로그인Four and a half years later, I stood in what had once been an abandoned warehouse and was now the nerve center of the Sanctuary’s operation, watching my empire of survivors thrive.
“Dr. Winters, we have three new arrivals from the Cascade pack,” Jennifer called from her workstation, fingers flying across multiple keyboards. “Two teenage siblings and an elderly beta. They’ll need full processing, probably medical attention. The Alpha there has a reputation for…”
“I know his reputation.” I cut her off, already pulling up the files on my tablet. “Get Dr. Martinez on standby and run complete background checks. I want to make sure they weren’t followed.”
“Already running.”
Jennifer was one of my first recruits, a brilliant tech specialist who’d fled her pack after they’d tried to force her into a mating with her abuser. Now she ran our digital security with ruthless efficiency, ensuring that no one who came to the Sanctuary could ever be tracked back to their origin.
I moved to the window overlooking the main floor. Three stories below, wolves from a dozen different packs mingled freely eating, talking, laughing. Some attended the therapy sessions we offered. Others worked in the various legitimate businesses we’d established to make the Sanctuary self-sufficient. We had a bakery, a tech consulting firm, a construction company. All of it run by wolves who’d been thrown away by the pack system.
Forty-three residents currently. Each one a life saved. Each one a middle finger to the pack laws that had tried to destroy them.
My tablet buzzed with an alert. Northern sector perimeter breach, false alarm. Just a deer. But it was the third one this week. Jennifer noticed my frown.
“The sensors are getting too sensitive,” she said. “Or something’s testing our defenses. I can’t tell which yet.”
A chill ran down my spine, but I pushed it away.
“Run diagnostics. If something’s probing us, I want to know.”
“Mama!”
The cry was accompanied by the thundering of small feet, and I turned just in time to catch Emma as she launched herself at my legs. At four and a half, my daughter was a force of nature, all wild dark curls and storm-gray eyes that were so much like Kieran’s it sometimes stole my breath.
“Easy, little wolf.” I scooped her up, pressing a kiss to her forehead. “Where are your brothers?”
“Liam’s in the library being boring, and Noah’s trying to convince Javier to teach him knife throwing again.” Emma’s expression was pure exasperation, so much older than her years. “Can you tell Noah that four and a half is too young for weapons training?”
“I’ll talk to him.” I smiled despite myself.
Noah had inherited Dominic’s protectiveness and his need to be useful, to protect everyone around him. At four and a half, he already positioned himself as the Sanctuary’s helper, wanting to take care of everyone. It would have been endearing if it didn’t break my heart every time I saw it.
Liam, quiet and thoughtful, with Asher’s amber eyes and that same calculating intelligence, preferred books and strategy games to physical activity. He was already reading at a second-grade level, already asking questions about pack politics and law that I had to carefully navigate.
And Emma fierce, independent Emma, with Kieran’s eyes and his commanding presence even at four years old, was the leader of their little pack, just like her biological father led his.
They were everything. My reason for surviving. My reason for building this place.
“Mama, you have the thinking face,” Emma said, touching my cheek with small fingers. “Are you worried about something?”
Too perceptive. All three of them were too perceptive, probably a side effect of being born from a mate bond that should never have resulted in children.
“Just work stuff, sweetheart. Nothing for you to worry about.” I set her down gently. “Go check on your brothers. We’ll have dinner in an hour.”
She scampered off with boundless energy, and I turned back to Jennifer.
“Status on the Cascade transfers?”
“Clean. No tracking signatures, no pack bonds that might be monitored. Elena’s crew did excellent work getting them out.” She pulled up their profiles on the main screen. “Two siblings, ages fourteen and sixteen, who witnessed their parents’ execution for speaking against pack law. And one seventy-two-year-old beta whose Alpha wanted to ‘retire’ her when she could no longer perform physical labor.”
The casual cruelty of pack law never stopped infuriating me.
“Get them settled in the east wing. Make sure they understand they’re safe here. That no one can touch them.”
“Will do.” Jennifer hesitated, her fingers hovering over the keyboard. “Dr. Winters, there’s something else. We got a message through the secured channels. Someone’s asking about you specifically.”
My blood went cold.
“What kind of someone?”
“They didn’t identify themselves, but the message came through with an Alpha signature. High-level, possibly Continental Council.” She pulled up the encrypted text on a separate monitor. “They’re asking for the Sanctuary director by name. They said they need to speak with you about a mate bond crisis affecting multiple packs. They’re offering full diplomatic immunity and substantial compensation for consultation.”
“Delete it.” The words came out harsher than I intended. “We don’t work with pack leadership. You know that’s our first rule.”
“I know, but…” Jennifer bit her lip, clearly wrestling with something. “Dr. Winters, they mentioned Silver Crest specifically. They said the crisis started there and it’s spreading fast. Over forty bonded pairs have severed in the last three months, and they have no idea how to stop it.”
Silver Crest.
The name alone made my chest tight, made the mate mark on my collarbone, faded but never fully gone, burn like it had five years ago.
“That’s not our problem,” I said firmly, forcing my voice to stay level. “We help individuals escape pack law. We don’t shore up the system that’s destroying them. Delete the message and blacklist that signature.”
“Already done.” But Jennifer was watching me with those too-knowing eyes. “Are you okay?”
“Fine.”
I wasn’t fine.
The thought of Silver Crest in crisis, of mate bonds severing en masse, of the pack that had been so eager to reject me now falling apart, it should have felt like justice.
Instead, it felt like a knife twisting in an old wound that had never properly healed.
