LILA - The night had finally ended, and any wolves lurking around had likely retreated. I slipped from Cast's grip and burst through the door. My only thought was getting to the pack house to ensure Declan was safe. I barely registered the cold ground under my feet as I ran.I made it to the packhouse in record time. It was dark and quiet, and that made my heart race faster. I pushed through the doors, bolting down the hall to the kid's room. Mrs. Wady sat in the rocking chair, Declan asleep against her chest, oblivious to the chaos of the night. I leaned against the doorframe, catching my breath. Declan was safe.Mrs. Wady looked up. I reached out and brushed a hand over Declan's soft hair, just to feel him, just to know he was still okay. He shifted slightly, snuggling deeper into Mrs. Wady, entirely at ease. I didn't want to leave him but knew I couldn't stay. I forced myself to pull away. I headed toward the cellar, catching sight of Cast as he emerged, dragging the kid from the
LINC - The second I caught a whiff of that punk kid outside the door, I knew the night was about to turn brutal. I didn't need to see him to know he was looking for me.Or for Lila or Declan. That kid wasn't just here to make trouble. He'd come with intent.I got even more pissed when I realized how easily I'd handed him a reason on a silver platter.I hated myself for it. Letting Lila's pregnancy slip out, making the baby part of the damn court case. I'd been stupid. I knew better.I'd spent years building walls around anything personal, keeping it under lock and key. But one look at Lila, one sign of our future, and I'd laid it all bare to make sure I was beside her as she recovered. The second you hand someone that kind of ammo, it is only a matter of time before they use it against you. You tell the world you have a child, and it's like inviting every predator in a hundred miles to test you.But what that kid didn't know...what he was too stupid or too green to understand...was
LILA -I guided Cast back to the living room. Linc leaned against the chair, his head lobbed back, looking barely conscious. He wouldn't make it to bed on his own, and I knew it."Come on, let's get him to the room," I said to Cast, nodding toward Linc. Without a word, he went to Linc's other side, slipping his arm around him to support most of his weight. I did my best to steady him as well, and together, we moved him across the house.Every step seemed to cost Cast. His face tightened, his movements strained. He'd forced his own shift in barely three minutes. No wonder he was struggling. Cast had used up nearly everything he had to get back to us in time, knowing what he'd be walking into. Despite his own fatigue, he'd been here with us through it all.Finally, we got Linc onto the bed, his head hitting the pillow as he sank into it, his body already going slack as he let go of what little energy he'd been holding onto. I looked back at Cast, who leaned against the wall, breathing
LINC - I woke up in the late afternoon. My body ached in places I didn't know could ache, and the dull throbbing headache and exhaustion still clung to me. Lila lay curled in Cast's arms, both of them completely out. Her hair fanned across his face, and his arm was wrapped around her protectively. I understood now more than ever why they were still so connected. The smell of dried sweat and dirt hit me. It clung to my skin, a reminder of everything I'd put my body through the night before. I couldn't stay in bed like this, not when I could barely stand to be near myself. Slowly, I swung my legs off the bed and stood, ignoring how my knees threatened to give out. The bassinet moving caught my eye, and I walked over, drawn to the soft sounds coming from inside it. Declan lay there, his bright eyes staring up at me, wide awake and calm. He kicked his little legs and looked up at me with what looked like a grin. Just the fact that he was so happy to see me still made everything el
CAST - I woke up pissed. The kind of pissed that made my blood feel hot and my jaw clench before I’d even sat up. Last night, I had been too focused on keeping Lila and Linc safe, on making sure Linc didn’t tear the whole damn territory apart. But now it hit me once I had some rest. That punk had the nerve to show up here, sneaking around like he owned the place.I swung my legs off the bed. Linc and Lila weren’t in the room. I figured they’d gotten up with Declan. Fine. I knew where I needed to be.The basement door creaked as I pushed it open, heading down the steps two at a time. The air was colder down there, the stone walls holding the chill, but the kid in the cage didn’t seem bothered. He was sitting on the floor, his arms wrapped around his knees, looking more bored than worried. Like he had nothing to worry about. His scrawny body didn’t scream threat, but his attitude grated on me the second I saw him. He barely flinched when I grabbed the chair from the corner and slammed
LILA - Dinner with the guys was always entertaining, mostly because feeding two alphas was like preparing food for an army. Add baby alpha Declan into the mix, and it felt like I'd spent the last half hour running a restaurant kitchen. I expected this hunger level after the energy they both poured out last night. Linc hadn't stopped moving for hours. He tore at the ground, the walls, and anything else in reach, his wolf desperate to get to the threat. Cast had done the unthinkable, forcing his shift back to human in record time, something no one would willingly endure unless there were no other choice. Then he pushed through the pain he had to be feeling with every movement to make sure I was safe. To make sure the girls and I were safe. Five alphas. That's what I was feeding now. I glanced at the two of them sitting at the bar, attempting to feed Declan a smooshed-up grape. They were finally still for once as they focused on our son, who growled and resisted the new foo
