Chapter 4

I dreamed of fire.

Not destructive fire-something older. The kind of flame that lived in candles and hearths and the hearts of stars. It burned behind my eyes, warm and golden, and in its center stood the woman from before. The Moon Priestess. Kael's mother.

She looked different this time. Less ethereal, more real. I could see the lines around her eyes, the silver in her hair, the way her hands bore the scars of a life fully lived. She smiled at me like a mother welcoming a child home.

You're fighting it, she said. The awakening. I can feel you pushing it away.

"I don't know what that means."

Yes, you do. You feel it stirring-that warmth in your chest, that pull toward the moon, that hunger that isn't quite hunger. You've felt it your whole life and called it something else. Intuition. Luck. That strange sense that you didn't quite belong in your own skin.

I wanted to deny it. But she was right. I'd always felt... wrong. Too sensitive to crowds, too aware of emotions that weren't mine, too prone to knowing things I shouldn't know. I'd learned to hide it, to dull it, to pretend I was as ordinary as everyone assumed.

You can't hide anymore, she said gently. They've found you. Both of them. And soon, others will come-those who want to use you, control you, destroy you. You need to be ready.

"Ready how?"

You need to stop fighting and start listening. The power is inside you. It's been inside you since birth, sleeping, waiting. Let it wake.

"I don't know how."

She stepped closer, and I felt her warmth like sunlight. Yes, you do. You've just been taught your whole life to ignore it. To be small. To be quiet. To take up less space. That's what the human world does to girls like you-teaches them to dim their own light. But you're not just a girl anymore, Lena. You're the last of a line that built civilizations before humans learned to write. It's time to remember.

She reached out and touched my chest, right where the pendant lay.

Wake up.

I woke gasping, drenched in sweat, the pendant burning against my skin.

Morning light streamed through my windows. Elinor sat on my chest, staring at me with the profound judgment only cats can muster. Everything was normal. Everything was fine.

Except it wasn't.

Because when I looked at my hand, I could see the blood moving beneath my skin. Not with my eyes-with something else. Something new. I could feel my own heartbeat like a drum, could sense the life pulsing through every vein, could feel power gathering in my core like a coil wound tight.

What the hell.

I sat up carefully, and Elinor leaped off with an offended meow. The room looked different. Sharper. Colors were more vivid, sounds more distinct. I could hear my neighbor three floors up making coffee. Could smell the bacon frying in the diner two blocks away. Could feel the weight of every living thing around me-their heartbeats, their breaths, their tiny sparks of life.

Too much. It was too much.

I closed my eyes and tried to breathe, and somehow-instinctively-I pushed. Pushed the sensations away, pushed them back, pushed until the world returned to something approaching normal.

When I opened my eyes again, I was crying.

Not from sadness. From relief. From the sudden understanding that I'd been living my whole life with muted senses, with a volume knob turned way down, and I hadn't even known it. This was what normal people felt. This quiet. This peace.

But I wasn't normal people. And somewhere deep inside, that coil of power waited. Patient. Hungry. Alive.

My phone buzzed.

Unknown Number: You're awake. I can feel it. -C

Caspian. Of course he could feel it. We were bound now, whether I liked it or not.

Me: What's happening to me?

Caspian: Awakening. Your hybrid blood is activating. The first stage is sensory-you'll hear, see, smell everything within a certain radius. You'll need to learn to control it, to filter, or it will overwhelm you.

Me: How do I control it?

Caspian: That's not a conversation for text. Can you meet me?

Me: Where?

Caspian: The library. Your library. One hour.

I stared at the message. He wanted to meet at my workplace? The place where I spent forty hours a week reshelving books and avoiding my coworker Margaret's questions about my love life?

Me: Why the library?

Caspian: Because it's neutral ground. Because wolves won't enter it without invitation. Because you're comfortable there, and comfort helps with control. One hour, Lena.

The phone went silent. I sat in bed, shaking, and wondered how my life had become this.

The library smelled like paper and dust and old secrets.

I arrived early, as always, and let myself in with my employee keycard. The building was empty this time of morning-just me, the books, and the faint hum of the ancient heating system. I walked through the stacks, trailing my fingers along the spines, letting the familiarity calm me.

It helped. Somewhat.

At exactly 8:47 AM, I felt him.

Not saw-felt. A shift in the air, a drop in temperature, a presence that pressed against my newly awakened senses like a brand. I turned, and there he was. Caspian, standing in the poetry section, running one pale finger along the spine of a worn collection of Neruda.

"You came," I said.

"I said I would." He didn't look up from the book. "I don't make promises I can't keep."

