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Author: AY WRITES
last update publish date: 2026-06-24 17:04:03

Killian's POV

The council chamber smelled like old wood and older decisions. I had been in this room more times than I could count — for formal hearings and pack announcements and the kind of deliberate, structured ceremony that keeps a social order from fraying at the edges by reminding everyone involved of their designated place within it. I knew the acoustics of it, the way the long table created a specific geography of authority with my father at its head and everyone else arranged in descending order of consequence. I knew the way certain voices carried in the stone space and certain voices got absorbed by it. I knew all of this with the familiarity of a person who has been inside a place since childhood and stopped seeing it clearly because of that familiarity.

Today I saw it very clearly. Today it felt like standing inside a building I had decided to dismantle.

"The shift was within the announced terms of the trial," Kaelen said. He was standing on the opposite side of the long table with both hands flat on its surface and his face arranged into the expression of a man who has prepared for this specific conversation and is moving through it according to a prepared plan. He was a tall man, the Beta — sharp-featured, composed with the particular kind of composure that is a sustained performance rather than a default state, the kind that requires maintenance. "The Prince announced no rules. Shifting is a natural and inherent ability of every wolf on these grounds. There is no violation of the trial's terms."

"There is a fundamental violation of the purpose and intention behind those terms," I said. My voice was level. I had made the decision on the climb back up from the ravine floor that I would maintain a level voice throughout this conversation, because the alternative was the thing that had come out of me at the bottom of the ravine and that was not a tool I wanted to use in a council chamber. Not yet. "Jace was not a registered participant in the trial. He was standing on a ledge above a competitor who was within twenty feet of the finish line. He shifted in mid-air and drove his wolf form into her chest from height." I let each of these facts occupy space separately, without rushing them. "These are not the actions of a concerned brother. They are the actions of someone who arrived at a specific location for a specific purpose."

"He was watching his sister—"

"He was waiting for her." I said this quietly and let it sit in the room for a moment before continuing. Around the table, six council members maintained the careful neutrality of people waiting to understand which direction a situation is going before they commit themselves to a position. This was normal. This was how the council had always operated. "He was in position before she reached that section of the climb. He did not climb down after her shift — he was already where he needed to be. And when she fell—" I stopped. Began again, more deliberately. "When she was pushed off that ledge and fell into the ravine below, Shadow Fang scouts collected her from the floor of that ravine within minutes. Scouts who had been positioned there before the trial horn ever sounded. Before any of us could have known she would be near the top of the rankings."

A silence moved through the room.

"You're suggesting premeditated coordination," said Elder Mads, from the far end of the table. He was somewhere north of eighty years old and had the quality of very old stone — not quick, but immovable once settled into a position. "Between a member of this pack's Beta household and an enemy pack."

"I'm stating that the timing of the Shadow Fang presence in that ravine is not consistent with coincidence," I said carefully. "Shadow Fang scouts do not pre-position at a Silver Moon trial by accident. They were told to be there. They were told that a specific person would be in that specific location at that specific time. The only way they could have known that Kaia would be in the top five — the only way they could have known she was worth taking rather than simply leaving — is if someone communicated that information to them." I held Mads's gaze and then, deliberately, moved my gaze to Kaelen's. "I intend to find out who."

The quality of the silence in the room changed after that. There are different silences in a council chamber. There is the silence of deliberation, the silence of shock, and the silence of people running calculations about what the information they have just been given means for their own position and their own safety. This one was predominantly the last kind.

Kaelen's jaw had tightened in a way that was small and controlled and told me considerably more than anything he had said since I walked into this room. "You are accusing the Beta's household," he said, his voice carrying a careful note of injury that I assessed as entirely performed, "of treason."

"I am stating that someone coordinated with an enemy pack," I said. "The investigation will determine who. What I am asking the council for right now is simple: I want Jace detained. Two guards with him at all times on pack grounds. I want his movements and communications for the past thirty days documented. And I want access to whatever intelligence records we have on Shadow Fang Northern Camp and their recent border activity."

My father had not spoken since I arrived. He had been sitting at the head of the table in the specific stillness of a man running many calculations simultaneously, watching the room and watching me with the expression of an Alpha who has not yet decided which version of what he is seeing he is going to respond to. Now he looked at me with something that was neither approval nor alarm but occupied a difficult, honest middle territory between them.

"The investigation proceeds," he said. The room adjusted to his voice the way it always adjusted to his voice — the reflexive reorientation of a group of wolves toward the dominant signal in the room. "Jace will remain on pack grounds under guard. His communications will be reviewed." He looked at Kaelen directly. "You will remain available for questioning as the investigation requires."

Kaelen inclined his head with precisely the degree of deference that communicates compliance while conceding as little dignity as possible. "Of course, Alpha."

