LOGINI'd made it barely twenty feet from the door before the night stopped me. I wasn't going to let anyone see me fall apart. I could wait out here until the crowd thinned, then confront Shane about ending this. That was the plan, until I heard voices shift behind the doors.
It was Mary's entrance. I hovered at the edge of the porch, hunched into my sweater. Through the window, I saw her, hair braided back with silver ribbon, skin gleaming against her navy-blue dress. She walked with calculated poise, her gaze locked onto Shane, her lips curling.
Mary crossed the room in five deliberate strides. When she reached him, the entire table quieted. She rested her hand on his shoulder, just a whisper of contact. They stared at each other, two magnets locked in silent challenge.
"I brought you something," Mary said, her voice velvet. She unwrapped a long, narrow box and set it before Shane. A silver dagger glinted in the light.
"It's from the Moonlight Memories store," Mary said, flashing teeth. "I picked it out just for you."
Shane's whole body changed. Tension melted; his face came alive. He picked up the dagger, ran his thumb along the edge, and looked up at Mary like he saw an angel. "This is perfect. Exactly what I needed."
Their hands met over the box, fingers touching too long. They held each other's gaze, and the room pulsed with electricity.
I shrank against the wall, heart pounding. I couldn't look away. My hands balled into fists around the rejected pendant in my pocket.
She leaned in, hair brushing his cheek, and whispered something. Whatever it was made him laugh.
I turned away. The world spun around Mary and Shane, and I was just an errant moon, never able to catch the light.
The cold should have hurt by now, but I barely felt it. I sat on the low stone wall behind the hall, the pendant still clutched in my hands. I wanted to throw it as far as I could, but my fingers wouldn't let go.
I caught snatches of voices through the thin window above me.
At first, I didn't want to listen. But then I heard Mary's voice, soft and coaxing. I pressed closer.
"A wooden trinket? How embarrassing. You should have told her off.” Mary was saying. "Why hasn’t she ended it yet?”
“I know.” Shane's reply rumbled low. "If I dumped her outright, there'd be hell to pay. Your brother watches everything. I worry about how he’d treat you if I leave her for you."
There was a pause. Then Mary laughed, slicing right through me. "He’s always been hard on me."
He snorted. "He's blinded by Leah's work. She does everything he asks. It's his loss that he's missing out on knowing the better sister."
Footsteps scuffed. "So what now?" Mary asked. "We keep pretending and try new ways to get her to end it?"
Long silence. Then Shane spoke, voice clearer, more determined than I'd ever heard. "I can't keep pretending with your sister. I love you, Mary. You made me see that I never really loved her."
My heart stopped.
Mary's answer was quieter, but sharp. "You dated Leah for one reason and you know it.”
"I know. Politics. Your brother's the alpha. He's always favored Leah. I knew I would get the beta position if I dated her."
I flinched. I'd been nothing more than a pawn.
Mary wasn't done. "I don't know why he hates me so much. It's not like I ever did anything to him."
"You scare him," Shane said, almost admiringly. "You're better at this than anyone. Even him."
She laughed. "I like it when you say things like that." A pause, then, voice thick with promise, "So you'll come to me tonight?"
Shane's answer was immediate. "I'll be there. Don’t expect to get much sleep."
The words punched the air from my lungs. I doubled over, the pendant finally slipping from my grip, tumbling into the dirt. I stared at it, unable to move.
I pressed my fist to my mouth to keep from screaming.
Inside, the voices faded, replaced by footsteps and creaking floorboards.
I thought back to the beginning, those rare moments when I'd felt chosen. It had all been a lie. He used me to get close to Anton. When I suggested making Shane the beta, my brother didn't hesitate.
I squeezed my hands into fists. I was a shadow, always standing behind the stars.
I wiped my face, picked up the pendant, and tucked it deep in my pocket. This would remind me that my pain was real, but it would not break me.
Above me, the moon shone sharp and pale. It didn't care who watched, or who hurt, or who was left in the dark.
The moon depended on itself to shine.
Maybe I should do the same.
LeahWe did it that night, when the kingdom was quiet and the only light came from a single lamp.Leah lay back against the pillows. I lay beside her, my hand splayed flat over her heart, the mating mark on my neck pulsing in time with hers. Andromeda rose to the surface, her presence filling Leah’s body like water filling a vessel, and through the bond I felt the doorway in my soul swing open.The shadows came.They poured from my hand, not into the room this time but into Leah, sinking through her skin, dark tendrils diving beneath the surface to a place that had no light and no air. And then I was there with them. Not physically. My awareness, my sight, riding the shadows into the landscape of my mate’s body.