"Could you maybe not do the mysterious, brooding vampire thing right now? I really need-"

"Answers. I know." He turned, and his red eyes swept over me, assessing. "You're controlling it better than I expected. Most hybrids spend their first few days in fetal positions, overwhelmed by input. You're standing. Speaking. Functioning."

"Most hybrids? I thought I was the only one."

His lips curved. "The only living hybrid. There have been others, throughout history. Rare. Powerful. Short-lived, usually. The vampire clans and wolf packs tend to fight over them until there's nothing left to fight over."

"Comforting."

"I don't do comfort." He moved closer, and I felt that pull again-that thread connecting us, warm despite his coldness. "I do truth. And the truth is, your awakening has accelerated. Faster than it should have. Faster than is safe."

"Why?"

He stopped a few feet away, close enough that I could see the individual flecks of darker red in his irises. "Because of me. Because of the bond. My presence, my age, my power-it's acting as a catalyst. Every moment we're together, your blood responds. Wakes faster. Burns brighter."

I should have stepped back. Should have put distance between us. Instead, I found myself leaning in.

"Is that bad?"

"For you? Potentially. Power without control is dangerous. For me?" Something flickered in his eyes-hunger, quickly suppressed. "For me, it's intoxicating."

The word hung in the air between us. Intoxicating. I felt it too-that pull, that draw, that need to be closer. It wasn't just the bond. It was him. His presence. His intensity. The way he looked at me like I was the first interesting thing he'd seen in centuries.

"Kael said you'd try to claim me," I whispered. "That the bond would make you possessive. Make me yours."

"Kael is young and thinks in wolf terms." But Caspian's voice had dropped, gone lower, rougher. "Vampire bonds are different. They don't claim. They... recognize."

"Recognize what?"

He reached out, slowly, giving me time to pull away, and touched the pendant at my throat. His fingers were cold, even through the warm metal.

"Recognize that you're the first thing in three hundred years that's made me feel alive. Recognize that I would burn this city to the ground to keep you safe. Recognize that I'm terrified of what that means."

The confession hit me like a physical blow. This ancient, powerful creature-terrified. Of me. Of what I made him feel.

"Caspian-"

"Don't." He pulled his hand back. "Don't pity me. Don't comfort me. I didn't come here for that. I came here to teach you control, because if you don't learn, the wolves who attacked you won't be the last. And the next ones won't be rogues."

He stepped back, and the moment shattered.

"Close your eyes," he said, all business now. "Feel the world around you. Every sound, every smell, every heartbeat. Don't push it away. Let it in."

I hesitated, then obeyed. The library rushed back in-the drip of a faucet three floors up, the scurry of mice in the walls, the distant traffic, the beating hearts of everyone within blocks. Too much. It was too much-

"Breathe." His voice cut through the chaos. "Don't fight it. Acknowledge it. And then-one by one-let them go. The sounds you don't need. The smells that don't matter. Filter them. Choose what stays."

I tried. God, I tried. But the world kept rushing in, overwhelming, drowning-

And then I felt him. Not physically. Through the bond. A steadying presence, cold and calm, wrapping around my consciousness like an anchor.

Let me help.

I didn't question it. Didn't hesitate. I just let him in.

And suddenly, the chaos organized itself. Became manageable. I could feel him beside me-not just physically, but inside my head, showing me how to build walls, how to choose what to feel, how to exist in a world that had suddenly become too loud.

When I opened my eyes, he was closer than before. Close enough that I could count his eyelashes. Close enough that if I rose on my toes, our lips would meet.

"That's better," he said softly. "You're a fast learner."

"You're in my head."

"Only as much as you allow. The bond works both ways. You could enter my mind too, if you tried. Feel what I feel. Know what I know."

The invitation hung in the air. I could feel the truth of it-that door, slightly ajar, waiting for me to push through.

"What would I find?" I asked. "If I looked?"

"Three hundred years of loneliness. Regret. Violence. And now, for the first time, hope." His voice cracked on the last word. Actually cracked. "I'm not a good man, Lena. I've done things that would make you run screaming. But I would burn the world to ash before I let anyone hurt you. That's what you'd find. That's what you'd know."

I should have been scared. Should have pulled back, built my walls higher, protected myself from this ancient, dangerous creature who admitted he wasn't good.

Instead, I reached up and touched his face.

He froze. Absolutely froze, like he'd forgotten what gentleness felt like. His skin was cold beneath my fingers, smooth as marble, but beneath it I felt something else-a heat, a hunger, a desperate need for connection.

