LOGINI wake up in a bed that's not mine.
That's my first thought. Before I open my eyes, before I remember anything—just that the sheets smell different. Like pine and something else. Something clean and sharp.
Then everything comes rushing back. The rejection. The run. The rain. The wolves.
I sit up so fast my head spins. White walls. Big windows. A fireplace in the corner with actual fire burning. I'm in someone's house. Someone's room. And I'm wearing clothes that aren't mine—a soft gray t-shirt that hangs past my thighs, no bra, no pants.
My heart starts slamming against my ribs.
The door opens and I freeze.
A girl, maybe a year or two younger than me, with dark hair pulled back in a messy ponytail and eyes that are almost silver—like the guy from last night. She's carrying a tray with a bowl of something steaming.
"Oh good, you're awake." She sets the tray on the nightstand like she's known me forever. "I'm Maya. You're in my brother's house. You've been out for like, eighteen hours. The healer said you'd probably sleep through till morning but here you are, blinking at me like a confused kitten." She grins. "Cute look, by the way."
I just stare at her. My brain can't catch up.
"Right, you're probably wondering about the clothes." Maya plops onto the edge of the bed like she's known me forever. "Esther—she's our healer—she stripped you down because you were soaked and freezing. The shirt's Damian's. Hope you don't mind. You didn't have much on under that dress anyway and it was totally ruined, like, beyond saving, so—"
"Damian." I find my voice. It's scratchy. "The guy from last night. He carried me here."
"Yep. Our illustrious Alpha." She rolls her eyes but there's affection in it. "He's been lurking outside your door all night. Won't admit it, but I caught him." She leans in. "I've never seen him like this. He usually doesn't bring stray wolves home."
"I'm not a stray."
"I know." She says it softer now. "I know you're not. I'm sorry. That came out wrong." She pushes the tray toward me. "Eat. It's just broth. Esther said start slow."
I look at the bowl. My stomach turns at the smell. But I pick up the spoon anyway, because she's watching, because I don't know what else to do.
"It's rejection sickness, right?" Maya asks. Not mean. Just curious. "I've heard about it but never seen it. You must have been really close to sealing the bond."
I almost drop the spoon.
"How did you—"
"The way you smell." She shrugs. "Like broken mate bond. It's got a specific scent. Sad and burnt at the same time." She pauses. "Caden Ahearn, right? Word travels fast. Even to enemy packs."
I put the spoon down. Can't eat anymore.
"Look." Maya shifts on the bed. "I'm not gonna pretend I know what you're going through. But my brother—Damian—he doesn't do things without reason. He brought you here. Saved you. That means something." She stands. "I'll go get him. You should talk."
She's out the door before I can say no.
---
Damian doesn't knock.
He just appears in the doorway, filling it with his height, his shoulders, that intense stare. He's dressed now—dark jeans, a simple black sweater. His hair is dry, pushed back from his face. The scar through his eyebrow is more noticeable in the firelight.
He doesn't come in. Just stands there, watching me.
"You're awake." His voice is the same as last night. Low. Careful.
"Apparently." I pull the blanket higher. Stupid, because the shirt covers everything, but I feel exposed anyway. "Your sister said you've been lurking."
Something flickers across his face. Embarrassment? "She talks too much."
"She seems nice."
"She's a nightmare." He says it like a compliment. Still doesn't move from the doorway. "How do you feel?"
"Like I got hit by a truck. Then backed over. Then set on fire."
One corner of his mouth twitches. Almost a smile. "Rejection sickness. It'll pass. A few days, maybe a week. Esther left herbs. Maya can show you—"
"Why?"
He stops. Looks at me properly.
"Why did you save me?" My voice cracks. "You don't know me. I'm from an enemy pack. I could be anyone. I could be—"
"You were dying." He says it simply. Like that explains everything.
"People die all the time. Rogues kill people every day. You can't save everyone."
"No." He steps into the room now. Just one step. "But I can save the ones who end up on my land."
"That's not a reason."
"It's the only reason I need."
I shake my head. This doesn't make sense. Alphas don't rescue random wolves from enemy packs. They don't carry them home and give them beds and stand guard outside doors. They just don't.
"What do you want from me?" I hear myself ask it. "What's the price?"
His face changes. Hardens. "There's no price."
"Everyone wants something. Caden wanted a Luna who looked good on his arm. His mother wanted me gone. His brother wanted—" I stop. Swallow. "Everyone wants something. So what is it? Information? A debt? What do I owe you?"
