Ava's POV
Silence was, I had always thought, my best defense; if I kept my head down and stayed invisible, I would be safe. But my secret seemed like a ticking clock, each pulse resonating in the hollow place where my heart used to be. Silence five years, hiding five years, and now it was all about to end. The truth was going to rip through the flimsy walls I had created, and there would be no turning back whether or not I was ready.
Perched on the brink of the forest, the tall trees created sweeping shadows across the road I had previously escaped. The clean autumn air pricked at my skin, reminding me of the evening I left—heartbroken, embarrassed, and alone. Except I was not by myself. Not then, either. not now.
My hand closed around the child's tiny, delicate fingers at my side. My daughter Lily is my lighthouse. Her clear green eyes reflected my own, wide with innocence and inquiry. She pulled at my sleeve, her gentle voice guiding me out of the depths of my mind.
Her wonder-filled voice questioned, "Mama, are we going to meet him today?" Caleb, her twin, followed us silently as usual, his eyes darting between the dark forest and the road forward.
Him: Jackson Wolfe. Alpha of the Blood Moon Pack. Their father they had never known.
I had not told them much—how could I? How could I communicate to them the agony of being turned aside like I intended nothing? How could I help them to realize that the guy they yearned to see had previously sent me away, saying I was too weak to be by his side?
My chest constricting, I looked down at Lily. She had a right to know the truth. Caleb ought to have known the truth. But that truth might be lethal. It may wipe out what I had attempted to create. But running from it was not something people did now. Not following events as they had happened.
The attack came quickly and mercilessly. Hunting us, rogue wolves tore throughout the community we had called home for the past five years. Searching for me. Though I was not sure how they had located us, they had. That evening burnt into my memories, the howls in the distance, the blood on my hands as I battled to shield my kids. My dormant powers, a reminder of the secret I had buried for too long, had erupted in a way I had not anticipated.
Then I realized we could not remain hidden any more. Not when the life of my children was on line. The pack had adversaries, strong ones who would not hesitate to turn against Jackson using them as leverage. Even after years of suffering and distance, and despite my continued resentment of him, I knew there was only one place they could be safe.
Along with him.
However, this did not make things any easier. Perched on the edge of the land I used to call home, I felt my past come crashing down on me. Jackson's steely eyes and the vicious twist of his lips as he spoke those words that had broken me ran through my mind.
You are not strong enough to be my Luna.
My gut turned. Now I was not that delicate girl. I had survived, and along that process I had produced two lovely, strong children. Still, the scars of his rejection burned deep, and I couldn't help but wonder how he would respond when he saw the kids he never knew existed. His pack's successors.
I inhaled deeply to help me to ground myself. One could not turn back. For Lily and Caleb, I would meet him. I would enter the den of the wolf who had previously broken me for their safety.
Still, a slithering of discomfort crept up my spine even as I tried to cool my beating heart. Something seemed wrong. The woodland was too silent, the air too motionless. The ground itself seemed to be waiting for something to happen, as though it were breathing.
Caleb stiffened next to me, his keen eyes glancing across the forest. Always seeing, always listening, he had always been more sensitive to danger than his sister. I sensed he felt it too as his hold tightened on my hand.
"We're not alone," he said, his voice almost above a whisper.
My heart accelerated. The smell first caught me—faint yet clear. Wolves are almost here. far too close. As I understood what this meant, my heart crashed against my ribs. Already the Blood Moon Pack recognized our presence. They were en route.
I dropped down to bring Lily and Caleb near to me. "Listen to me," I whispered gently, my voice firm even as my panic grew. Follow me. Leave my side no matter what happens. Do you follow?
Their eyes wide with terror but filled with the same quiet strength I had come to respect in them, they both nodded. Though they had no idea what was ahead, they trusted me. < I needed nothing else except it.
The silence broke with the sound of leaves rustling and a twig snapping. As I watched them—three wolves rising from the shadows, their eyes glowed amber in the last of the light—my breath seized in my throat. They were big, their fur tense and dark.
And Jackson Wolfe led them from the middle.
Towering and broad-shouldered, he was in human form and his presence dominated the area around him. His dark hair was longer than I had imagined, and his sharp, frigid silver eyes fastened onto me with an intensity that shivered my spine. The world seemed to slink for a time, memories drowning over me like a tidal wave. Those eyes had been void of interest the previous time I saw them.