"You're not in my head," I whispered. "You're in here." I touched my chest, over my heart. "I don't know if that's the bond or something else. But I feel you. All the time. And I'm not scared."

His eyes flared red-truly red, like embers catching wind. "You should be."

"Probably. But I'm not."

For a long moment, we just looked at each other. The library hummed around us. Somewhere, a book fell from a shelf. Neither of us moved.

Then his hand came up and covered mine where it rested on his cheek. "Lena-"

The door banged open.

We sprang apart like teenagers caught kissing. Margaret, my coworker, stood in the entrance with an armful of books and an expression of profound shock.

"Oh!" she exclaimed. "I'm so sorry, I didn't realize anyone was here yet, I just came to drop off these donations and-" She stopped, staring at Caspian. At his clothes. His presence. His obvious non-librarian-ness. "Oh my. You must be... new?"

"Leaving," Caspian said smoothly. He glanced at me, and something passed between us-a promise, a warning, a question. "I'll be in touch. Remember what I taught you."

Then he walked past Margaret and out the door, leaving me flushed and flustered and painfully aware of my coworker's sharp eyes.

"Lena." Margaret's voice was carefully neutral. "Who was that?"

"No one. Just a-a friend. He was returning a book."

"Mmhmm." Margaret didn't believe me for a second. "Well, your 'friend' is gorgeous in a 'I might murder you in your sleep' kind of way. Just so you know."

"He's not a murderer."

"You don't know that."

She wasn't wrong.

The rest of the day passed in a blur. I shelved books, helped patrons, answered phones, and tried very hard not to think about ancient vampires or alpha wolves or the power coiling in my chest.

At 5 PM, I walked home through streets that felt different now. I could sense the life around me-the couple arguing three floors up, the dog sleeping in that apartment, the teenager playing video games behind that window. It was still overwhelming, but manageable now. I could filter. Could choose.

Caspian had given me that.

When I reached my building, I stopped.

Kael sat on my front steps.

He looked different than before-rougher, wearier, like he hadn't slept. His clothes were rumpled, his hair uncombed, and when he looked up at me, his eyes held something I couldn't name.

"Lena."

"Kael." I stopped a few feet away. "What are you doing here?"

"I felt you." He stood slowly, carefully, like he was approaching a wild animal. "This morning. Something changed. Your presence-it's stronger now. Brighter. I had to make sure you were okay."

"I'm fine."

"You're lying." But he said it gently. "I can smell him on you. The vampire. You were with him today."

There was no accusation in his voice. Just sadness. Just acceptance.

"Yes," I said. "He taught me to control the sensory overload. My awakening-it's happening faster because of the bond."

Kael nodded slowly. "I figured. Ancient vampires do that-accelerate things. It's part of why they're so dangerous to hybrids." He paused. "Did he hurt you?"

"No. He helped me."

"Good." The word seemed to cost him something. "I'm glad. Whatever else he is, he won't hurt you. I believe that."

I studied him-this massive, powerful alpha who looked at me like I was something precious. "Why are you really here, Kael?"

He met my eyes. "Because my wolves found something. Information about your past. About who hid you, and why." He reached into his pocket and pulled out a worn photograph. "I thought you should see it."

I took the photo with trembling hands.

It showed a woman-young, beautiful, with my eyes and my smile. She held a baby wrapped in white, and behind her stood two men. One I recognized immediately: a younger Kael, maybe thirty years ago, looking at the woman with desperate love.

The other man made my breath catch.

Caspian. Younger, softer, but unmistakably him. Standing on the other side of the woman, one hand on the baby's head, his expression unreadable.

"That's your mother," Kael said quietly. "And that baby-" He pointed to the infant in her arms. "That's you."

The world tilted.

"Both of them," I whispered. "They both knew her. They both-"

"They both loved her," Kael finished. "And they both failed to protect her. That's why they're so desperate now, Lena. Not just because of what you are. Because you're hers. And they've been waiting thirty years for a second chance."

I stared at the photograph, at the two men flanking my mother, at the baby who'd grown up alone and never known why.

"Who killed her?" I asked.

Kael's expression darkened. "That's the question, isn't it? And the answer is the same person who sent those wolves after you. The same person who's been hunting hybrids for centuries." He met my eyes. "Her name is Seraphine. She's the oldest living vampire in existence. And she's your grandmother."

Chapter 5

The photograph trembled in my hands.

My grandmother. The oldest living vampire in existence. The woman who'd sent wolves to kill me before I even knew I was worth killing.

"I don't understand," I whispered. "If she's my grandmother, if she's family-why does she want me dead?"

