," he said again. Still quiet. Still controlled. The voice that had always worked before, the one that carried the weight of seventeen years of being obeyed without question."No," I said.The word came out steadier than I expected.Victor's eyes moved over my face with the particular attention of someone recalculating.Behind him, the stone was still glowing.Not bright. Not violent. Just that deep, steady silver lig
The full moon rose before the ceremony did.I felt it before I saw it, the way I had started feeling most things since the ridge. A pressure behind my sternum, low and steady, like the tide pulling at something it had always known was there.My wolf had been restless all day.Not frightened.Hungry.The main hall had been arranged for the presentation. I had not seen it like this before, the long tables pushed back against the walls, the floor cleared, the old stone dais at the far end lit by candles arranged in the crescent formation I now recognised from the carved markers on the ridge. Black Moon Ridge did not do ceremony lightly. Everything here meant something. Everything here was old.I stood near the back of the gathered pack with Luca two steps to my left and tried to make myself small.It had always been easy before.Tonight it was not working.The pack pressed around me, familiar faces I had been slowly learning again since my return, and I felt their energy running high and







