LOGINThe square still felt unreal.
One second, I had been standing on the edge of death, hand pressed to my stomach, Xena’s blue eyes locked on mine like she could will me back from the blade. The next, Alpha Dimitri’s voice had cut through everything.
And now the guards had let me go.
My arms felt strangely light without their grip. My knees wanted to buckle, but I locked them. I was still breathing and still standing. The crowd murmured around me, shifting, uncertain what to do with the woman who should have died but hadn’t.
Then Xena was running.
She pushed past the guards who had held her moments ago, shoving bodies out of her way without apology. She reached me in seconds and crashed into me, arms wrapping so tight I felt the air leave my lungs. Her heart hammered against mine. Her hands moved frantically — over my shoulders, my arms, my face — checking for damage like a warrior assessing a battlefield.
“Are you hurt?” The words tumbled out fast, overlapping each other. “Did they touch you? Are you okay? Rav— Scarlett— fuck, are you okay?”
I laughed, and even the sound surprised me. It came out broken and shaky. “I’m here,” I whispered against her shoulder. “I’m still here.”
She pulled back just enough to look at me, hands cupping my face. Her blue eyes were glossed over with tears, and her jaw was tight. For one precious moment, we just stared at each other. Everything since the gate passed between us without words — the acid, the separation, the dungeon, the square. All of it. She was the only constant I had left in this world, and she was still here.
We didn’t get more than that.
The sound of someone clearing their throat made us come to a halt. I turned slowly, and that was when I saw him.
Alpha Dimitri stood before us, his face still pale, and yet his body commanded power like any other werewolf with Alpha blood.
Xena’s body reacted instantly. Her spine straightened, shoulders squared, hands dropping from my face. The frantic energy vanished, replaced by the rigid posture of a warrior facing her Alpha. I felt my own head dip before I could stop it. Years of living with a man like Lucan would do that to anyone. The realization burned. Even here, even now, some part of me still feared that every Alpha would treat me the way Lucan did.
Alpha Dimitri stood a few paces away, his height towering above everyone else. His green eyes moved over the scene with Xena at attention, me with my head slightly lowered, and then the lingering crowd. He didn’t comment on the reunion. He simply looked toward Ms. Darkmoon, who was already hurrying forward.
“Yes, Alpha?” she said, bowing her head low.
“Prepare a room for her,” he ordered, as if every time he opened his mouth to speak, he was wasting something precious. “Adjacent to mine. She starts as my personal healer today.”
My stomach dropped.
Ms. Darkmoon turned to me. Her eyes narrowed sharply with something colder than professional suspicion. “Follow me, Scarlett Bane.”
The way she said my fake name made my stomach twist.
Xena reached for me one last time with a quick, hard squeeze of my hand. Her fingers trembled slightly before she let go. Her eyes said everything she couldn’t speak out loud in front of the Alpha: Stay alive. I’m watching. I’m still here.
I squeezed back once. Then I turned and followed Ms. Darkmoon.
The walk through the castle felt longer than before. Guards flanked us and people stared openly now. They were staring at a woman with short ginger-red hair who had almost died in the square and was suddenly elevated. I kept my gaze low but my head up. Scarlett Bane. I repeated it with every step.
We stopped at the healers’ wing first. Ms. Darkmoon watched me gather my few belongings in silence. When I was done, she spoke in a tone more venomous than snake poison.
“I don’t know what sorcery you used on him,” she said, eyes boring into me. “But I do not trust you. Your day of reckoning will come, girl. Mark my words.”
I said nothing. What was there to say? She believed I had manipulated the Alpha. The pack would believe it too. Healing him had only made me more dangerous in their eyes.
She led me to the new room without another word.
The room was larger than the small one I'd had before, but still modest. A proper bed. Curtains pulled over what I guessed was a reinforced window. A small sitting area with a cracked leather armchair that looked older than the building itself. I waited until Ms. Darkmoon and the guards left before I moved.
I went to the main door first, then locked it. I tested the handle, locked it again, and tested it once more. My hands wouldn’t stop until the click felt real. Even then, it wasn’t enough.
Exhaustion wore me down, making my legs tremble.
When was the last time I had any actual rest?
I barely made it to the bed before my legs gave out. I pulled the covers over myself, still fully clothed, scarf still wrapped high around my scarred neck, and then my hand found its way to my stomach, resting there protectively.
Sleep took me fast, and when I closed my eyes, no dreams came. Even in my unconscious state, I knew I was screwed.
A door clicked.
My eyes snapped open, body already bolting upright before my mind caught up. Adrenaline flooded my veins. With my heart slamming and breath shallow, I scanned the dark room, with every nerve in my body screaming danger.
There was a second door.
I hadn’t seen it before. Or maybe I had been too exhausted to notice. It stood open now, connecting directly to what had to be Alpha Dimitri’s room.
A tall figure stood in the doorway, silhouetted by faint moonlight from the window behind him.
Alpha Dimitri.
He didn’t speak. He simply stood there, green eyes fixed on me in the darkness.
And I realized with cold, sinking horror that all my careful locks had never mattered.
