LOGINCrystal's POV
I pressed myself into the night, moving quietly behind crates and low walls, every step I took was guided by my wolf. My senses were sharp. I could feel even the smallest movement, and every sniff of the air I took told me who was nearby. The desert wind blew against me, carrying the scent of sand, dry plants, and distant life. My wolf stirred, excited by the space, the freedom and the danger. I ran. Fast, but careful. Every step guided by instincts I had ignored for so long. Rocks cut into my skin, sand burned my legs, but I didn’t stop. The bond twisted painfully in my chest. Bryan with Chloe. My mate. The one who was supposed to protect me, was the one hurting me the most. My wolf howled inside me, full of anger and pain. I forced it down, turning it into strength. The desert felt alive. I could sense prey, predators, danger everywhere and something else. The power inside me grew stronger with every step, guiding me away from danger, helping me survive. I found a small canyon, its high walls hiding me from the moonlight. I dropped to the ground, my body aching, covered in bruises and blood. But I was alive. Exhaustion pulled at me like a heavy weight. Sleep came quickly, almost without me noticing. And with it, memories began to surface, soft at first, like a dream. I was ten. The pack house smelled of firewood and warm bread, laughter echoing through the halls. My parents, the alpha and Luna, were gentle and strong, their presence wrapping me in safety. I remembered being held in my father’s arms, his voice calm as he told me stories, my mother’s laughter so bright and comforting. I had never felt more loved, more certain that the world was a place where I belonged. We played in the fields together, my parents watching as I ran across the grass, my wolf still small but already stirring. They had praised me for courage, for cleverness, for heart. I was happy. I felt safe. And then it changed. I could still remember the day vividly. The Alpha and Luna went for a hunt with other ranking officials to mark the day the pack was founded. Then the tragedy occurred, My father was killed during the hunt, leaving the pack vulnerable. My Mother, Luna, of the pack was nowhere to be found. Fear rippled through the ranks, and whispers of weakness spread like wildfire. My father’s beta, Matthew Johnson stepped forward. At first, his presence seemed a relief. But soon, his patience ran thin, his eyes cold and calculating. When he declared himself alpha, everything shifted. The warmth vanished. The laughter disappeared. Praise was replaced with sharp words, cruel remarks, and harsh discipline. I was no longer the cherished daughter of the alphas. I was a target, a tool, an omega to be controlled. I remembered the sting of his first punishments, how my wolf trembled in fear whenever his shadow fell across me. I had tried to please him, to earn a fraction of the love I had once known, but nothing was enough. The pack’s eyes were now critical, mocking, always watching. The fear and confusion of that time became my earliest lesson in survival. My parents’ absence, Matthew’s cruelty, the whispers of wolves who had once been my friends. All of it planted the first seeds of anger, resilience, and the defiance that now burned inside me. Even in sleep, my wolf shifted restlessly beneath my skin, as if remembering the fear, the betrayal, and the strength that had begun to grow from it. The moonlight filtered into the canyon, pale and cold, but I clung to that memory not the pain, but the love I had once known. Waking up, the desert was quiet, my wolf growled softly. I wasn’t alone. Then I felt it. Bryan had noticed I was gone. The pack was searching. Their voices echoed through the night, calling my name, angry, sharp, hunting. I hid behind a large rock, my heart racing. They were close. Too close. The sand shifted. Then I saw them. Alpha Matthew and Bryan. Standing at the top of a dune, lit by the moon. My wolf growled in fear and anger. I was surrounded. Bryan’s voice echoed across the desert. “You can run, Crystal, but you can’t hide! Come back now, or it will be worse for you!” Matthew’s voice followed, cold and cruel. “The desert will teach you your place, little omega. There is no escape.” My legs trembled, weak from pain, but my wolf pushed me forward. I looked around desperately, there had to be a way out. Anything. Then I saw it. A cliff. High, steep and deadly. There was nowhere else to go. No path. No hiding place. No escape. Bryan’s voice came again, louder this time. “Come back, Crystal! Or you’ll regret it!” Matthew’s voice cut through the air. “You won’t survive out there.” I stepped closer to the edge, my heart pounding wildly. Fear filled me, but so did something else; Freedom. There was only one choice left. I jumped. The air rushed past me, the world spinning into darkness. Then; Impact. Pain exploded through my body as I hit the rocks below. Everything went black. Darkness closed in slowly, like water filling a space. My last thoughts were a mix of fear and relief. I had escaped. Even if only for a moment. And deep inside me, my wolf growled; Defiant. Then everything faded away.Kenneth's POV Marcus's report turned out to be nothing urgent. A miscommunication about patrol scheduling for the night after the gathering, the kind of thing that would have waited perfectly well until morning. I dealt with it quickly, my mind only half present, the other half still standing back at the fire with whatever I had been about to say to Crystal before duty pulled me away from it. By the time I returned to the gathering, she had already gone. I told myself it did not matter. That there would be other evenings, other quiet moments by other fires. I had believed that easily enough walking back to my own room that night. Sitting at my desk afterward, the gathering's noise still faintly audible through the window, I found myself thinking about the words I had not managed to say, turning them over with more care than I usually allowed myself. There is something I have been wanting to tell you. It should have been simple. I had rehearsed versions of it in my head more