Kael's expression was agonized. "Because you're not just her granddaughter. You're also the daughter of the woman who betrayed her. Your mother-Elena-she was Seraphine's only child. A pureblood vampire princess. And she fell in love with a werewolf."

My mind reeled. "A werewolf? But I thought-the Moon Priestess-"

"Was my mother." Kael's voice cracked. "Your mother, Elena, was a vampire princess. My mother, Selene, was the Moon Priestess of the Northern Pack. They were best friends. Sisters in all but blood. And they both fell in love with the same man."

"The same-" I stopped. Looked at the photograph again. At the two men flanking my mother. "No. No, that's not-"

"Your father was a human." Kael said it gently, like he was delivering a death blow. "A mortal. Completely ordinary. And both Elena and Selene loved him. Elena married him. Selene loved him from afar. And when you were born-half vampire, quarter wolf, quarter human-you became the most valuable and dangerous creature in existence."

I sank onto the steps. My legs wouldn't hold me anymore.

"Seraphine wanted you killed at birth. A hybrid of your power-she saw you as a threat. A rival. But Elena hid you. Gave you to humans, erased your trail, died protecting your secret." Kael knelt beside me. "My mother helped her. That's why Seraphine killed her too. Thirty years ago, on the same night, she murdered both of them. And she's been searching for you ever since."

The pendant burned against my chest. The woman in my visions-Kael's mother-she hadn't just been a priestess. She'd been my mother's best friend. My protector. My second mother, in a life I never got to live.

"She visited me," I said hoarsely. "In dreams. She told me not to let anyone own me. She told me to find my own path."

Kael's breath caught. "You saw her? Spoke with her?"

"Twice. She's... she's beautiful. And sad. And she warned me about you. About Caspian. About choosing."

Something broke in Kael's expression. Hope, maybe. Or grief. Or both.

"She's watching over you," he whispered. "Even now. Even from the other side."

We sat in silence for a long moment. The city hummed around us, oblivious to the bombshells dropping on my front steps.

"Caspian," I said finally. "Where does he fit in?"

Kael's jaw tightened. "Caspian was your mother's guardian. Assigned by Seraphine herself to watch over Elena, to report her movements, to ensure she never strayed from vampire law. Instead, he fell in love with her. Protected her. Helped her hide you. And when Seraphine found out-" He stopped.

"When she found out, what?"

"He spent fifty years in a silver coffin at the bottom of the ocean. Seraphine's favorite punishment for traitors. He only escaped ten years ago, when the silver finally weakened enough for him to break free."

I thought of Caspian's eyes. That ancient exhaustion. That loneliness. He hadn't just lost my mother-he'd been tortured for loving her. For protecting me before I was born.

"He never told me," I said.

"Would you have believed him if he had?"

No. Probably not. A week ago, I didn't believe in vampires at all.

"He loves you, you know." Kael's voice was quiet. "Not like he loved your mother-that was different. That was duty turning into devotion. But you-" He looked at me, and there was no jealousy in his eyes. Just truth. "You've woken something in him that's been dead for centuries. I can see it. I can smell it. He'd die for you. He'd kill for you. He'd burn the world."

"And you?" I asked. "What would you do?"

Kael smiled, and it was the saddest thing I'd ever seen. "I'd build you a new one."

I didn't sleep that night.

Instead, I sat at my kitchen table with Elinor in my lap and stared at the photograph Kael had given me. My mother. Elena. She had my eyes, my smile, my awkward way of holding her hands. She looked happy in the photo-genuinely happy, despite the two supernatural men flanking her and the ancient vampire grandmother who wanted her dead.

She'd had me anyway. She'd loved me anyway. She'd died for me anyway.

I never knew you, I thought. I never got to thank you.

The pendant warmed against my chest, and for a moment-just a moment-I felt her. A presence. A warmth. A love so fierce and endless it stole my breath.

You're welcome, little one.

Tears streamed down my face. I didn't try to stop them.

At 3 AM, my phone buzzed.

Caspian: Kael told you.

Not a question.

Me: Yes.

Caspian: I was going to tell you. Soon. When the time was right.

Me: When would that have been?

A long pause. Then:

Caspian: Never. I was never going to tell you. I was going to protect you, love you, keep you safe-and let you believe I was just a vampire who happened to save you in an alley. Cowardice. Pure cowardice. I'm sorry.

I stared at the message. This ancient, powerful creature-apologizing. Admitting fear. Laying himself bare in text messages at 3 AM.

Me: I'm not angry.

Caspian: You should be.

