LOGINA week had passed and I was still waiting for it to feel real.
That was the thing about grief that nobody warned you about. It didn't arrive all at once like a wave you could brace for. It came in small, ordinary moments. The way I reached for my phone every morning before I was fully awake, already dialing her number before I remembered. The way I would think of something funny and turn to text her and then remember there was no one to recieve the text anymore. The way silence in a room had started to feel like a presence instead of an absence. Elira was gone. Th only family I had left, was gone. The man on the phone had been careful with his words. A welfare officer from Shadowfang he said. They had received a report. They found her at the cottage. He was very sorry. I didn't hear much after that because Iris had taken the phone from my hand at some point and I had let her. Lucian drove us to Elenora Creek himself. I remembered the way he held my hand the entire drive, not saying anything, just keeping his fingers locked around mine like he could hold me together through his palm. The cottage looked exactly the way it always looked from the outside, small and quiet and surrounded by the kind of stillness that only existed this far from the human world. But inside it was different. The kind of different that you felt before you saw it. He stayed with us through the night. He stayed through the burial rights the next day. He made calls and handled things and spoke in low tones to people I didn't know while Iris sat with me on the floor of my aunt's bedroom and I went through her things with hands that wouldn't stop trembling. He was there in the morning after. Then his phone rang and his face did something complicated and he came to find me where I was sitting on the porch steps with a cup of tea gone cold in my hands. "There's a funeral." he said. "The Alpha King of Blackwater. I have to go." I looked up at him. "How long?" "A few days. Maybe more." He crouched down in front of me so we were level. His eyes were steady on mine the way they always were when he needed me to believe something. "I'm coming back. I need you to hear that." "Okay." I said. "Lena." "I heard you, Lucian. I know." Two gruesome days later, I saw his truck pull up in the track that was too big for the narrow read leading to the cottage. I thought he was finally back to take us to school. But it wasn't him. It was Jake, his cousin hanging out the window with a grin that was doing a lot of heavy lifting. "Ladies." he said. "Your chario awaits” I looked behind him like Lucian might be in the passenger seat. He wasn't. Jake's grin softened just slightly. "He got caught up." he said. "He asked me to make sure you got back safe." I nodded and picked up my bag. That had been a week ago. I was sitting on my bedroom floor with my back against the bed and my knees pulled to my chest, which had become my default position for existing lately. I was back at the house I shared with Iris, I could stay ovevat Lucian's alone. The Elenora history book was on the floor in front of me. I had taken it from the cottage the day we cleared out Elira's things, tucked it under my arm without fully deciding what to do with it, and it had been sitting on my bedroom floor in the same spot I kept it since we returned. I hadn't opened it. I didn't know why exactly. Or maybe I did and I just wasn't ready to say it out loud. My aunt's last words to me were about that book and about Alphas and about running out of time and some part of me understood that opening it meant letting all of that in. It meant making it real in a way that her death hadn't fully made real yet. And i wasn't ready for that yet. So it sat there. And I sat here staring at it like it was the cause of my problems. It probably is. A knock at my door pulled me up. "It's open." I called. Jake came in with two paper bags and the energy of a golden retriever who had just been let off a leash. He looked around my room, clocked the state of it, clocked the state of me, and shook his head like he wasn't proud of the energy. He set the bags down on my desk and started pulling out containers. "Rivel found this place that does jollof rice that tastes like somebody's grandmother made it." he said. "I got you two portions because you look like you haven't eaten since last Tuesday." "I've been eating." I said. "Cereal doesn't count." I almost smiled. That was the thing about Jake. He made almost smiling feel possible even on the days when nothing else did. He had been showing up like this every other day since he brought us back from the creek, always with food, always with that grin that was half performance and half genuine warmth, and never once pushing me to talk about anything I wasn't ready for. "Has he called?" I asked. Jake paused for just