The session ended. The council filed out with the purposeful efficiency of people who had things to think about in private. I stayed at the table. My father stayed.

When the room was empty except for the two of us, he looked at me with the expression of a man who has suspected something and is now having it confirmed in a form more concrete than he had anticipated.

"She is alive," he said. It was not quite a question and not quite a statement — it sat in the space between them, carrying the weight of something he needed to be true.

"As of when they took her," I said. "She was on her feet within twenty yards of the collection point — the drag marks shifted to footprints. Shadow Fang takes prisoners for leverage. She is alive." I paused. "She is at the Northern Camp. A day's march north-northwest. I know the route."

"You don't have my authorization to cross into Shadow Fang territory," my father said.

I nodded once.

"However." He said this word with a specific deliberateness, the deliberateness of a man saying two separate things at once and trusting the person across from him to hear both. "I cannot personally account for the movements of every individual on these grounds after nightfall. It is a large territory."

I looked at him. He looked back at me with the expression of a man who has made a decision he is not entirely comfortable with and has made it anyway because the alternative was worse.

"I understand," I said.

He stopped me at the door with just my name. Not a command. Just the word.

"Killian." A pause that had several things inside it — things that my father and I had never quite developed the language to say to each other directly. "Bring her back."

"Yes," I said.

I went to find Dax.

He was already in the map room, which was exactly what I had expected. Dax had an uncommon gift for anticipating the shape of a situation approximately two moves before everyone else arrived at it, and he had clearly anticipated this one well in advance — the northern territory charts were spread across the table, not just the standard tactical maps but the older surveys, the pre-settlement path maps that showed the original watercourse routes through the forest before anyone had bothered to make them into formal roads. He was standing over them with his arms folded and his eyes moving between two points on the map that I recognized immediately as the northern gate approach and the south supply route.

He did not look up when I walked in.

"Tell me it's a rescue," he said.

"It's a rescue," I said.

"Good." He looked up, and his face had the quality it carried before operations with a meaningful probability of going badly — not fear, because Dax did not experience fear in any form I had ever been able to identify in twenty years of knowing him, but a particular heightened presence, a sense of all the available systems coming online simultaneously. "We need Sera."

"Already sent for her. She'll be here within the hour."

He turned back to the maps. "South approach," he said, tapping a point on the older survey. "This old supply route. Pre-dates Vane. Most of his current fighters won't know it. Gets us to within two hundred yards of the southern perimeter."

"I found the same thing in the archive this morning," I said.

"Decoy first," Dax said. "Northern gate. We give them a reason to concentrate their attention and their force there before we come in the back."

"Agreed."

We worked the approach from multiple angles and covered multiple contingencies until Sera arrived — she came in still in her training gear, assessed the maps in about thirty seconds, and immediately began identifying the points of exposure that Dax and I had missed because she had grown up on genuinely difficult ground and had the instincts for it that only that kind of upbringing produces.

It was Dax who said, after the route was mapped and the contingencies were covered and we were beginning to roll the charts back, with the specific abruptness of a man who has been sitting with something and has decided to release it: "Tell me about her."

I looked at him.

"I'm about to walk into Shadow Fang territory without authorization," he said, with the particular patience of someone who has decided they are going to hear something and is genuinely prepared to wait as long as necessary. "I'd like to know why."

Sera had gone very still at the other side of the table in the way of someone who is listening with complete attention while appearing to be occupied with something else.

I thought about how to explain Kaia to two people who had seen her, if at all, from a distance at the welcoming feast, in the context of a kitchen girl carrying something heavy.

"Before the SUV reached the pack gates," I said, "I saw her in the sparring pit. She was going against Lukas — a senior warrior, fifteen years of serious combat training, two hundred and fifty pounds of Alpha blood. She took him down in under two minutes using a throw that converted his size and his momentum into the mechanism of his own defeat. She had clearly spent years developing specifically that technique because she had spent her life needing to know how to fight people who had exactly those advantages over her." I paused. "She was not lucky. She was the opposite of lucky. She was prepared."

Neither of them spoke.

"She was born Omega in a pack that treats the designation as a sentence," I continued. "She trained in secret. Kept records of her own progress in notebooks she hid because the notebooks existing was itself a risk. The official pack documentation classifies her as kitchen staff. The actual performance data shows someone who has been quietly and systematically surpassing every benchmark this pack has, for years, while the pack arranged not to notice." I stopped. "She was winning the Gauntlet. She was twenty feet from the finish line when her brother pushed her off the cliff on their father's orders."

Dax was quiet for a long moment.

"The Soul-Merge," Sera said, without looking up from the map she was no longer actually reading. "There were whispers after the feast. About where you looked when you arrived. About what happened in that moment." She did look up then, with the direct, unfussy honesty she applied to everything. "Is it real?"