Me: Probably. But I'm not. I'm tired. And confused. And I just found out my grandmother is the most dangerous vampire in existence and wants me dead. So honestly? Your secrets are kind of low on my list right now.

Another pause. Then:

Caspian: You have your mother's humor.

Me: Was she funny?

Caspian: She was everything. Funny. Brave. Reckless. Stubborn. She talked back to Seraphine, which no one did. She loved a human, which no one had done. She looked at a werewolf priestess and saw a sister, not an enemy. She looked at me-a monster assigned to watch her-and saw someone worth saving.

Tears again. I wiped them angrily.

Me: She sounds amazing.

Caspian: She was. And you're exactly like her. Which terrifies me more than anything.

Me: Why?

Caspian: Because Seraphine killed her for being exactly that. And I couldn't stop it. I couldn't protect her. I couldn't do anything except watch and burn and spend fifty years at the bottom of the ocean dreaming of revenge.

The pain in his words was physical. I felt it through the bond-a raw, bleeding wound that had never healed.

Me: You're not that person anymore.

Caspian: I'm exactly that person. I just have more rage now. And more to lose.

Me: You're not going to lose me.

Caspian: You can't promise that.

Me: Watch me.

I sent the message before I could think better of it. Before I could consider the implications. Before I could wonder what it meant that I was making promises to a vampire at 3 AM.

His response came immediately:

Caspian: Lena.

Me: What?

Caspian: Nothing. Just... your name. I like saying it.

I smiled despite everything. Despite the dead mother and the murderous grandmother and the two supernatural men fighting for my heart.

Me: You're weird.

Caspian: Three hundred years alone will do that.

Me: You're not alone anymore.

Another pause. Longer this time. When he finally responded, his words were careful. Measured. Like he was handling something infinitely precious.

Caspian: I know. That's what scares me.

Morning came too fast.

I dragged myself to work on three hours of sleep, fueled by coffee and determination and the lingering warmth of Caspian's texts. Margaret gave me a knowing look but didn't comment on the dark circles under my eyes. The library was quiet. Normal. Safe.

At noon, my break started, and I found Kael waiting in the periodicals section.

"You look terrible," he said.

"Thanks. You really know how to make a girl feel special."

He almost smiled. "Can we talk? Somewhere private?"

I led him to the staff break room, which was empty except for a half-dead plant and a fridge that smelled suspicious. He leaned against the counter, arms crossed, watching me with those warm brown eyes.

"I've been thinking," he said. "About Seraphine. About what she wants. About how to stop her."

"And?"

"And I think we need Caspian."

The words hung in the air. From anyone else, they'd be obvious. But from Kael-an alpha wolf suggesting alliance with an ancient vampire-they were seismic.

"You hate him," I said.

"I do. He's cold, manipulative, and he looks at you like you're the last drop of water in a desert. Which, by the way, is exactly how I look at you, so maybe I don't have room to judge." He ran a hand through his hair. "But he's also the only one who knows Seraphine. Really knows her. He served her for two centuries before he betrayed her for your mother. He knows her weaknesses, her patterns, her fears. We need that."

"You're suggesting we work together. You and Caspian. To protect me."

Kael's jaw tightened. "I'm suggesting we work together to keep you alive. After that, we can go back to hating each other."

I studied him-this proud, powerful alpha who'd rather swallow glass than ask a vampire for help. He was doing it for me. All of it, for me.

"Kael-"

"Don't." He held up a hand. "Don't thank me. Don't look at me like that. I'm not doing this to be noble. I'm doing it because the thought of you dying-" He stopped. Swallowed. "I can't. I literally cannot survive that. So if working with him is what it takes, I'll work with him. I'll do anything."

I crossed the room and hugged him.

He went rigid. Absolutely rigid, like he'd forgotten what physical affection felt like. Then his arms came around me-carefully, gently, like I was made of glass-and he held me against his chest.

"You're warm," I murmured against his shirt.

"Wolves run hot. It's a thing."

"I like it."

His arms tightened fractionally. "Lena. If you keep being this... this you... I'm going to fall even harder. And I'm already so far gone I can't see the surface."

I pulled back just enough to look at him. His eyes were gold again-burning gold, full of want and fear and desperate hope.

"I don't know what I'm doing," I admitted. "I don't know who I'll choose, or if I'll choose anyone at all. But I know you're good, Kael. I know you'd die for me. And I know that means something."

"It means everything." His voice was rough. "You mean everything."

For a moment-just a moment-I thought he might kiss me. His head dipped, his eyes dropped to my lips, his breath ghosted warm across my face.

