The journey from the Healers' Sanctum was a blur of gray trees and the heavy, metallic scent of rain. Anya gripped the steering wheel of her sleek black SUV, her knuckles white. The news of her failing wolf heart sat in her chest like a lump of lead, cold and unyielding.
She needed to tell someone. She needed her sister.
Huda had always been the fire to Anya’s ice. Growing up in a house where she was adopted. They only had each other. But as Anya pulled up to the dilapidated apartment complex where Huda had been staying since her recent “dismissal” from her own sub-pack, a sense of dread washed over her.
When Huda opened the door, the fire was gone. Her younger sister’s hair was matted, her eyes rimmed with red, and the scent of stale whiskey and unwashed laundry clung to her like a shroud.
“Anya,”Huda rasped, not moving to let her in. "Come to check on the charity case?"
“I came to see my sister,” Anya said softly, stepping inside despite the cold reception.
The apartment was a disaster. Huda had been cast out after losing her position in the pack’s administrative circle, a casualty of the same political disgrace that had nearly swallowed Anya. But while Anya had been “saved” by a marriage contract, Huda had been left to rot in the human world.
“It's not fair,” Huda spat, pacing the small room like a caged animal. Her wolf was restless, flicking through the surface of her skin in jagged, nervous shifts. “You're Luna. You wear silks and eat at the Alpha’s table while I’m counting pennies for bread. Why does the Goddess love you and hate me?"
Anya opened her mouth to speak, to tell Huda that her “perfect” life was a gilded cage, that her heart was literally dying. But looking at the raw, jagged misery in her sister’s eyes, the words died in her throat. How could she complain about a failing heart to someone who had lost their home?
“Huda, stop,” Anya said, reaching out to grab her sister’s trembling hands. “I’m going to make it right. Just for one night, let’s forget the packs and the debt. I’m throwing a party. A Moon Celebration at the mansion.”
Huda froze, a glimmer of her old self returning to her eyes. “A party? At the Blackridge estate?”
“Yes. A surprise for you. I want you to feel like a high-wolf again.” Anya forced a smile, masking the sharp pang of pain that shot through her chest.
I’ll give her this, she thought. If I only have three months, I’ll spend one night making her happy.
The preparations were frantic. Anya spent the afternoon coordinating with a few trusted staff members, her physical strength waning with every hour. She sent Huda to a high-end human spa in the city, providing a credit card and a strict instruction not to return until the moon reached its zenith.
By dusk, the grand ballroom of the Blackridge mansion was transformed. Silver silk draped from the rafters, and the scent of night-blooming jasmine filled the air. But as the first guests distinguished members of the pack’s inner circle began to arrive, Anya realized she had forgotten the ceremonial lunar pendant she was required to wear as the Alpha’s mate.
“I’ll be right back,” Anya told the lead decorator. “I need to go up to the bedroom wing. Don't let Huda in if she arrives early.”
She moved through the halls, her breath coming short. The silence of the bedroom wing was unusual. Typically, the house hummed with the busy footsteps of servants. As she approached the master suite, a sound reached her ears.
A low, guttural growl. A rhythmic creak of wood. And a high, melodic whimper that sounded hauntingly familiar.
Anya froze. She and Huda had often complained about the housekeeper, Mrs. Gable, suspecting her of bringing human lovers into the mansion while the Alphas were away. A spark of anger, a rare, hot ember of her wolf, Elara's spirit ignited in her chest.
Not tonight, Anya thought, her jaw tightening. I will not have this house desecrated on the night I’m trying to save my sister.
She didn't knock. She didn't announce herself. She placed her hand on the heavy oak door and shoved.
The door swung open with a violent c***k.
The scene inside didn't make sense at first. The moonlight was streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating the tangled limbs on the massive silk-covered bed.
Then, the scents hit her.
The heavy, musk-scent of Levi. And the sharp, citrus-and-clove scent of Huda.
Anya’s world tilted. The air seemed to turn to shards of glass in her lungs. Levi sat up, his chest bare, his eyes glowing a dark, unrepentant amber. Beneath him, Huda didn't scramble for the sheets. She didn't hide. She sat up slowly, smoothing her hair back with a chillingly calm expression.