LeahI slept for almost two days after the fire.Not the natural sleep of a body healing. The other kind. The parasite-deep unconsciousness that swallowed me whole and held me under, surfacing only in fragments. Darien’s voice. The cool press of a damp cloth on my forehead. Maren’s hands checking my pulse. The smell of smoke that clung to Darien’s skin even after he’d washed it away because he washed quickly so that he was back by my side.When I finally woke for real, the late afternoon light was gold against the walls and Darien was sitting in the chair beside the bed, watching me. Like I might disappear if he blinked.“There she is,” he said softly. “My sleeping beauty.”“How long?”“Almost two days.” He moved to the edge of the bed and took my hand. “The east wing is rebuilt. Tommy and his mother stopped by yesterday to check on you. He drew you a picture.” He nodded toward the nightstand, where a piece of paper sat propped against the lamp. A crayon drawing of a woman with brown
Leah Every time she shifted to smoke, the dark tendrils tracked her, mapping her true form inside the haze, and Darien’s claws followed where the shadows pointed. He fought with his eyes closed half the time, hunting her through senses that weren’t his, herding her away from me, cutting off every escape with walls of living darkness. “You can’t kill me!” Eyera shrieked, and there was something new in her voice … fear. “I am eternal! I have worn a hundred bodies! I will wear a hundred more!”
Leah A child crying. Down the first-floor hallway. Deeper in the building. I didn’t think. I went. The hallway was filling with smoke, the lights flickering overhead, and the heat was real now, radiating through the ceiling from whatever was burning above. I dropped low, pulling my shirt over my mouth, following the sound of the crying through the gray haze. Third door on the left. A family a
LeahI needed to feel useful. That was the truth underneath everything. Darien hovered, the healers monitored, Andromeda fought her endless war inside my blood, and I lay in bed feeling like a battlefield instead of a person. Sleeping had become my main occupation. Some days I was awake for only a handful of hours, surfacing from the exhaustion long enough to eat, to hold Darien’s hand, to hear Keanu’s voice on the phone, and then the parasite would pull me back under like a tide that owned me. But today was a good day. I’d woken with actual energy, eaten an actual breakfast, and convinced Darien that a visit to the apartment complex was not going to kill me. “One hour,” he’d said, holding up a finger like a parent negotiating with a toddler. “And a guard stays with you.” “Two hours, and the guard waits outside the building.” “One hour, the guard waits in the lobby, and you call me if you feel even slightly dizzy.” “Deal.” He kissed my forehead and held it a moment longe
KeanuI didn’t want to. The story belonged to me and Tempest and the forest where we’d spent one night together that had changed everything about who I was. But Eldric had the kind of presence that made confession feel less like vulnerability and more like laying down something heavy you’d been carrying too long.“I met her in the forest. She helped me find the cure for my sister. We spent the night together.” I stared at the stream. “When I woke up, she was gone. I searched for her every day. Never found her. She’s an elemental dragon who hides because the world punished her kind for existing. And I don’t know if she left because she’s afraid of being found or because …” I stopped.“Because?”
LeahI led Darien back into the disaster zone that was the kitchen, my heart pounding with a mixture of guilt and something else I refused to examine too closely.“Here, lean down,” I said, guiding him toward the sink.“Is this where you finish me off?” His tone was light, teasing despite the fact
DarienI took a breath, steadying myself. This was it. My chance to do what Cain had suggested. To show interest. To connect with her. "I wanted to ask you something," I said, keeping my tone casual. "You’ve been to the small town built down in the underground bunkers—"She blinked, clearly not exp
DarienMy hand rested over Leah's, warm and still, as she slept. I'd been sitting in this damned chair for hours, my back screaming in protest, but I couldn't bring myself to move. Not when her breathing had finally evened out. Not when she looked so peaceful for the first time since she'd arrived.
I froze, my brain stuttering over his words. "Your … room?""Yes." He walked further inside, shrugging off his coat and draping it over the back of a chair. "You'll be staying here with me until I determine it's safe for you to return to your own quarters."My eyes swept the room again, landing on







