LOGINI lay back and stared at the ceiling until it blurred, then blinked it sharp again. It became a game, or at least something to do.
Footsteps approached quietly, as if someone didn’t want to be heard until they were right at the door. I didn’t bother sitting up. I turned my head to see who would sneer at me next.
Two guards entered and took up space on either side of the doorway.
Lucien stepped in.
Power and anger radiated from him. His Alpha power stretched to all corners of the room. I felt it close in like a blanket, but not a nice fluffy one. One that suffocates.
His eyes were like steel, the gray before a storm breaks. For a heartbeat something pressed under his skin—golden and wild—and then shut down as he shoved it back.
But I saw it, his wolf leaped forward.
Orielle damn near broke through my skin to get to it.
Ori, stop!No! He’s ours!Lucien stopped an arm’s length away as if I was contagious. I scooted upright until I sat facing his looming standing presence.
He didn’t speak right away. He looked. He took stock of the room, the sneer on his face suggested my meager accommodations were too good for me.
Then his eyes fell on me. Starting at my feet, he worked his way up until our eyes met. I didn’t drop my gaze; I met him head on.
What did I have to lose at this point?
“Why.” His voice flat and menacing. It wasn’t a question; it was a demand.
“Why what?” I said more than asked.
“Why did you kill my father?”
“I didn’t.”
“You did.”
“I didn’t!” The chain rattled as I leaned forward. “I would never. I didn’t even know he was dead until your goons yanked me off the street.”
My chest heaved now as anger set in. “How did I supposedly kill him? Huh? I don’t even know how he was killed.”
“Doesn’t matter.”
“It does matter Asshole. I. Didn’t. Kill. Him.”
“Don’t lie. You ran.” His chest rose sharp, and his Alpha power pressed harder. “That’s guilt enough.”
“You rejected me!” The words tore out of me through gritted teeth, fighting back against him. “That’s why I left!”
“Bullshit.” His jaw locked, eyes storm-dark.
“It’s true!” My throat burned. “You condemned me to ridicule and humiliation the second you said no.”
His wolf shoved against his skin, gold flickering in his eyes. He fought it down, but I saw it.
“You feel it,” I said, breath shaking. “Don’t you dare deny it—I just saw your wolf.”
“My wolf only wants to kill yours for what you did,” his face hardened. “There is no bond. It’s gone. I severed it.”
“Bullshit,” I snapped back. “It’s still here. You can shove it down all you want, but I see it every time your eyes flash. My wolf feels it!”
“She’s wrong,” his breath came rough, chest heaving. “I chose my mate.”
“But your wolf wants me.”
Orielle slammed forward inside me, claws out, desperate.
Ours! she screamed, filling me until I had to bite back a sob.
His eyes lit gold again, brighter this time, before he killed it—like crushing something wild under his hand.
“You want it gone?” My voice shook with fury. “Then make it go.”
Any awe and hope for a bond I once felt for this man was gone. Only hatred remained.
“Watch me.” His voice was wolf-deep, a growl that rattled the stone.
We stood locked, breath harsh, wolves straining for mate, humans straining for denial. The air between us shook with it. Neither of us moved.
A muscle in his cheek jumped. His nostrils flared once. For a second I saw the man without the room, without the guards, without the house or the flags or the dead—just a wolf dragged to heel and not liking who held the leash.
He stepped back. The distance went cold.
He turned for the door. His hand hit the jamb as he passed through.
“No one comes down here but me,” he ordered.
“Yes, Alpha,” the guards answered together.
He didn’t look at me again. He walked out. The door shut; the bolt slid and the lock turned.
Orielle paced once, twice, three times, then curled small and furious and humming.
He felt it, she said, fierce in the quiet. He felt us.
I didn’t answer her. I couldn’t. I didn’t know what else to say. My eternally hopeful wolf. Hoping for a mate that would never be hers.
I pressed my palms flat on my thighs until my hands stopped shaking. I stared at the place he’d stood and tried to get my breathing under control.
“Bastard!” I said yelled. Hopefully it was loud enough for the whole damned Pack House to hear. “I didn’t freaking do it!”
Above, I imagined the pack carrying on as it does from day to day while I sat back against the wall and watched the door that only one person was allowed to open.
The one person who chose another mate besides his fated one.
Then I thought about the mate he chose. She was everything I wasn’t.
The smiling heiress who got everything she wanted in her life, while I sat here alone. Blamed for something I didn’t do, right on the heels of that son-of-a-bitch rejecting me.
How dare they treat me this way. Just because I’m a Wane?
After that moment of anger, I realized how futile the emotion was. It was just as draining as crying all the time.
Instead, I tried to focus on what I thought might happen next. Surely the pack had some type of counsel that would represent me and hear my side of the story. That’s how they did things on television, the innocent always went free.
Believing there was someone out there that would believe me, even if they were paid to do so, helped the minutes tick by while I waited.
And waited.
“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
It was almost dawn as the limo pulled up the hill toward the Pack House, I focused my attention on the house my family built over two hundred years ago. Gradually as the pack grew, additions were made.Now this massive house was mine. There was a legacy to live up to on these lands. It was
One more contract, then I can call it a day. Although, work is keeping me busy and out of my head.My brain can’t seem to wrap itself around the conversation Seith and I had right before the ceremony dinner. Is Rodgrick trying to expand his territory into the Northern hemisphere?It
I fiddled with my tie until the bow was perfectly aligned and centered. For whatever reason, my fingers just weren’t cooperating. What should have taken me seconds, took over twenty minutes.It didn’t help matters that Seith sat in the armchair directly behind me making faces in the mirror
Pulling a couple of bags from my closet, I tossed clothes in randomly. I didn’t care about matching items, jeans, sweats, hoodies, shirts, and other incidentals.After Sam left the Pack House, I pulled up the forecast, and he was right. This driving rain was going to turn into freezing rai







