POV: Nyx
They came before the sun was up and they did not ask if I had slept.
Four maids, efficient and wordless, moving through my rooms like they had done this a hundred times and felt nothing about doing it again. One worked my hair with cold hands and precise fingers, each pin placed without warmth, each adjustment made without asking. Another smoothed the dress over my hips and stepped back and said, "Perfect," like I was something being packaged.
I looked at myself in the mirror.
The dress fit exactly right. Not approximately. Exactly. Every seam sitting where it was meant to sit, every curve accounted for. Someone had known my body before I ever arrived here. That thought moved through me cold and quiet, and I filed it away with everything else I had been filing since I walked through those gates.
"Thank you," I said, and picked up the bouquet, and walked out before any of them could see my hands.
The ceremony hall doors were closed when I reached them.
I could hear the silence on the other side. That specific, loaded silence of a full room holding its breath. My pulse was doing something loud and inconvenient in my throat and I pressed my fingers hard around the bouquet stems and thought: *chin up, eyes forward, give them nothing.*
The doors opened.
The silence hit me like a wall.
Every head turned at once. A hundred wolves and not one friendly face in the group, which I had expected and prepared for, but preparing for a thing and standing inside it were different. I felt the weight of their stares, a pressure against the skin before a single drop falls. I walked and I read them without slowing. Calculation in the front rows. Curiosity further back. Pity here and there, which was almost worse than contempt because pity meant they had already decided how this ended for me.
I gave none of them my eyes long enough to matter.
And then I looked at the end of the aisle.
My feet nearly stopped.
I had heard about Lucian Crane my entire life. The cold, lethal Alpha King. A man who had turned his grief into something sharp and permanent and directed it outward. I had built a picture in my head of all those words and I had thought I was prepared.
I was not prepared.
He stood at the end of the aisle like the room had been built around him. Still in the way that was not peace but control, the stillness of a man who did not need to move because everything already knew he was there. Tall, dark suit, jaw set hard, and his eyes were already on me. Not sweeping the room or performing patience. On me, directly, with the focused weight of someone who had been waiting and did not intend to show what the waiting had cost him.
My chest locked.
My heart stopped skipping and simply slammed, once and hard.
*I am scared of him.* The thought came in flat and honest before I could shape it into something more useful. I let it. Fear was information. The problem was the thing underneath the fear, the thing I had no name for yet, a pull at the center of my ribs that felt nothing like fear and made no sense and I shoved it down hard and kept walking.
Mara went completely still.
Not the dormant heaviness I had carried for three years or the restless pull from last night. This was different. This was her whole attention gathering into a single point and directing it, without my permission, toward the man at the end of this aisle. She wasn't alarmed. She wasn't retreating.
She was leaning toward him.
Stop it, I told her.
She didn't stop.
I kept my chin level, my Hands loose and Face giving nothing. One step and then the next, each one deliberate, because the alternative was stopping in the middle of this aisle in front of a hundred wolves who were already watching me like they expected me to fall, and I had been refusing to fall my whole life, and I was not going to start now.
I reached him and he took my hand.
His cold fingers, firm grip with no hesitation. Not cruel or gentle. Simply certain, the grip of a man who did not spend time doubting where his hands were. His thumb pressed once, briefly, against the back of mine and I did not know if he meant it or not and I did not let my face say anything about it either way.
I looked up at him because looking away from dangerous things was how they got behind you.
Up close he was worse. The stillness was worse. His eyes were dark and they moved across my face with a careful, deliberate attention that was not attraction or contempt but was something more unsettling than either, the look of a man cataloguing something he intends to understand completely before he acts on it.
A muscle in his jaw ticked once and that was all.
The officiant began speaking.
Lucian said his vows the way a man signs a legal document. Measured words, flat delivery, each one placed exactly where it was required and not one syllable beyond. It was clean and final. The tone of a transaction being completed.
I said mine looking directly at him, because I needed him to hear the thing underneath the words even if the words themselves were the ceremony's and not mine. *I will not break.* That was what I was saying. Not a promise to him. A promise to myself, said out loud in front of witnesses.
The officiant reached the end.
*You may now* —
Lucian held his hand halting the officiant. He did not kiss me.
He looked at me.
The room held its breath. I heard someone shift in a pew. Someone else clear their throat. The silence stretched long enough that it stopped being a pause and became a statement, something deliberate and public and designed to land exactly where it landed. A slight. A reminder of what this was and what I was in it.
His eyes stayed on my face through all of it.
And what was in them was not contempt. It was not cruelty, exactly. It was something I had never seen directed at me before, something that moved through my chest before I could stop it, leaving heat behind it like a burn I had no explanation for.
Mara pushed toward it.
Toward him. Like she recognized something she had been looking for. Like he was a word she had forgotten and just heard spoken aloud.
I pulled her back, gulped my saliva, locked my face and I held his gaze because flinching was the same as falling and I did not fall.
But the thought came anyway, quiet, inexplicable and deeply inconvenient.
Why did it feel like I knew this man?