Lyra — Age 18 Boston, Massachusetts
Weeks dissolved into months like morning mist burned off by dawn. At first, Boston felt temporary— a pit stop on her journey— but by October its cobblestone streets and brick façades seemed to pulse in time with her own heartbeat. Each worn granite slab of sidewalk imprinted her stride; lamp-lit quads around campus shone like beacons guiding her back to routines she’d come to cherish. Lyra no longer summoned maps on her phone. She knew exactly which corner led to Widener Library’s arched entrance, which elm-shaded alley provided a shortcut to the student center. Even the corner café, its windows beaded with steam and the pale light of daybreak, anticipated her double- shot latte— oat milk, two sugars— before she spoke her order.
Her first-year courses, once sheer academic cliffs she feared she might tumble down, now lay before her like summits begging for her flag. She reveled in midnight hushes at the library, casebooks stacked in fortress-high piles, the soft glow of yellow desk lamps casting pools of warmth on her notes. She drank in the heated hush of lecture halls, the echo of debate ricocheting off oak-paneled walls, each argument honed sharp enough to draw blood. Emerging afterward into cold evening air felt like a dare—winter’s bite in her lungs a reminder that here, no one cared whose daughter she was before granting her space.
Harvard was unrelenting. It prodded and challenged, refused to coddle. But it was honest in a way Alaska’s vast stillness and Blackwood’s whispered secrets had never been. Here, success was carved from midnight oil and sweat; failure was a bruise you tended until it faded. No one measured her against the wolf she still carried in her bones, waiting in shadow.
Still, on her loneliest nights, Alaska’s evergreen silence curled back in memory like a ribbon unfurling. She missed Mira’s booming laughter, Talia’s soft observations, Bradley’s running commentary from behind his laptop’s glow. Even then, Boston’s restless heartbeat reminded her she was never truly alone.
Her days settled into a rhythm: autumn’s fiery leaves spinning into winter’s hush, winter cracking open into spring’s pink blush, spring folding into another semester. Textbooks multiplied, exams loomed and dissipated, papers were born at two in the morning in her apartment whose windows caught the city lights like a constellation. She discovered she was fearless in seminars—Professors paused mid-sentence, eyebrows arching, pens hovering as Lyra spoke truths sharper than they’d expected.
She mastered small triumphs: ordering takeout without hesitation, mapping the T lines in her mind, racing between buildings in downpours without turning her notes into soggy confetti. She learned how to sit with herself, the hush of her company no longer mistaken for loneliness. She felt like a butterfly pushing through its chrysalis, each challenge forging her wings stronger and more radiant than before.
And somewhere in the turning world, her bond with Vaelrion deepened—an unspoken thread pulsing just beyond her thoughts. Sometimes it whispered warmth at her shoulder during debates; sometimes it sparked amusement when her retort silenced a classmate; sometimes a sudden, scorching longing stole her breath before she recognized it as her own.
Vaelrion
Distance had once felt like a slow starvation; now it felt like hope-forged torment. Boston had reshaped their bond. He watched Lyra step into her power the moment she left Alaska—miles aside, she had entered the life she was meant to live, and the bond answered in kind. With every passing month, Vaelrion’s strength grew alongside her confidence.
Yet the ancient slumber still held him captive: stone sealed his form in a royal crypt beneath mountain and fire; old runes bound him like frost-cold chains. But his mind—his mind shimmered with clarity, alive in a way it hadn’t in centuries. He could feel her thoughts as edges when she tired, the thump of her heart when frustration flared, the tremor of loneliness that shadowed her victories.
Each time she chose him, something in him steadied. Yet ancient need coiled tighter with each sunrise she spent farther from his embrace. He wanted her—not only with the patient worship that had carried him through despair, not only as the mate meant to stand at his side when he finally broke free of stone and spell—but as a male claims his rightful mate: to hold, to guard, to mark. That claim pulsed in his dragon blood, summoned by age-old magic that reduced the world to a single axis: her.
He feared the timing. Feared the dormant wolf within her might falter when the bond at last sealed. He craved counsel—his land beneath him, his elders’ steady voices, Tharok’s iron-true wisdom—to know which clans still stood, which had bent knee to the mate they’d never seen but whose blood carried their future. Above all, he wanted her, in waking as in dream.
Lyra noticed the change before he spoke. It was late; rain traced veins down her apartment windows. Constitutional law cases lay splayed across her floor in neat chaos. She’d pretended exhaustion wouldn’t claim her, but finally, tucked beneath blankets with one arm under her pillow, she sighed. The words slipped out: “I miss you.”
Something shifted in the familiar warmth of her mind—deepening, intensifying like sunlight bursting through storm clouds.
