LOGINOlivia
“I’m sorry about showing up like this,” I said, wringing rainwater from the edge of the towel in my lap. “My car broke down, and I really didn’t want to miss this interview. Unfortunately, the weather decided not to cooperate either.” Mrs. Hawthorne studied me carefully before giving a small nod. “I can see that,” she replied smoothly. “Still, I admire your determination for making it here.” She walked around her desk and settled gracefully into her chair. “Let’s skip the formalities and get straight to the point, shall we?” I straightened in my seat and nodded, trying to ignore how damp my clothes still felt against my skin. “My husband and I are extremely busy people,” she began. “The Hawthorne family owns a large portion of this town’s businesses, and with that comes… responsibilities.” There was something deliberate about the way she said it. Responsibilities. People always joked that the Hawthornes ruled the town, but hearing her say it out loud made it sound less like a joke and more like a fact. “Because of that,” she continued, “I need someone trustworthy to help care for my daughter. Someone dependable.” Her sharp blue eyes locked onto mine. “Can you be that person, Olivia?” “I’d like to think so,” I answered honestly. “I love children, and I’d never do anything to hurt your family’s trust. Hopefully Lily and I would get along well.” “Hm.” She picked up the résumé sitting on her desk. “I noticed you were studying early childhood education at the university,” she said. “But according to this, you’re no longer enrolled. Is that correct?” My stomach tightened. How exactly was I supposed to explain that I dropped out of college because my father drank himself into oblivion after my mother died? “That’s correct,” I said carefully. “I had some family issues that forced me to leave school temporarily. But I fully intend to return one day.” Mrs. Hawthorne narrowed her eyes slightly before her expression softened just a fraction. “I heard about your mother,” she said quietly. “I’m sorry for your loss.” The sympathy caught me off guard. Before I could respond, she stood from her chair. “Well,” she said briskly, smoothing invisible wrinkles from her dress, “let’s go meet Lily. Whether or not you stay here for a trial period will depend entirely on how she responds to you.” Relief instantly sparked through me. So all I had to do was impress a five-year-old? That, I could handle. I followed Mrs. Hawthorne out of the office and down the hallway toward a large room on the first floor she referred to as the nursery. The second I stepped inside, I nearly laughed. The room looked like an upscale toy store had exploded. Stuffed animals covered shelves from floor to ceiling. Dolls sat propped neatly in tiny chairs. There were miniature castles, toy kitchens, tea sets, and enough books to fill a small library. In the far corner sat a tiny blonde girl at a child-sized table. Three dolls were arranged around her, each with tiny teacups placed in front of them. A tea party. Mrs. Hawthorne gestured toward the child. “Well?” she said. “Go impress my daughter.” I nodded and crossed the room slowly before crouching beside the little table so I was eye level with the girl. “Hi there,” I said softly. “You must be Lily. I’m Olivia. Your tea party looks very fancy. Think there’s room for one more guest?” The little girl looked up at me with startlingly blue eyes. Then she sighed dramatically. “Another one,” she muttered. I blinked in surprise before glancing toward Mrs. Hawthorne. The woman barely seemed interested. She stood near the doorway inspecting her manicured nails instead of watching us. Well. That wasn’t exactly comforting. Guess I was already failing this interview. Still… I did happen to have one small advantage. “You know,” I said thoughtfully as I turned back to Lily, “tea is nice…” I casually glanced toward Mrs. Hawthorne again. Still distracted. Good. “But what if we had something even better?” I waved my fingers gently over the tiny cups. Almost instantly, rich chocolate milk appeared inside each one. Lily’s eyes widened so much I thought they might fall out of her head. I picked up one of the little cups and took an exaggerated sip. “Mmm,” I hummed. “My favorite.” Lily grabbed her own cup and drank from it cautiously. Her jaw dropped. I quickly pressed a finger to my lips. “Secret?” I whispered. Her face lit up with excitement. “Secret,” she whispered back. A warmth spread through my chest at her smile. My mother had been part fae. At least, that was what she told me after my abilities first appeared. My father was fully human, so neither of us expected me to inherit magic at all. But one day objects simply