LOGINThe girl ahead of me whispered a prayer into her fist and stumbled into motion. She was all nerves and pearls, nearly tripping on the third step before catching herself.
He touched her wrist. Waited. Shook his head.
She made it all the way back to her mother before she cried.
“Next.”
My mouth tasted like metal and wax.
The room went quieter than it had been all night.
I moved because stopping wasn’t allowed. Just five steps. I could do it.
I kept my focus on the lowest step and lifted my foot.
Lucien Veyrac looked at me, and for a fraction of a second, everything else disappeared. Not because he was beautiful, but because the weight of his attention felt like a hand wrapped around my ribcage.
He didn’t smile. He didn’t frown. He watched.
I reached the top step. The dress suddenly felt tight and ugly. I stopped an arm’s length from him.
The elder shifted closer, the ritual book open, lips pressed thin.
Lucien didn’t meet me half way, he waited until I stood right in front of him and raised his hand to lay two fingers against my left wrist.
Skin to skin.
If the bond had a sound, it would have been the gong sound going off in my brain.
Something in my chest tightened, snapped, flared. My wolf surged, clawing to reach him, certain this was ours. And in his gray eyes, for a heartbeat, I saw his wolf answer—wild, unhidden, undeniable.
It was too much. I tore my gaze away before I fell to my knees, staring instead, at the hollow of his throat—his pulse. Suddenly wanting to lean in and take a long sniff.
Instead, I stood frozen, waiting to be told what to do.
The future Alpha took a step back, shaking his head.
“Lucien,” Elder Ansel whispered, voice cutting across the stillness. “You feel it. She is your mate.”
The words swallowed a hundred whispers whole. The air shifted as people leaned forward. Somewhere in the crowd, someone said, “No.”
Someone else laughed once, then stopped when no one joined them.
I looked up into Lucien’s eyes because I couldn’t not.
A muscle jumped in his jaw. His lip curled.
He blinked, slow, without surprise or joy. This was not a male celebrating finding his mate. His gaze slid past me as if pulled on a string and caught on the crimson silk waiting at the edge of the head table.
When he spoke, his voice carried to every corner. No one could pretend they hadn’t heard.
“I, Lucien Veyrac of the Silverpine Pack, heir to the Alpha Corren, reject you, Soraya Wane, as my mate.”
The last word cracked across the marble like a whip.
For one fleeting instant, my wolf had felt his—raw and fierce, reaching for me. Then the bond snapped under his words. My wolf cried out, a soundless keening inside my chest, before recoiling as if struck. The burn twisted into something crueler, not just denial but rejection, a beating-down in front of the entire pack and every other pack in the area.
I gasped, and pulled my hand away from his.
Laughter burst and overlapped, bright, sharp, delighted. Not everyone laughed. Some people sucked in breath and held it, as if struck too. Some of the older men looked away.
The woman in crimson silk didn’t smile because the smile never left her lips in the first place. Regardless of the ceremony, she knew he would choose her. It was obvious to me now.
Elder Ansel stepped forward as if to protest, then stopped with his mouth open, eyes moving between Lucien and the rest of the council, and me.
The bond didn’t snap back. It didn’t shatter like glass. It just… burned.
I stood there silent, in front of everyone I would have to see tomorrow, and the day after, and the day after.
There was only one way for me to save face. Orielle jumped and snarled once she knew my intent. I threw up walls to block her from taking control.
“I, Soraya Wane, accept your rejection.” The words tore out of me. “I, Soraya Wane, Wane of the Silverpine pack, reject you Lucien Veyric as my mate.”
When the bond seared him in turn, I saw it—the faintest wince he couldn’t hide—and I clung to that sliver of satisfaction.
I didn’t want to cry in front of them, but the tears welled anyway.
I didn’t want to give them that, but I didn’t have a choice.
Tears spilled and rolled down my cheeks, hot and mortifying.
I felt the weight of a hundred eyes waiting. Waiting for the entertainment of it.
I lifted my chin because it was the only thing I could lift.
And then I turned before anyone could see anything else break.
My shoes struck the floor. In a mirror, I caught my reflection—eyes wide and wet, mouth pressed into a miserable line—and looked away just in time to avoid colliding with a server carrying a tray full of bubbly.
At the far side of the ballroom, between two pillars, an archway stood empty. Staff used it to move from kitchens to the great hall. I’d used it too, carrying platters like most Wanes and Omegas.
I slipped inside without a word. I leaned back, letting the sturdiness of the wall hold me up.
The noise of the ballroom halved the instant stone closed around me. Far ahead, a scuff of footsteps echoed and then faded. I crept along the hallway, doors lined the passage, one ajar with steam curling out, and someone swearing softly over a spilled sauce for the decadent dessert.
I pressed a palm flat against my chest and told my heart to be quiet.
It thudded harder, as if it didn’t know how.
The next sobs hurt worse than the rejection.
I clapped my hand over my mouth to stop the next, but it still came, shaking my shoulders, clawing at my throat. Tears spilled fast and faster, staining the bodice.
From the hall, laughter rose again. Muted by stone now, but still sharp enough to find me.
And then Lucien’s voice carried through the open doors, clear and certain:
“I claim her as my mate.”
A roar of cheers shook the walls.
Against my will, I glanced through the arch at the very end of the ballroom. Through the crack in the door, crimson silk shimmered in the candlelight—already at his side.