Then the door banged open.

Margaret stood there, eyes wide, holding a stack of books that immediately fell everywhere.

"Oh my GOD," she exclaimed. "Again? Lena, this is the second time I've walked in on you with a gorgeous man! What is happening to you?"

Kael stepped back quickly, and I felt the loss of his warmth like a physical thing. He looked almost embarrassed-this massive alpha wolf, embarrassed by a middle-aged librarian.

"I should go," he said. "We'll talk more later. About... the thing. With the other person."

"Smooth," I muttered.

He shot me a look that was half-amusement, half-agony, and then he was gone, leaving me alone with Margaret and twenty-seven scattered books.

"Lena." Margaret's voice was stern. "Explain. Now."

"There's nothing to explain."

"The first one looked like he'd kill for you. This one looks like he'd die for you. And you're standing here looking like you don't know which one you want. That's not nothing. That's the plot of every romance novel I've ever read."

I stared at her. "You read romance novels?"

"Lena. Sweetie. I'm fifty-three, divorced twice, and I have three cats. Of course I read romance novels. They're the only place where men actually say what they feel." She knelt to pick up books, and I knelt to help. "So which one is it? The dark and dangerous one, or the warm and protective one?"

"Both?"

Margaret snorted. "Honey, you can't have both."

"Watch me."

The words came out before I could stop them. And as soon as they did, I realized-I meant them. I wasn't going to choose. I wasn't going to let anyone own me. I was going to find my own path, like the Moon Priestess said.

Even if that path led straight through the hearts of two supernatural men who'd do anything to keep me.

Margaret looked at me sideways. "You're serious."

"I don't know what I am anymore." I stacked the last book. "But I'm done letting other people decide for me. If I want both, I'll fight for both. If I want neither, I'll walk away. It's my choice. My life. My heart."

"Damn." Margaret sat back on her heels. "That's the most badass thing I've ever heard you say."

"Blame the vampire. And the werewolf. And the dead mother I never knew. And the homicidal grandmother who's apparently the oldest vampire in existence."

Margaret blinked. "Okay, that sounds like a lot more than a love triangle."

"You have no idea."

That night, I stood on my fire escape and looked at the stars.

The city buzzed below me-cars, people, life. But up here, it was quiet. Just me and the moon and the pendant warm against my chest.

I felt them both. Kael, somewhere to the north, his presence a warm glow at the edge of my awareness. Caspian, closer, lurking in shadows, his cold fire a constant pulse through the bond.

They were both waiting. Both hoping. Both terrified.

And I was done being terrified.

I pulled out my phone and created a group chat.

Me: Tomorrow night. Midnight. My apartment. We're going to talk. All three of us. No fighting, no posturing, no alpha/vampire bullshit. Just the truth. Be there or be square.

Kael: ...square?

Caspian: I believe she means we either attend or we are, colloquially, squares.

Kael: I know what it means. I just didn't expect her to say it.

Me: Midnight. Don't be late.

Caspian: I'm never late.

Kael: I'll be there.

I put down the phone and looked at the moon. Somewhere out there, my mother was watching. The Moon Priestess was watching. And my grandmother-the monster who'd killed them both-was waiting for her chance to finish the job.

But I wasn't the hidden baby anymore. I wasn't the ordinary librarian. I was Lena. Daughter of Elena. Heir to a power that had terrified vampires for millennia.

And tomorrow night, the two men who loved me were going to sit down and figure out how to keep me alive.

Or die trying.

Either way, it was going to be interesting.

Chapter 6

Midnight approached like a held breath.

I'd spent the entire day cleaning my apartment-not because I cared what they thought, but because I needed something to do with my hands. Something to distract from the churning in my stomach and the weight of what was about to happen.

Elinor seemed to sense my nerves. She'd taken up residence on the back of the couch, watching the door with the intensity of a tiny, judgmental sentinel.

At 11:47, I felt him first.

Caspian. A cold brush against my consciousness, a whisper of presence just outside my window. I turned, and there he was-perched on my fire escape like some kind of gothic gargoyle, red eyes gleaming in the darkness.

"The door was unlocked," he said through the glass.

"It's always unlocked for you, apparently."

He almost smiled. It was becoming a thing between us, those almost-smiles. I didn't hate it.

He slipped inside with that impossible grace, landing silently on my thrift store rug. He'd dressed differently tonight-still black, but softer somehow. Less armor, more... him. His hair was slightly disheveled, like he'd been running his hands through it.

"You're nervous," he observed.

"I'm not the one who should be nervous."