Damian crosses the room in three strides. Stops at the foot of the bed. Looks down at me with those silver-gray eyes that seem to see right through everything.
"You owe me nothing." His voice is quiet but it fills the room. "You were bleeding on my land. I stopped the bleeding. That's it. No contract. No debt. No expectations." He pauses. "I'm not Caden."
I flinch at the name.
"Yeah." He notices. "I can see that's going to take a while."
"I don't need your pity."
"Good. Because I'm not offering it." He shoves his hands in his pockets. "I'm offering you a place to heal. After that, you can do whatever you want. Stay. Leave. Doesn't matter to me."
"Then why do you look at me like that?"
The question slips out before I can stop it. I don't even know what I mean by it. But he does. Something shifts in his eyes—darkens, deepens.
"Like what?"
"Like..." I can't find the words. "Like I matter to you—"
He's quiet for a long moment. The fire crackles. Somewhere in the house, a door closes.
"My parents died five years ago." He says it like it costs him something. "Rogues. I found them. Became Alpha at twenty-two. Raised Maya alone. Built this pack from nothing." He looks at me. "I know what it's like to feel like the world ended and you're the only one who—."
My eyes sting. I look away.
"I'm not trying to be your savior." His voice is softer now. "I'm just... I found you in the rain, half-dead, and something in me couldn't walk away. That's all. That's the whole truth."
I don't know what to say. Don't know what to do with this—this man who saved me for no reason, who stands there with his hands in his pockets like he's not the most powerful Alpha in the region, who looks at me like I'm actually a person instead of a problem.
"You should rest." He turns toward the door. "Maya will check on you later. If you need anything—"
"Damian."
He stops. Looks back.
"Thank you." My voice breaks on it. "For not letting me die."
He nods. Once. "Get some sleep, Selena."
He leaves. The door clicks shut behind him.
I lie back against the pillows. Stare at the ceiling. My body still aches. My chest still feels hollow where the bond used to be. But for the first time since Caden spoke those words, I don't feel like I'm drowning.
I don't know what that means.
I don't know what any of this means.
But when I close my eyes, I don't see Caden's cold face. I don't hear the rejection echoing in my skull.
I see silver eyes. Rain-soaked hair. A strange man.
And I fall asleep wondering if maybe—just maybe—the Moon Goddess didn't abandon me after all.
Maybe she just had a different plan.
---
I wake to shouting.
Male voices. Angry. I sit up, heart pounding, and listen. The words are muffled but the tone is clear—someone's furious.
The door bursts open. Maya.
"Stay here." She says it fast. "Don't move. Don't make noise. I'll be back."
"What's happening?"
She's already gone.
I throw off the blanket anyway. My legs are shaky but they hold. I pad to the window, peer through the curtains.
Below, in the front yard of the house, a crowd has gathered. Pack members. Dozens of them. And at the center—Damian, facing off against a group of men I don't recognize. Their postures are aggressive. Their scents, even from here, are wrong.
Bloodmoon.
They're from Bloodmoon.
And standing at the front, arms crossed, expression carved from ice—
Caden.
He's here.
He found me.