The crowd cheered again. I swallowed hard and ran toward the last door between me and the outside.
“Lucien, please try to understand,” Bina pleaded for the umpteenth time in the last couple of days.I glared at her as I closed the refrigerator and stomped past her on my way out to the balcony. After the scene in the shower, I hadn’t said more than two words to her, or listened to her excuses as to why she didn’t tell me about her vision.Her bags were packed and waiting near the front door since yesterday when I told her to get the fuck out. Yet, she was still here.I wasn’t ready and she didn’t deserve my attention. Like a pup wanting attention, she followed on my heels.I whirled on her. Her eyes held a tinge of fear, and this time I didn’t care. If anything, that’s what I wanted to see. “Don’t you get it? I don’t care what you have to say. You had a life changing vision about me. Me! And you decided to keep it to yourself for weeks. Not a fucking day or two. Weeks, dammit.”
“I think we can repurpose the old library and the high school,” Nakoa said, looking at the enlarged map of Coralridge’s town center. “The high school will be the easiest to renovate into studio rooms with the cafeteria for meals.”I grimaced, but he was right. We needed something that we could fix sooner than yesterday.We were interrupted by the desk phone. I recognized Sid’s number and picked up on the second ring, also putting him on speakerphone in the process.“Hey Sid, you’re on speaker with Nakoa, Seith, and Bear.”“Hey,” he replied. “I think we have a line on our Council spy.”I automatically tensed, mentally crossing my fingers that it wasn’t someone from the Pack. “Who is it?”
I cracked my eyes open and saw the earliest glimpse of daylight around the edge of the curtains. Up until the last couple of weeks, it had been my favorite time of the day…waking the sleepy witch next to me little by little until she was putty in my hands and beyond ready to take me in.Something changed. I reach for her now, and she conveniently has something else to do, or sidesteps me completely.Every time I try to bring it up, she counters with my raging male hormones making sex more than it needs to be.My raging hormones weren’t an issue before. If anything, there were days when I needed all the stamina I could muster to keep up with her wants.Something else was going on, but she denied that as well.I could try and place blame on her coven, but there were always witches hanging out around the villa on a daily basis. I felt no ill will from any of them. They appeared to be genuine with their conversations and smiles toward me.I turn
My phone vibrated in my back pocket just as I tried to put a sleeping Kali in her crib. Last night was another sleepless night for the three of us. Gabriel took turns walking her around the room.I don’t know if she was feeding off our energy, because we were all on edge since the night she was born.All the known LK within the pack felt a ripple go up and down their spine, along with the pull to come and pay homage to our little princess. Gabriel felt it as well, so Bear’s assuming he’s also LK. But he did say it could be because of our soul bond, but none of us are buying it.It makes sense that Luna would bestow her blessing on the alpha line of the Pack that originally worshipped her.Now, three days after her birth, LK women randomly stop by the Pack House with a small gift for her. They feel calmer being near
A whole-body tremor pulled me out of a sound sleep. I couldn’t catch my breath, my fingers and toes ached with the pins-and-needles feeling.Bina’s head popped off the pillow. “What’s wrong?”I couldn’t even catch my breath long enough to answer her. As it was, I could barely shake my head. Shrugging my shoulders was not in the cards at present.“Do I need to call a doctor? Linsus?”As if those symptoms weren’t bad enough, I broke out into a cold sweat.“Lucien, what the fuck?” Bina cried, jumping out of bed. “You’re soaking the bed!”My heartbeat started coming back down to a manageable level, but Auron paced inside. I could feel his growls.“I don&r
I watched Gabriel closely as he absorbed my words. His wolf had to smell the magick. If he didn’t, that would be unusual for an Alpha wolf.He didn’t disappoint.“What do you mean?” he snarled at me. I could tell that he just wanted to hate me regardless; but being magicked and not remembering wasn’t something one could ignore.I take that back; I obviously ignored it when that young woman was in the dungeon. That was guilt I had to live with. One day I might be able to look at myself in the mirror, but that was a very long time in the future, if at all.“One of my Elders has had me magicked since I was at the Academy,” I replied dryly.“What? No way!” he replied in disbelief. “How could you not know?”Gabriel slid the chair from the guard’s desk and sat so we were now eye to eye.“If you’re magicked, how do you know? It just becomes your life and how
The sun was barely over the horizon and I was already on my third whiskey. It wasn’t like alcohol gave shifters a buzz, it was just the symbolism of the quantity that pissed me off.Then again, over the past week, everything pissed me off.All because of that Wane girl. What was she
I slowly blinked my eyes open, morning two in my new bedroom. I tried to move, but there was a heavy weight thrown across my waist.Then I registered soft snoring at my ear.Gabriel came home, slipped into bed, and somehow, I slept through it.I was doing everything in my pow
The upstairs was empty; I could hear Sam and Elara downstairs in the kitchen. I scooted across the hallway barely wrapped in a towel… old habits die hard.I held my towel firmly in place, even in the privacy of my room. Again, old habits.I closed my bedroom door and leaned a
I shifted until my back faced him at the foot of the cot. He pulled the tunic down over my left shoulder. He made a short, sharp cut.Selwyn turned to Lucien. “Do you accept?”Lucien nodded, his eyes fixed on me. I could tell he was physically