started appearing around me whenever I concentrated hard enough. At first, I thought I was losing my mind. Then my mother finally confessed the truth. Fae weren’t stories. They were real. And apparently, part of that blood lived inside me. She warned me never to tell anyone, especially humans. My father never even knew what she truly was. After her death, all her secrets died with her. I still didn’t fully understand why hiding mattered so much. But I listened anyway. Lily suddenly jumped from her chair and ran across the room toward her mother. “Mommy!” she exclaimed. “Can Olivia play with me?” Mrs. Hawthorne finally looked up from her nails. “Are you certain?” she asked carefully. “You want her to stay?” Lily nodded enthusiastically. “Yes, Mommy.” Mrs. Hawthorne studied her daughter for a long moment before sighing softly. “All right. You can play with her shortly. But first, I need to speak with Olivia privately.” Lily’s shoulders slumped dramatically. “Yes, Mommy.” “Good girl.” Mrs. Hawthorne turned toward me. “Miss Carter, come with me please.” I glanced back toward Lily as she slowly returned to her tea party looking disappointed. “I’ll be right back,” I promised her with a grin. “Lickety-split.” Lily burst into giggles. “Lickety-split!” she repeated. I smiled before following Mrs. Hawthorne into the hallway. The second we were out of earshot, her entire demeanor shifted into something colder and more businesslike. “I have rules in this house,” she said plainly. “Rule number one: no visitors unless I approve them personally.” “That won’t be a problem,” I assured her. She nodded once. “Good.” Then her gaze sharpened. “And the most important rule of all…” She paused deliberately. “You will not sleep with any of my sons.” I stared at her, caught completely off guard. “I’m sorry?” “My sons live here,” she said calmly. “They’re preparing to take over various aspects of the family business someday, so for now they remain under this roof.” I blinked. All four of them lived here? Mrs. Hawthorne crossed her arms. “I was young once too, Olivia,” she continued coolly. “I know exactly how charming my sons can be. They’re handsome, wealthy, and accustomed to getting attention from girls.” Her eyes swept over me knowingly. “I will not have one reckless night ruin their futures. Are we understood?”OliviaI didn’t want Maximus getting jealous of Brutus, so I went over to him to show him some love and thank him for the ride before turning my attention back to Brutus.Both wolves were so beautiful and huge.Seriously, what were they feeding these animals?There was still another wolf I’d heard about—Duke. I wondered if he was as big as Maximus and Brutus. Then again, Lily played with him, so maybe not. Maybe Duke was younger.As I said goodbye to Maximus, I turned around to go back to Brutus.Only he was gone.I blinked.He had been standing right there.“Where did—”I turned back toward Maximus only to catch a glimpse of his tail disappearing through the trees.And then he was gone too.My chest sank.Both wolves had left.I thought they liked me.I thought we’d connected somehow.Apparently not.I crossed my arms.Great.Now where was Logan?How exactly was I supposed to get back to the mansion?A horrible thought suddenly struck me.What if he’d done this on purpose?I’d heard
LoganI went over to help Olivia climb onto Maximus. She hesitated, staring at the massive black wolf beneath her.“What if I’m too heavy for him?” she asked nervously.I looked at her like she was insane. Her body was perfect. Yeah, she had curves, but they fit her beautifully.Maximus snorted while Ethan’s voice echoed through our mindlink.“She has no idea how gorgeous she is. Goddess, I want to shift back and have her on top of me instead.”“Behave,” I warned him.I shook my head at Olivia. She needed to stop doubting herself.“You’re not too heavy for us,” I told her quietly. “You’re perfect.”“You know, staring at her ass in that dress is really winding both me and Maximus up,” Ethan linked.Olivia suddenly looked toward Maximus, and for a second panic hit me.There was no way she heard that… right?Before I could think more about it, she turned back to me.“Help me up?”I crouched beside Maximus and lifted her carefully onto his back.“Hold onto the fur around his neck,” I inst