There had always been another way in.
The connecting door stayed open.I lay in bed, staring at the dark gap between my room and his, and every muscle in my body went tight. I had tried to sleep, and I had failed.My mind kept circling back to the same images: his green eyes in the doorway, the calm way he had threatened to execute me, the feel of his fingers brushing my hair like it was the most natural thing in the world. My body refused to relax. Every small sound in the castle — a distant footstep, the low hum of the ventilation system running through the walls, the faint click of something electronic somewhere down the corridor — made my heart jump.I kept one hand on my stomach. The baby had been quiet all day. I didn't know if that was normal or if the exhaustion and fear were affecting it. I rubbed slow circles over the small swell, whispering silent prayers to the goddess. Keep my child safe. Just keep us both safe.Studying the room without meaning to, I noted the window, the main door, and the connecting door I
He was already inside the room.Alpha Dimitri stepped forward from the doorway, closing the distance between us with slow, deliberate steps. The air in my new room grew thinner with every inch he took. My head dropped before I could stop it. Chin to chest with my shoulders curving inward. The same posture my body had performed for years around Lucan. It made me small, safe, and invisible. And I hated it. I hated that even here, my muscles still remembered exactly how to make myself smaller.I kept breathing, my breaths rapidly alternating between shallow and fast. Each inhale caught high in my throat.He stopped right in front of me.I could feel the heat rolling off his body. The clean scent of his skin mixed with faint traces of herbs and something darker, more masculine. My hands fisted in the sheets. I waited for the blow. For the words that would tell me I had already failed some test I didn’t know existed.His hand rose.I flinched hard, my head jerking away with one arm flying
The square still felt unreal.One second, I had been standing on the edge of death, hand pressed to my stomach, Xena’s blue eyes locked on mine like she could will me back from the blade. The next, Alpha Dimitri’s voice had cut through everything.And now the guards had let me go.My arms felt strangely light without their grip. My knees wanted to buckle, but I locked them. I was still breathing and still standing. The crowd murmured around me, shifting, uncertain what to do with the woman who should have died but hadn’t.Then Xena was running.She pushed past the guards who had held her moments ago, shoving bodies out of her way without apology. She reached me in seconds and crashed into me, arms wrapping so tight I felt the air leave my lungs. Her heart hammered against mine. Her hands moved frantically — over my shoulders, my arms, my face — checking for damage like a warrior assessing a battlefield.“Are you hurt?” The words tumbled out fast, overlapping each other. “Did they touc
My hands found his chest before I had fully crossed the room.The warmth surged up from beneath my chest, hotter and sharper than it had been in the evaluation room. I poured everything I had into him. My gift answered without hesitation, chasing the damage through his blood, his organs, every place where something was shutting down.There was no time to think—only time to work.Sweat broke across my forehead within minutes.My back ached from kneeling on hard stone. My hands burned deep in the joints, but still I pushed. “Stay. Stay with me. Breathe. Just breathe… please,” I murmured underneath my breath.His body fought me, but I fought harder, drawing on reserves I didn’t know I had. The room grew darker, candles burned lower, and my vision blurred at the edges.That was when I realized it.This was not poison.The damage didn’t feel like an outside attack. It felt older and deeper than that.It was something inside him breaking down on its own. A sickness that had reached its pe
My fingers froze on the edge of the scarf. One heartbeat. Two. I lifted my gaze to his slowly, hoping that permanently scarring my skin was enough for me not to end up in my own pool of blood beside the last person. The guard didn’t even flinch.With surprisingly steady hands, I unwrapped the scarf.Cool air hit the ruined skin on my neck. The guard’s eyes dropped to it fast. He stared at the blistered mess, the uneven texture, and the angry red that still wept in places. His jaw tightened, and then his brows pulled together. I could read the pity in his eyes.He didn’t speak.Xena stepped beside me, her shoulders brushing mine. Her hands trembled once at her sides before she clenched them. Tears welled in her blue eyes, but she blinked hard, fighting them back. Her voice came out ragged.“My sister… she was attacked on the road here. We barely made it. The journey was long and cruel, but we chose Bloodfang because we heard this pack was strong, ordered, and safe.” She swallowed har
“We’ll talk about the baby later. Right now we move,” Xena replied, her voice clipped.I nodded. My throat hurt too much to answer."Bloodfang," Xena said the moment we were inside. "We leave tonight. Lucan saw us leave together. His men will be here within the hour."My mouth fell open. The rival pack. The only territory Lucan couldn't storm without starting a war."They take travelers who swear allegiance. We go, we say our old pack fell apart, we start anew."Her eyes dropped to my stomach. Her hand twitched toward me and stopped."Then we start," I said.Her bathroom felt too small. Tiles cold under my feet. Xena grabbed scissors from a drawer while I sat on the closed toilet lid and stared at the floor.Thick strands of my jet-black hair fell onto the tiles as Xena cut my hair—one after another. I watched them drop. The hair I had worn my whole life. The hair Lucan used to wrap around his fist when he wanted to remind me who owned me. It lay there now in useless piles.Xena’s han







