Midnight ca and went. I knew because at so point between the waves of heat that kept crashing through , I’d opened my eyes long enough to see the clock on Kael’s nightstand tick past twelve and into the small hours of morning when everything hurt worse and ti stopped having aning.
The heat had gone from manageable to brutal sowhere around eleven and now I was shaking with it, skin too tight and too hot and every nerve ending screaming for relief I didn’t know how to ask for.
Kael’s hand stroked through my hair, steady and grounding, while Riven’s thumb traced circles on the inside of my wrist where my pulse hamred against the skin. Draven had draped a cool cloth over my forehead that did exactly nothing but I appreciated the gesture anyway, and Thorne’s presence at the foot of the bed felt like an anchor keeping from flying apart completely.
"Talk to ," Kael murmured, his voice cutting through the haze. "Tell what you need."
What I needed was for my skin to stop trying to crawl off my bones, but that didn’t seem like a useful answer so I just shook my head and tried to breathe through the next wave that rolled through like fire in my veins.
"Selene." Riven’s voice this ti, patient but firm. "You have to tell us. We can’t help if you won’t let us in."
I turned my face into Kael’s chest and let out a sound that was half sob, half growl of frustration. "I don’t know what I need. I just—everything hurts and I can’t think and I don’t know how to make it stop."
"The bond will make it stop," Draven said from sowhere to my left. "But only if you let us complete it."
"I know." The words ca out muffled against Kael’s shirt. "I know that. I just—"
Another wave hit and this one was different, sharper, like my body had decided it was done waiting and was going to force the issue whether I was ready or not.
I arched off the bed with a gasp that turned into a moan I definitely should have been embarrassed about, and Kael’s arms tightened around while Riven’s grip on my wrist went vice-tight.
"That’s the peak," Kael said, and his voice had gone rough in a way that sent shivers down my spine for entirely different reasons. "Your heat just hit full strength."
"Make it stop." I was begging and I didn’t care. "Please. I can’t—I can’t do this."
"Yes, you can." His hand cupped my face, tilting it up so I had to et his eyes. "You’re the strongest person I’ve ever t. You can survive this."
"I don’t want to just survive it." My voice cracked. "I want it to stop hurting."
"Then let us help." His thumb brushed over my cheekbone. "Tell yes. Give permission to make this better."
I looked at him through the haze of heat and pain and saw nothing but absolute certainty in his gaze, like he’d been born to do exactly this and was just waiting for to realize it.
"Yes." The word fell out of . "Please. Yes."
His pupils blew wide and I watched his control fracture in real ti, watched him shift from the asured Alpha King into sothing more primal, and then his mouth was on mine and the kiss obliterated every coherent thought I’d ever had.
Not gentle. Not asking. Just taking with the kind of possessive certainty that rewired my entire nervous system and made forget there was ever a version of that didn’t need this, didn’t crave this, didn’t burn for exactly this.
When he finally pulled back we were both breathing hard and I was clutching his shirt so tightly my knuckles had gone white.
"Better?" His voice had gone gravelly.
I nodded because speech was beyond .
"Good." He shifted, rolling so I was pinned beneath him, and the weight of him against made the heat ease just enough that I could breathe again. "Because we’re just getting started."
Riven’s hand slid under my shirt, palm flat against my ribs, and the skin-to-skin contact sent sparks racing along every nerve ending in ways that had nothing to do with pain and everything to do with need.
"We’re not completing the bond tonight," Draven said, and I turned my head to find him watching with those dark eyes that catalogued everything. "Your heat needs to peak first. But we can ease it. Take the edge off."
"How?" I managed, and Thorne’s hand closed around my ankle with just enough pressure to remind he was there, that all four of them were there, that I wasn’t alone in this.
"By reminding your body what it’s waiting for," Kael murmured against my neck, his mouth tracing the line where my pulse hamred. "By showing you what the bond is going to feel like when it finally snaps."
His teeth scraped over my throat, not hard enough to break skin but enough to make gasp, and the phantom sensation of what that bite would feel like when it was real sent heat flooding through that had nothing to do with my cycle and everything to do with want.
"Tell to stop," he breathed against my skin. "Right now. Before I forget how."
I fisted my hand in his hair instead of answering and pulled him closer, and the growl that rumbled through his chest vibrated against in ways that made forget my own na.
Riven’s hand splayed over my stomach, anchoring while Kael’s mouth moved lower, and Draven’s cool fingers wrapped around my wrist to check my pulse while Thorne’s grip on my ankle kept grounded.
Four of them touching . Four points of contact. Four different sensations that sohow all blurred together into one overwhelming wave of this is right, this is safe, this is ho.
The heat pulled back, not gone but manageable, and I sagged against the bed with relief so profound I felt tears prick the corners of my eyes.
"There you go," Kael murmured, pressing a kiss to my forehead. "We’ve got you."
I believed him.
For the first ti since my mother died, I let myself believe soone when they said they’d take care of .
The heat would co back — I knew that, could already feel it building again in the background like a storm gathering strength — but for now, wrapped in their combined presence with their hands on and their scents surrounding , I felt safe enough to close my eyes and breathe.
"Sleep if you can," Riven said softly. "We’ll be here when you wake up."
I wanted to stay awake, wanted to hold onto this feeling of being wanted and protected and claid, but exhaustion pulled at with the weight of weeks of running finally catching up.
"Don’t leave." It ca out slurred with sleep.
"Never," Kael promised against my hair.
"Ours," Thorne added from the foot of the bed, and even half-asleep I felt the possessiveness in that single word settle into my bones like truth.
The last thing I registered before sleep took was the feeling of four different hands touching , four different heartbeats steady and strong, four different promises that I wasn’t alone anymore.
And for the first ti in two years, I let myself believe it might be true.
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