The antiseptic sting of the pack infirmary was sharper than any blade. It smelled of bleach and impending death. My father, the once-great warrior of Silver Mist, lay withered in the hospital bed, his skin the color of wet ash. The Healers called it Sanguine Decay—a rot that ate a wolf’s blood from the inside out. He needed a transfusion from a direct blood relative, and he needed it tonight.
Iris sat in the corner, wrapped in a plush cashmere blanket, looking like a porcelain doll held together by glue. She claimed her "broken wolf" made her constitution too weak to handle a blood draw. She claimed the stress alone would kill her.
"Test her again!" My mother’s voice was a shriek that peeled the paint from the walls. She gripped the Healer’s arm, her nails digging into his white coat. She pointed a trembling finger at me. "She has to be a match. She’s the healthy one. She’s the strong one."
I sat on the exam table, a cotton ball taped to the crook of my arm. I had given three vials. I had prayed to the Moon Goddess that, just this once, I could be the daughter they wanted. That my blood could wash away the disappointment in their eyes and buy my way back into my family.
Dr. Evans, the Head Healer, walked back into the room. He held a clipboard against his chest like a shield. He didn't look at me. He looked at my mother and shook his head slowly.
"I'm sorry, Luna Bennett. Chloe's blood markers are incompatible. If we transfuse her blood, his body will reject it. It would kill him instantly."
The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating.
"Get out," my mother whispered.
"Mom, please, I tried—"
"I said get out!" She spun on me, her eyes wild with a mixture of grief and pure hatred. "You are useless! You survived the fire, you kept your wolf, and for what? You can't even save your own father! You are a waste of blood, Chloe. A useless, breathing waste of space!"
I slid off the table, my legs numb. I looked at Iris. For a split second, through the veil of her theatrical tears, I saw it. Her cheeks were flushed with health, not fever. Her scent wasn't acrid with sickness; it was rich, potent. She was a match. I knew it in my gut. She was compatible, but she was letting our father die because saving him would require her to drop the "fragile victim" act. She would rather be the tragic orphan than the savior.
I walked out of the room, the sound of my mother’s weeping chasing me down the hall like a physical blow.
***
The rain lashed against my face, cold and unforgiving. Being demoted to Delta meant taking the shifts no one else wanted. Tonight, that meant the eastern ridge, a mud-slicked path bordering the unchecked wilderness of the Rogue lands.
"Sector Four clear," I muttered into my radio, though I knew no one was listening. The static was my only companion.
A twig snapped. Not by the wind.
I spun around, shifting my weight into a defensive crouch, but the blow came from the shadows. A heavy body slammed into me, driving the air from my lungs. I hit the mud hard, tasting iron and dirt.
Rogues. Three of them.
But as I scrambled back, claws extending, the scent hit me. Unwashed bodies, yes. But underneath the filth? *Laundry detergent. Coffee. Silver Mist pack territory.*
These weren't wild Rogues. They had been inside the borders recently.
"Traitor!" I snarled, lunging at the nearest one. I didn't shift—Nova was too weak, suppressed by my own despair—but I fought with human fists and Delta grit. I landed a solid kick to a knee, hearing a satisfying crunch, but the other two were on me instantly.
Teeth sank into my shoulder. I screamed, thrashing as they pinned me down. The leader raised a serrated knife, aiming for my throat.
Then, the earth shook.
A massive black blur tore through the trees. *Titan.*
Cole’s wolf didn't just attack; he obliterated. He hit the leader with the force of a freight train, snapping the rogue's neck before the body even hit the ground. The other two scrambled, yelping in terror, but Titan was a shadow of death. He tore through them, leaving silence and steam rising from the bloody mud.
Cole shifted back, naked and heaving, the rain washing the blood from his chest. He didn't offer me a hand. He just stared down at me, his eyes cold and hard.
"You're careless, Delta," he spat. "If I hadn't been tracking their scent..."
"They didn't just cross the border, Cole," I gasped, clutching my bleeding shoulder. I crawled toward the body of the leader. "They smell like us. Like the Pack House."
I patted down the rogue's tactical vest. My fingers brushed hard plastic. A burner phone.
I pulled it out. The screen was cracked but active. One unread message flashed on the screen, glowing in the gloom.
*Target isolated on East Ridge. Make it look like an accident. - I.B.*
I.B. Iris Bennett.
My heart hammered against my ribs. "Look," I said, stumbling to my feet and thrusting the phone at Cole. "Read it! 'I.B.' It's Iris! She hired them!"
Cole snatched the phone from my hand. He looked at the screen, rain dripping from his nose. His expression didn't shift to anger at her. It shifted to disgust at *me*.
"You think I'm stupid?" Cole asked, his voice dangerously low.
"Cole, the evidence is right th—"
*CRACK.*
Cole dropped the phone into the mud and brought his heel down. He ground it into the earth, shattering the plastic and glass until it was nothing but debris.
"No!" I shrieked, dropping to my knees, digging frantically through the mud for the pieces. "What are you doing? That was proof!"
"It was a plant," Cole growled, grabbing me by my good arm and hauling me up. "Iris is in the infirmary, weeping over your dying father. She can barely walk, let alone coordinate a hit. You typed that message. You planted this phone to frame your own sister."
"I didn't! She's lying to you, Cole! She's letting Dad die!"
He shoved me back, hard enough that I stumbled. "Stop it! Your jealousy has turned you into something I don't recognize. You are sick, Chloe. Get back to the barracks before I have you thrown in the cells for insubordination."