I headed upstairs, following the sound of splashing water and Declan’s delighted squeals. When I stepped into the bathroom, I found all three of my guys crowded around the tub. Declan sat in the middle of the bath, splashing and babbling while Linc knelt beside the tub and Cast leaned over from the other side, both of them soaked from the chaos.“That bad?” I asked, leaning against the doorframe with a grin.Linc looked up, water dripping from his sleeve. “The diaper was more for show than function. Banana aftermath. Don’t ask.”Cast laughed, grabbing a washcloth to wipe the water Declan had just splashed into his face. “We figured a full scrub-down was easier than dealing with the mess.”Declan smacked the water, sending another spray of droplets flying. I laughed as the two men groaned, trying to contain the tidal wave of destruction our son was gleefully creating.“Seems like you’ve got it handled,” I teased, stepping closer to get a better look at Declan, who was clearly having th
CAST - Lila was persistent. That much had become painfully clear over the last week. She had taken to calling the kid Jaed, and somehow, Linc had started using it too, probably because she softened him with every meal, every gentle nudge to "see the potential" in the scrawny former threat. I wasn't buying it yet. The kid had tried to hurt my family. The only reason he hadn't touched Declan was that he'd mistakenly thought my son would smell like Linc. That wasn't heroics; it was a miscalculation.We were in Linc's office, the three of us, Declan perched on his stomach on a blanket in the middle of the floor. Lila leaned back against the couch, her arms crossed as she argued her point for the hundredth time. Linc looked like he was trying not to get drawn in, which wasn't going well. I kept my stance firm, arms crossed, glaring at the wall instead of her."He's putting on weight," Lila said. "He's less shaky, and he's been polite to everyone...""Polite isn't enough," I interrupted.
Gaia lunged at him. Ian didn't move. He braced himself, standing firm as her massive form slammed into him. The force of it sent a shockwave through the ground. He held his position, absorbing the impact, pushing her back with raw strength alone. His white fur bristled. Gaia struck again, snapping at his throat, but he dodged, twisting at the last second to drive her off balance. She hit the dirt hard, paws digging into the earth as she pushed herself back up in an instant. Her entire body shook, not from exhaustion but from pure, unchecked aggression. Ian snarled, lowering his stance, but he didn't strike back. He didn't need to. He was blocking her, stopping her, keeping her from finishing what she had started. Something shifted in Gaia. Her breaths came hard, her body still wound too tight, but the moment stretched longer, stretched too long. Then, finally, she stopped. Ian didn't move, waiting, making sure she was really done. I didn't wait. The second she hesitated, I forced
DECLAN -The trees blurred past as Gaia ran, powerful and sure beneath me. I gripped her fur tighter, not because I was afraid but because I had never felt anything like this. The wind cut sharp against my skin, my pulse pounded in my ears, and my body moved in sync with hers like we were built for this. Everything in me buzzed with adrenaline, with the rush of speed, the sheer force of her muscles coiling and flexing beneath me. Then I saw it. A shadow slipped between the trees, fast and silent, keeping pace with us. Suki. Not now. Not like this. I silently begged her to stay back, to leave this moment alone, to not push this any further than it had already gone. But she didn't. Her wolf stayed just on the edges of my vision, always there, always lingering, never letting me forget what was still tangled inside me. The pull. The connection that refused to break, no matter how much I willed it to disappear. Then Gaia saw her. Her muscles coiled. A ripple of tension passed through
DECLAN -I made it back to the house just as Gaia came tearing out the front door, furious. She was barely holding herself together. The second she saw me, she yanked her shirt over her head. My brain barely caught up. I froze as every muscle in my body seemed to ripple at once. I was still reeling from being near Suki. From the way she looked at me. From the way my body reacted even when my mind told me I belonged to Gaia. The confusion pulled me in opposite directions, turning every second into a battle. And now Gaia was storming toward me, tearing off her clothes, taking up every bit of space in my mind. "Damn, Gaia." I snapped my head to the side, forcing myself to look anywhere but at her. She stalked closer, bare feet kicking up dust. I frowned. Why the hell were her shoes off? She had stormed out of the house so fast that she hadn't even thought to put them on. That wasn't like her. She grabbed my chin and jerked my head forward. "We... werr 'dults. We... need to stop act
