Chapter 2

The dream came with a violence that left me gasping.

I was running—no, *he* was running. Through silver eyes that weren't mine, I watched moonlight filter through ancient pines as massive paws struck the forest floor with predatory grace. The world blurred past in shades of silver and shadow, every scent sharp and defined: deer tracks three hours old, the musk of a rival pack's border marking, the metallic tang of approaching storm.

But beneath it all was the rage. A fury so deep and consuming it threatened to tear apart the very soul containing it. The wolf—*his* wolf—fought against invisible chains, clawing at the edges of consciousness with desperate hunger.

*Control,* came a voice rough with strain. *Must maintain control.*

I felt his human side wrestling with the beast, felt the crushing weight of expectations and the terror of what would happen if he lost this battle. Around him, other wolves ran in formation—his pack—but none dared come too close. They feared him. Even in human form, even as their Alpha, they feared what lived inside him.

The loneliness hit me like a physical blow. Here was a wolf surrounded by his pack yet utterly, completely alone. No one understood the curse that ran in his blood, the way his wolf grew stronger and more uncontrollable with each passing blood moon. No one could share the burden of knowing that one day, he might become the monster his father had become.

Suddenly, the silver eyes turned skyward, and I saw the blood moon hanging overhead like a crimson wound. The wolf inside him roared, and I felt his human control shatter like glass.

*No—*

I jolted awake, tears streaming down my face, my heart hammering against my ribs. The phantom sensation of fur and fangs faded slowly, leaving me aching and empty in my narrow bed. But the scent lingered—pine and storm, wild and desperate, calling to something deep in my chest that shouldn't exist.

Wolfless wolves didn't dream through other wolves' eyes. We didn't feel pack bonds or experience phantom shifts. Yet night after night, I lived through his struggles, felt his isolation as keenly as my own.

Who was he? And why could I see through his eyes when I didn't even have a wolf of my own?

The next morning brought no answers, only the usual routine of shame and servitude. I was scrubbing the pack house floors when raised voices from Alpha Harrison's office caught my attention.

"—can't keep pretending this is normal, Daniel!" My mother's voice carried a sharp edge I rarely heard. "The dreams are getting worse. She's experiencing things that should be impossible."

"Keep your voice down," my father hissed. "If anyone hears you talking about this—"

"About what? The truth? That our daughter might not be the broken failure everyone thinks she is?"

I crept closer to the partially open door, my heart pounding. They were talking about me. About the dreams.

"Margaret, please. You know what happened to wolves who were suspected of being—"

"Late Bloomers," my mother said firmly. "Say it, Daniel. Some wolves are too powerful for their human shells. They need a trigger, something significant enough to break through the barriers holding them back."

"Even if that's true, it doesn't change anything. She's been examined by the pack healers. There's no wolf scent, no sign of an inner beast. She's wolfless."

"Is she?" My mother's voice dropped to a whisper. "Have you considered that maybe the Moon Goddess knows something we don't? That maybe the Crawford curse might need a specific kind of mate to—"

"Don't." My father's voice turned sharp with warning. "Don't even think it. The Crawford Alpha is cursed, Margaret. His bloodline produces monsters. Even if Evangeline had a wolf, which she doesn't, she could never survive being mated to something like that."

Crawford. The name sent a shock of recognition through me. I'd heard whispers about the Nightshade Pack's Alpha, warnings about the cursed bloodline that ruled the dangerous territory beyond Cascade Ridge. The same mountains where the pine and storm scent seemed to originate in my dreams.

"You don't understand," my mother continued. "Late Bloomers don't emerge on schedule. They need trauma, intensity, something that forces the wolf to break free. And if the bond is strong enough—"

Footsteps approached the door. I scrambled away, but not before I heard my father's final, desperate words:

"She's not going anywhere near those mountains, Margaret. I won't lose our daughter to that monster's curse."

But as the blood moon rose that night, painting the world in shades of crimson and shadow, I felt the call growing stronger. The pine and storm scent wrapped around me like invisible chains, pulling me toward the forbidden territory where a cursed Alpha ran alone through silver-lit forests.

My parents' warnings echoed in my mind, but they couldn't compete with the desperate need building in my chest. Something was waiting for me in those mountains. Someone was waiting.

And for the first time since my failed ceremony, I felt truly alive.