Gracia's POV"Sera…""Take it back!"I stared at her. She was shaking, her eyes wild with emotion. I had never seen her like this before. I had been beaten so many times in my life—by my father, by Castor, by countless others. But her single slap hurt more than any beating I had ever endured.*Why? Why does her pain matter more than mine?*"Sera, I…""Please," she whispered, her voice breaking. "Please just take it back."I couldn't speak.She stepped closer, her hand still shaking. "You say you have nothing to give? You gave me your trust. You gave me your honesty. You gave me the privilege of knowing who you truly are. That's not nothing."Her words hit me like a physical blow. I had spent my entire life being told I was worthless. And now this woman—this beautiful, kind woman—was telling me I had value.Why? What does she see something in me that I can't see in myse
Gracia's POV"I love you, Gracia."The words hung in the air like a physical weight. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't think. My mind was a storm of confusion and disbelief.She loves me. Sera loves me.Not like. Not attraction. Love. The kind of love I felt for Ivy. The kind of love that consumes you, that makes you want to give everything to someone else.I never saw it. All those moments—the lingering touches, the way she looked at me, the way she always found excuses to stay—I thought it was just kindness. Just the kindness of a healer who saw a wounded animal and wanted to help.But it wasn't kindness. It was love.And I was too blind to see it.Guilt washed over me like a wave. I had been so wrapped up in my own pain, my own grief, my own self-pity, that I hadn't noticed the woman who was quietly falling in love with me.How could I have been so stupid?I looked at her. She was standin
Sera's POVThe door opened.Gracia stood there, holding my sword. He was clearly confused, his brow furrowed, his eyes searching my face. The lamplight behind him cast shadows across his features, making him look even more striking than usual."Sera…"I couldn't speak. My throat was tight, my heart pounding so hard I was sure he could hear it. I was trembling, terrified, my mind completely blank. I had rehearsed this moment a thousand times in my head. I had imagined what I would say, how I would say it, how he would react. But now that I was actually here, standing in front of him, all those carefully planned words had vanished.‘Say something. Say anything. Don't just stand here like a fool.’But I couldn't. I was frozen."Are you alright?" Gracia asked, his voice laced with concern. "What happened? Is something wrong?"I shook my head frantically. "No. Nothing's wrong. I just… I
Sera's POVThe night was cold and still. Snow had fallen earlier, blanketing the courtyard in white. Now, the sky was clear, stars scattered across the darkness like scattered diamonds. The fire in the brazier crackled softly, casting warm light on the two women wrapped in shawls on the bench.My head rested on Eve's shoulder. The packhouse behind us was dark, everyone asleep. The world was quiet, peaceful, as if it had forgotten all the pain and suffering that existed in it."Eve," I whispered, my voice barely audible. "I think I'm in complete love with him."Eve didn't seem surprised. She just smiled softly. "I know."I lifted my head, my eyes wide. "You know?""I've known for weeks." Her voice was gentle. "The way you look at him. The way you constantly stay around him. The way you linger when you heal him. The way you panic when he's in danger."I buried my face in my hands. "Is it that obvious?""Only to me,"
Gracia's POVFour months had passed since I collapsed by the river.Four months since Sera found me, half-dead, and dragged me into her cottage. Four months since she healed my wounds, fed me, clothed me, and gave me a reason to keep breathing.I still didn't understand why.Every morning, she came with food. Every evening, she checked my bandages. Every day, she asked how I was feeling, if I needed anything, if I was comfortable. She treated me like I was a person—not a slave, not a gutter rat, not a piece of trash to be discarded.I didn't understand it.I had spent my whole life being told I was worthless. My father had sold me like cattle. Castor had beaten me like a dog. The only person who had ever shown me kindness was Ivy, and she was dead.And now, here was Sera. A noblewoman. The Alpha's daughter. Someone who had every reason to look down on me, to ignore me, to throw me out.Instead, she healed me
Gracia's POVThe light was wrong.I opened my one functioning eye and immediately knew something was off. The ceiling above me was wooden, not stone. The air smelled of herbs and flowers, not damp and rot. The walls were warm, not cold. The bed beneath me was soft, not hard.‘Where am I?’I tried to move. Pain exploded through my body. I gasped, my hands clutching the sheets. Bandages covered my arms, my chest, my legs. Every inch of me was wrapped in white linen. I could feel the wounds beneath—some still raw, others slowly healing.‘What happened?’Memories flooded back. The escape. The river. The running. The woman's voice. ‘Hey, are you okay?’I had collapsed. I had been found.But by whom?I tried to sit up. Pain shot through my ribs. I fell back against the pillow, gasping. My vision swam. I blinked, trying to focus.I was in a big ample room. Sunli
Damian's POVThe scout shows up at noon.I’m in the war room, going over maps and making plans. Viktor is out there, healing and regrouping. I can feel it deep down.“Alpha.” The scout is panting, his face white as a sheet. “Viktor's forc
Selena's POVI wake up to the warmth surrounding me.The room is dimly lit, with the curtains drawn and the lamp on the nightstand casting a soft glow. Damian’s lap is under my head, his back against the headboard and his chin resting on his chest. He’s sle
Caden's POVThe holding cells are in the basement of the council building. It's cold and damp down here, with the walls almost sweating. The lights flicker, casting long shadows.I haven't been back since the trial—not since I saw them drag my mother away or walk
Selena's POVThe convoy makes its way through the forest, headlights piercing the darkness. Warriors sit in silence, worn out and battered but, thankfully, alive. The battle is finished. Viktor has pulled back. For now, we’ve won.I’m in the back of an SUV