a second before he kept unpacking. "He's dealing with a lot back home." "That's not what I asked." He looked at me then. Something moved across his face that was more complicated than his usual easy expression. "He'll come back, Lena." "Everyone keeps saying that." I said. "Nobody's explaining why he isn't already here." Jake didn't have an answer for that. He handed me a container of rice instead and sat on the floor beside me the way someone sits when they're planning to stay a while. Iris arrived twenty minutes later with the righteous energy of a woman who had been holding her anger at a precise simmer for seven days and was doing the bare minimum to keep it from boiling over. She came in, looked at Jake, looked at me, looked at the food, and sat down. "Has he called?" she asked. "Jake already answered that question." "Jake is too nice." She picked up a fork. "I want to claw his eyes out." "Iris." Jake said. "I'm being calm." she said. "This is me being very, very calm, Jake. You should see me when I'm not calm." Jake looked at me sideways. I looked back at him and we shared a knowing look. If Iris was left to her devices, she would certainly be crawling out people's eyes. Iris pointed her fork in the general direction of the history book on the floor. "Are you going to open that?" "Not today." “What book?” Jake asked looking between Iris and I. "Lena—" "Not today, Iris." I huffed hoping that was enough to shut down the conversation. She pressed her lips together and let it go. That was the other thing about Iris. She pushed exactly as far as she knew she could and then she stopped, and she never made me feel guilty for where the line was. She was furious on my behalf and gentle with me at the same time and I didn't know how she managed both but I was grateful for it every single day. And Jake knew it was too personal to pry. We ate on the floor, the three of us, Jake telling a story about Rivel getting lost on campus that was probably forty percent true and a hundred percent entertaining. I laughed twice. Real laughs, the kind that I had no luxury luxury for recently. Later, after Jake left and Iris was washing the containers in my kitchen sink, I looked at the book again. I pressed my hand flat against my stomach the way I had been doing more often lately. Two things I didn't know how to carry. And only one person I wanted to talk to about either of them. He had promised he would come back. I was still waiting. But i was getting really angry and he had a lot of explaining to do.Lena"You have to tell him." Iris said it like a command, not a suggestion."But what if—""No what ifs." She cut me off before the fear could take hold completely. "Tell him first. If it comes down to it, we reach out to your father."My whole body went cold at the mention of him. I shook my head hard."That man wanted nothing to do with me once his spell broke." I snapped, pushing up off the bed to pace the room. "I want nothing to do with him."How could she even bring that up.Iris stood and followed me. "He is the—""I don't care who he is. I don't care what his status is. I don't need him." I said it firmly, but something in the way she held herself made me stop. "I don't need him. Right?"Iris took my hands and looked everywhere except directly at me. "This could mean nothing. But the first time we were attacked, and the day we got followed leaving the library, you felt it before I did. Both times. Your reaction was what made me notice, the way your whole body went stiff before
Lena"Why are you crying, Lena?" Iris rushed to my side and dropped to the floor beside me, her face tight with concern.I turned away and wiped my eyes but it did nothing. She had already seen the mess of me."You didn't knock." I said, grasping for anything else to talk about. "What if I wasn't dressed."She looked at me like I had grown horns. "I have seen you in your baby suit. I've watched you throw up on yourself. I undressed you and bathed you after your aunt died because you refused to clean up after yourself for three days." All trace of her usual playfulness was gone. "Don't test me. Why are you crying?"My head pounded with everything crashing through it at once. I clenched my teeth trying to hold it back and lost the battle anyway."I don't know." I said, voice cracking, arms flailing. "I'm just tired and confused and scared.""You still haven't told Lucian?" Her face fell when I nodded. "What's stopping you?""A lot happened today, Iris.""That should have been the first
