LOGINJasmina woke up at dawn with a plan, six days to prove herself to Marcus. Six days before he came back with threats or worse.
She couldn't waste time. Lyanna was already in the training yard when Jasmina arrived. The older woman looked tired but determined. "We're doing this differently," Lyanna said without preamble. "No more trying to suppress the baby's magic. That's impossible. We work with it instead." "How?" "ByShe found Lyanna in the training yard two days later, working with a group of the newer warriors on footwork, and waited until the session ended before she said she needed to talk and it wasn't urgent enough to interrupt but it was important enough that she wanted Lyanna's full attention when they did.Lyanna looked at her for a moment and then told the warriors to run the drill three more times on their own and walked with Jasmina to the bench at the edge of the yard, the one under the old oak that had probably been there before the compound was built.Jasmina told her what Stefan had said. The comparison to Arlene. The quiet authority, the sense of resisting him meaning resisting something larger than yourself.Lyanna didn't say anything for a long moment. She looked out at the yard, at the warriors running their footwork without supervision, doing it properly because they'd been trained to do it properly even unsupervised, which was its own kind of testament.She said Arlene hadn't
Stefan was gone for nine days before he came back with anything substantial, and when he did come back he looked like a man who'd been sleeping in vehicles, which he had been.He sat down across from Jasmina's desk without the report folder this time, which she noticed immediately because Stefan always had the folder. He said he wanted to tell her in person first because some of it wasn't the kind of thing that read well on paper, and she said go ahead, and he started talking and didn't really stop for twenty minutes.Aldric was not what either of them had expected. Stefan had gone in assuming he'd find another Gareth, a power-hungry Alpha building a coalition for territory or title, and what he'd found instead was a man who didn't appear to want territory at all. He had no pack of his own that anyone could identify, no compound, no fixed seat. He moved between the seven packs that made up the Eastern Collective and stayed with each one for weeks at a time, and from what Stefan had pi
The message from Erik of Northern Frost came on a Tuesday, four months after the battle.It wasn't a radio call. It was a written letter, which Erik only used when he wanted to be certain that the precise wording was recorded, and when she saw the Northern Frost seal on the envelope she set down what she was doing and read it immediately.Erik wrote the way he talked—direct and without softening. The substance of the letter was this: three packs in the northeastern corridor, two of them Northern Frost affiliates and one independent, had in the last six weeks received visits from representatives of a coalition Jasmina had not heard of. The representatives identified themselves as speaking for something they called the Eastern Collective, a loose alliance of seven packs operating in the deep eastern territories beyond Erik's usual sphere of contact. The Eastern Collective's representatives had brought a specific message: that the Grand Council's recognition of Jasmina as Alpha Supreme r
Lyanna told Damoew what she thought in the kitchen at six in the morning while Jasmina was still asleep.Jasmina heard about it secondhand, from Damoew, who told her while they were doing the dishes after dinner, three days later, because that was how Damoew worked—he held things and turned them over and brought them out when he'd decided what he thought about them. He said Lyanna had sat across from him with her tea and told him that what Kira was doing was consistent with what Sable had always described as the foundational trajectory, which was that this child was going to move fast and the job of everyone around her was not to manage the speed but to make sure she had ballast. He said Lyanna had used the word ballast, which he found slightly funny. He said Lyanna told him that his own instinct toward steadiness was the most useful thing he brought to this situation and that he should trust it and stop standing in the nursery doorway with the look he got.Damoew said he didn't know
Kira broke a window at three and a half months old.Not dramatically. Not in anger. She was lying on the floor mat in the nursery during free time—Sable had introduced free time, twenty minutes where no exercise was happening and no one was directing her attention anywhere, just Kira on the mat with whatever she chose to do with it—and Damoew was sitting against the wall watching her the way he'd started watching her in the mornings, that low steady attention he gave her that didn't demand anything back.She was looking at the window.The glass didn't shatter. It cracked—a single line from the lower left corner up to about the midpoint, the kind of crack that suggested pressure had been applied from inside out. Slow. Deliberate. Like a test.Damoew said: "Kira."She looked at him.The crack stopped where it was.He sat with it for about ten seconds—Jasmina knew this because he told her exactly afterward, and she believed him because Damoew didn't embellish—and then he said, very calml
The morning after Gareth signed the submission document, Jasmina slept until eight.Not because she'd decided to. Her body just didn't wake her. Kira slept too, which almost never happened past six, and Damoew was already up and gone when she opened her eyes. The compound outside the window sounded normal. Not quiet-normal, not after-battle-normal. Just normal, the everyday hum of people going about things, which was its own kind of strange after the weeks they'd had.She lay there for a moment and looked at the ceiling.Gareth was being transported back to Ironwood territory this morning. Stefan had organized it with two warriors and a vehicle and the minimum of ceremony. She hadn't gone to see him off. She'd thought about it and decided it would have been theater—the Alpha Supreme watching the defeated Alpha leave—and she had no interest in theater. She'd already said what needed saying in that secured room. The rest was logistics.She got up, fed Kira, dressed, and went to the offi
Stefan's casualty report came at 0510.She read it in the command room with her hands on the desk and took it in slowly.Four wounded seriously. Fourteen with minor injuries. No deaths.She read the last line twice.No deaths.Three battles. She'd lost three people in the first. Zero in the second.
Fenwick called on a Friday evening. Jasmina was in the nursery. Kira had been fussy for the past hour—not magic, just a baby having a bad evening—and she was walking her slowly around the room while Damoew sat in the corner chair with the patience of a man who had learned that sometimes the walking
Ord called on a Wednesday. Not his Beta, not an intermediary. Ord himself, direct line, which meant he'd either done his research and found the Alpha Supreme's administrative channel or someone had given it to him. From the way Vincent had been working the situation, she suspected the latter.He i
Kira turned three months old on a Sunday. Not a ceremony—they didn't mark it formally. But Jasmina noticed it, and Damoew noticed it, and Lyanna arrived in the morning with food that she claimed was for no particular reason, which meant she'd noticed it too.Sable noticed it differently. She came t







