LOGINI’ve always lived a quiet, ordinary life. School, long shifts at a small diner, and a grandmother who raised me without ever really talking about my past. No parents. No answers. Just a life I learned not to question too deeply. Until the day she called me. Her voice wasn’t normal. It was shaken, breathless, like she was forcing herself to stay calm while everything around her was falling apart. And all she said was simple: Don’t come home. I didn’t understand it. I still don’t fully understand why I didn’t listen. But I went anyway. And after that, everything started to change. People I didn’t know began showing up in places they shouldn’t have been. Small moments started feeling wrong in ways I couldn’t explain. Like something I couldn’t see was slowly closing in around me. Then I realized it wasn’t random. It was aimed. At me. And by the time I tried to make sense of it, I was already too deep in something I was never meant to stumble into. Now I’m caught in a situation I don’t understand, surrounded by silence, half-truths, and people who act like they already know more about me than I know about myself. And the worst part? My grandmother wasn’t just scared for nothing. She knew something was coming. And somehow… it still found me.
View MoreMira's POVThe howl rolled across the territory like a wave, rising from one side of the mountain before another answered somewhere farther away. By the time the third joined in, the sound had wrapped itself around the entire pack house. Every hair on my arms stood up.I forgot about the door. I forgot about Rowan standing a few feet away. I couldn't even look at him because my eyes were fixed on my wrist.The silver lines hadn't disappeared. They rested beneath my skin like they had always been there, faint but unmistakable, curving around my wrist before disappearing beneath the sleeve of my sweater. If I hadn't watched them appear with my own eyes, I would've convinced myself I'd imagined the whole thing.I rubbed at them with my thumb. Nothing happened."They're still there," I whispered."I can see that."His voice was calm, but it didn't sound normal. Rowan always spoke like someone who expected people to listen. Tonight there was something else mixed in with it, something caref
Rowan's pov "You're know," she said "You're making me nervous." "How?" "You keep standing there like you're about to interrogate me." "I don't interrogate people." She stared at me for a second before bursting into laughter. I frowned. "What?" "You cannot be serious." "I am." "You questioned me for twenty minutes the first day I got here." "I was gathering information." "That is the longest way anyone has ever said interrogation." A reluctant smile tugged at the corner of my mouth before I caught it. Unfortunately, she caught it too. "...Did you just smile?" "I didn't." "You absolutely did." "You imagined it." She pointed at me triumphantly. "There! You did it again." "I think you're tired." "I think you're in denial."I should have ended the conversation right there. Instead, I pulled out the chair beside the window and sat down. She looked entirely too pleased with herself. "You know what's funny?" she asked. "I'm sure you're about to tell me." "I used to think you were terrifyi
Rowan's POVThe message stayed exactly where it was no matter how many times I looked away. Whoever had carved it into the wall hadn't rushed the job. Every letter was clean and deliberate, almost too neat, as if they wanted to make sure I read every word. She belongs to us. I let out a slow breath and stepped closer. Stone dust still covered the floor beneath the carving. I crouched, rubbed a little between my fingers, then scanned the room again. Nothing else had been touched. The desk was exactly where I'd left it. My weapons still hung beside the fireplace, and even the glass I'd abandoned near the window hadn't been moved. Whoever had entered my room hadn't come looking for information. They'd come to make sure I saw those four words.Three steady knocks sounded at the door. Not hurried. Not hesitant. Familiar. "Come in." Elias walked in without waiting, just as he always had. He'd been doing that since we were teenagers, long before either of us carried titles that demanded resp
Rowan's POVThe passage could wait.Mira clearly thought otherwise.She stood in front of the hidden opening wearing the same expression she'd had since the day I bought her at the auction—the one that usually appeared right before she ignored every ounce of common sense and somehow made my day far more complicated than it needed to be. I already knew what she was thinking, and the worst part was that she knew I knew."Don't even start," I said.She folded her arms without a hint of guilt. "I haven't said anything.""You don't need to."The corner of her mouth lifted. That tiny smile was all the confirmation I needed, and for some reason it made her look entirely too pleased with herself. Behind her, the hidden passage sat in complete silence. The shelf had slid back into place, the strange glow had vanished, and if I hadn't seen everything with my own eyes, I might have convinced myself none of it had happened. Unfortunately, it had happened. That was exactly why I wasn't letting her
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.