LOGIN[MARA]
Miriam left without another word. Or a backward glance, her footsteps disappearing down the corridor.
Caine closed the door with a soft click. Her smile was still in my head—warm at the surface, nothing underneath it. Wrong in a way I couldn't name.
'I have a bad feeling about this,' Eira voiced from the recesses of my mind.
'She was probably just surprised.' I tried to reassure my wolf, but deep down, I couldn't shake the unease settling in my stomach.
'Sure.' Eira was silent for a moment before adding, 'But surprises aren't always good.'
The unease lingered, a shadow creeping over my thoughts.
Rhys pulled me back toward him. "She just needed a minute." His certainty was easy and warm.
I wanted to borrow it.
Caine watched the door for three more seconds. Then turned away.
Zane remained quiet. He never said anything when he was thinking hard.
After that, time seemed to stand still. I forgot about Miriam and the that didn't quite reach her eyes. I forgot about how the pack would react when they learned I was the triplets' mate.
I forgot about all of it.
Caine turned, and whatever was on his face when he looked at me made my chest tighten in a completely different way. Like I’d become the only thing that mattered in that moment, the only thing he saw.
My pulse kicked hard enough to hurt.
'Too fast,' I thought, pressing a hand to my chest.
If Eira could count my pulse, she'd be concerned.
'One hundred and fifty,' she offered helpfully.
'Not helping.'
"Come here," he said.
Not a question.
My feet moved before my brain caught up. He took my wrist and drew me into the corner of the room where the lantern light barely reached, backing me against the wall with a slow, deliberate patience that was somehow worse than urgency.
'Breathe,' Eira urged.
Easy for her to say.
He didn't touch me yet. Just looked—that controlled, thorough attention of his running over my face like he was making a decision he'd already made.
"Caine." My voice came out smaller than I wanted. "Say something."
"I'm thinking."
"About what?"
"Where to start."
My lungs forgot their job entirely.
He lifted one hand and tucked a strand of hair behind my ear, fingertips barely grazing my jaw. That one small touch lit up every nerve ending I owned.
"You've been quiet since my mother left," he murmured.
"I've been—I'm fine."
"You're nervous."
"I'm not nervous."
One corner of his mouth moved. Not quite a smile. "Your heart rate says otherwise."
Of course he could hear it. Of course.
I pressed my shoulders back against the wall and met his eyes. "Are you going to do something about it, or are you just going to stand there?"
That landed. Something shifted in his expression—amusement and something darker underneath it. He closed the remaining distance, and his hands found my waist, unhurried, learning the shape of me through the fabric.
"Mara." Low. Like a warning.
"What?"
He answered by tilting my chin up with two fingers and finally—finally—bringing his mouth to mine.
It wasn't gentle. Not harsh either. Somewhere between the two, thorough and focused, like he intended to finish what he started. I grabbed his shirt with both fists just to stay grounded. He responded by pulling me closer, one hand sliding to the small of my back, and the kiss deepened in a way that wiped out every other coherent thought in my head.
'There you are,' Eira breathed.
Rhys's voice came from the other side of the room. "That looks unfair."
Caine didn't stop immediately. He eased back in his own time, forehead dropping to mine, both of us breathing harder than we'd started.
I turned to find Rhys watching with his arms folded and an expression that was trying very hard to look patient. Zane, behind him, was looking at the ceiling with elaborate disinterest.
"Your turn's coming," Caine told him without looking over.
"I've been waiting very politely—" Rhys came up beside me, warmth at my back.
Zane stayed just far enough away to make me feel all three of them.“Say something,” Rhys muttered, his eyes locked on mine.
I shook my head. “No.”
His jaw tightened. “Mara—”
“Don’t.” My voice came out rough. “Don’t make me talk right now.”
His gaze dropped to my mouth. “Then what do you want?”
I stepped in close enough to feel his breath. “You.”
That got a low sound out of him.
Caine swore under his breath. Zane’s hand flexed at his side. Nobody moved.
Rhys lifted one hand to my waist, slow this time, like he was giving me every chance to bolt. I didn’t. My heart was already doing that for me.
“Still sure?” he asked.
I nodded, then grabbed his shirt. “Stop asking.”
That did it.
His mouth hit mine like he’d been starving. Heat flashed through me, bright and sharp. I grabbed him harder, and he answered with a rough sound that went straight through my bones.
Zane let out a low laugh. “About damn time.”
“Shut up,” I snapped, without looking away from Rhys.
Zane moved closer, voice pitched low. “Careful, mate.”
Rhys broke the kiss just long enough to look at him. “I know exactly what I’m doing.”
I almost laughed. Almost. Then his mouth found my jaw, and the sound died in my throat.
“Caine,” I breathed.
He paused just long enough to look at me. “Yeah?”
My hands slid up his chest, and I felt the muscle jump under my palms. “Don’t stop.”
His smile was pure trouble. “Wasn’t planning to.”
The lamplight burned lower. The bond settled into something deep and warm and entirely certain. At some point I ended up between all three of them—Rhys's arm around my shoulders, Caine's presence at my back, Zane close enough that his knee pressed mine.
Content. That was the word.
I was completely, entirely content.
'Remember this,' Eira mumbled.
Something in her tone snagged.
'Why?'
She didn't answer.
I woke to pale light and the soft hum of the bond.
Just that. Just warmth.
I lay still and let myself have it for a moment—the banner, the cupcake, Rhys saying Mara is our mate, Mom like it was the simplest thing in the world.
Then I reached for that warmth and found the room empty.