Crystal's POVThe bonfire was bigger than I expected.Stella had mentioned the gathering in passing over the last several days, the seasonal marker the pack apparently observed every few months, something about honoring the turn of the moon cycle and giving everyone a reason to gather outside the usual rhythm of work and patrol. I had pictured something small. A few logs, a few people standing around them out of obligation.Instead the open field behind the training grounds had been transformed entirely. The fire itself rose tall and bright at the center, ringed by smaller lanterns strung between posts, and the smell of roasting meat and the cinnamon thing the cook had been perfecting all week drifted thick and warm across the gathered crowd. Nearly the entire pack seemed to be present, children weaving between adults, someone playing something on a stringed instrument near the edge of the firelight.I stood near the back for the first stretch of it, watching rather than participating,
Crystal's POVI found Stella in the linen room off the eastern corridor, the small overlooked space the pack used for storing bedding and towels, where she had apparently retreated to sort through a fresh delivery before the gathering later that week required every spare blanket the pack owned.I had simply found myself walking that direction after my evening session, the elder's words about my mother still settling somewhere quiet in my chest, and some part of me had wanted company that did not require explaining any of it."So," I said, dropping into the chair across from Stella with far more casualness than I actually felt, "Jordan."She did not even look up from the basket of linens she was sorting, though the tips of her ears went faintly pink. "What about him?""That is what I am asking you," I said. "What about him?""He is Kenneth's beta," she said, with the careful neutrality of someone reciting a fact rather than answering a question. "He is good at his job. He is loyal.""H
Crystal's POV"Tell me about the coven," I said, before I could lose my nerve.The elder paused mid-motion, his hand halfway to the small book he always carried, and looked at me with the particular stillness that meant he was deciding how honest to be.We had just finished the evening session, my third of the new two-a-day rhythm, and my body carried the familiar settled ache that no longer worried me. The clearing had gone soft and gold around us, the sun low enough to paint long shadows across the grass without yet surrendering the sky to dark."Which part," he asked carefully."Any part," I said. "All of it, eventually. But tonight, whatever you think I am ready to hear."He considered that, lowering himself onto the same flat rock he favored, setting the book beside him unopened. I sat across from him, cross-legged on the still-warm ground, waiting."Your mother's coven was old," he said finally. "Older than most of the wolf packs that exist today, though witches do not measure t
Crystal's POV"You frown when you concentrate," I said. "Did you know that."Kenneth glanced up from the report in front of him, one eyebrow lifting slightly. We were in the same library room as before, though this time I had not come looking for quiet. I had come looking for him, with no real excuse beyond restlessness and the fact that the second training session of the day had ended early and left me with nowhere useful to put the leftover energy."I was not aware that frowning was a crime," he said."It is not," I said. "It is just very serious. Constantly. Even when you are reading something boring, like that report you are holding right now, you frown like it personally offended you.""Border allocation reports are offensive," he said, deadpan. "They reported the need for three more patrol points on the northern boundary and have not explained why any of them require new construction instead of reassigning existing posts.""See," I said, gesturing at his face. "That exact expres
Crystal's POVI had not planned on walking with him.The evening had simply turned out that way, I had left the second training session of the day later than usual, and I had taken the longer path back toward the pack house instead of the direct one, mostly because the air outside was finally cooling after the heavy heat of the afternoon and I was not ready to be indoors yet.The elder's new pace was beginning to show its logic, even if I had argued against it only days before. Two shorter sessions left less wreckage than one long, frustrated one. My body ached differently now. I had grudgingly started to admit, somewhere in the back of my mind, that he had been right.Kenneth was already on that path when I reached it.He did not look surprised to see me, which made me wonder, briefly, whether he had taken the longer route home for the same unspoken reason I had."Long day," I said, falling into step beside him."They are mostly long days," he said, though there was no real complaint
Crystal's POVThe elder moved our sessions to dusk.He did not offer a lengthy explanation. He simply told me the following evening and said that what I was working with responded differently after dark, and that I should eat before I came.I ate. I came. And the moment I stepped into the clearing
Kenneth's POVThe senior council met at midday.Eight people around a table, each of them having served in some capacity under my father and then under me, each of them with enough experience to understand that a vampire scout on the eastern boundary at two in the morning was not a routine report.
Crystal's POVI turned and went back inside, keeping my steps even, my face arranged into something that would not invite questions. Stella was still at the table, now deep in conversation with someone new, and she glanced up as I passed and something in her expression told me she had seen Nadia le
Crystal's POVStella told me it was expected.That was the word she used. Expected. Like attendance at the pack dinner was not optional, but a thing that simply happened and I was now included in it."I don't eat with people I don't know," I said."You know me," she replied, already moving toward t