OliviaI stood in my new bedroom waiting for Logan to come get me. I was nervous about seeing Maximus tonight.An actual wolf.The only wolves I’d ever seen before were at a zoo behind thick fencing. But tonight, the twins promised I’d actually get to touch one.I glanced at myself in the mirror again.Why did Braxton want me wearing this dress?The white fabric practically glowed in the moonlight spilling through my windows. Maybe he picked it so they could see me better in the woods if something happened.That had to be it.I suddenly felt him in the room before I even turned around.Logan.I looked away from the mirror and toward him standing just inside my doorway.He’d warned me earlier he wouldn’t knock. We needed to stay quiet so his mother wouldn’t realize we were sneaking out.This was risky.I could lose this job after one day.But the temptation of seeing a real wolf up close was too strong.And honestly…I couldn’t explain the pull I felt toward Maximus.It was almost like
Logan“She’s fascinated by wolves because she thinks a wolf is her spirit animal?” Braxton asked me through the mindlink.“Yeah,” I linked back. “That’s what she said. Honestly, I can’t help wondering if she’s always felt drawn to wolves because she was destined to be our mate.”“That’s the only explanation I can think of too. Maximus is practically howling over the fact she loves wolves. I think he’s relieved she doesn’t want to put a bow tie collar on him anymore.” Braxton snorted.I rolled my eyes.“I still can’t believe you made her think your wolf was some mutant dog. Brutus would murder me if I did that to him.”“Hindsight is fifty-fifty,” Braxton smirked.My twin was an idiot.“She has to meet our wolves now,” I linked him.“Well, Maximus at least. She already knows his name. She doesn’t know Brutus yet,” Braxton reminded me.Not for long.I looked over at Olivia as she moved around her room putting clothes away. I couldn’t stop staring at her.Her long auburn hair fell down he
OliviaI looked between Ethan and Mrs. Hawthorne as they questioned Logan about whatever he’d been trying to explain to me.Honestly?This felt less like a conversation and more like some weird family intervention.I hadn’t even worked here for a full day yet, and somehow I’d already exposed Logan’s possible drug problem.Fantastic.The silence stretched awkwardly.Then I noticed it again.Ethan’s eyes looked cloudy for a brief second.Almost silver.Weird.And then Logan’s eyes did the same thing.Okay.That definitely couldn’t be normal.Twins could share medical conditions, right?Maybe they both had some eye disorder?Glaucoma?Though they seemed way too young for that.Mrs. Hawthorne cleared her throat sharply.Both men immediately looked at her.“Logan,” she said slowly, “would you care to explain this mysterious hybrid animal Olivia thinks we own?”Logan sighed dramatically.“Lily mentioned Duke,” he muttered. “Then I accidentally mentioned Maximus.”Mrs. Hawthorne raised an ey
LoganMan, I completely screwed this up.The second Maximus’s name slipped out of my mouth, everything spiraled.“Why?” Maximus demanded in my head. “Mate is going to meet me eventually.”I frowned internally.“I thought I blocked you.”“Well apparently your dumb ass loosened it,” he grumbled.Fantastic.Meanwhile Olivia stood in front of me looking adorably confused while I desperately tried to explain wolves without actually explaining wolves.“So Duke and Maximus are kind of like dogs,” I said carefully, “but not really dogs.”“I am not a dog,” Maximus snarled instantly. “Why are you telling mate I’m a dog?”“Because she doesn’t know about us yet,” I shot back mentally. “I’m trying to ease her into this.”“Great. Now she’s going to think I’m some family pet named Fido.”Honestly?That mental image almost made me laugh.“I’ll tell her you’re like family.”Unfortunately what actually came out of my mouth sounded like verbal diarrhea.Then somehow I made things worse by comparing them
OliviaEarly the next morning, I loaded the last of my things into my car.Thank God Uncle Mike replaced the battery yesterday. There was no way I could drag a suitcase and a storage box across town on a bus while moving into the Hawthorne estate.After packing the trunk, I walked back inside the h
Olivia“I still don’t understand why you have to live in that house,” my father said quietly.We sat in our tiny living room, the old television humming softly in the background. Dad was in his recliner while I sat curled up on the couch across from him, explaining everything about my new job.For
OliviaI couldn’t decide whether I wanted to hug Mrs. Hawthorne for giving me the opportunity I desperately needed… or slap her for making me sound like some girl who would throw herself at her sons the second I moved in.In the end, I swallowed my irritation.This job mattered more than my pride r
OliviaI tightened my grip on the steering wheel and turned the ignition again. The engine sputtered violently before dying with a pathetic cough.“No. Absolutely not today,” I groaned, smacking the dashboard. “You cannot do this to me right now.”The ancient Honda had been barely surviving for mon







