LOGINFlashes.
That was all I had.
Flashes of light.
Flashes of voices.
Flashes of movement just beyond my reach.
Every time I tried to grasp one of the memories, it slipped away like water through my fingers.
My head pounded.
It felt as though someone had taken a hammer to my skull and then left the pieces rattling around inside. Every heartbeat sent another wave of pain through me.
I tried to open my eyes.
Nothing happened.
Panic flickered briefly before fading beneath the heavy fog clouding my thoughts.
Where was I?
What happened?
The last thing I remembered clearly was sitting with my friends on the patio at the club.
Then the nausea.
The dizziness.
Lyall catching me before I fell.
After that...
Nothing.
The darkness around me shifted.
Or maybe I was moving.
I couldn't tell.
I became aware of voices nearby.
At first they sounded distant, muffled as though I were listening from underwater.
Gradually they grew clearer.
"You weren't supposed to give her any. Only him."
The sharpness in the voice cut through some of the haze.
Her?
Who was her?
Me?
The realization came slowly.
A cold knot formed in my stomach.
Another voice answered.
A woman.
"I didn't know she was up there. I just slipped it into a few drinks after flirting with that pathetic wolf at the bar. If I had known she would get one, I never would have sent those drinks upstairs."
For a moment, everything froze.
The wolf at the bar.
Troy.
Images flashed through my mind.
Troy blushing.
The beautiful woman talking to him.
The rest of us laughing from the balcony.
My stomach twisted violently.
No.
No, no, no.
We had been careful.
We knew about the drug.
We had spent the entire evening making sure every drink was safe.
How could we have missed something so obvious?
Another male voice joined the conversation.
"Well, she got some too. What happens now?"
A long pause followed.
Then the woman laughed.
The sound sent a chill down my spine.
"If I remember correctly, the effects on females can be... interesting."
My pulse quickened.
Interesting?
What did that mean?
"What kind of effects?" one of the men asked.
The woman seemed amused.
"We may be able to use this to our advantage."
The words struck me harder than anything else.
Use it?
Use me?
Fear exploded through the fog in my mind.
I tried to move.
Tried to force my eyes open.
Tried to listen.
Anything.
But my body refused to obey.
It felt impossibly heavy.
Like I was trapped beneath layers of stone.
The darkness pressed closer.
The voices faded.
I fought to stay conscious.
I needed to hear more.
Needed to know what they were planning.
Needed to know where Lyall was.
The thought of him sent another wave of panic through me.
He had stumbled too.
He had been affected.
Was he here?
Was he safe?
Was he hurt?
I tried to call his name.
No sound came out.
Only silence.
The darkness swallowed me again.
Time lost all meaning.
Minutes.
Hours.
Maybe days.
I had no way of knowing.
The next thing I became aware of was the heat.
At first it was subtle.
A warmth spreading through my chest.
Then it began to grow.
The sensation crept through my body, winding through every muscle and nerve.
My breathing quickened.
Sweat dampened my skin.
The heat intensified.
It wasn't natural.
Every instinct I possessed screamed that something was wrong.
Terribly wrong.
A shiver ran through me despite the overwhelming warmth.
I knew this feeling.
Not from experience.
From stories.
Lessons.
Warnings passed down from older female wolves.
Heat.
The word echoed through my mind.
Impossible.
Heat wasn't supposed to happen like this.
Female wolves entered heat only under very specific circumstances.
It was rare.
Special.
Sacred, according to some.
Certainly not something caused by an unknown drug.
My pulse raced.
The harder I fought the sensation, the stronger it became.
The pounding in my head returned with renewed force.
My thoughts scattered.
Nothing made sense anymore.
I drifted in and out of awareness.
The world became fragments.
A voice.
A shadow.
Movement.
The feeling of being carried somewhere.
Then darkness again.
At one point I thought I heard Lyall's voice.
At another, I was certain I heard someone arguing nearby.
Neither memory stayed long enough for me to trust it.
Everything blurred together.
Reality.
Dreams.
Memories.
Hallucinations.
I could no longer tell the difference.
The only thing I knew for certain was that something had gone horribly wrong.
Eventually the heat began to fade.
The relentless fire burning through my veins weakened until all that remained was exhaustion.
A bone-deep weariness unlike anything I had ever experienced.
When awareness finally returned, I found myself lying on a hard floor.
The room was silent.
My head still throbbed.
Every muscle in my body ached.
For several long moments, I couldn't bring myself to move.
I simply stared into the darkness, trying to piece together the shattered fragments of memory.
The voices.
The drug.
The woman at the bar.
The strange heat.
None of it fit together.
None of it made sense.
But one thing was painfully clear.
Something had happened.
Something important.
Something that would change everything.
And I couldn't remember enough to understand what it was.
That realization terrified me more than the darkness ever could.
