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What the weekend holds

Author: JJ2WRITES
last update publish date: 2026-06-26 09:42:20

šŸŒ‘ELARAšŸŒ‘

Saturday arrived like a small mercy.

Elara was up before the sun, moving through the quiet house with the practiced efficiency of someone who had learned early that mornings belonged to work. Her parents were already gone by the time she came downstairs ,both worked weekends, which meant the house was hers, and the house being hers meant the responsibilities were too.

She cleaned. She cooked. She moved from room to room with her mind carefully blank, which was the only way she knew how to get through tasks when her thoughts were trying to pull her somewhere she didn't want to go.

It worked, mostly.

Then she sat down with her tea and it stopped working.

The week replayed itself without her permission, Julie's voice carrying across the classroom, Aiden's face when he'd looked at her like she was a problem he was bored of, the floor of the Business Administration block, cold and hard beneath her palms. The sound of laughter that had nothing kind in it.

She wrapped both hands around her mug.

The worst part, she had decided, was not the humiliation itself. It was what came after the way people she had never spoken to suddenly had opinions about her. The way she had become a story without ever agreeing to be one.

She stared out the kitchen window. The neighborhood outside was unhurried and indifferent, children playing somewhere in the distance, birds on the wires, the world moving without any particular awareness that her week had been what it had been.

She envied that.

Maybe by Monday it'll be something else, she told herself. College students move on. They always find something new.

She almost believed it.

She put down her mug, opened her laptop, and went back to work. It was easier than thinking. It was almost always easier than thinking.

She told herself things would settle.

She was wrong.

šŸŒ‘ LUCIAN šŸŒ‘

Lucian spent Saturday the way he spent most difficult things in motion.

He ran the eastern perimeter of pack territory at dawn, long after the scouts had rotated out, when the forest was dark and quiet and the only sound was his own breathing and the soft impact of his feet against the earth. He ran until the restlessness wore itself down to something manageable. Then he went home, showered, and sat at his desk in front of books he didn't read.

The scent was still there. In his memory, vivid and specific, not frightening, not unpleasant, just hers, unmistakable in the way of things that had already lodged themselves somewhere permanent.

His wolf stirred every time he came close to thinking about it directly.

He had been avoiding thinking about it directly.

By evening he gave up pretending to work and went downstairs, where he found his mother in the sitting room with a book open in her lap and a glass of wine on the table beside her. Sera Voss looked up when he entered, read his face the way she always had quietly, without making a performance of it and closed her book.

"Sit down," she said.

He sat.

For a moment neither of them spoke. The fire in the hearth was low. Outside, wind moved through the old trees that lined the estate grounds, a sound Lucian had grown up with and found, on most nights, settling.

Not tonight.

"Something is bothering you," his mother said. Not a question.

"I'm fine."

She gave him the look she had perfected over twenty years of raising him. The one that said I know exactly what fine sounds like and that isn't it.

He exhaled.

"There's a girl."

His mother's expression didn't change, but something in her eyes shifted with careful attention, the kind she gave things that mattered.

"At University A," he continued. "Human."

A brief pause.

"And?"

"My wolf recognizes her." The words came out flat, clinical, like if he said it without inflection it would sound less significant than it was. "Her scent. Her fear. I feel it before I'm anywhere near her."

Sera was quiet for a long moment.

"How long?"

"A week."

She looked at him steadily. "Have you spoken to her?"

"No."

"Does she know you exist?"

"No." He paused. "Not in any meaningful way."

His mother picked up her wine glass, turned it slowly in her hands without drinking from it. "Your father felt it with me from a distance," she said. "Before we had ever exchanged a single word. He told me afterward it was like knowing something before you had any reason to know it."

Lucian said nothing.

"I'm not telling you what it means," she added. "I'm telling you what it can feel like."

He looked at the fire.

"Pack law"

"Pack law is your father's domain," she said simply. "What I'm asking is what you feel."

The question sat between them, honest and uncomfortable.

What he felt was this: the pull. The specific, unasked-for awareness of her that had followed him for a week and showed no sign of fading. The anger that had moved through him, sharp and immediate, when he had seen her on that classroom floor. The way his wolf had gone quiet  not absent, just still when he'd stood near her in the gardens.

None of it was convenient.

None of it was something he had chosen.

"I don't know what to do with it," he said finally. It cost him something to admit that.

His mother set down her glass.

"For now?" She met his eyes. "Keep her safe. The rest will come when it comes."

Simple. Practical. No promises about how it would go.

He nodded once.

She picked up her book again, which was her way of saying the conversation was over but she was still there, still present, still in the room with him.

He stayed by the fire for a long time after that.

He didn't have answers. But the thing sitting in his chest had loosened slightly, the way problems do when someone else knows about them.

Outside, the wind moved through the trees.

He thought about a girl who didn't know he existed.

And he made himself a quiet promise: whatever was coming, she would not face it unprotected. Not while he could prevent it.

That, at least, he was certain of.

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