“Anya,” Huda said, her voice devoid of the misery she’d shown earlier. “You're early.”
The betrayal was so absolute. It felt physical, like a silver blade plunging into the center of Anya’s already failing heart. “Huda?” Anya whispered. “How... why?”
“Why?”Huda laughed, a sharp, jagged sound. She stood up, draped in nothing but her resentment. “Because I’m tired of your leftovers, Anya. I’m tired of watching you play the martyr in your diamonds. You didn’t get this life because you were better. You got it because you were the oldest. You got everything. The title, the Alpha, the protection. I just took what I deserved.”
Anya turned her gaze to Levi. Her husband. The man who had promised to find a heart to save her. He lounged back against the headboard, a bored smirk playing on his lips.
“Don't look at me like that, Anya,” Levi said, his voice a low rumble. “She seduced me. She’s got a fire in her that you lost months ago. Besides,” he gestured vaguely toward her chest, “you’re always 'too tired' or 'too sick.' A man like me has needs. If you won't fulfill them, I'll find someone of your blood who will.”
“I was… I was throwing a party for you Huda,” Anya gasped, her voice trembling with a sudden, violent energy. Elara was screaming now, a primal, dying roar of fury. “I was trying to save you, Huda!”
“I don't need saving from a ghost!” Huda screamed back, her wolf surfacing, her fingernails lengthening into claws. “You’re weak, Anya! You’ve always been weak! You’re a dying Omega who doesn't even know how to hold her man!”
Something inside Anya snapped.
The “failing” heart in her chest surged. It wasn't the steady beat of health, but the desperate, explosive rhythm of a cornered animal.
Levi stood up, reaching for his trousers. “Enough. Anya, go back to the ballroom. Compose yourself. We will discuss your 'duties' tomorrow.”
He moved to grab her arm, to exert his Alpha Command and force her into submission. But he underestimated the fury of a woman with nothing left to lose.
As his hand closed on her wrist, Anya didn't flinch. She twisted, using his own momentum against him. Her hand flashed out, her nails unusually sharp in her rage ripping three jagged lines across Levi’s cheek.
He roared, more in shock than pain, but Anya wasn't finished. She turned to Huda, who was lunging at her with a snarl. Anya met her head-on, her shoulder slamming into her sister’s chest with a strength she didn't know she possessed. They hit the floor, a tangle of limbs and teeth. Anya delivered a sharp, stinging slap that sent Huda sprawling back against the bedframe.
“Stay away from me,” Anya hissed, her voice sounding like the grinding of stones. Her vision was swimming, red spots dancing in her eyes. The exertion was killing her, she could feel her heart stuttering, but she refused to fall. Not here. Not in front of them.
Levi lunged for her, his Alpha Aura flaring to full power, a suffocating weight meant to drop any Omega to their knees. “SUBMIT!” he bellowed.
Anya felt the pressure in her skull. Her knees buckled, but she gritted her teeth so hard her gums bled. She looked him dead in the eye, a direct challenge to an Alpha and spat at his feet.
“I would rather die in the dirt than submit to a dog like you,” she whispered.
She turned and bolted.
She ran through the halls, ignoring the gasps of the staff and the confused looks of the guests arriving in the ballroom. She burst through the front doors into the freezing night air.
Her lungs were burning. Her heart felt as if it were being squeezed by an iron fist. She didn't have her keys. She didn't have her phone. She only had the searing, white-hot agony of betrayal.
She ran until the lights of the mansion were gone, until the scent of Levi and Huda was washed away by the rain. She found herself in the human city, her ceremonial dress torn and stained with mud.
She saw the neon sign of a nightclub called The Gray Zone. A neutral territory where rogues, humans, and outcasts mingled in a haze of loud music and cheap gin.
Anya stumbled inside, the thumping bass vibrating through her weakened bones. She pushed through the crowd to the bar.
“Whiskey,” she told the bartender, her voice cracking. “The strongest you have. And keep them coming.”
She drank until the pain in her heart became a dull hum. She drank until the faces of her husband and sister blurred into the shadows. And when the world finally began to fade into black, she felt a pair of strong, steady arms catch her before she hit the floor.
The scent that filled her nose wasn't pine or citrus. It was cedar and rain .
Safe, her wolf whispered for the first time in years. Safe.