LOGINI knew I had to let my brother know what was going on. After all, he took Shane as his beta because I’d insisted. It was only right that I explain I messed up. I let my feelings get in the way. Anton had every right to be angry with me.
My brother lost his fated mate in an accident a couple of years ago. Since then, I’d done my best to be there and support him as much as I could. He hadn’t been the same since he lost Emelia, but I didn’t know of any wolf who would have returned to normal.
Fated mates were not the things you read about in storybooks. There wasn’t this instant part of your wolf that cries out, mate. Instead, it was something that started gradually. Your wolves learned about the other and discovered they were mates. It took time, and the fated mate connection was rare. So rare that most wolves dated and chose their own mate. Part of the reason it was rare was because you could miss your fated mate if you weren’t looking for it. Honestly, most wolves weren’t looking for it. They just wanted a partner who would stay next to them loyally.
I found Anton in his study at midnight, but he wasn't alone. A man with an imposing figure stood across from my brother, his black hair catching the firelight. I couldn't see his face from this angle, and I turned to leave when they both noticed me.
The stranger's piercing silver eyes landed on me and held my gaze. Something electric passed between us, stopping me in my tracks.
"I'm sorry... I'll come back later—"
"Leah?" Anton studied me, then looked at the stranger. "Darien, this is my sister, Leah—"
"I'll return in the morning." Darien walked toward me, his eyes never leaving mine. For a moment, he stopped, standing inches away from me, like he wanted to say something. The air between us crackled with unspoken words before he walked out.
My heart hammered against my ribs and I felt my wolf stir inside me. "Who was that?"
Anton ignored my question, his caramel-colored hair falling over his forehead as he studied me. We had the same hair and blue eyes, but right now his were filled with concern. "You've been crying."
I wanted to lie, to pretend I'd just come in for tea. But I was spent. Hollowed out. There was nothing left for pretenses.
"I misjudged him, Anton," I whispered. "Shane. I thought he was different. I'm sorry."
He sat back like the words had physically shoved him. "What did he do?"
I shook my head, focusing on his desk instead of his face. "He used me. All the dates, the training, being his fiancé ... he just wanted to be Beta. He wanted to get close to you, and he always wanted Mary. I was just someone he could use to get what he wanted."
Anton made a strangled sound, somewhere between a growl and a sigh. "Fuck. I should have seen it—"
"No," I said fiercely. "Don't act like it's your fault when it's mine!"
"It is my fault. I trusted him with you." His hands curled into fists. For a moment, I thought he'd actually punch the desk. "I can't believe I let this happen."
"You don't get to make this your fault, Anton. It's Shane and Mary's fault. I don't know which one upsets me the most ... my fiancé cheating on me or my sister betraying me."
The silence stretched between us until he rose and paced in front of the cold fireplace. "I'm ending things with him," I said, voice barely audible.
He turned on his heel, fixing me with a look I hadn't seen since we were kids. "He's lucky you're the one breaking it off. If it were up to me, I'd bury him. He's out as Beta."
"He's the best fighter you've got, Anton. If you kick him out—"
"It's not about strength. It's about trust." He stopped pacing, hands on his hips. "You always act like you don't matter, but you're the one holding all the pieces together. You’re caring, kind, brave, and strong. Shane is an idiot. Mary has nothing on you."
I felt my chest constrict. "She’s more polished than I am—"
"At the expense of others. She’s turned into a manipulative and selfish wolf. I failed her. When we lost our parents, we over-coddled her." His phone chimed, and he grunted as he read the message. "The man who was just here, Darien Ravencrest, is the alpha's advisor for the Northwind Pack. They're trying to revive the old structure and want help from us. I need to send someone who won't tarnish our pack's name, but—"
"I'll go."
He hesitated, searching my face. "You're the only one who can do it, Leah. I was telling him about you when you showed up. You're patient, smart, and you don't scare easily. But it could be a year. More, if the place is as bad as I've heard. Winters up there are brutal—"
"I know," I said, sitting up straighter. This was my way out, my chance at a fresh start where nobody would know me as the girl who got dumped for her own sister.
He dragged his fingers through his hair. "You amaze me sometimes."
I almost laughed. "Don't make a thing of it. I just want to see what I'm made of."
His eyes shone in the firelight. "You're precious to me, Leah. Always have been."
I reached across and grabbed his hand, squeezed it until he squeezed back. "You can always depend on me, Anton. Always."
He pulled me up into a bone-crushing hug before letting go, his hands still on my arms. "What are we going to do about Mary? Our sister needs to be taught a lesson."
I looked down at his scarred knuckles. "I used to think she was just petty. But there's something mean in her."
He nodded grimly. "You don't know the half of it. I've caught her pulling things that would make a vulture gag. I first realized it when I caught her near the furnace. She had locked Bun Bun in there to suffer."
I gasped. Bun Bun was my pet rabbit. My brother told me he got out of his cage and ran away. "Why would she have done that? Why haven't you done anything?"
He shrugged, shoulders sagging. "She's our sister. I kept hoping she'd grow out of it. But now ... she's not safe for anyone. Not even herself."
My stomach turned at the thought of what Mary had done, what she was capable of. "Maybe now that she has Shane, she'll finally let up."
He looked at me sideways. "You believe that?"
"No. But I'd like to."
He rubbed the dark circles beneath his eyes. "I'll let Mr. Ravencrest know you're coming. He’ll want to assess you first. Make sure you can make it in the North."
"He said he would be back tomorrow morning. I'll pack tonight so I'm ready."
He smiled, something softer this time. "I'm proud of you, Leah."
A part of me wanted to cry at that, but I just smiled back. “Let’s not get sentimental.”He rolled his eyes. “You know you can be vulnerable with me.”
I walked out of his study and went to my room, pulling a canvas duffel from my closet. I packed methodically: socks, thermals, sweaters, my hunting knife. I hesitated before dropping the pendant in, wrapping it in a scarf and tucking it deep into the side pocket.
I zipped the bag and sat on the edge of the bed, checking my phone. There was a message from Shane.
"If I embarrassed you today, I didn't mean to."
I snorted. No apology, just IF he embarrassed me. This message had no purpose, especially if he wanted me to break up with him. I set the phone down and pulled the blankets over me.
For the first time in ages, I felt something close to hope. Not for a miracle or a clean start, but for the chance to find out who I was when nobody was looking.
Tomorrow, I would meet Darien Ravencrest again. Tomorrow, everything would change.
And this time, I wouldn't fade away.
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?”
DarienI hadn't planned to stay.The balcony above the training yard was cold as hell, the wind cutting through even the thick fur lining of my coat. I'd come up here to check on the new officers, to see if Leah was making any progress with them. A quick glance, maybe ten minutes, then I'd head bac
DarienI couldn't stop smiling.Here I was, the Lycan King, sitting in my office reviewing intelligence reports about potential Raven Witch sightings, and I was grinning like a fool.But I couldn't help it.Leah sat across from me at my desk, her hair falling forward as she read through the documen
LeahI looked around the woods slowly, taking in every detail. The trees were too quiet. No birds singing. No small animals rustling through the underbrush. The scents were gone, somehow there was no smell here.
"If you are still needed?" His silver eyes flashed with confusion. "What does that mean? Leah, we are mates. You aren't going to deny that. Not after that kiss. Surely you know—"I reached out and gr







