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Chapter One
The gates swung open at dusk. Gianna heard the patrol return before she saw it – boots on gravel, wolves shifting back to skin, the familiar chaos of Valemont's warriors coming home. She was standing on the upper terrace with a glass of wine when she saw Cyrus walk through the main gate. He wasn't alone. A woman walked beside him – young with dark hair loose around her shoulders. She was wearing Cyrus's spare patrol jacket – the grey one Gianna had picked out for him last winter – and she was looking up at him the way a dog looks at the person holding its leash. Like he was the only solid thing in the world. Cyrus wasn't pushing her away. Gianna set her wine glass down very carefully on the stone railing. She walked downstairs. By the time she reached the courtyard, Cyrus had already stopped walking. He stood at the center of the stone yard with the woman still at his side, talking to Beta Francisabout something that clearly wasn't important enough to finish, because the moment he saw Gianna's face, he stopped. "Who is she?" Gianna asked with no greeting or preamble. She was looking directly at Cyrus. Cyrus's jaw tightened. "Her name is Pietra. She's a she-wolf I found during patrol. She has nowhere to go." He paused. "She'll be staying here." The courtyard had gone quiet. Three packmates who'd been crossing toward the barracks had slowed without stopping, pretending they weren't listening. Gianna looked at Pietra. Pietra looked back at her with wide, careful eyes that knew exactly what they were doing. "She'll be staying," Gianna repeated. "Here. In Valemont. In my house." "In the pack house," Cyrus said. "Yes." "Cyrus." Gianna's voice came out low and very controlled. "I am Luna of Valemont. You don't bring a woman through those gates without telling me. You don't bring anyone through those gates without –" "I don't answer to you." He said it flatly, like it was a fact he'd grown tired of having to state. Gianna felt heat crawl up the back of her neck. "You answer to this pack. And this pack has a Luna. And what you're doing right now is bringing a woman into her home and telling her to deal with it, and I am telling you I will not –" "I've been dealing with you for two years." Cyrus stepped forward. His voice didn't rise. That was somehow worse – it stayed exactly level, like she wasn't worth the energy of real anger. "Two years of your tantrums. Two years of you treating every Omega in this house like they're beneath you, of you making every decision based on what you want, of you turning this Luna role into your personal throne." He stopped two feet from her. "I am done negotiating with you, Gianna." Pietra's fingers curled around Cyrus's forearm. "Should I not have come?" she asked softly but loud enough for everyone to hear, "I'm sorry, Cyrus. Luna seems upset. Maybe I should –" "Don't." Cyrus turned to her immediately. He covered her hand with his. "You're not going anywhere. I said you were welcome here, and you are." He glanced back at Gianna with eyes that had gone cold again. "Don't be afraid. She won't do anything." She won't do anything. Gianna stood very still. He turned his back on her and walked toward the door, Pietra tucked against his side. Gianna crossed the courtyard in four steps and planted herself in the doorway with both hands on the frame, blocking the entrance. Her pulse was hammering. Her wolf was screaming. "You will not walk past me," she said. "Not with her. Not like this. I am Luna of this pack and you will –" Cyrus's hand shot out and shoved her aside. Gianna's heel caught the edge of the first step. She fell backwards. The back of her skull hit the stone staircase with a crack that silenced every sound in the courtyard. Then there was nothing. *** The first thing Gianna saw when she opened her eyes was the stone ceiling. Then, the unfamiliar tapestry on the wall and a window showing a sky that had gone full dark. She was in a bed. Someone had moved her. She had absolutely no idea where she was. She sat up slowly, pressing one hand to the back of her head. A lump the size of a walnut had formed just above her neck. She winced, pulled her hand away, and looked around the room carefully, trying to piece together the puzzle of how she had ended up in this unfamiliar bedroom. Just then, the door burst open. A young Omega woman rushed in, her face pale, her hands already wringing together before she'd even reached the bed. She stopped when she saw Gianna sitting up, and she looked relieved. "Luna." She pressed her hands together. "Luna, you're awake. The healer said to send for him immediately when you –" "What's your name?" Gianna asked. The Omega blinked. "I – Evelyn . My name is Evelyn . I've been your personal servant for eight months, Luna." "Evelyn ." Gianna filed that away. "What pack is this?" Evelyn 's mouth opened, then closed. "Valemont," she said slowly. "Luna, do you... do you remember anything?" Gianna considered the question honestly. She remembered waking up. She remembered pain. Before that — nothing. "No," she said. Evelyn looked like she might faint. "All right." Gianna held up one hand. "Don't panic. Just talk. Who am I?" "You're Gianna." Evelyn 's voice was barely steady. "Luna of Valemont. You've been married to Alpha Cyrus for two years." Cyrus. Something about that name produced a faint, unpleasant sensation. "And this Alpha Cyrus," Gianna said carefully. "Who is he to me exactly?" "Your husband." Evelyn hesitated. "He's – Luna, he's the one who –" She stopped. "Who what?" Evelyn 's eyes dropped to the floor. Gianna decided not to push that thread yet. "Is there something happening in the house right now? Something I should know about?" Evelyn looked up. In her face, behind the fear, there was something that looked very much like desperate hope – like she was waiting for Gianna to explode so she could point her somewhere useful. "The woman," Evelyn said carefully. "The one Alpha Cyrus brought back. The pack doesn't know what to do. Do you want us to remove her? Or –" "What's her name?" "Pietra." "And Cyrus brought her here himself? To live?" "Yes, Luna. He