'They left early,' Eira offered.
Pack runs started at six. I'd known that my whole life. It didn't explain the flat, wrong feeling at the back of my throat, like I'd missed something crucial while I slept.
I dressed and went downstairs.
The breakfast table looked the same. That was the problem.
Caine was eating. Rhys had a cup of something. Zane was reading. All completely normal. None of them looked up when I walked in.
I pulled out a chair. "Morning."
Rhys glanced over. "Morning." Then back to his cup.
That was it.
'Something happened,' Eira said.
'I know.'
I watched Caine cut his food with his usual precision. He didn't look up once. The mate bond was still there—I could feel it—but muted, like a voice behind a closed door. Present. Not reaching.
I kept waiting for someone to explain.
A packmate arrived before I finished eating.
"Your father requests the family in the main hall." A pause. "All family."
The triplets stood without discussion. Without signal.
I followed.
'They're telling them,' I thought. 'About the bond. That's what this is.'
Eira didn't answer. The walk felt long. Rhys didn't take my hand. Caine moved slightly ahead. Zane didn't look back.
I told myself it meant nothing.
The hall was already full.
Pack members lined the walls. Conversations dropped as we entered. My dad stood near the front with his arms folded. He didn't look at me.
He never looked at me.
Former Alpha Michael was at the far end. Elders flanked him. The whole thing felt too formal for a morning announcement.
I smoothed my hands against my jeans. My heart was moving too fast.
'This is fine,' I told myself. 'They're making it official.'
The bond pulsed once—dull, distant—then went quiet.
Caine stepped forward.
The room stilled.
I watched him take his position. Straight-backed. Jaw set. He opened his mouth, and I was already arranging my expression into something ready to be seen.
His voice came out flat. Removed. Like he was reading from something he'd decided before he arrived.
He said he was renouncing the bond.
The first rejection was Caine's.
The second was Rhys's.
The third was Zane's.
Each landed before I could process the one before it. No speech. No hesitation. No looking at me like they were sorry. Just words—final, formal, pack law words—and then nothing.
I kept waiting for the punchline. For any of them to look at me and realize.
No one did.
[SLOANE]The desk was organized because I'd organized it.Three patient files. Two research summaries. One message from the county healer's office that could wait until Thursday. The photograph on the corner—three boys, taken last October, all three squinting into too much sun—was the only thing on my desk without a function.I kept it there anyway.Evelyn knocked twice and came in without waiting, which was why I'd hired her."Lunches are packed." She set a coffee on the edge of the desk without being asked. "Kai's asking if wolves can get colds or if it's only humans.""Tell him it's complicated.""He'll want a follow-up.""I know."She left. I heard her on the stairs—her particular rhythm, efficient and unhurried, the sound of someone who understood the household's architecture because I'd explained it once and she'd never needed it explained again.The duplex worked because I'd designed it to. Clinic entrance on the east side, family entrance on the west, the boys' school two bloc
[MARA]The bond snapped.Not slowly. Not fading. It broke all at once, violent and complete, like a structural collapse from the inside out. The pain tore through my chest and radiated in every direction simultaneously.My knees hit the floor.I pressed a palm flat against the stone just to stay upright. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't think.Eira screamed.Not a howl. A scream—the kind that only existed inside your own skull, the kind that was worse for that. It went on for three seconds and then cut off completely.The quiet that followed was worse than the pain.Nobody moved.I lifted my head and looked around.Some pack members looked away when I found them. Some didn't bother.My dad was across the room.Still. Arms folded. Face exactly as it had been when he arrived. He was looking directly at me.I kept thinking he would move. I kept waiting for the part where my dad crossed the room and stood between me and the rest of it.He didn't move.I found their faces.Caine. Rhys. Zane.Non
[MARA]Miriam left without another word. Or a backward glance, her footsteps disappearing down the corridor.Caine closed the door with a soft click. Her smile was still in my head—warm at the surface, nothing underneath it. Wrong in a way I couldn't name.'I have a bad feeling about this,' Eira voiced from the recesses of my mind.'She was probably just surprised.' I tried to reassure my wolf, but deep down, I couldn't shake the unease settling in my stomach.'Sure.' Eira was silent for a moment before adding, 'But surprises aren't always good.' The unease lingered, a shadow creeping over my thoughts.Rhys pulled me back toward him. "She just needed a minute." His certainty was easy and warm.I wanted to borrow it.Caine watched the door for three more seconds. Then turned away.Zane remained quiet. He never said anything when he was thinking hard.After that, time seemed to stand still. I forgot about Miriam and the that didn't quite reach her eyes. I forgot about how the pack woul
[MARA]"Stop trying to peek.""I'm not peeking.""Your eyebrows are doing the thing."I didn't know my eyebrows had a thing, but I pressed the blindfold tighter just to end that particular conversation. Rhys's hands stayed warm on my shoulders, steering me down the corridor with more patience than he usually had. From ahead, I caught Caine's low voice and Zane telling someone to move.The carpet changed. Then stairs. Rhys's grip shifted to my elbow."Three more steps," he said.I counted them. A door opened. Warmth hit me—amber, lamp-warm.Rhys pulled the blindfold free.Streamers were everywhere. Red and gold. A banner across the far wall in Zane's neat handwriting: Happy Birthday, Mara. Balloons pressed at the window like they were trying to get out. A low table held my favorite pastries—honey walnut, from the bakery in town I'd mentioned once, months ago. And Caine stood in the middle of everything with his arms folded, looking like he absolutely had not spent an hour blowing up ba







