The night Adrian Blackthorne realized she had returned, the moon was bleeding.
Not metaphorically. Not poetically.
It was a literal crimson stain across the London sky, a lunar eclipse so rare that even the immortals felt a primal, bone-deep unease beneath it. The moon hung low and swollen, smeared with a violent red as though an unseen blade had wounded the heavens themselves. Ancient magic, dormant for generations, stirred restlessly in its shadow, old laws whispering to one another in the dark, waking from a centuries-long slumber.
Adrian felt it in his marrow before he saw it with his eyes.
He stood barefoot on the obsidian-tiled balcony of Blackthorne Tower, seventy floors above the city. The cold stone bit into skin that had survived fire, silver, and the teeth of monsters. His shirt was unbuttoned, the silk snapping like a whip in the rising wind. Below him, London was a sprawling grid of golden veins-headlights, neon signs, and the frantic pulse of eight million humans rushing through their fragile, blink-and-you-miss-it lives. They were utterly unaware of how thin the veil truly was tonight.
The air carried the familiar scents of a city on the edge of a storm: rain slicking hot asphalt, the metallic tang of the Underground, and the heavy scent of ozone.
And beneath it all-beneath the smog and the sweat of millions-there was her.
The scent hit him like a physical blow, a silver dagger driven straight through his sternum. It wasn't a mundane perfume or the simple smell of skin. It was the scent of a soul he had cataloged in every corner of his mind. Moonlight, crushed winter jasmine, and something heartbreakingly familiar-the smell of a cold morning after a long night.
It was a scent that bypassed logic, memory, and the seven hundred years of iron-clad restraint he had built to keep the world safe from him.
Adrian's fingers curled slowly, his knuckles turning white as they gripped the glass railing.
Seven hundred years.
Seven centuries of waking up in a world that felt like a tomb. Seven centuries of burying hope so deep that he had eventually convinced himself it had withered away into ash. He had watched kingdoms rise and crumble into dust; he had seen the invention of the steam engine and the birth of the internet, all while staying the same-unchanging, untouched by time, cursed to remember every face he had ever loved and every grave he had ever been forced to dig.
And now, his wolf wasn't just stirring. It was screaming.
She's here. She's here. She's here.
The beast inside him, a creature of shadow and ancient hunger, surged against its metaphorical chains. It was half-mad with a longing that had fermented into something feral. Adrian's heart stuttered-not because it needed to beat to keep him alive, but because it finally remembered how it felt to break.
Behind him, through the floor-to-ceiling glass doors, laughter spilled from the penthouse.
It was soft, tinkling, and entirely artificial. The party he hadn't bothered to attend continued in his absence, a sea of beautiful, shallow people basking in the reflected glow of his wealth. Models with hollow eyes, heiresses with practiced smiles, and "influencers" whose entire existences were curated performances on a screen. They lounged across his velvet couches and sipped his vintage champagne from crystal flutes.
They were distractions. Carefully chosen, high-priced distractions.
He surrounded himself with women who asked nothing real of him-women who didn't look too closely at the way his eyes reflected gold instead of brown when the moon grew heavy, or that his pulse never quickened, or that the scars on his back from the 18th century would vanish by morning.
They never stayed long enough to matter. They were the white noise he used to drown out the silence of his own immortality.
"Adrian, darling?"
The voice was like honey laced with arsenic. He didn't need to turn to know it was Selene.
She stepped out onto the balcony, her presence a cold weight against his back. Selene was an Immortal Fae-touched witch, a creature who had haunted the peripheries of his life for longer than he cared to admit. She was dressed in a gown of midnight silk that seemed to drink the light, her dark hair pinned back with silver pins that looked like tiny daggers.
"You're missing your own celebration," she murmured, her hand sliding across his shoulder. Her touch was elegant, possessive, and entirely unwelcome. "The board is thrilled with the new merger. You should be inside, drinking to your own genius."
"I have no interest in the board, Selene," Adrian said, his voice a low, vibrating growl. "Or the merger."
She followed his gaze to the blood-red moon, her eyes narrowing. She was sensitive to the shifts in the atmosphere-she knew the laws of the universe were bending. "The moon is angry tonight. It feels like... a return."
Adrian didn't answer. He couldn't. His throat was tight with the effort of not shifting right there on the balcony.
"You're tense," Selene whispered, her fingers trailing up to his neck. "Is it the eclipse? Or have you finally realized that looking for a ghost is a waste of a perfect eternity?"
"Leave," Adrian commanded. It wasn't a request. The air around him began to hum with the static of his power.
Selene's smile didn't falter, but her eyes flashed with a bitter, ancient jealousy. She knew. She didn't know who or where, but she knew the look on his face. She had seen it before, centuries ago, and every time it ended the same way. She withdrew her hand slowly. "As you wish. But remember, Adrian-the moon might remember her name, but it never lets her keep it."