Chapter 3

The blood moon hung overhead like a crimson eye as I crept through the shadows of Cascade Ridge, my bare feet silent against the forest floor. Every rational part of my mind screamed that I was making a terrible mistake, but the pull in my chest had become unbearable. The pine and storm scent from my dreams wrapped around me now in reality, so intense it made my head spin with desperate need.

I'd left through my bedroom window hours ago, driven by something I couldn't name or resist. My parents' warnings echoed in my memory, but they felt distant compared to the magnetic force dragging me deeper into forbidden territory. The Nightshade Pack lands. Home to the cursed Alpha whose silver eyes haunted my dreams.

The forest around me pulsed with predatory energy. Ancient pines towered overhead, their branches creating a canopy so thick that only fragments of moonlight penetrated to the forest floor. Every shadow could hide danger, every rustling leaf could signal an attack. But I pressed forward, following the scent that called to my very soul.

Then I heard them—the thunderous sound of paws against earth, the rhythmic breathing of wolves in formation. A pack run. My blood turned to ice as I realized what I'd stumbled into. The monthly blood moon hunt, when the Nightshade Pack's cursed nature would be at its most dangerous.

I should have run. Every survival instinct I possessed screamed at me to flee back to the safety of Crescent Valley territory. Instead, I found myself moving toward the sound, drawn by a compulsion I couldn't fight.

The pack emerged from the trees like shadows given form. Dozens of wolves, their eyes reflecting the crimson moonlight, moved in perfect synchronization through the forest. They were magnificent and terrifying, each one radiating the kind of power I'd never possessed.

But it was the wolf leading them that stole my breath completely.

Massive didn't begin to describe him. His black fur seemed to absorb the moonlight, making him appear as a living void moving through the silver-lit forest. But it was his eyes—those silver eyes from my dreams—that confirmed what my heart already knew.

The moment our gazes met across the moonlit clearing, the world exploded.

The word slammed into my consciousness with the force of a freight train: *MATE.*

It wasn't my voice. I didn't have a wolf to speak such things. But something deep inside me, something that had been dormant and silent for twenty-one years, suddenly roared to life with desperate recognition. The connection hit like lightning, searing through every nerve in my body and leaving me gasping.

The massive black wolf skidded to a halt, his pack flowing around him in confusion as their Alpha suddenly stopped mid-hunt. His silver eyes locked onto mine with an intensity that made my knees weak. I watched his nostrils flare as he scented the air, and even from this distance, I could see the shock ripple through his powerful frame.

*Mine,* something whispered in my mind. *Finally, mine.*

But the voice that answered was rough with horror: *No. This can't be happening.*

The other wolves had noticed me now. I heard growls of confusion and alarm as they caught my scent—or rather, the lack of wolf scent that marked me as an outsider. A human. A wolfless intruder in their sacred territory.

"Alpha?" The word came from a large brown wolf who had moved to stand beside the black one. Even in wolf form, his bearing suggested high rank. Beta, perhaps.

The black wolf—my mate, my mind insisted with devastating certainty—took a step toward me. Then another. His massive paws made no sound on the forest floor, but I could feel the weight of his attention like a physical thing. The pine and storm scent that had haunted my dreams intensified until I could barely breathe.

Behind him, his pack began to shift restlessly. I caught fragments of their confused communications—whines and growls that spoke of disbelief and growing alarm. Their Alpha had found his mate, but she bore no wolf scent. She was human. Wolfless. Defective.

The shame of my Omega status crashed over me like a wave, but it couldn't compete with the overwhelming rightness of this moment. Every dream, every night of loneliness and longing, had led to this. To him.

The black wolf was close enough now that I could see the intelligence burning in his silver eyes, the way his massive chest rose and fell with each breath. Close enough that when he spoke—somehow, impossibly, directly into my mind—his voice was rough with barely contained emotion.

*You're real.*

The wonder in his mental voice made my heart clench. But beneath it, I heard something else. Fear. Horror. The growing realization of what this meant.

*You're supposed to be wolfless,* he continued, and now his mental voice carried the edge of panic. *This isn't possible.*

The pack behind him had begun to pace, their agitation growing as they witnessed their Alpha's unprecedented reaction to what appeared to be a human intruder. I could feel their confusion, their growing doubt about their leader's judgment.

And in that moment, staring into the silver eyes of my fated mate, I realized that finding him might be the worst thing that had ever happened to both of us.

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