The territory is nothing like I imagined.
I expected cold, fortified labs. Instead, there are forest clearings, lantern-lit paths, and sleek, modern buildings. Wolves move through the twilight as they’ve always belonged.
It’s… beautiful and wild.
Everyone goes still when Kieran’s car rolls past. They bow to him, but their eyes stay glued to me.
The human in the Alpha’s passenger seat.
I try to fold into myself, but Kieran’s hand finds mine without warning.
“Don’t look at them,” he mutters.
“They’re staring at me like I’m a threat."
“You’re not.” His thumb slides over my hand, steady and warm. “You’re just new.”
“That is not a friendly look.”
He glances their way, and every wolf immediately snaps their gaze aside.
“They’ll adjust,” he says quietly.
The certainty in his tone wraps around me like a shield, and my chest tightens. He says it like a promise, like he’s already decided where I belong.
With him.
The car stops in front of a massive modern lodge carved into the hillside. Glass walls reflect the forest, warm light spilling out like something out of a luxury retreat.
Yeah… this does not look like a monster’s den.
Tabitha leans forward between the seats, whisper-screaming, “Sienna, this is HIS house. His real house. Do you understand what that means?”
“That we made it here alive,” I mutter.
“That he BRINGS you. Do you know how many Luna Chasers would—”
Kieran opens my door, cutting her off.
He offers his hand.
I take it.
The second I touch him, heat surges my arm.
Kieran’s eyes flash gold as he leans in. “Come. Inside, before anyone else tries to stop us.”
Before I can ask what that means—
A voice slices through the air.
“Stop you from what, exactly?”
Dr. Elara Vayne stands in the doorway, arms crossed, posture perfect, gaze sharp enough to cut. Beautiful and intimidating, she looks beautiful and sharp.
She studies Kieran. Then me.
Something like understanding flickers across her face.
“Elara,” Kieran says evenly. “We need a full exam. Now.”
“Because you bring a human into pack lands during a crisis,” she replies. “And because someone leaves a slaughtered wolf on her lawn.”
Tabitha sucks in a sharp breath behind me, for once completely silent.
He leads me inside with his hand at the small of my back. The light pressure grounds me; my body reacts before I can think.
His scent surrounds me: smoke, pine, and something warm underneath. It shouldn’t feel safe.
Inside, the house opens into high windows and dark beams, warm and lived-in. It feels like him.
Then I notice the books. Everywhere.
That catches me off guard.
I shouldn’t care that he reads. But it doesn’t match the whole dangerous Alpha thing he has going on…which makes me want to know exactly what he’s reading.
Elara leads us into the medical wing. It’s spotless, efficient, cold.
Very her.
“Sit,” she says, eyes sliding to Kieran for half a second too long.
I do.
Kieran doesn’t step away.
She snaps on gloves. “You know what this means, right? You showing up here like this, at his side—the pack will assume—”
“Elara.”
She ignores it. “He’s going to keep you.”
My breath catches.
Kieran doesn’t deny it.
Elara sighs, something in her expression slipping. “Claiming a human is complicated. For both sides.”
“No one said anything about claiming her,” Kieran cuts in, sharp.
But the way he says her—the way his hand tightens against the edge of the bed—gives him away.
Elara notices. “Kieran,” she says dryly, “you’re not subtle.”
His jaw flexes. “Just do the exam.”
Elara looks at me now, voice softer—but it feels pointed. “I need to check you. Make sure no one touched you. Marked you. Anything.”
Her gaze flicks briefly to Kieran. “You can say no. You still have that option.”
I look at him.
His eyes are gold, too bright, something tight underneath. His jaw set like he’s holding himself back.
He’s not worried about the results.
He’s worried about me.
“Do it,” I say.
***
The exam is long and meticulous. Kieran barely moves, but he never lets go of me. Every time Elara touches me, he goes rigid.
Finally, Elara steps back. “She’s clean,” she announces. “No trackers. No toxins. No forced enhancements.”
Kieran exhales a breath that sounds like he’s been holding it since the moment he saw me at the club.
I try to steady myself, folding my hands in my lap, watching the tremor in my fingers. “Why me?”
Kieran moves in front of me and crouches until we’re eye level. “Your mother.”
Elara adds calmly, “Lilian Hart got too close to something. Close enough that the Architects killed her.”
“My mother studies mythological anthropology,” I whisper. “Not genetics.”
Elara tilts her head. “Are you sure?”
The implication hits like a punch.
“She… doesn’t tell me everything,” I admit.
“She doesn’t tell us everything,” Kieran says quietly.
Elara strips off her gloves. “The Architects think you’re carrying what she died to protect. And they won’t stop.”
Kieran straightens, looming over both of us. “That’s why she stays here. With me.”
It stuns me. “For how long?”
His gaze locks onto mine, and the rest of the room disappears.
“As long as you’re in danger,” he says. “Or until I find out why they want you. Whichever comes last.”
His voice is low, unshakable.
My heart stutters.
He notices.
Slowly, he lifts his hand to my face, hesitates, then touches my cheek like I might disappear.
“I don’t do this,” he mutters. “I don’t let people in. I don’t trust easily. I don’t… feel like this.”
Elara watches from across the room, caught between hurt and understanding.
“But you walk into my world,” Kieran says, eyes searching mine, “and everything I thought I knew stops mattering.”
“Kieran…”
He gives a small shake of his head. “I shouldn’t want you here. This is reckless. This is dangerous. This is the worst decision I could make.”
“But you’re making it anyway,” I whisper.
His mouth twitches. “Yeah. I am.”
Something skips between us—a heartbeat, a jolt of electricity demanding to be acknowledged.
I don’t realize I’ve moved until I feel his hand in mine. Or maybe he reached for me. Or maybe we met in the middle.
Either way, our fingers slide together like they’ve done it before.
And it terrifies me.
Footsteps pound down the hallway before either of us can speak. Heavy. Urgent.
Maddox bursts through the door. “Alpha,” he says, his gaze flicking to me, then back to Kieran. “You need to see this.”
Kieran goes instantly rigid. “What now?”
Maddox holds out a tablet. “The Architects just issued a public challenge. Every supernatural network is broadcasting it.”
Kieran snatches it from his hand.
From where I sit, I can see the headline:
TRADE OFFERED: SIENNA HART FOR SUPERNATURAL CEASEFIRE. 48 HOURS.
My stomach drops.
No. No. No. No.
Kieran’s voice turns ice-cold. “Tell them no.”
Maddox nods once. “I figured. But, Alpha… this means war.”
Kieran looks at me.
Only me.
“Let them come,” he says. “They want her?” His wolf flashes in his gaze. “They go through me.”