She vanished back into the party, leaving him alone with the wind.
Adrian's golden eyes remained fixed on the city as memories clawed their way out of the grave.
Fire.
Not the clean, flickering kind. This was the kind that devoured whole villages, the kind that turned the sky into a black shroud. He remembered the smell of burning thatch and the way the snow turned black beneath the boots of charging men. He remembered the sound of steel on bone.
Blood soaking into white.
Always blood. That was the price the universe demanded for a love that wasn't supposed to exist.
He saw the face of a girl with dark, frightened eyes-eyes that were far too old for her young face. He felt her weight in his arms as she died for the third time, her breath hitching as the life left her.
"Adrian," she had breathed, her fingers slick with red, clutching at his leather sleeve. Her lips had been blue with cold, though the fire raged just feet away. "Find me again. Promise me."
His hands had shaken as he held her, golden tears streaking his face, his wolf howling in a grief that could level mountains. "I always do," he had promised, pressing his forehead to hers until her heart stopped. "I will always find you."
It was a vow spoken into smoke and ruin. A promise cursed by fate itself.
The wind shifted again, more violently now. The scent of winter jasmine intensified, practically screaming at him.
This wasn't like the other times. In previous lifetimes, he would find her as a distant echo-a girl in a marketplace, a scholar in a library. It would take years of careful observation to be sure. But this? This was a strike of lightning through his very soul. It was as if the universe had stopped playing games and had finally thrown them back together with the force of a car crash.
His phone vibrated in his pocket.
The sound was absurdly loud, a digital intrusion into a primordial moment. Adrian stared at the screen for a long moment, his hand trembling. He was afraid that touching it might shatter the fragile thread of his control.
He picked it up. One message from a number that shouldn't exist.
UNKNOWN NUMBER: She just collapsed at the British Museum. The mark is back. The clock is ticking, Alpha.
The world stopped.
For a fraction of a second-a heartbeat so brief that even an immortal might have missed it-Adrian's control slipped.
The heavy glass railing shattered under his grip. Tempered crystal exploded outward like a hail of diamonds, raining shards down seventy floors to the pavement below. Somewhere in the distance, a car alarm began to wail. Inside the penthouse, the music cut out. Laughter turned into confused, panicked gasps as the wind rushed through the open doors.
Adrian didn't hear any of it.
Seven lifetimes. Seven tragic endings. Seven graves, scattered across continents and centuries.
He was moving before the thought fully formed. He crossed the penthouse in a blur of speed that no human eye could track. The women screamed as he passed, a literal rush of wind overturning marble side tables and sending silk dresses fluttering. Someone called his name-perhaps Selene-but he was already gone.
The elevator doors slid open at his approach, the sensors overridden by the biometric bypass he'd built into the tower's core. The descent was a gut-wrenching drop.
In the underground garage, the air was still and smelled of oil and expensive rubber. He ignored the Ferraris and the armored SUVs. He chose the Ducati.
He didn't grab a helmet. He didn't need it.
The engine roared to life, a mechanical growl that echoed off the concrete walls like a challenge to the gods. He tore out into the night, the tires screaming as he hit the ramp.
The rain began to fall as he carved through London's streets, the droplets slicing against his skin like tiny needles. Traffic parted instinctively before him; it was as if the city itself recognized the apex predator moving through its streets and moved out of his way. His mind raced faster than the 200 miles per hour he was hitting on the straights.
A museum.
His jaw tightened until his teeth ached. Museums were repositories of the dead. They were vaults for things that were meant to be forgotten. Of course, she would be there. Of course, the past would find her among the ruins of other civilizations.
The mark had returned.
That mark-the crescent sigil etched into her very soul, reborn with her in every life-was the tether between them. It was the bridge between his curse and her mortality.
As he neared Bloomsbury, the air changed. He smelled it then-not just her, but magic.
It was old, bitter magic. Witchcraft laced with the scent of stagnant water and graveyard dirt. Someone else was watching. Someone else had been waiting for the Sovereign to wake up.
He swerved hard, tires skidding across the wet pavement as he skidded to a halt half a block from the museum's Great Russell Street entrance. The neoclassical columns loomed stark and white against the bleeding red moon. Police lights strobed blue and red against the stone. An ambulance idled near the steps, its back doors open like a hungry maw.
Too many humans. Too much noise.
Adrian melted into the shadows of the nearby trees, moving with the silence of a ghost. His eyes, now fully gold, pierced through the dark.
He saw her.
She lay on a gurney beneath the harsh, buzzing fluorescent lights of the ambulance bay. The paramedics were working frantically, but their movements felt slow to him-glacial.
Lena Ashcroft.
