Mag-log inAfter her mate Stephen publicly rejected her for her cruel cousin, Emerald rebuilt her life as a talented metalwork artisan. Seeking independence at the Warrior Games, she is confronted by her toxic ex, only to be shielded by the elite Frost pack. Among them is Zyan, the newly crowned Alpha of the Frost Moon pack, who recognizes Emerald as his true fated mate. Emerald initially flees, fearing the mate bond is a cage. However, Zyan is patient and protective, refusing to force the connection. As Stephen’s reputation crumbles due to his own poor choices, Emerald flourishes within a new, loyal found-family. Guided by Zyan’s devotion, she must find the courage to trust again and embrace her worth in this satisfying tale of karma and healing.
view moreZyan gripped the arms of the leather chair behind his desk, knuckles white and ready to snap. The office felt like a pressurized chamber, the air dense with a violent static charge that made the fine hairs on his arms rise and sent prickling pain across his skin. Every breath felt like inhaling jagged glass as he stared at the mountain of logistics before him—an event that looked more like a funeral march than a celebration. Eight months into a leadership he never asked for, with the walls finally closing in, the atmosphere in the room was frantic, chaotic, and charged—an echo of the storm in his chest.
Across the room, Xander paced relentlessly from the door to the center, his movement predatory and unyielding, only adding to the tension in the air.
“I just don’t think I can do it, Xander. And for goddess’ sake, stop moving—you’re making the air in here vibrate,” Zyan snapped, his heart pounding a frantic, uneven rhythm. “The Warrior Games. It feels like a death sentence for my sanity. It’s barely been eight months since the massacre, and you want me to invite the world to watch us pretend we aren’t withering away? Every time I look at these plans I’m back in the dirt, hearing all the screaming. Don’t you think the pack will see this as a betrayal—a loud, vulgar insult to the dead?”
Xander stopped pacing, and the silence that followed was dense and electric, nearly visible with the friction between them. “Then let them come, Zyan!” Xander shot back, his eyes flashing with frustration. “If we cancel, the other packs won’t just see a pack still grieving—they’ll see a pack that’s only half what it used to be. Ripe for the picking. They’ll smell blood. We have to host these games to prove we’re still here, still standing. Your mother wouldn’t want her memory to be the reason her pack became prey.”
They stood at an impasse, responsibility and terror colliding, when the door suddenly opened.
Reagan walked in. Gone was her old, confident stride—she immediately gravitated toward Xander, wrapping her arms around his waist and resting her cheek against his back, as if he were the only thing anchoring her to the present.
“Why does it feel so electrically charged in here?” she asked gently, her voice missing the sharp bite it once carried.
Before either man could answer, she pressed her face harder against Xander’s shirt. “Xander, your wolf is pacing right under your skin,” she murmured, reading him through the mate bond. “You’re trembling from stress.”
She lifted her head, shifting her gaze to her twin brother across the desk.
“And you,” Reagan said softly, a sad, knowing look spreading over her face, “you’re rubbing your jaw just like Dad used to when a meeting was going off the rails. You only do that when you’re afraid of making the wrong call for the pack.” She angled herself so she could see both men, her hand still on Xander’s hip. “So, out with it. What are we talking about?”
Zyan looked at his sister, a fresh wave of weariness washing over him. Once, Reagan had been a force of nature—the pack prodigy, first in the sparring ring, built of proud muscle and unbreakable will. Now, just looking at her hurt. The knit sweater hung from a frame ravaged by grief; her collarbones jutted sharply, her wrists looked too fragile for the world. The fire in her eyes was barely a spark.
Seeing her like this, Zyan felt the terrified little boy inside him go quiet as the Alpha took over. His resolve hardened. If dragging the pack into daylight—if hosting these games—meant even a chance of reigniting Reagan’s spirit, he would do it. Anything to get her back.
Still, his protective instincts warred with his Alpha duty. He didn’t want to add to her burden.
“It’s nothing, Reagan,” Zyan lied, trying to wave it off. “Just boring logistics. Winter supplies. Patrol rotations.”
She didn’t even blink. “Yep, I call bullshit.”
Zyan winced, breath catching in his chest as if bracing for a blow. Every muscle tensed.
“You’re a terrible liar, Zyan, and you always have been,” Reagan said, a flicker of stubborn fire returning to her hoarse voice. “You don’t rub your jaw over patrols, and Xander doesn’t pace over grain shipments. I may be weak, but I’m not stupid. Tell me.”