Rushing through the woods toward our designated meeting place is easier than I expected.The ball cap shades enough of my face that I no longer feel the need to duck behind every tree. I still avoid the main trails whenever possible, but being alone in the woods isn't unusual for a werewolf. We hunt here. Train here. Think here.No one gives a lone wolf a second glance.Every step carries me farther away from everything I have ever known.I refuse to think about that.Instead, I focus on Raven.On the plan.On putting one foot in front of the other.If I allow myself to think about what I'm leaving behind, I know I'll turn around before I ever reach the edge of the territory.Eventually the trees begin to thin, revealing the narrow road where Raven promised to meet me.Right on cue, I spot her old car sitting on the shoulder with the hood raised.I can't help smiling.A young warrior from the pack is standing beside her, scratching the back of his neck while staring helplessly into th
When I see that the path is clear, I climb out the window and press myself against the outer wall of the pack house.One careful step at a time.I know the patrol schedules, but the pack house is different. There are always wolves coming and going—warriors changing shifts, mothers picking up children, elders stopping in to gossip, omegas bringing supplies. At any second someone could round a corner and everything would be over before I even made it home.Keeping my breathing slow, I slip around the first corner.Nothing.Another few steps.Still nothing.A tiny smile tugs at my lips as I disappear into the tree line surrounding the pack house.That was the hardest part.At least...I hope it was.Now all I have to do is get home, grab my emergency cash, and leave before anyone realizes I was never sleeping.Raven's part of the plan is just as important.She is buying me time.The blood sample is only an excuse. She admitted there is still enough of the drug in my bloodstream for her to
Making the decision to leave was one of the hardest things I had ever done.Harder than waking up in the hospital.Harder than learning I was pregnant.Harder than accepting that I might never know who the father of my child truly was.Because this wasn't just a decision to leave a place.It was a decision to leave my entire life behind.My home.My friends.My future.Every dream I had carefully built over the last eighteen years.I would never again walk through these halls without wondering if someone was hunting me.Never sit in the pack dining room without looking over my shoulder.Never train beside Lyall.Never laugh with River until we cried.Never tease Mel.Never race Troy through the woods.I wasn't simply running away.I was grieving a life that hadn't even ended yet.Raven remained silent while I processed everything.She knew there was nothing she could say to make this easier.Eventually, I wiped my eyes and forced myself to think.If I was going to survive...Then I ha
"You need to come with me," Raven said urgently."What do you mean?" I asked, confused.Raven had been absolutely insistent ever since she finished examining me.Leave.Today.Not tomorrow.Not after I had time to think.Today.The word echoed through my mind like a death sentence.Leave my pack.Leave my home.Leave my friends.Leave Lyall.All because of a child I hadn't even known existed twenty-four hours ago.A child that apparently wasn't normal.A child that had already managed to turn my entire life upside down before it was even born."You know that you can't raise this baby here," Raven said firmly.I looked away.The truth was, part of me already knew that.I just didn't want to admit it."You heard the Alpha this morning," she continued. "You heard the Luna. Something is wrong.""They were just asking questions.""No."The force in her voice made me look back at her."They weren't asking questions. They were fishing."My stomach tightened.I hated that I knew exactly what
As that feeling starts to grow, so does the look on Raven's face.At first, she just looks surprised.Then confused.Then absolutely horrified.The moment she jerks her hands away from me, I know something is wrong.Very wrong."What?" I ask immediately.Raven doesn't answer.Instead, she begins pacing the small office.Back and forth.Back and forth.Her hands tug at her hair while she mutters under her breath."No...no, that isn't possible.""Raven."She ignores me.I watch as she rushes back over and grabs both of my wrists. Her eyes close once more as she lets her magic flow through me.This time the sensation is much gentler.The warmth gathers low in my stomach.A soft golden glow that feels strangely familiar.Safe.Protected.Loved.When Raven finally opens her eyes again, they are wide with disbelief."Raven, talk to me!"She releases me immediately."Your doctor was right. Most of the drug is still trapped in your body.""I know that already.""No, you don't understand."Her
Before long, Raven has me in a different room not far from the pack dining room. As soon as she pushes me into some obscure office, she closes the door and begins to wave her hands in some way that makes absolutely no sense to me, but I am able to feel magic ripple in the air as her hands keep moving. "Okay, now that I have you alone, what is going on? You cannot send me an SOS with no other clues. Then, when I arrive you are practically in tears while speaking to the Alpha and Luna. You are better than that. I know that, you know that. What is going on!?" She asks in disbelief.I am so excited to see her and see how the rest of the pack acted around her that it takes my mind a few moments to catch up. Before I can even answer her, I just start laughing hysterically. As much as I want to stop and explain myself, I am unable until well after tears form in my eyes and run down my face."Okay, I am really confused now. What is going on?" She asks again. I take a few deep breaths as I w
Lyall helps me into my wheelchair once again so that we can head to the pack kitchen for some much needed snacks. River picks up my blanket and takes it to the corner where a maid will come by later to grab it. "Okay, so...maybe we will avoid ice cream this time. There are plenty of other snacks t
For a few moments, neither of us says anything.The only sound is the quiet ticking of the turn signal and the occasional vehicle passing by on the road beside us. I keep my face turned toward the window, watching trees and storefronts blur together through watery eyes.I hate this.I hate feeling
"Rowan, how are you feeling today?" the doctor asked as she entered the exam room for my one-week checkup.One week.I had somehow survived an entire week trapped in my bedroom.I wasn't entirely sure how.There had been moments when I thought I might lose my mind from the boredom alone. Other mome
The next few days passed with little to no excitement.At first, I told myself that was a good thing. Recovery was supposed to be boring. Recovery was supposed to mean resting, sleeping, and gradually feeling stronger.Instead, I felt trapped.My parents had begun avoiding me as though I carried so







