The air in the room was still when Selene woke. For a moment, she thought the strange feeling pressing against her chest was just a dreamâbut then she saw her.
Zara.
Her supposedly younger sister stood near the foot of the bed, arms folded, her eyes scanning Selene with a mix of curiosity and something colderâcalculation. Two of Richardâs guards lingered near the door, silent and armed.
âMorning, big sis,â Zara said softly. Too softly. The kind of voice a snake might use before striking.
Selene pushed herself up, her muscles stiff. âWhat are you doing here?â
Zara gave a slow smile, the kind she wore when she wanted people to believe she cared. âRichard thought it would be nice for us to⊠reconnect.â
Her gaze slid to Seleneâs stomach for a fraction of a second. She knew. Seleneâs heart gave a sharp thump in her chest.
The guards didnât move, but Selene could feel their presence like weights in the room. She couldnât say what she wantedânot here.
âYouâve changed,â Selene said, trying to keep her voice steady.
âSo have you,â Zara replied, stepping closer. The light from the window caught her eyes, making them gleam. âAnd I hear youâve been keeping secrets.â
Selene didnât answer. The silence stretched between them until Zaraâs smile faded into something harder.
âI know about the pregnancy,â Zara said, her voice flat now. âI havenât told Kael.â
Seleneâs chest tightened. âWhy?â
âBecause itâs not his business,â Zara said, lowering her voice. âAnd because I donât want him charging in here and ruining⊠arrangements.â
Arrangements. The word made Seleneâs wolf stir. Her instincts prickled under her skin, sharp and restless.
Zaraâs hand drifted to the edge of the bed, her nails tapping the wood. âRichard has been⊠generous. He sees value in you, Selene. In the child. Thatâs why youâre still breathing.â
Seleneâs throat felt dry. âValue,â she repeated.
âDo you know how rare it is for a wolf to get pregnant?â Zaraâs tone turned almost instructional, as if she were explaining something to a stubborn child. âIt almost never happens unless youâre marked by your true mate. And we both know who marked you.â
Selene didnât reply. She didnât have to. They both knew the truth: Richard was not the father. He never could be.
Zara straightened. âHe doesnât care. In fact, that makes it better for him. This child will give him power in places you canât even imagine. You should be grateful.â
Grateful. Seleneâs wolf pressed harder against her skin at the word, a low growl curling in her mind.
âAnd Kael?â Selene asked quietly. âWhat if he finds out?â
Zaraâs smile returnedâsharp, dangerous. âHe wonât. Not from me. And by the time he does, it wonât matter.â
She moved closer, leaning down so her lips were near Seleneâs ear. âStay quiet. Behave. Or Iâll make sure you regret ever opening your mouth.â
The scent of her perfume was thick, sweet, cloying. It reminded Selene of poison dressed in flowers.
When Zara pulled back, she glanced at the guards. âWeâre done here.â
They moved toward the door, and Selene felt her wolf push againâharder this time. Her hearing sharpened, picking up the faint beat of Zaraâs heart, the slower thump of the guard on the right. Scents separated in the airâiron from the weapons, leather from their jackets, and the faintest trace of Richardâs cologne down the hall.
Her wolf was waking.
And she would need every bit of that strength.
Selene sat in silence long after Zara left. The door shut with a heavy click, but the scent of her sister lingered, sharp and smug.
Zara knew everythingâabout the pregnancy, about Kaelâand sheâd kept it from him. Not out of loyalty to Selene, but to keep her trapped here for Richardâs plans.
The thought twisted like a knife in Seleneâs stomach.
She pushed the blanket aside and stood, moving to the small window. Outside, the grounds stretched wide, guarded at every corner. Wolves in human form patrolled in pairs. Richard wasnât taking chances.
Her wolfâs voice was louder now, no longer a faint whisper. Run. Fight. Break.
But Selene knew she had to be careful. Reckless moves would only get her killed.
Later that afternoon, she heard footsteps in the hall. She moved closer to the door, senses sharp. Voices drifted inâlow, urgent.
ââŠsheâs restless,â Richard was saying.
âThen keep her restless,â Zara replied, her tone cold. âA desperate wolf is easier to control than a calm one.â
Seleneâs nails dug into her palms.
Richardâs voice lowered, but her sharpened hearing caught it anyway. âIf she tries to leaveââ
âIâll hand her to Adrian myself,â Zara cut in smoothly.
Seleneâs breath caught. Adrian. The name was like a shadow from their pastâa man with charm like silk and hands stained with blood.
âYou trust him with her?â Richard asked.
âI trust him to do what I tell him,â Zara said simply. âAnd I trust him to make sure Kael never sees her again.â
The voices moved away, footsteps fading down the hall.
Selene stayed frozen by the door, her mind spinning.
Her own sister. The one person she thought might help her, even a littleâwas working to deliver her into the hands of someone even worse than Richard. I mean, who was she kidding? They've never gotten along since they were sisters, what makes her think they'll get along now? And Kael⊠Kael didnât even know she was carrying his child.
Her wolf surged so fiercely she almost staggered. Her hearing, her sense of smell, even the strength in her limbs felt doubled. The thin veneer of control sheâd kept was starting to c***k.
She turned back toward the window, gripping the sill hard enough her knuckles ached.
There would be no help coming.
No mercy from Richard.
No loyalty from Zara.
If Selene wanted to survive, she would have to outthink them allâbefore the full moon.
Outside, a guard glanced up at her window. His eyes lingered for a moment, suspicious.
Selene forced herself to step back, her heart hammering.
The moon was coming.
And so was her chance.