DECLAN - Suki stretched out on the rock beside me, legs extended, fingers tapping idly against the stone. She wasn't in a rush, and that only made everything worse for me."Why are you upset?"I stared at the dirt, exhaling hard. "You don't want to know.""Please. You rejected me. Nothing else you say can be worse than that."That shouldn't have hit as hard as it did. My hands tightened against my knees, but I kept my voice even. "Yeah... Sorry for that too."She shrugged like it didn't matter. "You did what you had to do. That doesn't mean I can't tease you about it."She smiled, not mean, not teasing, but something about it still made it impossible to ignore. I didn't push. Couldn't. Not right now.Some of the pressure in my shoulders eased. "You're handling it better than I thought.""What, did you expect me to run off crying?" She kicked a loose rock down the slope. "I don't do the whole helpless thing."I huffed. "I know. Takes a lot of strength to live out here on purpose all t
DECLAN - Mom knocked once before stepping inside, moving like she expected this to be a fight. Maybe she did. Maybe it was."Your dads worked out a deal with Jaed."I stayed where I was, back against the headboard, arms locked around Gaia. Keeping her here. Keeping her mine. "Doesn't matter. Nothing is changing."She did her best to ignore my attitude. "Gaia can still stay until her birthday."I scoffed. "You heard what I said. She was staying regardless of all the bullshit."Gaia sat up fast, then shoved off the bed completely. "Don't talk to your mother like that."Heat crawled up my spine fast. A burn that made my stomach wrench. Being called out pissed me off. Being called out by someone below me? Made my teeth ache.And I hated that I felt like that.Mom just watched, waiting. No reaction, no expression, no wasted effort. My breath felt thicker, slower, body bracing for something I wasn't even sure of. I forced my attention back to her instead of the fire sparking hot under my s
DECLAN - Jaed turned on his heel and stormed out, steps heavy enough to shake the floor. The door slammed hard enough to rattle the frame. Gaia moved fast, pushing out of the room after him without looking back. My body still burned, everything wound so tight I thought I might snap in half. There was no way in hell I was walking out there right now, not like this. I sat on the edge of the bed, planted my feet, and dragged both hands through my hair before forcing them down. If I kept doing that, it would only make everything worse. I needed to get it together. I needed to think about something else. Anything else. My breathing was too hard, too uneven. My pulse pounded in my ears. My entire body ached, my skin too hot, my blood thick and heavy. Every inch of me still screamed for her, for more, for everything I had been seconds away from having. I stared at the ceiling and tried to focus. No good. Every thought ran straight back to her. To the way she had felt pressed against m
DECLAN - By the end of the lesson, most of them had the alphabet down. It wasn't perfect, but it was a start. More than that, it was proof that this was happening. That Gaia was becoming part of us, not just some outsider with no way to connect.As the room emptied out, I felt her before she even touched me. Gaia slid her arms around my waist from behind, pressing herself against my back."You're incredible," she signed against my chest, looking up at me.I swallowed. Hard. "Come on," I muttered, taking her hand and pulling her toward my room.The second the door shut behind us, she was on me. She dragged me down to meet her lips. I didn't hesitate. I kissed her hard, ignoring the dull ache still lingering in my ribs. My shoulder moved without protest, and most of the cuts had already faded into thin scars. I knew I should still be careful, but touching her made everything else disappear. The soreness, the exhaustion, the remnants of pain all vanished the second she was in my arms.S
I found Cast and Linc in the office, going over some pack reports. Linc leaned back in his chair while Cast was half-standing, flipping through pages with a scowl. They barely looked up when I walked in, but I didn't care. I had something to say, and they were going to listen."We're starting ASL classes," I said, crossing my arms. "Everyone is required to attend. That includes both of you."Linc's brow lifted slightly, and Cast set the papers down with an exasperated sigh. "You're giving us orders now?" Cast asked, folding his arms over his chest."Yes."They exchanged a look. Linc sighed first. "Declan, you don't get to just..."I cut him off. "I do. And I am. This should've happened the second we knew Gaia was deaf. Jaed made sure every single person in his pack knew how to communicate with her before they moved there. But here? We're still scribbling on notepads like it's the Dark Ages."Linc's jaw tightened. Cast clenched his teeth, looking more annoyed than guilty. But I wasn't
Life felt strange now. Not bad. Just different.The routine of school was gone, replaced by the quiet predictability of home. I woke up early, trained with Dad Cast and some of the others, then spent the rest of the day doing whatever needed to be done around the packhouse. The only difference now? I was healing far faster than I should have been.The gashes along my ribs had already started closing. My shoulder still ached, but nowhere near what it should have been given the damage Suki had done. Even the deep bruising felt more like old aches instead of fresh wounds. It was fast. Too fast.Gaia noticed it first. She was there when I peeled off my shirt after training, her eyes narrowing as she reached out, fingers barely brushing over the nearly-healed claw marks."That’s not normal," she signed, eyes flicking up to mine.I already knew that. "I heal fast now that I'm an adult alpha?""Not this fast," she countered . "Do you think,"I exhaled. "It’s you."She nodded slowly. "We heal