I thought about the pack square and the moment my eyes found her and the world had simply reorganized itself around that point. I thought about the pull that had not faded for a single moment since then and was running north-northwest right now with the steadiness of something that knew exactly where it was going.

"Yes," I said.

"And she knows?"

"She feels it too."

Sera nodded once — a single, decisive movement that had the quality of a conclusion being reached. "Then we're going to get her back," she said, as if this had always been the settled outcome and she was simply confirming the shared understanding. She turned to the maps. "South approach. Walk me through the elevation changes between the tree line and the perimeter one more time."

Dax made a sound that was his specific version of a resigned sigh — not actually resigned, just acknowledging that a thing is going to happen and he has accepted it. "You're both going to get me killed," he said, pulling the older survey toward him. "All right. Let's do this correctly."

We worked until the fire burned down to coals. When we finished, I knew every step of the route and every contingency and every line we would not cross. I knew what we were going into and I knew what we were coming back with.

"Six feet," Dax said, as he was putting on his jacket.

I looked at him.

"Lukas," he said. "You said she threw him six feet."

"At least," I confirmed.

He was quiet for a moment, in the way of someone revising an internal assessment upward in a way they find mildly surprising. "Good," he said. "I want someone who can throw Lukas six feet between me and the people who want to kill me." He picked up his gear. "Let's go bring her home."

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  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    Twenty one

    Kaia's POVRhea's cottage smelled like dried herbs and old books and something underneath both of those that I'd never found a name for. Something warm and green and very old, like the first week of spring when the ground is remembering what it is after a long winter. I'd been coming here since I was a child and I'd stopped trying to name the smell years ago. Some things you just let be what they are.She opened the door before we knocked.She looked at me the way she always looked at things she was assessing, with an attention that went through the surface rather than stopping at it. Not invasive. Just thorough. She'd been looking at me like that for as long as I could remember and I'd never minded it because nothing about it felt like judgment. It felt like someone who was actually trying to see what was there.She stepped back and let us in."Sit," she said to me. She told Killian the tea things were where they always were and he'd know. She told Mira to stop hovering in the doorwa

  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    Twenty

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  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    nineteen

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  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    Eighteen

    Killian's POVShe was on her feet the whole way through the forest. I want to say that clearly because it mattered to me then and it matters to me now — she was on her feet, moving under her own power, despite the hip and the ribs and the absolute depletion of a first full Matriarch shift. I had offered to carry her. Once, quietly, in the first few minutes after we cleared the camp. She had looked at me with an expression that communicated several things simultaneously, most of them variations on the theme of absolutely not, and I had respected this and not offered again.She did accept my arm. Not as support — she made that distinction clear without saying it, the way she made most distinctions clear, through the specific quality of how she held herself. She took my arm because she wanted to, because we were moving through dark forest terrain and two points of balance are better than one, because something between us had shifted in the corridor and the touching felt right. Those were

  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    seventeen

    Kaia's POVVane escaped into the trees. I let him.Not because I couldn't have caught him — I probably could have, in Matriarch form, even with the camp in chaos and the guards still processing what had just happened to them. I let him go because keeping him alive and functional was more useful than catching him right now, and because I was already thinking three moves ahead of this corridor, and one of those moves required Vane to still be walking around and making decisions.This was something new. I had never thought this clearly in a fight before. In the sparring pit my mind went quiet and my body took over, all the training running on its own without narration. But in Matriarch form the thinking didn't stop — it expanded. It ran wider and faster and saw further. I'd dealt with eight guards, kept track of Mira's position, noted the direction Vane went, assessed the camp sounds for secondary response, and made the conscious decision to let him leave, all in the time it took most pe

  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    sixteen

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  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    one

    Kaia’s POV.The scent of damp earth and pine needles always felt like a second skin, but today, it was choked out by the metallic tang of sweat and the bruised ego of a warrior twice my size.I shifted my weight, feeling the familiar, power in my thighs. People in the Silver Moon pack saw "plus-siz

  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    five

    Kaia's POVPain was information.That was the first thing I had taught myself, in the years of training alone in the dark. When you hurt, you didn't panic. You listened. Pain told you where you were damaged and how badly, what you could still use and what you needed to protect. Pain was data, and d

  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    three

    The kiss didn’t just taste like rebellion; it tasted like an ending.When Killian’s lips finally parted from mine, He was still hovering over me, his weight a delicious, grounding pressure that my wolf was currently purring for—a sound I hadn’t known she was capable of making.He looked down at me,

  • The Alpha's Forbidden Plus-Size Mate    two

    Kaia’s POV.The air in the Great Hall had turned thick enough to choke on. Every eye was a needle, stitching me to the spot where the Alpha’s son had just committed social suicide by touching me.My father’s eyes flared with a warning so potent it made my knees want to buckle. He didn't move from h

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