"No." His gaze swept the room, landing on the couch, the coffee table, the two chairs I'd arranged facing each other. "I am. Deeply."

Before I could respond, the building hummed with a different presence. Warm. Wild. Approaching fast.

Kael didn't bother with the fire escape. He used the front door, knocking once before letting himself in. He filled the doorway like always, all broad shoulders and honey-dark hair and eyes that found me immediately, like I was the only light in the room.

"Lena." Then his gaze shifted to Caspian, and the temperature dropped twenty degrees. "Blood-drinker."

"Wolf." Caspian's voice was ice.

They stared at each other across my living room, centuries of hatred crackling in the space between them. Elinor hissed from the couch. Even my plants seemed to lean away.

"Sit down," I said.

Neither moved.

"I said sit down. Both of you. Now."

Something in my voice must have shifted-some new authority, some hybrid power I didn't know I possessed-because they both turned to look at me. Really looked. And then, slowly, they sat.

Kael took one chair. Caspian took the other. I remained standing, partly for the height advantage, partly because my legs were shaking and I didn't trust them to hold me in a seated position.

"Here's how this is going to work," I said. "We're going to talk. All three of us. No threats, no posturing, no alpha-vampire dominance games. We're going to share information like adults, and we're going to figure out how to keep me alive. Clear?"

Caspian inclined his head. Kael nodded once.

"Good." I took a breath. "Kael told me about my mother. About Seraphine. About how you both loved her, how you both failed to protect her, how you've both been carrying that guilt for thirty years. Is that accurate?"

Caspian's jaw tightened. "Simplified, but essentially."

"And you both feel... what? Responsible for me now? Guilty? Obligated?"

"No." Kael's voice was firm. "Not obligated. Never obligated. Lena, I told you-the mate bond is real. It's not about your mother or my mother or any of the past. It's about you. The moment I smelled you, the moment I saw your face, something in me knew. That's not guilt. That's fate."

I looked at Caspian. "And you?"

He was quiet for a long moment. When he spoke, his voice was careful. Measured. "I don't believe in fate. I've lived too long, seen too much cruelty, to trust the universe with anything as precious as this. But I believe in what I feel when I'm near you. I believe that you've woken something in me that I thought died in that silver coffin. I believe that I would rather face Seraphine again-rather spend another fifty years at the bottom of the ocean-than watch harm come to you."

The room was very quiet.

"That's..." I swallowed. "That's a lot."

"It's the truth." Caspian's red eyes held mine. "All of it."

I turned away, unable to bear the intensity. "Okay. Okay. So we've established that you both have feelings. Complicated, possibly supernatural, definitely inconvenient feelings. Now what?"

"Now we prepare." Kael leaned forward, elbows on his knees. "Seraphine knows you're awake. She has to-her network is everywhere. Vampire covens, wolf packs she's corrupted, humans she's turned or compelled. She'll be watching. Waiting. And when she's ready, she'll strike."

"She won't do it herself," Caspian added. "Not initially. She'll send proxies-lesser vampires, rogue wolves, maybe even humans she's enslaved. She'll test your strength, your defenses, your allies. She'll probe for weaknesses."

"And when she finds them?"

They exchanged a glance. The first time they'd looked at each other without murder in their eyes.

"She'll come," Caspian said quietly. "And when she does, nowhere in this world will be safe."

I sank onto the arm of the couch. "Great. So I'm doomed."

"No." Kael stood, crossed to me, knelt at my feet. The gesture was so familiar now-this massive alpha, putting himself below me, offering his strength. "You're not doomed. You have us. You have your power-awakening more every day. And you have something Seraphine doesn't have."

"What?"

"Humanity." He touched my hand, feather-light. "She's been alive for thousands of years. She's forgotten what it means to love, to hope, to feel fear for someone other than herself. You remember. You feel. That's power she can't comprehend."

I looked at Caspian. He hadn't moved from his chair, but his eyes were fixed on Kael's hand on mine. Something flickered there-jealousy? longing?-before he banked it.

"He's right," Caspian said. "I've seen what love can do. I watched your mother face Seraphine with nothing but a kitchen knife and the need to protect you. She didn't win-but she delayed. Long enough for you to be hidden. Long enough for you to survive. Love made her stronger."

"And it made you weaker?" I asked. "When she died?"

Caspian's expression didn't change, but I felt it through the bond-a stab of pain so sharp I gasped.

"Yes," he whispered. "It made me weak. It made me human. It made me feel something other than hunger and boredom for the first time in two centuries. And then it was gone, and I was nothing again." He met my eyes. "Until you."

The air in the room thickened. Kael's hand tightened on mine.