The name settled into his bones as though it had always been carved there. He saw her face clearly now. She was pale, her dark hair plastered to her forehead by the rain. She looked smaller than she had in the 1920s. Younger. Fragile in all the ways that made his chest ache. Her lashes fluttered against her cheeks, her brow furrowed as if she were trapped in a nightmare she couldn't wake up from.
Her heart was racing-a frantic, fluttering thing. Adrian felt the rhythm of it like a drumbeat in his own chest.
"No sign of a stroke," one paramedic shouted over the rain. "Her BP is spiking! Get her to UCH now!"
None of them saw the faint, ethereal silver glow pulsing just beneath her skin. None of them noticed the way the shadows seemed to lean toward her, drawn to the light she didn't know she carried.
Adrian did.
Just above her collarbone, nestled in the hollow of her throat, the crescent sigil shimmered. It was silver-edged with a violent, bruised red. It pulsed in perfect synchronization with the bleeding moon overhead.
The bond snapped tight, a spectral chain linking his soul to hers. Pain lanced through him-sharp, agonizing, and more welcome than any breath of air.
There you are.
His wolf surged, its claws metaphorical but its hunger real. Mine. Protect. Kill the ones who hurt her.
"No," Adrian whispered into the rain, his fists clenched so hard his nails drew blood from his palms. "Not yet. We can't destroy her life before she even remembers who she is."
He stayed in the darkness, watching as they loaded her into the ambulance. He had learned the hard way the cost of rushing this. In the 1700s, he had claimed her too soon, and the shock of his world had burned her mind. In the 1800s, he had been too protective, and his enemies had used her as a lure.
Every time before, it had ended in a grave. Fire. Steel. Blood. Death.
The memories pressed in like a physical weight. He saw her as the healer burned at the stake, her eyes defiant even as the smoke filled her lungs. He saw her as the scholar in the 20s, falling into his arms after the poison took hold, whispering that she'd see him in the next one.
He was always just a few seconds too late. He was the most powerful being in the city, and yet he was a slave to a clock he couldn't see.
A presence brushed against the edge of his sensory perimeter. It was a cold, oily feeling.
Adrian stiffened, his head snapping to the side.
Standing on the roof of a parked car across the street, partially hidden by the fog, was a figure. A woman. She wasn't human, and she certainly wasn't an ally.
Selene.
She hadn't stayed at the party. She had followed him. She stood there, her midnight dress fluttering in the wind, a cruel, knowing smile on her lips. She didn't look at Adrian; she looked at the ambulance as it pulled away, sirens wailing.
"The cycle begins again, Adrian," Selene's voice carried through the psychic link they shared, echoing in his mind like a funeral bell. "But look at her. She's so weak this time. So very... breakable."
Adrian's eyes flashed with a lethal, predatory gold. He could be across the street in a heartbeat. He could tear her throat out before she could cast a single hex.
"Touch her," Adrian growled, the sound vibrating in the air, "and I will show you why the world spent five hundred years trying to kill me."
Selene laughed, a sound like breaking glass. "Oh, Adrian. It isn't me you should be worried about. The Order of the Eclipse has already smelled the Sovereignty. And you know Lucien. He doesn't like loose ends."
She blew a kiss toward the receding ambulance and vanished into a cloud of ravens that scattered into the rainy night.
Adrian didn't wait. He leaped back onto his bike, the roar of the engine drowning out the sound of his own racing heart.
The game had begun. The hunters were already circling. The jealous rival was already plotting. And in the center of the storm was a girl who just wanted to be a student, unaware that she was the reason the moon was bleeding.
This time, he wouldn't just find her. This time, he would burn the world down before he let her die again.
But as he sped toward the hospital, a cold thought chilled his blood. If the curse was older than the moon... was even a god's love enough to break it?
He reached the hospital gates just as the ambulance pulled in.
The night was far from over. And for Lena Ashcroft, the dream was just beginning-and the dream was a memory of fire.
Lena Ashcroft hated museums.
It wasn't just the quiet, which felt heavy and artificial, or the way the air always seemed to be exactly sixty-eight degrees to protect pieces of parchment that were older than the concept of paper. It was the smell. They smelled like dust and dead men with too much money-stone, silence, and the kind of forced reverence that made her skin itch.
To most people, the British Museum was a temple of human achievement. To Lena, it was a graveyard where history sat behind glass, stripped of its soul and given a catalog number.
She adjusted her security badge for the tenth time that hour, the plastic clip biting into her thumb. She stood watch in the restricted wing-the "Old World" wing-stifling a yawn as the last of the evening's VIP tour groups shuffled past the velvet ropes. Their voices were a low, blurred hum, punctuated by the occasional gasp of rehearsed awe or the clinical click of a high-end camera.