said –" Evelyn stopped again. "Say it." "He said she's his fated mate." Gianna sat with that for a moment. She pressed two fingers to her temple. The headache pulsed steadily, like a second heartbeat. Fated mate. So this Cyrus married me – a non-fated mate – and has now brought his actual fated mate home to live in the same house. Charming man. She thought about it practically. She was, apparently, the daughter of some Alpha. She had money, status, a family to return to. This Cyrus person had shoved her down a flight of stairs. She was aware she should feel something violent about this. A righteous, burning fury. But what she felt was far away from that, "Evelyn ," she said. "Yes, Luna?" "I want every Omega in the house assembled in the next ten minutes." Evelyn blinked. "To – to remove Pietra? Because I can send for the guard if you want to make it official, or your father always said –" "No." Gianna pulled back the blankets and swung her legs over the side of the bed. The room tilted slightly but she breathed through it. "To prepare a welcome." Silence. "A... welcome," Evelyn repeated. "The Alpha has found his fated mate. That's cause for celebration." Gianna stood up carefully, one hand on the bedpost. "I want the guest room on the east wing prepared – fresh linens, flowers, the good candles. I want a proper dinner laid out. And –" she paused, thinking, " –I want someone to go into my wardrobe and find the nicest sets of lingerie I own, and put them in Cyrus's bedroom. Several sets. Along with whatever the house keeps for... romantic evenings." She waved a hand. "Aphrodisiacs, whatever we have." Evelyn was staring at her. "Luna." "They're fated mates," Gianna said patiently. "They should have a proper wedding night. We should be helpful." "You hit your head," Evelyn whispered, as if this explained everything and also nothing. "I did." Gianna walked carefully to the wardrobe and began sorting through dresses with one hand, the other still pressed to the lump on her skull. "Evelyn . I want you to think about something. I am apparently the daughter of a Highmoon Alpha. I have a father with power and resources who loves me. I have money of my own, position of my own, and a pack I was born into." She pulled out a silk robe and held it up. "Why, exactly, would I waste a single drop of energy fighting over a man who pushed me down a flight of stairs?" Evelyn opened her mouth and closed it. "Get the Omegas," Gianna said. "And tell the kitchen I want a full meal sent up here as well. Something with meat. I'm starving." She sat down at the vanity and looked at her reflection. Objectively beautiful, she noted, with the detached appreciation of someone looking at a painting. High cheekbones. Dark eyes. A bruise forming along the left side of her jaw she hadn't noticed until now. So. Valemont. A husband who hates me. A mistress who thinks she's already won. She tilted her head at her own reflection. She'd think about that one tomorrow. Tonight, she was going to eat an enormous meal, get a proper massage, and sleep in what was clearly a very expensive bed. One problem at a time. She reached for the hairbrush and began to work through the knots in her hair.By the time Gianna stepped out of the library and into the morning light, her legs had turned to water beneath her. She stumbled slightly, and Elmund was at her side in an instant, his hand steadying her elbow."What happened?" he asked, his eyes scanning her face frantically. "Gianna, talk to me. What did he say to you?"She opened her mouth, but no words came out. Her mind was still tangled in everything Elias had revealed, still trying to make sense of the healer's twisted motives and the impossible condition he'd placed on his help. She simply shook her head, unable to form a coherent sentence.Elmund's gaze dropped to her arm, and his expression darkened when he noticed the faint red mark blooming against her skin where Elias had gripped her."He hurt you," Elmund said, his voice going flat and cold in a way that frightened her more than his anger would have. He turned sharply back toward the library entrance, his hand already moving toward the hilt of his sword. "I'm going to—"
Gianna stood frozen, her mind still reeling from what Elias had just told her. But the shock of the healer's motives quickly gave way to a different, more pressing confusion."Why are you helping me then?" she asked, her voice sharper than she intended. "If your sister wants Nolan dead, what do you gain from stopping her? What do you stand to gain from any of this?"Elias's expression remained calm, almost amused, as if her question was one he'd been waiting for."I don't want you to give up your life," he said simply. "So I'll get you the blood jar. But only on one condition."Gianna's stomach tightened with unease, but she pushed the feeling down."Name it," she said."You'll take an oath," Elias said, his voice steady, "to bear me a child."For a moment, Gianna couldn't process the words. They simply didn't make sense, didn't fit into any shape her mind could hold."What?" she said finally, her voice barely above a whisper."You heard me," Elias said."If you need a child," Gianna
They reached the library just as the first light of dawn crept over the horizon, painting the ancient stone in soft shades of gold. Gianna stopped at the entrance and turned to Elmund."Wait here," she said.He looked like he wanted to argue, but he simply nodded, positioning himself close enough to the door that he'd hear her if she called out. She took a steadying breath and pushed the heavy door open, stepping into the dim, dusty interior alone.Fear pooled in her stomach with every step she took deeper into the library, the memory of her last encounter here still fresh enough to make her pulse quicken. But she forced herself forward, refusing to let the fear show on her face.Elias was already waiting for her near the center of the room, standing beside a small table with two chairs. When he saw her approaching, something flickered across his expression, brief but noticeable."You came alone," he said, and it wasn't quite a question.Gianna said nothing to correct the assumption.