"We're getting off track," Kael said, but his voice was rougher than before. "The point is-Seraphine is coming. We need to prepare. We need to train Lena, strengthen her powers, build alliances. And we need to do it together."

"Agreed." Caspian rose, graceful as smoke. "Which means we need to set aside our... differences."

"Can you do that?" I asked. "Both of you? Really?"

Kael looked at Caspian. Caspian looked at Kael. Centuries of hatred, betrayal, bloodshed-all of it hanging in the balance.

"For you," Kael said finally. "Yes."

Caspian nodded once. "For you."

Something in my chest loosened. I hadn't realized how much I needed to hear that-needed to know they could coexist, could cooperate, could be in the same room without killing each other.

"Okay," I said. "So where do we start?"

We talked for hours.

Caspian mapped Seraphine's known allies-vampire covens across Europe, wolf packs in Asia, a network of human servants embedded in governments and corporations worldwide. Kael countered with his pack's intelligence, the territories they controlled, the allies they could call upon.

I listened, asked questions, tried to absorb information that felt like it belonged in a fantasy novel. My life had become a fantasy novel. The thought was almost funny.

Around 3 AM, Elinor decided she'd had enough of the tension and stalked to my bedroom, tail high with offense. The moment broke-all three of us laughed, the sound strange and welcome in the heavy room.

"She doesn't like us," Kael observed.

"Cats are excellent judges of character," Caspian said. "She's right to be wary."

"She's right to be wary of you," Kael shot back. "I'm delightful."

"You smell like wet dog and possessiveness."

"And you smell like a crypt and repressed emotions. Your point?"

I held up my hands. "Okay, that's enough. No fighting, remember?"

They subsided, but I caught the ghost of a smile on Caspian's lips. Kael's eyes sparkled with something that looked almost like amusement.

Were they... bonding? Over insulting each other?

"Men are weird," I muttered.

"Centuries-old supernatural men are weirder," Kael agreed. "We should probably sleep. Train tomorrow?"

"Train where?" I asked.

"My territory. The pack has land outside the city-private, protected, neutral ground for vampires." He glanced at Caspian. "If he can tolerate the proximity."

"I can tolerate anything if it keeps her safe."

The words were simple, but the weight behind them wasn't. I felt it through the bond-that fierce, desperate protectiveness. And beside it, Kael's warmth, equally fierce, equally desperate.

Two men. Two kinds of love. One heart that was rapidly becoming too small to hold them both.

"Okay," I said. "Tomorrow. Your territory. But right now-" I looked at the clock. "Right now, I need sleep. And you both need to go."

Caspian moved first. He crossed to me in that silent way of his, and for a moment I thought he might touch me. Instead, he just looked-long and deep, like he was memorizing my face.

"Tomorrow," he said. "I'll find you."

Then he was gone, slipping out the fire escape like shadow.

Kael lingered. He stood by the door, hands in his pockets, looking younger than his seventy-three years.

"Lena?"

"Yeah?"

"I meant what I said. About love making us stronger. About you giving us something to fight for." He hesitated. "I know you're not ready to choose. I know you might never choose. But I need you to know-whatever happens, however this ends-I'm grateful. For meeting you. For knowing you. For getting to love you, even if it's only from a distance."

My eyes burned. "Kael-"

"Don't cry. I can't handle it when you cry." But his voice cracked. "Just... take care of yourself, okay? And call if you need me. Day or night. I'll come."

"I know."

He nodded once, then opened the door and walked out, leaving me alone with the weight of everything.

I didn't sleep.

Instead, I sat on my fire escape and watched the sky turn gray. The pendant warmed my chest. Somewhere to the north, Kael's presence pulsed like a second heartbeat. Somewhere in the city, Caspian's cold fire waited.

Two men. Two futures. One choice I wasn't ready to make.

But as the sun rose over the city, painting the sky in shades of gold and pink, I realized something. The choice wasn't about them. It was about me. Who I was becoming. Who I wanted to be.

The Moon Priestess had told me not to let anyone own me. She was right. I wasn't a prize to be won, a territory to be claimed, a bond to be fulfilled. I was Lena. Daughter of Elena. Heir to power I didn't understand.

And I was done being passive.

I pulled out my phone.

Me: Both of you. Noon. The park on Fifth. We're not training today. We're talking. Really talking. About us. About what this is. About what comes next.

Kael: I'll be there.

Caspian: As will I.

Me: Good. Because I have things to say. And you're both going to listen.

I put down the phone and looked at the sun.

Whatever happened next, it would be on my terms.

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