Lena barely noticed them. Her mind was already at home, in her cramped studio apartment with its peeling wallpaper and the radiator that clanked like a dying ghost.
Her life was painfully, beautifully ordinary, and tonight was supposed to be no exception.
She was twenty-six, her bank account was a tragedy in three acts, and she currently had an overdue rent notice folded into the back pocket of her black uniform trousers. She'd spent the last year trying to rebuild a life that had shattered when her engagement ended-a breakup she told her sister was "mutual" and "mature," even though it had felt more like a limb being torn off without anesthetic.
But lately, the ordinary world felt like a thin mask.
The nightmares had started six months ago. At first, she'd blamed the double shifts and the cheap caffeine. Then she blamed the city. But doctors couldn't explain why she woke up every morning with the phantom scent of smoke in her hair and the taste of salt on her tongue.
They came in fragments. Vivid, jagged shards of a life she had never lived.
A man with eyes like molten gold standing in a field of waist-high snow, blood staining his hands. A forest fire so hot the sky turned purple, and the sound of someone screaming her name-a name that wasn't Lena, but felt more "right" than the one on her birth certificate. The sensation of cold steel sliding between her ribs.
She always woke up gasping, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird, clutching her throat as if to check if it was still intact.
The doctors called it "Grief-Induced Somatic Flashbacks." Her therapist called it "Unresolved Trauma."
Lena just called it exhausting.
Tonight, the air in the museum felt wrong from the moment she had clocked in. The "Relics of the Old World" exhibit was quieter than usual, the shadows pooling in the corners where the ancient artifacts rested. The temperature had dropped ten degrees since midnight, and the air felt stale and heavy, as if the walls themselves were holding their breath, waiting for a signal.
"Get a grip, Ashcroft," she muttered, her voice echoing too loudly against the vaulted ceiling.
She paced the marble floor, her boots making a rhythmic clack-clack-clack that usually soothed her. She passed a collection of Celtic swords, then a display of 14th-century tapestries that looked like they had been woven with dried blood.
Then she saw it. The case at the very end of the hall.
The pendant.
It was small, nestled on a bed of black velvet. A silver medallion shaped like a wolf biting its own tail-an Ouroboros of fur and fang. The placard claimed it was a ceremonial piece from the 13th century, recovered from a burial mound in Northern Europe.
Lena hated it. She'd hated it since it arrived two weeks ago.
Every time she walked past it, a sharp, cold discomfort settled in her solar plexus. It was a feeling of profound recognition, the way you might recognize a killer in a crowded room before they even draw a weapon.
She stopped in front of the glass. Her reflection stared back at her-pale skin, dark circles under her eyes, and a mass of dark hair she'd pulled into a messy bun. She looked tired. She looked human.
Then the pain hit.
It wasn't a dull ache. It was a violent, white-hot brand.
Lena gasped, her knees buckling as a searing heat flared just below her collarbone. It felt like someone had pressed a glowing coal against her skin and held it there.
"Ah-God!"
She stumbled back, her hand flying to her chest, her fingers clawing at her shirt. Her vision swam, the white marble of the floor turning into a kaleidoscope of dizzying shapes.
Then the pendant began to move.
At first, she thought it was the blood rushing in her ears, making her eyes play tricks. But the silver chain was rattling against the velvet. The medallion was trembling, vibrating with a frequency so high it made her teeth ache.
Cling. Cling. Cling.
The sound of the silver hitting the glass was like a countdown.
"No," she whispered, her heart pounding a frantic rhythm. "No, no, no."
The lights overhead flickered. The hum of the building's HVAC system faltered, dying out into a tomb-like silence. The dim, orange emergency lights kicked in, bathing the hall in a sickly, apocalyptic glow. The air grew impossibly thick, pressing against her lungs until every breath felt like she was inhaling water.
And then, she felt him.
She didn't see him, but the presence was immense. It was the feeling of a mountain leaning over her, the weight of an ocean about to crash down. It was ancient, predatory, and achingly familiar. It wrapped around her mind, a golden tether that pulled at a part of her soul she didn't know existed.
Lena's legs gave out. She hit the floor hard, her palms scraping against the cold marble.
"Please," she sobbed, the word caught in her throat. "Help me."
But the museum was empty. Only the statues were watching.
Then the world fractured.
The marble beneath her hands didn't feel like stone anymore. It felt like wet earth.
THE FIRST VISION: THE HEALER (1542)
The smell of burning pine hit her first.
Lena-or the woman who was Lena-was tied to a thick oaken post. The village square was a blur of angry faces and mud-splattered tunics. The sky was a bruised grey, heavy with the promise of rain that wouldn't come in time to save her.
"Witch!" they screamed. "Demon-seed!"