I know, little wolf.
Her chest tightened. She whispered, “The distance feels…thinner somehow.”
Satisfaction rippled through their bond.
The bond grows stronger, little wolf.
Lyra rolled onto her back, eyes on the dark ceiling. “How?”
Silence. Then his voice, gravel over velvet:
You’ve stopped bracing for catastrophe with every breath. The bond recognizes your surrender to living. As do I.
Her throat went dry.
“Vaelrion…”
Let me have you in dreams, where time cannot steal you away so quickly.
His words poured through her veins like molten gold.
“You’ll stay with me?”
A low vibration thrummed beneath her skin—a growl caught between desire and control.
The boundaries of time have weakened. I can stretch these moments further.
Her heartbeat thundered.
“Tell me how much time we have.”
Silence weighed until he answered:
Enough to satisfy, not enough to sate.
The world shimmered around her. No violent blaze, only a gentle warmth, as though a thousand stars exhaled in smoky breath. She found herself on a terrace of dark stone, arches carved with ancient runes glowing pale cobalt. A courtyard of obsidian and silver stretched below, pillars reaching for a mist-blurred sky. Lichen-draped archways glowed faintly by candlelight.
There he stood in human form: skin like black-bronze, as if shadow and flame were forged into flesh; robes swirling around him like living smoke. Scaled sinew flickered beneath, but tonight he was entirely male, entirely royal, entirely hers.
She crossed the terrace without hesitation. The air tasted of ozone and heated stone. His hands rose to draw her close—and she felt it in an instant: not fear, but fierce tenderness, every ounce of his ancient power poured into that single touch. The bond drew taut between them like a living thread. His palms traced her waist, slid up her back, and she shivered under his gaze, as if gravity itself bent toward them.
You are nearer now, he murmured. And it makes honesty difficult.
She offered a faint smile. “You’re usually very honest.”
A shadow passed over his mouth. Not about the worst of it.
Her heart fluttered. She laid her hands on his chest. “Tell me.”
Flamelight danced in his liquid-gold eyes. He covered her hands with his own, warm and certain.
There is a hunger in me that has no measure.
The confession hung between them like an unspoken vow.
“What kind of hunger?” she whispered.
His thumb traced her knuckles, a whisper against her skin. His voice held mountain weight and star-fire heat:
I hunger for nothing but you. I have waited for nothing but you. Heat pooled in her veins. He bent toward her slowly, giving her every chance to pull away. She did not. Their lips met—gentle at first, tasting of longing and promise—then deeper, insistent, each breath pressed into the other. When he finally broke away, his forehead rested against hers.
In this place, I could give you anything, he whispered.
Her pulse thundered as the arches brightened, listening.
Anything we do here remains here. Nothing is taken from you. Nothing occurs beyond dream, bond, and your choice to remember.
Her breath trembled.
“You’re warning me.”
His lips curved in a smile of safety.
I offer boundaries, not barriers.
His hands moved over her body like reverent worship—each curve learned, each response cherished. Lyra had never known desire could speak in such gentle language, every touch a stanza of devotion. They settled at last on a stone bench piled with furs and silken wraps, the night sky spinning slow above them. Vaelrion sat behind her, arms encircling her waist, mapping her curves with careful, adoring fingers.
A tremor ran through her. “I can’t tell where the dream ends anymore.”
His lips grazed her ear. What you feel is no illusion, little wolf.
Her heart clenched. He paused, palm resting at her waist.
Lyra.
She leaned back into him. He turned her gently to face him. In his eyes burned hunger—but also a rare vulnerability.
I long for more than borrowed hours, he said quietly. For time with you that doesn’t dissolve with the dawn.
She traced the edge of his cheekbone. “Someday.”
Someday, he echoed, closing his eyes at her touch.
Later, she studied the stars’ slow dance overhead. “How long have I been here?”
He traced her jaw with a fingertip, half-boyish smile, half-ancient secret. Twelve hours, he said.
“That’s impossible,” she whispered, sitting up.
You have lived a full turning of this realm’s sky.
Lyra’s eyes went wide. “But in my world—”
The laws of time bow to different masters here, little wolf.
“You can do that?” she breathed. “Bend time itself?”
He caught the starlight in his gaze. I merely persuaded it to linger where we needed it most.
The dream realm’s veil softened. Firelight dimmed. His hand slipped from her waist. A moment later, Boston’s pale dawn light streamed through her bedroom windows as if no time had passed. Lyra lay wrapped in blankets, her heart swollen with twelve impossible hours in Vaelrion’s arms.
She stayed still, tracing her pillows, breathing in the quiet morning. Then she pressed a hand to her lips and smiled—miss him already, but closer than ever before.