But these days they are unreadable.
Ava.
His voice was low, gravelly, like a vice dragging me back into the past. But I couldn't afford to let the past chew through me right now. For my children, I had to be robust. regarding me.
"I didn't come back for you," I murmured, forcing the words out, my voice calmer than I felt. I returned specifically for them.
I moved aside to show Lily and Caleb, their little hands firmly clutching mine. Jackson's eyes flicked to them, and for a fleeting moment something tore through the frigid mask he wore. Startle. ambiguity. And then... realization.
"They're yours," I replied softly, staring at the fury building in his eyes. "Always yours have been."
Jackson stepped closer, his face darkening, but before he could say, a strong howl ripped through the tension like a dagger from the treetops. My blood turned frigid.
Renowned players.
They followed us.
Ji
Jackson's body stiffened as his gaze shot to the forest line as the distant sounds of coming wolves got louder. His tone stern and forceful, he continued, "We need to get back to the packhouse." "Now."
Looking down at Lily and Caleb, panic shot through me. Originally we had stepped directly into the lion's den, and now the wolves were closing in. We had nowhere to go and the same thing I had been away from for five years was here.
Jackson said, "Stay close," his voice piercing my terror. He changed then, his wolf under control and the change quick and smooth. Before me stood a large black beast with silver eyes shining in the evening.
I did not hesitate. Running toward the protection of the packhouse, we trailed Jackson into the forest, gathering my kids near. But one horrible idea kept running through me as the cries of the rogues neared.
Had I simply brought my kids into much more risk?
As the shouts of the rogues got louder and their footsteps resounded across the forest, it seemed to shut in around us. As we sprinted, Jackson's black shape led the way and my heart hammered in my chest. But a shadow too swift, too close appeared in the distance as we arrived at the clearing.
And then I noticed him.
A towering, strong man with vicious amber eyes and a smile that made my spine shudder. His presence exuding menace, he stood between us and the packhouse.
Blackthorne Marcus.
"I have been waiting for you, Ava," he continued, his voice full of contempt. And your tiny secrets.
My blood went ice.
Ava's POV Coming back here never appealed to me.As I drove down the little, twisting road heading toward the Blood Moon Pack's territory, my lungs smelled familiarly of pine and earth. The air seemed to weigh more and became dense with memories and unspoken words the closer I approached. My pulse accelerated as my hands tightened their grasp on the driving wheel, the dark contour of the forest loomed ahead enveloping the territory of the pack in a shield. Five years as opposed to thisFive years after Jackson Wolfe tossed me aside like I was nothing—his mate, his weakness—reversed. I had been damaged, brittle, uncertain of who I was without him back then. But that woman? She vanished from sight. I was not the same Ava that had grieved and powerless stumbled out of this woodland.I had shifted. My kids had made me different."Mama, are we almost at it? Lily's voice drew me back into consciousness. Her brilliant green eyes wide as she stared out the window, she sat in the rear seat.
Jackson’s POV Seeing her once more was like a gut-pulverizing punch.Ava Thorne The one I had turned aside. The one I persuaded myself I had no need for. the person who carried my kids without notifying me once at least. Rejecting her seemed to be the correct thing—hell, the only thing keeping the pack safe. But now my world spun on its axis as she stood there with two children I knew did not exist.My offspring.The term kept bouncing off the walls of my already disintegrating sanity in my head. These were Lily and Caleb, mine. Although I should have been angry, betrayed even, all I could concentrate on was the weight of guilt smothering me. I had turned them down as well as Ava.I refused to look at her. Not at the moment."We have to pay attention to the threat," I murmured, attempting to ignore the simmering resentment under surface level. Though my voice sounded harsher than I wanted, I needed time to sort through all of this before I lost control.Ava stood sharply next to the
Ava's POV I never imagined I would be back here. The packhouse was supposed to be a fortification, a haven with its lofty stone walls and dark wooden flooring. But being here today surrounded by wolves that used to view me as an alien, it felt more like a jail. Jackson was still staring at me, observing, evaluating, maybe even accusing. Still, it was not his stare that most troubled me. It weighed what I had to tell him. The secrets I had stored for so long seemed like chains dragging me down with every stride around my ankles.I returned here not to be with him. I came to see my kids.Ignorant of the conflict whirling amongst the parents, the twins quietly occupied the corner of the room. Lily was deep in concentration on her puzzle, her little forehead wrinkled, as Caleb piled blocks and hummed to himself. They were uninformed of the threat hovering over us. Not aware that their father faced as much risk as they did.Jackson leaned against the desk, his arms folded, that austere p