She looked down. Her hands were small, calloused from grinding herbs and tending to the sick. She wasn't a witch; she was a girl who knew how to stop a fever. But the villagers didn't care about the lives she'd saved. They only cared that the Alpha of the Great Forest had been seen at her window.
The fire licked at her feet. It was a terrifying, orange beast that roared in the wind.
Then she saw him.
A man tore through the crowd like a wolf through sheep. He wasn't human. He moved too fast, his eyes glowing like embers in the twilight. He roared-a sound that wasn't a man's voice, but the howl of a god in mourning.
He reached for her as the flames climbed her skirts, his fingers brushing hers for one agonizing second.
"Adrian!" she screamed.
Then the fire consumed everything.
THE SECOND VISION: THE SOLDIER'S WIFE (1815)
The heat of the fire vanished, replaced by a cold so sharp it felt like glass in her lungs.
Lena was lying in the mud. The air was thick with the smell of gunpowder and the metallic tang of fresh blood. All around her, the sounds of Waterloo were dying down-the moans of the wounded, the distant crack of a final musket shot.
She felt the wetness at her side. She looked down and saw a crimson stain spreading across her white bodice. A stray ball. A piece of lead that didn't care about her name.
"Stay with me! Look at me!"
A man was kneeling over her. He was wearing a tattered officer's coat, but his face was the same. The same sharp jaw, the same dark, tortured brow. And those eyes. Those golden, impossible eyes.
"Adrian," she coughed, the blood bubbling in the back of her throat. "The children..."
"I have them," he lied, his voice breaking. His hands were pressed hard against her wound, but the blood just kept coming. "I have you. I'm not letting you go. Not again. Never again."
He bent down, his forehead resting against hers. He was sobbing, a sound of such profound, immortal agony that it hurt worse than the bullet.
"Find me," she whispered as the world turned grey.
"I will always find you," he vowed.
THE THIRD VISION: THE SCHOLAR (1924)
The mud turned to a velvet rug. The smell of blood turned to the scent of old books and expensive brandy.
Lena was sitting in a high-backed chair in a dimly lit library. A glass of wine sat on the table beside her. Her head felt heavy. Her limbs felt like lead.
Opposite her sat a woman with dark hair and a cruel, beautiful smile. Selene.
"You always think love is enough, don't you?" Selene murmured, watching as Lena's hand trembled. "But he is a monster, my dear. And you are just a candle. Eventually, the wind has to blow you out."
The poison was efficient. Lena's heart slowed, each beat a struggle.
The door burst open. Adrian.
He looked younger here, dressed in a sleek tuxedo, but the exhaustion in his soul was visible in the way he moved. He saw the glass. He saw her pale face.
He didn't look at Selene. He ran to Lena, catching her before she slid from the chair.
"No," he begged, his voice a ragged whisper. "Not this time. We had only a year. Please, Lena. Just one more year."
She tried to speak, but her tongue was numb. She could only watch as the gold in his eyes turned to a sea of tears.
THE AWAKENING
"I don't know you!" Lena screamed, her voice echoing through the restricted wing of the British Museum.
She was back on the marble floor. She was clutching her head, her body racking with sobs. The visions had been so real she could still feel the heat of the fire and the cold of the mud.
"I don't know you!"
But her soul knew better. Her soul was screaming back at her, demanding she recognize the truth.
The pendant in the case suddenly shattered.
The glass didn't just crack; it exploded outward in a spray of diamond-like shards. The silver wolf-medallion snapped in half, the two pieces clattering against the marble floor like discarded bone.
Throughout the building, the alarms went mental. High-pitched shrieks bounced off the walls. Red lights spun, painting the hall in the color of the bleeding moon outside.
Lena collapsed fully. Her strength was gone. Her mind felt like a house that had been ransacked by a storm.
She lay there, gasping, staring at the broken pendant.
"What did you do to me?" she whispered hoarsely to the empty air.
She pressed her trembling fingers to her collarbone, right where the burning had been. Her skin was raised. She could feel the shape of it. A crescent. A mark. It felt like it was humming, a low-frequency vibration that resonated in her very bones.
"Ma'am? Ma'am! Can you hear me?"
Footsteps pounded toward her. Beams of flashlights cut through the darkness. Security guards-her coworkers-surrounded her.
"It's Lena! Lena, stay with us!"
"Call an ambulance! She's hemorrhaging or something-look at her neck!"
Lena flinched as hands touched her. She tried to tell them she was fine, but her voice was gone. Her vision was dimming at the edges, the world shrinking down to the flickering red lights and the sound of her own frantic heart.
The last thing she felt before the darkness claimed her wasn't the hands of the guards.
It was a shift in the air. A sudden, violent surge of power that made the guards freeze and the alarms falter for a split second.
Someone was coming.
