LOGINAvery’s POV“Bjorn!” I lunged for the glass, snatching it out of Melissa’s hands. “Bjorn, it’s me, I’m here—”But the ink was already swirling back over his face, swallowing the green grass and the blue sky and my son’s wide eyes, and then it went dark once more.“He’s gone,” Melissa said softly fro
It was old, the frame tarnished silver worked into a pattern of vines, the glass itself dark, like looking into a pool of standing water rather than a mirror. My reflection didn’t show up in it the way it should have. I turned it over in my hands, then carried it over to where Melissa was sleeping.
Avery’s POVBy the time the sun came up, we’d tried everything I could think of.We went through the boulders more times than I could count. We tried walking out a different way, off the trail entirely, pushing through the brush until the trees got too thick to pass, only to come out facing that sam
I caught her by the shoulders and held her back so I could see her face.“Avery. Slow down.” I searched her eyes for some sign she was joking, some flicker of the woman who had only just agreed to date again, let alone have a child. Right now, all I saw was heat and desire, like her wolf was going w
Gideon’s POVAvery was quiet on the drive home, her cheek pressed against the window, that little smile still sitting on her face. Her hand didn’t leave mine the entire way. She’d laced her fingers through mine as soon as I pulled out of the driveway, and now, as we pulled into our own, she was stil
I pressed my lips together. The witch’s doing, of course. But why Melissa? She’d never bothered the witch before. She had even left offerings. She had nothing to do with any of this.“I barely saw her before it all went black,” Melissa said. “When I woke up, I was already in the web. She kept giving







