The "Sanctuary" wasn't a church or a safe house. It was a brutalist fortress of black glass and reinforced steel, hidden deep in the hills far from the prying eyes of the New York elite.
The SUV came to a skidding halt in the subterranean garage. Silas didn't wait for Marcus to open the door. He was out and hauling me with him before the engine had even died. His grip on my hand was possessive, his skin still humming with the silver energy we’d shared in the boardroom.
"Silas, slow down," I gasped, my heels dragging on the concrete. "My head is spinning. That... whatever that light was... it's still under my skin."
He stopped abruptly, spinning me around and pinning me against the cool metal of the SUV. The garage was dim, the only light coming from the glowing amber of the dashboard. Silas looked like a man possessed. His tie was gone, his shirt unbuttoned at the collar, and his eyes were a constant, burning gold.
"That light was me, Elena," he rasped, his hands framing my face. "And the fact that you survived it—that you channeled it—means the bond is moving faster than the moon. Your body is ready. Your wolf is screaming for the Seal."
"I don't have a wolf, Silas! I have a biology degree and a massive headache!" I shouted back, though my heart was betraying me, thudding against my ribs in a frantic rhythm that matched his. "I did what I had to do to save your life. That doesn't mean I'm ready to be branded like cattle."
"It’s not a brand," he growled, his face dropping toward mine until our lips were a breath apart. "It’s a tether. It’s the only thing that will stop the energy from burning through your nervous system. Look at your arms, Elena. Really look."
I looked. Under the skin of my forearms, the silver light wasn't just glowing anymore; it was branching like lightning, tracing the path of my veins in a beautiful, terrifying web. It felt like needles made of ice were dancing under my flesh.
"It’s beautiful," I whispered, terrified.
"It’s lethal," Silas corrected. He leaned in, his forehead resting against mine. "If I don't Mark you by midnight, the overflow will cause a seizure. Your human heart can't handle the voltage of an Alpha's power without the Mark to ground it."
He didn't wait for me to process the science of it. He scooped me up into his arms, carrying me toward the private elevator. I should have fought, but the closer I was to him, the more the needles under my skin turned into a soft, numbing warmth. My body wanted him. My soul was practically begging for the touch I was trying so hard to negotiate.
The elevator opened directly into a sprawling master suite. It was a temple of dark silk and shadows. Silas set me down on the edge of a bed that felt like a cloud, but he didn't join me. He paced the room, his movements jagged and predatory.
"Arthur’s poison was meant to kill me, but it did something worse," Silas said, stopping to look at the moon through the skylight. "It triggered the Moon-Heat early. For both of us."
"Moon-Heat?" I asked, my voice trembling. "That sounds like a bad romance novel trope, Silas."
"Call it what you want," he said, turning to face me. He was already pulling off his jacket, his movements heavy with a dark, inevitable intent. "But in ten minutes, you’re going to be begging me for the very thing you said was 'off-limits.'"
"Is that a challenge, Mr. Vane?" I stood up, my witty mind trying to find a footing even as my knees felt like they were made of water.
"It's a prophecy, Elena," he whispered.
He moved then—faster than my human eyes could track. One second he was across the room, and the next, he was directly in front of me, his hands sliding up my waist to pull me flush against the hard, vibrating planes of his chest.
"The office is closed," he growled against my neck. "The board is gone. Now, it's just the Alpha and his Anchor. Tell me you don't want this, and I'll walk out that door."
He waited. He didn't move. He just let me feel the raw, agonizing hunger radiating off him. I looked up into those gold eyes, and for the first time, I didn't see the CEO. I saw my mate.
"Don't you dare walk out that door," I whispered.
Silas didn’t wait. He didn’t give me a chance to reconsider or let my "terms" get in the way of the wildfire currently burning between us.
His mouth found mine with a ferocity that made my head spin. It wasn't a question; it was an answer to a year of questions I’d been too afraid to ask. I tasted the salt of sweat, the faint metallic tang of the boardroom, and the pure, intoxicating scent of the man who had officially ruined my life.
My hands, still glowing with that frantic silver light, found the buttons of his shirt. I wasn't just undressing him; I was trying to get to the heat. I needed the contact. Every inch of skin that touched his felt like it was finally being grounded, the painful "needles" under my flesh softening into a deep, heavy throb of pleasure.
"Elena," he groaned into my mouth, his hands sliding down to my hips and hoisting me up.
I wrapped my legs around his waist, my skirt riding up until there was nothing but the thin lace of my underwear between us and the raw power of his desire. He carried me the two steps to the bed and came down over me, his massive weight a welcome pressure that finally silenced the screaming in my nerves.
"The Mark," I gasped, my head tossing back against the silk pillows as he buried his face in the crook of my neck. "Is it going to hurt?"
"Only for a second," he whispered, his teeth grazing the sensitive skin right where my shoulder met my neck. "And then... then you’ll never feel alone again. You’ll hear me in your head, Elena. You’ll feel my heart beating alongside yours. Do you want that?"
"Yes," I breathed, my fingers digging into the muscles of his back. "God, Silas, yes."
He pulled back, his eyes searching mine. The gold was so bright now it was almost blinding. He looked at the silver lightning branching across my chest, his expression one of pure, unadulterated worship.
"I’m going to be gentle, but the wolf... he’s been waiting a long time for this."
He moved lower, his lips tracing the path of the silver veins, leaving a trail of fire in his wake. When his hand slid between my thighs, I let out a sound I didn't recognize—a high, desperate whimper that made Silas growl in response. The "Moon-Heat" wasn't just a term; it was a physical fever. My skin felt too tight, my blood felt too hot, and Silas was the only cure.
He moved back up, pinning my wrists above my head with one hand. With the other, he guided himself against me, the friction sending jolts of electricity through the bond that made the silver light in the room pulse in a blinding rhythm.
"Look at me, Elena," he commanded.
I opened my eyes, my vision blurred by tears of sheer intensity.
"You are the Anchor," he rasped, his voice dropping into a register that made the very air vibrate. "You are the soul of the Silver Moon. And tonight, you become mine."
He surged forward, and for a heartbeat, the world disappeared. There was only the sensation of being filled, of being claimed, and the sharp, sudden sting of his fangs sinking into the base of my neck.
I didn't scream. I gasped, my back arching off the bed as a flood of gold light poured from his mouth into my veins. The silver and gold collided, swirling together until my entire body felt like it was made of stars. The pain of the bite vanished instantly, replaced by a wave of such intense, soul-deep peace that I felt my eyes flutter shut.
I could hear him.
Not with my ears, but in my mind. A deep, steady thrum of Mine. Mine. Always mine.
"Always," I whispered back, the word echoing through the bond.
Silas didn't stop. He began to move, his pace slow and deliberate, each stroke reinforcing the Seal he’d just placed on my soul. The boardroom, the traitors, and the "Terms" didn't matter anymore. In this sanctuary, under the light of a moon that was almost full, the Ice King and his Secretary were gone.
There was only the Alpha and his Mate, finally home.