And they weren't coming to help.
THE HOSPITAL
University College Hospital was a temple of sterile white and the smell of antiseptic.
The ambulance ride had been a blur of sirens and the metallic taste of an oxygen mask. Lena was vaguely aware of being rolled through corridors, of the bright fluorescent lights that felt like knives against her retinas.
She was in a private room now. They had sedated her, or tried to, but the visions kept dancing behind her eyelids.
Suddenly, the door to the ward didn't just open-it was nearly taken off its hinges.
The nurses at the station screamed as a man stormed past them. He didn't look like a visitor. He looked like a force of nature dressed in a thousand-pound suit. He was soaked to the bone, his dark hair plastered to his face, his eyes fixed on Room 402 with a terrifying intensity.
"Sir! You can't be back here!" a young doctor shouted, stepping into his path.
Adrian Blackthorne didn't even look at him. He simply kept walking. The doctor was physically shoved aside by a wall of unseen pressure, stumbling into a gurney as Adrian passed.
He reached Lena's door. He paused, his hand trembling as it hovered over the handle.
For seven hundred years, he had waited for this moment. For seven hundred years, he had rehearsed what he would say.
But as he pushed the door open and saw her-pale, fragile, and marked by the moon-the only thing he could do was breathe.
He crossed the room in two strides and fell to his knees beside her bed. He didn't touch her-he didn't dare. He just watched the rise and fall of her chest.
"I found you," he whispered, his voice thick with a grief that spanned centuries.
On the bed, Lena's eyes flew open. They weren't their usual brown. For a fleeting second, they reflected the silver of the moon.
"Adrian?" she whispered.
It wasn't a question. It was a memory.
Outside the window, the moon began to weep red. The hunt had officially begun.
The first rule Adrian Blackthorne had learned in seven centuries was deceptively simple:
Never touch her first.
It was a rule written in the scars on his soul and the blood on his hands. Every time he found her-every time the universe saw fit to spit her back into existence-Adrian tried to be careful. He tried to be the guardian, the silent observer, the man who waited until she was ready.
But fate was a cruel playwright. Every time he reached for her too soon, the world responded with violence. Sometimes it was an "accident." Sometimes it was a war. Sometimes it was just a sudden, unexplained illness that stole her breath.
Touching her before the bond fully stabilized was like trying to handle raw lightning with bare hands. It accelerated the curse. It pulled the inevitable tragedy forward, like a blade drawn too quickly from its sheath, slicing the hands of those who held it.
And yet-
Rules meant nothing when the soul began to burn.
The hospital corridor smelled of sterile antiseptic, cold metal, and the sharp, sour tang of human fear. It was a place where life and death negotiated on a daily basis, but tonight, the negotiation was over.
Adrian stood at the far end of the hallway, a silhouette of black tailored perfection that felt entirely out of place among the scuffed linoleum and buzzing fluorescent tubes. He was too sharp, too still, too... unmoving. He didn't shift his weight. He didn't blink. He simply existed, a predator in a suit, waiting for the cage to open.
His hands were shoved deep into the pockets of his slacks. He kept them there to hide the fine tremor in his fingers-the physical manifestation of a wolf that was currently trying to chew its way out of his ribcage.
The hospital staff felt it. Doctors slowed their pace as they passed him, their conversations dying in their throats. Nurses looked at him once, their eyes widening, before darting away. They didn't know he was a werewolf. They didn't know he was seven hundred years old. But their lizard-brains-the ancient parts of them that still remembered being hunted in the tall grass-told them to run.
Behind the reinforced glass wall of Room 402 lay Lena Ashcroft.
She looked so small. So terribly mortal.
The heart monitor beeped with a rhythmic, mechanical indifference. Beep. Beep. Beep. Every sound was a reminder that her heart was a muscle of flesh and blood, a fragile thing that could stop at any second.
"She's stable, Mr. Blackthorne."
The doctor-a man named Miller who had clearly been woken up at 3:00 AM-stood five feet away, refusing to get closer. He kept looking at the clipboard in his hands as if it were a shield. "But we're seeing things we can't explain. The neurological spikes during her 'collapse'... they shouldn't be possible. It's as if her brain was processing a lifetime of data in three seconds."
Adrian didn't look at him. His eyes were fixed on Lena's pale profile. "And the mark?"
Miller swallowed, the sound audible in the quiet hall. "Yes. The... sigil. It's fascinating, really. It's not a tattoo. It's not a burn. It's as if the pigmentation of her skin has been rearranged from the inside out. It's pulsing, Mr. Blackthorne. It's actually pulsing."
"Leave her," Adrian said. It wasn't a suggestion. It was a command that carried the weight of a king.
