He crossed the distance between us in two steps.
Didn’t ask. Didn’t hesitate. Just moved.
His hand ca up to cup the side of my face warm, calloused, steadier than my pulse and I forgot how to breathe.
"Tell to stop." His thumb traced my cheekbone. "Right now. Before this goes sowhere we can’t walk back from."
I should have. Every survival instinct I’d honed over two years of rogue camps was screaming at to step back, put distance between us, rebuild the wall I’d just admitted I was tired of maintaining.
Instead I leaned into his hand.
His pupils blew wide.
"Selene—"
"I’m not asking you to claim ." My voice ca out rougher than I ant. "I’m asking you to make it stop hurting."
His jaw clenched hard enough I heard his teeth click. "If I touch you the way you’re asking to touch you, I won’t be able to stop at just making it stop."
"Good."
That one word snapped whatever leash he’d been holding himself on.
He kissed .
Not gentle. Not asking permission he’d already been given. Just his mouth on mine with the kind of certainty that rewired my nervous system on contact. I made a sound I’d never made before desperate and hungry and honest in ways I’d spent twenty-one years trying not to be and his other hand found my hip, fingers pressing hard enough to leave marks I’d feel tomorrow.
I didn’t care.
The heat that had been building all evening exploded through . My hands fisted in his shirt, pulling him closer, needing him closer, trying to crawl inside his skin because mine felt three sizes too small.
He kissed like he’d been thinking about it since the mont I walked into his study. Thorough. Possessive. Like he had all the ti in the world and planned to use every second learning exactly what made co apart.
I broke away gasping. "Kael—"
"I know." His forehead dropped to mine. His breath ca harsh and uneven. "I can feel it. Your heat’s accelerating."
"Is that—" I couldn’t finish the sentence. My brain had stopped forming complete thoughts sowhere around the ti his hand had slid from my hip to the small of my back, pressing flush against him.
"Normal? For a mate bond trying to snap into place?" His voice had gone gravelly. "Yeah. It’s normal."
Mate bond.
Those two words should have terrified .
Instead my biology did a victory lap.
"We’re not—" I had to stop. Breathe. Try again. "I haven’t agreed to that."
"I know." He pulled back just enough to look at . His eyes had gone almost black. "But your heat doesn’t care what you’ve agreed to. It knows what it wants."
"And what does it want."
"." No hesitation. "Inside you. Knotted. Marked. Bred."
The blunt honesty of it sent heat straight between my legs.
My knees gave out.
He caught . One arm banding around my waist, the other sliding under my knees, and then I was off my feet entirely. He lifted like I weighed nothing and set on the counter.
The cold granite against my bare thighs shocked a gasp out of .
"Better?" His hands bracketed my hips, keeping steady.
I nodded. Couldn’t speak. My heart was trying to break through my ribs.
He stepped between my legs and I stopped breathing again.
We were eye level now. Close enough that I could see gold flecks in his irises I’d never noticed before. Close enough that when he spoke, I felt the vibration of it.
"I need you to understand what you’re asking for." His hands flexed on my hips. "If we do this — if I help you through your heat it’s going to create a bond. Temporary at first. But your biology is going to want to make it permanent."
"How permanent."
"Life permanent." He didn’t blink. "You’ll feel . I’ll feel you. Distance won’t matter. Ti won’t matter. You’ll be mine and I’ll be yours and there’s no undoing it."
I should have been scared.
I wasn’t.
"What if I want that."
His grip on my hips went tight enough to bruise. "Don’t say that unless you an it."
"What if I an it."
He made a sound low in his chest that vibrated through both of us. "Then you’re in trouble, because I’ve been holding myself back for a week and I’m about thirty seconds from bending you over this counter and making sure you feel for the next month."
The image that put in my head did things to that should have been illegal.
I grabbed the front of his shirt. Pulled him closer. "Do it."
"Not here." He peeled my hands off his shirt. Stepped back. "Not fast. Not your first ti."
I made a sound that might have been a whimper.
He smiled. Actually smiled. It was predatory and warm and absolutely devastating. "Oh, I’m going to enjoy making you beg."
"I’m not—"
"You will." He pulled off the counter. Steadied when my legs wobbled. "Co on."
"Where—"
"My room." He laced his fingers through mine. "Where I can take my ti with you without worrying about pack mbers walking in on trying to figure out how many different ways I can make you co."
My brain short-circuited.
He tugged toward the doorway. I followed on legs that felt like they’d forgotten their purpose.
We made it three steps into the hallway before I heard footsteps.
Kael heard them too. His hand tightened on mine.
Draven rounded the corner.
He stopped. Looked at Kael. Looked at . Looked at our joined hands.
His nostrils flared.
"She’s in heat." Not a question.
Kael’s jaw set. "Yes."
Draven’s eyes locked on mine. Dark. Assessing. "And you’re helping her through it."
"She asked."
"Did she." Draven took one step closer. Then another. His gaze never left my face. "Or did her biology ask and you answered before her brain caught up."
My chin lifted. "I asked."
He studied for a long mont. Then his attention shifted back to Kael. "You bonding her?"
"That’s between and her."
"No." Draven’s voice went cold. "It’s between all of us."
The hallway went tense.
I looked between them. Kael had gone still in that way he did when he was restraining himself from doing violence. Draven looked like he was carved from ice.
"Explain that." My voice ca out steadier than I felt.
Draven’s gaze ca back to . "You’re not just his. You’re the Hybrid Queen the prophecy talks about. Which ans bonding you isn’t just a personal decision. It’s political. It affects the whole pack."
"I don’t care about prophecies."
"You will when the demon at our borders figures out you’re here." He crossed his arms. "But that’s a problem for tomorrow. Tonight’s problem is that if Kael bonds you alone, the rest of us lose our chance."
"Chance at what."
"You." Simple. Direct. "We’re all tied to the prophecy. All four of us. You’re ant to bond all of us or none of us."
The hallway tilted.
Kael’s hand steadied . "She doesn’t need to hear this now."
"Yes, she does." Draven’s voice didn’t soften. "Before she makes a decision she can’t unmake."
I looked up at Kael. "Is that true."
His jaw worked. "Yes."
"Why didn’t you tell ."
"Because I was trying to give you ti to—"
"To what?" My voice cracked. "To accidentally bond myself to all four of you before I understood what I was agreeing to?"
Silence.
Draven broke it. "Your heat is accelerating. If you’re going through it with soone, decide now. But understand the consequences."
He walked past us. Didn’t look back.
I stood in the hallway with my hand in Kael’s and my heat burning through and the sudden realization that I’d been one kiss away from changing my entire life without understanding the fine print.
Kael’s thumb stroked over my knuckles. "Do you want to walk you back to your room."
I pulled my hand free. Wrapped my arms around myself. "Yeah."
"Selene—"
"Just walk back."
He did.
We didn’t talk.
When we reached my door, I didn’t look at him. "I need to think."
"Take all the ti you need."
I went inside. Closed the door.
Slid down it until I was sitting on the floor with my knees pulled to my chest and my heat trying to claw its way out of my skin.
All four of them.
Or none of them.
The prophecy had decided that for before I even knew it existed.
God, I was tired of other people deciding who I was supposed to be.
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