The pack house hasn't changed.
Still sharp corners and polished wood. Still that curated sterility beneath the surface, as if it's built not to shelter but to impress. A place meant for display, not for warmth. Every line of it too crisp, too clean.
Just like him.
I linger in the doorway of the guest room longer than I need to, letting the hush settle around me. Nova's tucked on her side, lashes fluttering faintly, lost in a dream I'll never be able to protect her from. Leo stays close, fingers curled loosely against her ribs, the soft sound of his breath matching hers. Even in sleep they reach for each other. Always connected.
They don't know how close we are to danger. Again.
And if I'm honest, I don't know either.
I let out an unsteady breath and pull the door closed with a soft click. The silence in the hallway feels deeper than it should, like the whole house is waiting.
And I walk straight into him.
Solid. Tall. Hard lines and quiet heat. He fills the narrow space and I hate how familiar it feels. I catch the breath before it leaves me, before it can turn into something I don't want him to hear.
He doesn't speak. Doesn't blink.
Just stands there watching me like I'm some kind of ghost he hasn't yet decided whether to leave or devour. The air thickens, not with breath but pressure, the hush that falls before a lightning strike, when even the wind dares not move.
He's been waiting here. For me. His gaze drops to my mouth, slow, deliberate, unapologetic.
The worst part isn't the look itself. It's how my body responds to it. My pulse betrays me, stuttering once, hard enough that I feel it all the way down my spine. He heard it. No doubt.
Still, I don't move.
Tension stretches taut between us, thick with too much history. The kind that seeps into your skin and stays long after it should have faded.
I lift my chin. If he's going to look at me like that, he can deal with the claws too.
"Lurking outside bedrooms now?" I say, cool and sharp. "Real Alpha behaviour."
He keeps staring. Pinning me there with nothing but his presence. Like he can cage me without laying a single hand.
"You smell like heat," he says, voice low and certain.
I almost laugh. Not because any of this is funny, because it's easier than letting him see how rattled I am. How close to the edge.
"You always were poetic," I reply, letting my voice curl around the words like smoke.
"You're not in season."
No hesitation. No question at the end. Just cold, quiet certainty.
And he isn't wrong. There's no reason for it, no timing, no cycle. But something in me responds anyway. Something buried and instinctive that remembers him. The bond twitches. Just once. Like something waking up that should have stayed buried.
His eyes sharpen.
"Step back," I say. Softer now, not quite a command.
He doesn't.
Instead he moves toward me, a slow press of muscle and heat that pulls the air straight out of the corridor. I step back without thinking, spine hitting the wall behind me. His body follows until we're nearly touching, until his shadow swallows mine and the scent of him closes around me. He braces one hand against the wall beside my head, palm flat, body angled to trap.
He still doesn't touch me. Doesn't need to.
The space is his. Claimed in a heartbeat. Dominated in a way that has nothing to do with contact and everything to do with intent. With memory. With the fact that no one else has ever made me feel this tightly wound just by existing this close.
I can taste the restraint in him. Feel it vibrating in the inch of space between us.
And even now, even after everything, my traitorous body wants to close that distance.
"Why are you here, Cassia?" His voice drops. A gravel-drag of sound.
I meet his gaze. Keep my voice level. "Sanctuary."
Again that lie. And not even a good one.
"Bullshit."
The word cracks between us, stripped bare and unflinching.
"I had nowhere else to go." Still false. But safer than the truth.
His eyes scan my face, mapping it, searching for the parts that have changed and the ones that haven't.
"Try again," he says finally. And this time it isn't a demand. It's a dare.
Words I can't say press like thorns behind my teeth. Because the real reason, the truth, I won’t give it to him. Not yet. If I do, if I say the words out loud, he'll never let me leave.
The most dangerous part? A piece of me, deep in the place I keep buried, isn't entirely sure I want to.
"You left." The words c***k from his throat like something unhealed. His voice falters. Just enough to make me still. "You didn't give me a chance."
Is he serious? The audacity sits between us like a lit match.
"You didn't give me a choice." I don't yell it. The truth cuts cleaner when whispered.
And it lands.
I see the flinch. Very real. Very mine.
He tries to recover but the words tangle in his throat.
"I would've—"
"What?" My voice snaps. Sharp as the break in my chest. "Fought for me?"
His mouth opens. No answer comes. Because there isn't one. When it mattered he did nothing, and we both know it.
"You rejected me in front of the entire pack, Kade."
It rings too loud in the narrow hall. Brittle and sharp and full of everything I haven't let myself say until now.
"You stripped my title. My name. My place. You stood there, looked me in the eye, and called me unworthy like it meant nothing. Like I meant nothing."
The words lodge like glass. I force them out anyway. Let them cut. "What exactly would you have done after that?" I demand. "Alpha."
I spit the title like poison. It tastes exactly like that.
His jaw locks. One muscle twitches in his cheek, grinding under skin stretched too tight.
Then he leans in. Close enough to feel the shift in the air. His breath hits my cheek, warm and so familiar. The memory of how it used to feel surfaces before I can stop it.
No.
My hands ball into fists at my sides. I turn my head away. Even now, even after everything, my body remembers what it feels like to be claimed by him.
The heat between us throbs.
"I should hate you," I say. Quiet but vicious. The words catching on something raw.
"Then go." Low. Rough. Barely human.
His hand drops from the wall like it costs him something to let go. The weight of him keeps me rooted anyway.
"I should put you in a separate wing." That flat, disinterested tone he uses when something matters more than he wants it to.
"Do it," I shoot back, chin lifting. Daring him.
"No." His eyes find mine. "I want you close."
The words hit harder than they have any right to. "Why?"
He doesn't answer that. His gaze shifts, not to my mouth this time. Not to the parts of me he used to know. Through me.
And then, as if the thought escaped before he could catch it, he murmurs, "They're too quiet."
Every instinct in me snaps taut.
"What?"
"The twins." His voice changes, something slow and careful entering it, like a man who has just noticed a tripwire and is deciding whether to step back or forward. "They don't act like pups."
There is nothing I can do but hold his gaze and make my body lie better than my mouth can.
"They've been trained," I say. Each word deliberate. "To survive."
His jaw works once. Twice. No outward reaction. But I feel the shift. See the tension settle into his shoulders differently, like something rearranging beneath the surface.
"By who?"
The pause before I answer stretches longer than it should.
"By me."
Silence.
He holds my gaze for one long moment. Then he steps back, just enough to let air between us, and something in the atmosphere changes. Not relief. Not resolution.
A beginning.
"Keep them close," he says, voice low and stretched thin. "Things are shifting. Something's coming."
He turns before I can answer. His boots make dull, measured thuds against the polished floor as he disappears into the dim corridor. The shadows swallow him quickly.
But the imprint of him stays.
I exhale.
He doesn't know yet.
But he's close.