"Sir, we need to run more tests-"
Adrian finally turned his head. His eyes weren't gold yet, but they were dark, infinite, and terrifying. "You will leave her room. You will tell your staff that Miss Ashcroft is under my private care. You will take the generous donation I've already wired to this hospital's foundation, and you will forget that anything unusual happened tonight."
Miller opened his mouth to protest, but the words died. He nodded once, jerkily, and turned on his heel, fleeing toward the safety of the nurses' station.
"You're scaring the locals again, Adrian. It's unbecoming."
The voice was cool, weary, and dry as a desert bone.
Morgana Vale stepped out from the shadows of the vending machine alcove. She looked like a woman in her late thirties, dressed in a battered leather jacket and heavy boots, but her eyes held the exhaustion of an era. She was a Truth Keeper-a witch whose line had been tied to Adrian's curse since the very beginning.
"I didn't ask you to be here, Morgana," Adrian said, turning back to the glass.
"No, you just radiated enough psychic distress to wake every sensitive within fifty miles," she replied, leaning against the wall. She pulled a pack of cigarettes from her pocket, looked at the 'No Smoking' sign, and tucked them away with a sigh. "She's waking up, isn't she?"
"She said my name," Adrian whispered. The admission felt like a confession. "In the museum. Before she ever saw my face."
Morgana's expression shifted from bored to grim. "That's not supposed to happen. Not in Arc One. Not before the first full moon of the cycle. If she's remembering now, the bond is moving at five times its usual speed."
"I know."
"Which means the Order of the Eclipse is already on their way," Morgana continued, her voice dropping an octave. "Lucien won't wait for her to understand who she is. He'll strike while she's still fragile. You know his philosophy: Better to kill the flower than let the forest burn."
Adrian's jaw tightened. The thought of the Hunter, Lucien Hale, near Lena made the air in the hallway turn cold. Small frost patterns began to bloom on the glass partition.
"I will kill him," Adrian said simply.
"You've tried," Morgana reminded him. "In 1612. In 1890. He's as immortal as you are, Adrian, just for different reasons. You can't protect her by playing bodyguard. You have to tell her the truth."
"The truth is what kills her! Every time!" Adrian finally snapped, his voice a low roar that made the lights overhead flicker. "The truth is a weight she can't carry until her power stabilizes. If I tell her she's the Lunar Sovereign, her own mind will tear itself apart trying to house that much divinity."
Morgana looked at Lena, then back at Adrian. Her eyes softened with a pity that Adrian hated. "Maybe. But look at her. She's not the girl from the 1500s anymore. She's not the scholar from the 20s. This world is different. Maybe she's stronger than you think."
Suddenly, the heart monitor inside the room changed.
Beep-beep-beep-beep.
The rhythm accelerated into a frantic staccato.
Adrian moved. He didn't use the door; he moved through the space with a blur of speed that left a vacuum of air in his wake.
Inside the room, the temperature had plummeted. Lena was thrashing against the thin hospital sheets, her dark hair a tangled mess against the white pillow. Her skin was no longer just pale; it was translucent, the silver veins beneath her surface glowing with an ethereal, terrifying light.
"Lena!" Adrian's voice was a plea.
She woke with a scream that tore the air. It wasn't just a sound; it was a release of pressure.
Lena bolted upright, her eyes wide and unfocused. She was gasping for air, her hands clutching at her throat, right where the mark was glowing a fierce, angry silver.
"Fire..." she choked out. "The smell of... the smoke... Adrian!"
She turned her head, her gaze clashing with his.
The world stopped.
The beeping of the monitor, the hum of the city outside, the rustle of the wind-all of it faded into a dull, distant roar. There was only him.
Lena's breath hitched. She didn't look like a woman who had just seen a stranger. She looked like a woman who had finally found the missing piece of a puzzle she'd been working on for a thousand years.
"It's you," she whispered. Her voice was hoarse, raw from screaming. "The man from the snow. The man from the fire."
Adrian stayed at the edge of the bed, his hands clenched at his sides. He was fighting every instinct he possessed to reach out and pull her into his arms. "Lena. You're safe. You're in London. It's 2026."
"No," she said, her eyes filling with tears that shone like mercury. "I'm nowhere. I'm everywhere. Why do I remember your hands? Why do I know the way you smell before you even walk into the room?"
She reached out a trembling hand toward him. "I keep dying, Adrian. Over and over. I see myself falling. I see you catching me. And every time, you're crying. Why are you always crying?"
Adrian felt his heart shatter. It was a familiar sensation, but it never got easier. "Because I am a man who has lived too long, and you are the only thing that makes the years worth counting."
"Who are you?" she asked, her voice dropping to a whisper. "What are you?"
Adrian looked at Morgana, who stood in the doorway, her face unreadable. He looked back at Lena-the girl who didn't believe in monsters, now staring at one.