He looked at Xander, who gave a firm nod and a resigned shrug. Time to rip off the bandage. Zyan drew a deep breath, bracing for impact. “The Warrior Games. We’re deciding if we should host them this year,” he admitted, voice subdued. “It would mean a lot of work in a short time. If we do it, we have to pull everyone together and move fast—there’s so much that needs to be organized.”
Zyan saw the overwhelming realization dawn in her eyes and quickly stepped in to ease the sudden weight resting on her shoulders."You don't have to if you don't want to," Zyan assured her, his voice incredibly gentle, stripped of any demanding Alpha command. "But if you do make them, you can be absolutely certain that if you never want to wear yours... they will never be worn. I will keep them in a safe place forever. And I will pay you for your time and craftsmanship, of course."Zyan saw the overwhelming realization dawn in her eyes and quickly stepped in to ease the sudden weight resting on her shoulders. It had hit Emerald like a physical blow, the weight of it crushing her lungs. She stepped back, but Zyan was already there, not to trap her, but to block the world from seeing her shake."You don't have to," Zyan said. His voice was low, stripped of the Alpha command that usually vibrated in his tone. "If you make them, and you never want to wear yours, they will never be worn. I
As they continued their slow stroll along the winding, firelit path, the comfortable, easy energy between them shifted into something just a little more serious.Zyan glanced down at her, his expression softening as he carefully chose his next words. "I actually have a couple of questions for you," he began, his deep voice carrying a gentle, deeply reassuring tone. He slowed his pace just a fraction to look her squarely in the eyes. "And I want you to know right off the bat that I will be completely okay with you saying no."Emerald’s breath hitched, a sudden, freezing spike of panic piercing straight through the warm comfort of the evening. Her heart instantly started to hammer against her ribs like a trapped bird.Not the mate bond again, she pleaded silently to herself, her mind flashing back to the absolute terror and heartbreak of her past. Please, not the mate bond again.She forced herself to take a shallow, grounding breath, her fingers tightening nervously around the fabric o
Zyan stepped away from the roaring crowds of the formal assembly and headed back toward the rowdy feast. It didn't take him long to spot them. Cobb, Nesha, and their larger-than-life family had commandeered an entire long table near the edge of the firelight. Tucked safely right in the middle of the chaos was Emerald, a small, genuine smile gracing her face as she watched her massive cousins joke and shove each other over plates of roasted meat.Taking a deep breath to steady the sudden racing of his heart, Zyan stepped fully into the light and approached their table.The second Zyan drew near, the laughter abruptly stopped. All six of Cobb’s boys shifted in unison, seamlessly going on the defensive. They squared their shoulders, physically forming a wall of muscle to block his path to Emerald. It didn't matter that Zyan was a notoriously dangerous Alpha, or that they had known the Frost twins their entire lives. When it came to Emerald, they operated on uncompromising protective inst
Reagan didn't even bother to knock. She turned the handle and pushed the door open, stepping quietly into her brother's bedroom. The room itself was dark and empty, but the glass doors leading out to his private balcony were pushed wide open, letting the cool, pine-scented mountain air spill inside.She walked softly across the room and stepped out into the chill of the night. Zyan was standing at the edge of the stone balcony, his large hands gripping the heavy wrought-iron banister as he stared out over the vast, moonlit expanse of the Frost Pack territory. Down below, the distant, glowing embers of the celebratory bonfires flickered against the tree line.Reagan walked right up beside him, mirroring his posture as she leaned her forearms against the cold metal banister. For a long time, the only sound between them was the faint, echoing music carrying up from the festival grounds."She's leaving tomorrow, Reagan," Zyan said, his voice low and heavy, thick with an aching kind of res
Zyan stood rooted to the spot, chest heaving with ragged, uneven breaths. Every inch of distance she put between them felt like a physical tearing of his own flesh. Ky was losing his mind, snarling and thrashing against the inside of Zyan's ribs like a caged storm. Beside him, Maddox turned, his
The morning sun broke over the Frost pack lands, illuminating a Midway that was already bursting with color and life. The official sign-in booths flanked the main gates, surrounded by visiting vendors eagerly setting up their intricately carved wooden stalls. Beyond the gates, a line of SUVs, truck
Maddox's gaze wandered toward the distant packhouse, his expression changing incredibly tender. "That was one of your mother's favorite things to do, you know. To sit down with the three of us after a long day in the dirt, spread the lists out over the desk, and run everyone's crazy suggestions by
As the guards hoisted the last of the flour bags into the back of the SUV, Reagan closed the tailgate with a solid thud and then rested against the bumper. She let out a long sigh, wiping a smudge of dirt from her jeans, before turning to the older woman."I'm really happy we could have this day to
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