“Mama!” Noah’s voice echoed up the stairs, young and bright. “Dinner’s ready, and Liam says we have to wait for you, but Emma’s already stealing bread!”
“Emma!” Liam’s indignant cry followed. “That’s the third piece!”
Despite everything, the memories, the pain, the message about Silver Crest, I smiled.
This was my pack now. These children, these survivors, this place we’d built from nothing but determination and fury.
Silver Crest and its crisis could burn for all I cared.
I’d built something better from the ashes of my rejection.
“Come on,” I told Jennifer, closing down my workstation. “Let’s call it a day. Whatever’s happening in Silver Crest, it’s not our concern.”
But even as I said it, even as I walked downstairs to have dinner with my children and the family we’d chosen, a small voice in the back of my mind whispered that I was lying.
Some wounds never fully healed.
Some bonds, no matter how thoroughly rejected, never truly died.
Dominic.I barely felt sadness. But as I gazed down at Sunder all bent and out of shape, I knew that she deserved better.I had been in a deep and tense conversation with First Clan Chief who had finally revealed what made him confidence about going against me.I was amused by what he told me. Then I heard the sounds of stones breaking. I knew that it was Sage and she was in trouble.And then here we were in my favorite part of the hotel with my rare marble collections tampered with and some of them were already shattered to pieces."I leave you alone for some time and here you are destroying art pieces to pieces." I mused as watched her skin begin to burn."What..." Sunder trailed in surprise and fell on her already damaged knees. I looked over at Sage and felt her intensely radiating energy.She was safe but she looked shaken and slightly trembly."What is happening to her?" she demamded breathlessly."I am putting her out of her misery," I replied."Or maybe you should help her ins
Sage."We must not underestimate her, Sage." Oracle said to me. "This is the first time I hear how worried you are," I told the entity sharing my body and mind."You may be powerful, Sage but you are not untouchable." Oracle replied. I needed to hear that because it kept me even more focused.I knew how dangerous Sunder was and just how much of a combatant she was.My ears rang and pulsed with Source magic. The Source magic fused with my wolf core giving me a very high perception of my surroundings. I controlled my breathing and submitted myself to my magically fused instincts. Sunder charged at me. I was momentarily shocked by how fast she truly was. She had read my body language and knew from exactly which angle to strike at me from. I moved just in time and barely escaped by an inch. With every bit of power in me, I jumped back up into the air and did two flips and landed directly behind the statue of a naked woman. The head of the castle exploded with a powerful force as Sund
Sage.My mind screamed for something else to do. I was already bored of looking at the horizon of Black Crest.I could hear vividly, the call of trouble whisper to me. I could feel my freedom seep out of my in little droplets.I went back inside and thought of what Dominic and the First Chief were talking about.The sheer humiliation Dominic had put that werewolf through had physically hurt me. I shuddered uncomfortably as I imagined myself bump into him.
Kieran.It dawned on me that Sage was not coming back. Dominic had made her Luna. How dare him? Without consulting me first? His audacity irked me and I wanted nothing but to crush his spine. I knew because my spy had been killed by Sage when he tried to play his hand. Fortunately, he had not been linked back to me. I cursed softly as I thought of how difficult it had been to plant Lord Baron at Black Crest as my eyes and ears. His death was a foolish one. He had no business seeking out Dominic nor trying to assert a dominance he did not posses. It was illegal to have spies in another Alpha's territory. Black Crest belonged to Dominic by rule and by blood. I had no business there but that would not stop me from getting what I want from him. Sage Winters was now Luna. It was still shocking to hear. "He played us," Asher announced himself arrogantly, distracting me from my thoughts. He seemed agitated by something but I didn't care what it was. After the disgusting act he had com
Dominic.I gave her the time alone she so clearly needed, though it cost me more restraint than I wanted to examine. Five years of not knowing where she was, not knowing if she was safe, not knowing if she thought of me at all in whatever version of a life she'd built without me, and now she was one floor away, on a balcony I could reach in under a minute, and I made myself stay exactly where I was.Some lessons I had learned the hard way. Chief among them: Sage did not respond to being chased. She responded to being given room to choose, even when every instinct I had screamed to close the distance and not let her out of my sight again.I dressed and went looking for Argos instead, found him exactly where I expected, already three steps ahead of whatever crisis the morning intended to hand me.
Sage.I didn't remember falling asleep. One moment I was watching the last of the party guests trickle toward the elevators, and the next I was waking to grey light filtering through unfamiliar curtains, my body curled instinctively toward the warmth beside me before my mind caught up to where, and who, that warmth belonged to.I didn't move. Dominic's breathing was slow and even behind me, the particular stillness of someone who slept the way predators slept: lightly, but completely, ready to wake at the first wrong sound. I let myself lie there for one long, indulgent moment before the memory of the previous night caught up with me in full, Lord Baron exploding into pieces, the Beta vomiting blood at my feet, an old man crawling across marble while a room full of strangers laughed.I eased myself out from under the bl
Asher“And what if I killed you all right here, right now?” I asked Magnus, letting the threat hang in the air between us.I expected fear. I expected at least a flicker of self-pres
Sage.“I don’t quite understand you, Sage,” the woman said in an exasperated manner as she watched me with an intense interest in her gaz
Sage.He was very timid for a warrior. I had heard near mythological exploits about him and yet here he stood awkwardly before me like he was afraid if embarrassing himself before me.
Sage.I trembled with fear and worry as I stepped into the Manor. The only person that was aware of my children was Marcus, my father’s best friend and archivist. I was sure he would not have told anyone because he too would be complacent in covering up my escape which would put him in a terrible p







