LOGINI push the peas around my plate, watching James cut his meat with mechanical precision while Sophia stares at her untouched dinner. We're playing house, the three of us, pretending this is just another family meal when we all know it might be our last. Tomorrow is my daughter's twenty-first birthday, if she makes it that far. The clock on our kitchen wall ticks toward seven-thirty, each sound like a hammer hitting the final nails in our family's coffin. I reach for my water glass with fingers that don't quite shake, a small victory.
"More potatoes, Sophia?" I ask, my voice too bright, too normal. My daughter looks up, those hazel eyes, so much like my own, clouded with fear she's trying desperately to hide. "No, thanks, Mum." James clears his throat. "The roast turned out well, Lora." "I used rosemary this time," I reply, as if we're discussing recipes rather than sitting through what might be our final meal together. We've been preparing for this night for years, but nothing could truly ready us for the weight of these moments, the way time seems both frozen and rushing forward. I study my daughter across the table, her delicate features, the auburn hair she twisted into a braid this morning, the gentle slope of her shoulders. All the parts of her that make her my Sophia, not just some prize broodmare for an alpha with enough money to buy her. James takes a sip of water, his eyes never leaving the window that faces our front yard. He's been alternating between watching the road and checking his watch since we sat down. My mate of twenty-five years, the steadfast Beta who's served our pack loyally until the moment our daughter's future hung in the balance. Now we're prepared to throw it all away, our positions, our home, possibly our lives, for her freedom. "Remember when you were seven," I say suddenly, unable to bear the silence, "and you insisted on making pancakes by yourself?" Sophia's lips quirk up slightly. "I covered the entire kitchen in flour." "Your father walked in and thought it had snowed indoors." A genuine smile breaks through, brief but precious. "Dad sneezed for ten minutes straight." James chuckles, the sound rusty with disuse. We haven't had much to laugh about these past five days. I reach across the table and squeeze Sophia's hand. Her skin is cool against mine, her fingers tightening around my own. How many more times will I get to hold my daughter's hand? To see her smile? To hear her laugh? The doorbell rings. All three of us freeze, the sound cutting through our home like a blade. Our forks hover mid-air, the fake normalcy of our dinner shattered in an instant. Sophia's face drains of colour. James's jaw tightens as he sets down his knife with deliberate control. "Stay here," he says, his voice steady despite the wild flare of panic in his eyes. I watch my mate rise from the table, straightening his shoulders as he moves toward the front door. Through our bond, I feel his fear, his rage, his fierce determination. Twenty-five years together has made our connection strong, unbreakable even in this moment of crisis. 'Two SUVs,' he sends through our mind link. 'Elder Nora Stone herself, with at least two guards.' My blood turns to ice. Not just any Council representative, but Elder Stone, the architect of the modern Omega Directive herself. She wouldn't come personally unless... 'Sophia must have tested extraordinarily high,' I reply, my mental voice trembling where my physical one cannot afford to. 'Get her talking. I'll get Sophia out.' I turn to our daughter, whose eyes are fixed on the hallway where her father disappeared. "Sophia," I whisper, urgent but gentle. "It's time. We need to go. Now." Understanding dawns in her eyes, followed immediately by resistance. "But Dad…" "Is buying us time." I stand, pulling her up with me. "We've prepared for this. You promised." Her lower lip trembles, but she nods. I guide her toward the kitchen's back door, my arm around her shoulders. We move silently, years of preparation guiding our steps. Through the window, I catch glimpses of black-suited figures positioning themselves around our property. My heart hammers against my ribs, but my hands remain steady as I unlock the door. From the front of the house, I hear James's deep voice, the formal greeting of a Beta welcoming a Council Elder. He's playing his part perfectly, the respectful pack official who has no idea why such an esteemed visitor would grace his humble home. "I can't leave you and Dad," Sophia whispers, tears spilling onto her cheeks. "They'll kill you both." I cup her face between my palms, memorising every detail, the constellation of freckles across her nose, the tiny scar above her eyebrow from falling out of a tree at nine, the stubborn set of her chin that's all her father. "Listen to me," I say fiercely. "Your father and I have lived. We've made our choices. But you, you deserve freedom. Not to be some alpha's property, not to be bred like livestock. You deserve to choose your own path." "Mum—" "I need you to shift and run. Head south like we planned. Don't look back, don't hesitate." Her tears fall faster now, silent but devastating. I pull her into my arms one last time, breathing in her scent, wildflowers and pine, with the distinctive sweet undertone that marks her as a true omega. My precious girl, my miracle child. "I love you," I whisper against her hair. "More than my own life. Now go. Be free. Live." I push her gently toward the door. Sophia steps outside, her feet bare against the cool grass. She looks back at me once, her face a portrait of anguish, before closing her eyes and letting the shift take her. Her human form blurs, bones and muscles rearranging in that magical, painful transformation that still fascinates me even after all these years. Where my daughter stood moments before, Nyx emerges—sleek black fur with those striking silver-grey eyes. Larger than most omega wolves, her form powerful despite her designation. The silver crescent marking on her chest gleams in the moonlight. "Run," I whisper. "Don't stop for anything." Nyx, my daughter in her wolf form, stares at me for one heartbeat, two. Then she turns and bolts toward the tree-line at the edge of our property, a shadow moving through shadows.The wind rushes through Nyx’s midnight-black fur as we race along the ridge marking the eastern border of Midnight Eclipse territory.There‘s a freedom in running as a wolf that I’ve never found in human form, a perfect unity of purpose, power, and instinct that makes everything clearer. Vance’s wolf, a sleek dark grey form with silver markings, lopes effortlessly ahead of me, occasionally glancing back as if to ensure I’m keeping pace. I respond by pushing harder, drawing on Nyx’s natural speed and agility to close the gap between us. After a week of maps and meetings, the pure physical joy of running makes both Nyx and me feel alive in a way nothing else can.‘This is what we were made for,’ Nyx sighs contentedly as we leap over a fallen log, our paws barely making a sound on the forest floor. ‘Running. Territory. Pack.’I can’t disagree. The past week spent learning about the Midnight Eclipse territory has shifted something inside me. What once felt like a prison now