Gianna sat in silence for a long moment after her father finished speaking, her chest aching with a grief that didn't quite belong to her but felt heavy all the same. She thought about Iris, about the way she had described her own death, the curse she had laid with her dying breath. She thought about all those Faes who had died alongside her, slaughtered simply for believing that their future queen deserved justice.She felt sorry for them, even though she had never known them, even though they had died long before she was even a thought in anyone's mind.But what struck her more than the story itself was the way her father had told it. His voice had wavered more than once. His eyes had grown distant and glassy, like he was remembering something far more personal than an old piece of history passed down through generations. It was strange. Almost too emotional for a man simply recounting ancient events."Is there a last surviving Fae?" she asked suddenly, watching his face carefully a
They rode back to Highmoon just as the last light faded from the sky, and Gianna found her father waiting for her in the sitting room, his face etched with worry. He stood the moment she walked through the door, crossing the room in quick strides to pull her into his arms."I heard what's happening," Alexander said, his voice tight with concern. "Is it true? Is Nolan really dead?"Gianna pulled back to look at him, exhaustion pressing down on her shoulders like a physical weight."He's not dead," she said firmly. "He's sick. Unconscious. But he's going to recover soon."Alexander studied her face, his expression skeptical."Don't lie to me," he said quietly. "I raised you. I know when you're hiding something. The council members are already talking, Gianna. It's only a matter of time before they mount real pressure on you. I don't want that for you. I don't want you fighting a battle you can't win.""What are you saying?" Gianna asked, though she already sensed where this was going."
Dusk had settled over the palace grounds by the time Gianna and Elmund made their way toward the healer's chambers. The sky had turned a deep shade of purple, streaked with the last remnants of orange along the horizon. Torches were being lit along the corridors, casting long shadows that stretched and danced against the stone walls.As they approached the healer's quarters, a figure emerged from the doorway ahead of them.Gianna's breath caught in her throat.It was Elias. The librarian from the ancient library. The man who had warned her about asking questions regarding the Faes. He walked past them without so much as a flicker of recognition, his white robes swaying gently as he moved, his expression as calm and unreadable as it had been the last time she'd seen him.He didn't look at her. Didn't acknowledge her presence at all. It was as if she was a stranger to him, as if their previous encounter in the library had never happened.Gianna's mind raced with questions. What was he d
Gianna's heart jumped into her throat.She quickly shoved the necklace deep into the pocket of her nightrobe. Her fingers fumbled slightly as she turned around to face him. Nolan was sitting up in bed now, watching her with curiosity and something that looked like amusement."Why are you sneaking a
Nolan held her close and spoke softly against her hair."Don't worry about anything right now," he said. "What matters is that you're awake. What matters is that you're here with me."Gianna nodded but her mind was already spinning with everything she had learned. She had so many questions and so l
Gianna stared at Iris in complete shock. Her mind couldn't process what she had just witnessed. Curses like that actually worked? She had always thought curses were something that only happened in fantasy books and old stories. Things that people made up to explain bad luck or coincidence.But she
The guards caught Iris before she made it far into the woods.They grabbed her from behind, their hands rough and unforgiving. She struggled and fought but there were too many of them. They dragged her back toward the palace, her feet scraping against the ground, her white hair tangled with leaves