He turned and walked away, disappearing into the dark, rainy forest. I stood alone in the mud, clutching the shattered remains of the phone, while the ghost of my mate bond screamed in agony.
The War Room smelled of stale coffee and fresh betrayal. Iris sat in the corner, her leg propped up on a velvet stool, looking every inch the fragile victim. Her skin was pale, her eyes wide and glistening with unshed tears as she looked up at Cole.
"She needs this, Cole," Iris said, her voice trembling just enough to sound sincere. "Chloe has been… lost. Leading the scout team to the old silver mine will help her redeem her honor. It’s a low-risk sweep. Let her prove she’s still a warrior."
Beta Marcus nodded enthusiastically, his oily smile failing to reach his eyes. "It’s a generous suggestion, Alpha. The pack needs to see that Chloe is still useful, despite her… instability."
I stood in the center of the room, mud still drying on my boots from patrol. I didn't look at my sister. I looked at my mate.
Cole rubbed his temples, his exhaustion radiating off him in waves. He didn't even look at me. He just wanted the problem gone. He wanted the tension out of his house so he could focus on the girl who had returned from the dead.
"Fine," Cole muttered, signing the mission order without reading it. "Take a squad. Sweep the mine. If it’s clear, we’ll use it for storage. Just… go, Chloe."
His dismissal hurt more than a physical blow. Nova, my wolf, curled into a ball in the back of my mind, too weak to even whimper.
***
The entrance to the Blackwood Mine gaped like a toothless mouth in the side of the mountain. The rain had turned to a freezing drizzle, slicking the rocks with ice.
"Stay close," I ordered, my voice echoing in the damp tunnel.
Elena Cross fell in step behind me. We had been friends since pup school. She was the one who braided my hair before my first shift. Now, she wouldn't meet my eyes. She kept checking her watch, her scent spiking with anxiety—acrid sweat and burnt sugar.
"You okay, El?" I asked, pausing as the tunnel split.
"Just cold," she murmured, gripping her rifle tighter. "Let’s check the lower cavern. That’s where the heat signatures were."
We descended into the dark. The air grew heavy, tasting of sulfur and stagnant water. The beam of my flashlight cut through the gloom, illuminating rusted tracks and rotting support beams. We reached the heavy steel blast doors of the main storage vault.
I stepped inside, sweeping the room with my light. "Clear. Nothing here but dust and—"
*Clang.*
The sound of the heavy steel door slamming shut behind me was deafening.
I spun around, rushing to the small reinforced window. Elena stood on the other side, her hand on the locking mechanism. Her face was pale, tears streaming down her cheeks.
"Elena! Open the door!"
"I'm sorry, Chloe," she sobbed, her voice muffled by the thick steel. "Iris… she knows about my brother’s gambling debts. She said she’d pay them off. She promised she wouldn't hurt my family."
"Elena, look at me!" I screamed, pounding on the metal. "This isn't you!"
"Goodbye, Chloe."
She turned and ran.
Panic flared in my chest. I tried to mind-link Cole, to scream for help, but the rock walls were lined with lead and silver ore—a natural dead zone. And then I heard it. A hiss.
Vents in the ceiling popped open. A thick, shimmering gray mist poured into the room.
*Silver Gas.*
It hit my lungs like liquid fire. My knees buckled. I tried to shift, to call Nova forward to heal me, but the connection was severed instantly. The gas paralyzed the shifting gene, locking my bones in human form. I fell to the cold stone floor, gasping, my muscles seizing.
Through the haze, I saw a red light blinking on a crate in the corner.
*00:10.*
C4.
Iris hadn't just sent me to investigate. She had sent me to be erased.
*00:05.*
I closed my eyes. *Cole,* I thought, the name a jagged prayer in my mind. *I didn't betray you.*
*00:03.*
Suddenly, the floor beneath me didn't explode—it vanished. A grate I hadn't seen was kicked open from below. A hand, gloved in tactical black, shot up and grabbed my combat vest.
"Gotcha," a rough voice growled.
I was yanked downward into a narrow maintenance shaft just as the world above turned white.
*BOOM.*
The explosion was a physical hammer. The shockwave slammed into us, throwing me against the hard earth of the tunnel floor. The ceiling above collapsed, tons of rock sealing the exit forever.
But the pain wasn't from the fall. It was from the bond.
It felt like a hook had been ripped out of my heart. A scream tore from my throat, raw and bloody, as the connection to Cole snapped. Not because he rejected me, but because the explosion had masked my life force. To him, I was gone. Vaporized.
I lay in the dirt, coughing up blood, the agony of the severed bond making me wish the fire had taken me.
"Stay with me, soldier."
A man loomed over me. He was massive, his aura ancient and terrifyingly powerful. He wore the black combat gear of the Lycan King's elite forces.
Commander Myles Cook. I recognized him from the history books.
He knelt, checking my pulse, his eyes scanning my burns.
"Why?" I rasped, blood bubbling on my lips.
"Because the King doesn't like wasted potential," Myles said, his voice grim. He pulled a syringe from his kit and jammed it into my thigh. "And because I know what it's like to be thrown away."
The pain began to recede, replaced by a cold numbness. Myles lifted me effortlessly into his arms, carrying me deeper into the dark tunnels that led away from Silver Mist territory.
"Chloe Bennett died in that cave," Myles said, his gaze hard as iron. "The question is, who wakes up in her place?"
I looked back at the collapsed tunnel, at the tomb of my past life. I felt the phantom pain of my mate bond, the ghost of Cole’s scent fading into memory.
"River," I whispered, the name tasting of cold water and sharp rocks. "Her name is River."
Myles nodded once. "Then let's get you home, River."