I’ve never spent this much time teaching anyone about pack business, not even Vance when he first became my Beta. Yet here I am, seven days into explaining every detail of our territory to Sophia, and I find myself enjoying it.Her mind works differently than mine, she sees connections I miss, asks questions that make me reconsider strategies I’ve held for decades. Conri paces contentedly in my mind as I watch her absorb each new piece of information, both of us pleased with how quickly she’s adapting to her role as Luna.The week has fallen into a rhythm that feels both strange and right. Mornings spent over maps and resource reports, afternoons walking the grounds so she can see our operations firsthand. But it’s our meals together that I find myself looking forward to most, just the two of us, no pack business, no interruptions. Simple conversations that have nothing to do with territory or hierarchy.‘She laughs more now,’ Conri observes during lunch on the sixth day
Her hand feels small in mine as I lead her along the narrow forest path. Three days of touching her, tasting her, being inside her, yet this simple connection of palms sends something warm spreading through my chest.I’ve spent the better part of fifty years believing weakness and affection were the same thing, a mistake my father made that I swore never to repeat.But watching Sophia these past days, seeing her strength even in vulnerability, has started to unravel certainties I once thought immutable. Conri huffs in agreement in the back of my mind, equally captivated by the woman walking beside me.“Where exactly are we going?” she asks, her voice stronger than it’s been in days. The circles beneath her eyes have faded, her skin regaining its glow now that the fever of heat has passed.“Patience, little wolf,” I reply, guiding her around a fallen log. “We‘re almost there.”‘She smells different now,’ Conri observes. ‘Changed. Our scents mixed permanently.’
The worst of my heat broke sometime in the early morning hours, leaving me wrung out but finally clear-headed. After three days of biological need driving every thought and action, the sudden absence of that consuming fire feels almost like floating. I sit beside my father on a stone bench in one of the pack house’s private gardens, letting the afternoon sun warm my skin as a gentle breeze carries the scent of pine and wildflowers.My muscles ache pleasantly, reminders of activities I’m not quite ready to discuss with the man beside me.Dad cradles a steaming mug of tea between his palms, his eyes fixed on the distant mountains rather than on me. We’ve been sitting in comfortable silence for nearly ten minutes, neither quite ready to acknowledge the elephant in the garden, that his daughter has spent three days locked away with an alpha he still doesn’t fully trust.“So,” he finally ventures, clearing his throat awkwardly. “You’re feeling better now?”I take a sip fr
I wake to fire in my veins again, my skin so hot it feels like it might crack open. Two hours of sleep wasn’t enough to reset whatever’s happening in my body, this heat more intense than any I’ve experienced before.I shift uncomfortably, acutely aware of the empty ache between my thighs, the wetness already gathering there. Nyx whines in my mind, restless and desperate for relief.I roll toward Zane’s sleeping form, running my fingers along his jaw. “Zane,” I whisper, my voice already thick with need. “Wake up. Please.”His eyes snap open immediately, instantly alert in that predatory way of his. As his gaze focuses on me, the steel grey of his irises flares to brilliant silver, Conri catching my scent and pushing forward. The sight sends a jolt of anticipation through me, my body responding to the wolf’s presence as much as to the man’s.“Please, Zane, Conri,” I gasp, unable to maintain any pretence of control. “I need you. Nyx needs you.”He moves with fluid g
I’m still buried deep inside her, my knot ensuring neither of us can move much, when Sophia starts whimpering and squirming again. The sensation of her inner walls clenching around my sensitive length nearly makes me growl.Her scent spikes, that sweet omega heat perfume growing stronger as she moans my name. “More, Zane,” she pleads, her voice thick with renewed need. “Please, I need more.” I’ve heard that true omega heats are intense, but this, this insatiable hunger… is beyond anything I’ve experienced in over a century of life.“Needy little she-wolf,” I chuckle, though the sound is strained. The knot tying us together should be a time for rest, for our bodies to recover, but Sophia’s heat isn’t following normal patterns, just like nothing else about her has.She groans my name, her hips making desperate little circles that send jolts of both pleasure and discomfort through my still-sensitive cock. Part of me wants to hold her still, to wait for the knot to subside n
I can’t remember the last time I laughed this much. Certainly not since my test results came back. Definitely not since being claimed by Zane. Yet here we are, sharing stories over a meal that would make pack chefs weep with envy, and I’ve laughed three times in the past hour. Real la
My footsteps echo against the stone floors as I make my way back to Zane’s office, my fingers unconsciously tracing the crescent birthmark behind my ear. The skin still tingles where his fingers touched it moments ago.Matching marks.What are the odds?One in millions?
I move silently through my territory's perimeter, Conri's powerful legs carrying us effortlessly over the rough terrain. The night air brings a symphony of information to my nose, each scent a story, each disturbance in the forest floor a potential threat or opportunity. Three of my border patrol w
I run until my lungs burn and my paws bleed, putting as much distance as possible between myself and the only home I've ever known. Trees blur past me as Nyx pushes our body harder than I knew possible, her instincts stronger than mine in this form. The night air whips through my fur, carrying the