IrisI left Jake with the guards in the living room and headed toward the kitchen.He was busy setting up a protected route back to the pack in case we needed to leave in a hurry, brows furrowed in concentration as he traced lines across a map spread over the table. A serious Jake wasn't something I saw often and I didn't want to break it.I peeked into the kitchen and found Rivel flipping pancakes and steak in two different pans at once. His back was to me. I moved in as quietly as I could and watched his shoulders straighten anyway.He already knew I was there.I let out a sigh and rounded the counter to stand a careful distance from him. "Someone can't even sneak up on you.""That would be risky and negligent of me." He didn't even glance over.I looked around the kitchen. Everything was spotless. No flour on the counter, no spilled milk, nothing out of place. "I didn't know you could cook."He turned to me then, eyes bored, like he genuinely didn't care whether I stayed or left. "
LenaI froze for half a second.In my bid to shake it off and act normal I lost my footing completely and tripped over my own leg. My toe hit the ground first and I hissed.Lucian caught me before I finished falling. His hands found my waist and he pulled me into his side, face full of concern, and before I could protest he lifted me bridal style. I laughed and wrapped my arms around his neck and hid my face against his skin. The rest of them didn't catch it. Or if they did they said nothing.He carried me through the front door and up the stairs, Jake whistling from somewhere behind us, and shouldered open the door to his room. He set me on the bed with a gentleness that made me feel like something that could shatter."You don't have to be that gentle with me." I said. "I won't break."He looked at me, hands still holding mine, thumbs drawing slow circles across my knuckles. "I'll always be gentle with you, Icy." His voice was quiet. "And I'll never let you break. Ever."I smiled and
Lena"Lucian. Lucian, are you alright?"I dragged myself back to him, heart in my throat. Iris was beside me doing the same. But what we found made us both stop.He was crouching on the ground. Naked. And smiling.Iris turned around immediately.I scoffed, pushing myself to my feet. "Lucian, goodness. You scared me." I said, trying and failing not to laugh at his situation. He was still covered in blood. "Are you hurt?"His lips pulled up slowly. "It would take a lot more than five rogue wolves to put me down, Icy."He glanced past me at the wolf that had gone down first, the one he had dropped at the start of everything. Iris was already crouching beside it, two fingers to its neck.I looked back at Lucian. His shoulder wound was closing on its own, the skin knitting back together right in front of my eyes. "So what are we going to do with you?"He shrugged and stood, pulling me firmly in front of him.Iris approached us. She had a chain wrapped around the unconscious wolf's legs tha
Lena"We've got company." Lucian said and I held my breath.Five figures stepped out from the tree line.They were cloaked in black and they moved toward us in slow, coordinated steps, each one broad and radiating something so wrong that my hand went to my stomach before I could think about it. Their red eyes were fixed on me. All of them. Like Lucian wasn't even standing there.I grabbed his shoulder. "We have to run."He didn't move."Ice." My voice came out desperate. They were closer now, cutting the distance between us in unhurried strides. "Lucian, come on. What are you doing?"He turned to me for just a second and I saw his eyes. They were glowing, steady and fierce, and that was all I needed to understand. An Alpha wolf doesn't run.He pushed me gently backward and stepped fully in front of me. "Go behind the tree, Lena. Don't look."The command in his voice moved my feet before my brain caught up.One of the men broke from the group and started toward me. Lucian caught him by
Two months passed.Two months of constant fear and paranoia. Two months of sleeping with one eye open the way Elira used to, checking locks she had never thought about before, watching doorways and windows and the faces of people she didn't recognise on campus. Two months of hiding my bump under cl
Something was coming.Something bad.Iris moved to the window before I could process what was happening. She looked out once, then pulled it shut and locked it with a quiet click that felt louder than it should have.Then we heard it.The living room door. Someone on the other side of it, working t
Iris came back an hour after Lucian left.I heard her key in the lock and didn't look up from the book. I was on my third read of my grandmother's entry, turning the same sentences over and over the way you turn a stone in your hand, feeling for edges. The twins detail refused to sit still in my mi
I stood under the shower until the water ran cold. It was the only thing that helped. The heat first, as hot as I could stand it, then the slow drop to cold that forced my body to feel something other than the weight sitting in my chest. I stood there until my fingers pruned and my breathing evene