Jackson's POV The blackness outside the packhouse was unbroken, as though the night itself had turned against us. Perched on the balcony of my workplace, I could see the thick woodland just outside our boundaries. Everything seemed to bear down on my shoulders. The squad. The rogers. AVA.The twins come next. My sons.Though I attempted to push it to the back of my mind, the disclosure still left me spinning. Now I afford to be sidetracked. But in what way might I not be? Ava had kept them away from me for five years. Five years later, she came back, undoing what I had believed I had sealed up. And with it, the growing suspicion that someone I trusted was poised to burn everything to the ground.Betrayal stung more when it came from your own; it tasted sour. I tried to concentrate by clenching my hands and making sense of the mess we were in. An enemy in the pack? Though it seemed inconceivable, I could no longer overlook the warning indicators. Ava would not have returned without ca
Ava's POV The chilly night air carried earthy and pine smells as it stroked across my skin. Every wolf on edge following the last attack, the packhouse was tense. Unaware of the tempest building around my kids, my heart raced as I watched them sleep peacefully on Jackson's office couch. Their little faces were calm; for a minute, I yearned for their purity.I was back here for them, not for me. Though here was the last place I wanted to be, the twins needed protection and had no alternative. I had vowed never to return across Blood Moon territory. Still, here I was, back in the place that had felt like home and today felt like a trap.Jackson never left me with his keen silver gaze. As I acted to be preoccupied covering Caleb's small figure with a blanket, I could feel his eyes blazing into the back of my neck. Between us, there was a great lot of unsaid communication and weight hovering around. I knew the inquiries were on their way. Since I came, I had seen the anxiety rising; I wa
Jackson's POV I walked back and forth in my office, the moon low in the heavens giving a soft silver glimmer over the packhouse. My ideas were disorganized, bits of guilt, rage, and anxiety. The weight of it all would not go away. Ava's comeback, the twins, the rogues—it seemed as though the earth was collapsing upon me. Worse of all, I lost faith in someone.Riley." My closest friend, Beta, had been behaving unusually. Though he had always been faithful and had my back, lately something seemed odd. It was in his avoidance of my eye and his hesitation upon receiving directions. And now, as these renegade strikes grew more frequent and deliberate, I couldn't deny the chewing suspicion that had crept inside me.Stopped by the window, I peered out into the black wilderness encircling our domain. The trees moved in the breeze, their limbs murmuring whispers I could not hear. The rogues were waiting, observing, organizing their next action somewhere out there. And I felt as though their b
Ava's POV Standing near the window in my makeshift room in the packhouse, the cool night air bit my skin. Being back here, in a location that had once been my house but now felt like a far-off memory, was unusual. Five years had brought considerable change—Jackson, the pack, me. Still, certain things had stayed agonizingly the same.Through the woods, I watched the moon, its brilliance creating long shadows on the ground. In the other room the twins were asleep; the only sound that calmed me down was their gentle breathing. But it was just temporary solace, one eclipsed by the weight of all else. The threat that loomed, the rivals hiding in the darkness, and the secrets I had stashed for so long.Mysteries starting to fall apart.Early on, Jackson had been right. I ought to have brought up the twins with him. But, following all of this, how could I. His rejection still loomed large, a wound never quite healed. I had made mine; he had made his decision back then. Now, though, I wasn't
Jackson's POV Tonight the packhouse appeared to weigh more. Every floorboard groan and lamp flutter felt as though the ground itself was breathing. I was likewise too. The twins were asleep and ignorant of the storm building outside these walls in their room with Ava. Still, I wasn't sleepy. Days had gone without sleep coming naturally. Not with Blackthorn, planning, waiting out there. Not with a traitor prowling about our group.Riley's comments earlier had shook me more than I had let on. He is aware of the twin set. He is on his way for them.My head was a battlefield where ideas clashed to rule. How had things gone so far out of control? I thought for years that I was maintaining pack order and safeguarding them. The fundamental basis was falling apart right now, and I had to admit I hadn't seen it approaching. Perhaps I had, but I had been too pleased to see the flaws.Perched in the middle of the room, I gazed at the door leading to Ava's temporary accommodations. Inside she wa