"I am a werewolf, Lena," he said, the truth finally falling between them like a heavy stone. "I am the Alpha of a pack that died out before your great-grandparents were born. I am an immortal who has loved you for seven centuries."
He expected her to scream. He expected her to call for the nurses.
Instead, Lena let out a short, hysterical laugh. "A werewolf? Really? Not a vampire? Not a ghost?"
"Does it matter?" Adrian asked, stepping closer.
Lena looked down at her hands. They were shaking. "No. Because the weirdest part isn't what you are. It's what I am."
She looked up at him, and for the first time, the fear in her eyes was replaced by something much more dangerous: Awareness.
"I'm not just a security guard, am I?" she asked. "When that pendant broke... I felt something click. Like a lock being turned. I feel... powerful, Adrian. And I feel so, so angry."
"The Sovereign," Morgana whispered from the door. "She's waking up."
Adrian's eyes flashed a brilliant, lethal gold. "Lena, listen to me. You have to stay calm. Your power-it's tied to your emotions. If you let it out now, before you're ready, the Order will find us."
"Let them find us!" Lena cried, her voice echoing with a strange, metallic resonance. The glass of the water pitcher on her bedside table began to spiderweb with cracks. "I'm tired of running! I'm tired of dying! I want to know why this is happening!"
She lunged forward, reaching for his hand.
"Lena, don't!" Adrian warned, but he was too slow-or perhaps, deep down, he didn't want to be fast enough.
Their fingers met.
The contact was a detonation.
It wasn't a touch; it was a collision of two celestial bodies. A shockwave of silver and gold light exploded from the point of contact, ripping outward with enough force to shatter the lightbulbs in the ceiling. The glass rained down like glowing snow.
Lena's head snapped back, her body arching as the bond finally, violently, slammed into place.
THE MEMORY STORM
It wasn't a vision this time. It was a deluge.
She saw them in a garden in 14th-century Italy, sharing a peach beneath a canopy of vines. She felt the sweetness of the fruit on her tongue. She saw them on a ship in the middle of the Atlantic, huddling together against the spray of salt water as they fled a plague. She saw them in a small cottage in the English countryside, Adrian reading to her by candlelight while she knitted a blanket for a baby that would never be born.
Every kiss. Every argument. Every moment of mundane, beautiful life they had managed to steal between the tragedies.
It all hit her in a single, crushing second.
She felt Adrian's grief-seven hundred years of it. She felt the weight of every grave he had stood over. She felt the sheer, agonizing depth of his devotion.
And then, she felt the Sovereign.
Deep inside her, something massive and celestial uncurled its wings. It was a cold, lunar power that didn't care about "Lena." It cared about the stars. It cared about balance. It cared about the fact that it had been imprisoned in mortal flesh for far too long.
Adrian let out an inhuman roar as the power surged through him as well. He wasn't just an Alpha anymore; he was the anchor for a goddess. He gripped her hands, his claws extending, his face shifting into something more lupine, more ancient.
The room was a vortex of wind and light.
Then, as quickly as it had begun, it stopped.
The silence that followed was deafening. The hospital room was a wreck-glass everywhere, the monitors fried, the walls scorched by the sheer intensity of the energy release.
Lena sat there, her hands still locked in Adrian's. She wasn't shaking anymore.
She looked at him, and her eyes were no longer brown. They were the color of the moon during an eclipse-a shimmering, liquid silver.
"I remember," she said. Her voice was different. It carried the weight of centuries.
She looked at the mark on her chest, which was now glowing with a steady, permanent light.
"I remember why I chose this," she whispered, looking back at Adrian. "I chose to be human so I could love you. But the universe... the universe wouldn't let me."
She squeezed his hands, her grip surprisingly strong. "They're coming, Adrian. I can feel them. Lucien and the others. They're in the parking lot."
Adrian stood up, pulling her with him. He didn't care about the doctors or the nurses or the mess. He only cared about the woman who was finally, truly back in his arms.
"Let them come," Adrian growled, his golden eyes glowing in the wreckage of the room. "I've spent seven hundred years learning how to kill them. This time, we aren't the prey."
Morgana stepped into the room, her hand hovering over a dagger hidden in her jacket. "We need to move. Now. The hospital isn't a fortress."
Lena looked at the window. The moon was still red, but as she watched, a ripple of silver passed over its surface.
"No," Lena said, a small, dark smile touching her lips. "I'm done being protected. Adrian, give me your coat."
"What?"
"We're walking out the front door," Lena said, her voice filled with a new, terrifying authority. "And if they want the Sovereign, they're going to have to go through the Moon first."
Adrian stared at her, a mixture of awe and absolute terror filling his chest.
She wasn't the girl who didn't believe in monsters anymore.
She was the monster's queen.