Here’s sothing nobody tells you about living in a pack house.
The silence has a pulse.
Back in the rogue settlents, silence ant danger. It ant soone was holding their breath and waiting for a reason to stop. Here it was different — fuller sohow, like the quiet itself had weight and belonged to sothing. I’d been awake an hour before sunrise trying to figure out why it felt so different and that was the best I could co up with.
The house was inhabited in a way the settlents never were. Those were just collections of people trying not to die in the sa location. This was sothing that had been lived in for generations and knew it.
I didn’t like how much I noticed that.
Three days in and I had a system.
Mornings: kitchen before anyone else. I learned which cabinet held the mugs without asking. Learned that the coffee situation was self-serve and nobody tracked who started it. Made myself useful enough to be unremarkable — washed my own dishes, wiped the counter after, stayed out of the way of the pack mbers who moved through like they owned the air.
They did own the air. But still.
Afternoons: map the grounds. I’d confird three exits, suspected two more. There was a blind spot near the east garden where the tree line ca close enough to the fence that soone desperate might make it through.
I wasn’t planning to run. I was just noting things. Old habit.
Evenings: back in my room before the heat had opinions.
The system worked fine until the third afternoon when I turned a corner in the east corridor and walked directly into a wall that turned out to be a person.
I stumbled. He didn’t move.
Not an inch. Not a flinch. Just stood there in the middle of the hallway like he’d been placed there with complete intention, and looked at the way you look at sothing you’ve already spent considerable ti thinking about.
Dark eyes. Unhurried. Taking inventory.
I recognized the feeling because I do it too, and that was sohow worse.
"Selene." My na in his mouth was precise. Every syllable approved before release.
"Draven Voss." Not a question — Riven’s description had been accurate down to the bone. Controlled. Don’t mistake it for harmless.
One corner of his mouth moved. Not quite a smile. More like an acknowledgnt. "You’ve been avoiding this introduction."
"I’ve been settling in."
"Into three of four." He tilted his head by about half an inch. "You’re working through us by order of perceived threat. Kael first — imdiate power. Riven second — imdiate access to your interior. third, because I haven’t been readable yet." A pause that felt deliberate. "You put yourself in the hallway eventually though. Interesting."
The heat, which had been quiet all morning, picked that exact mont to stir low in my stomach.
I kept my face still. "Are you going to move."
"No." A pleasant nothing in his expression. "Walk with ."
"I don’t go places with people I haven’t evaluated."
Sothing shifted in those dark eyes. Not irritation. Closer to satisfaction — like I’d answered a question he hadn’t asked out loud yet.
He turned and walked toward the east garden without looking back.
I stood in the hallway for a full five seconds.
Then I followed him and hated myself a little for it.
---
The garden was cold the way evenings get cold at the end of autumn — not cruel, just present. Draven moved through it like he’d decided exactly how much space he was going to occupy and not a centiter more.
"Your coven." I kept pace beside him. "Riven said they used you."
"Fourteen years as a negotiating instrunt." No emotion in it. Just facts that had been processed sowhere far from the telling. "My hybrid blood made valuable to both sides of any conflict. They pointed at problems and called it diplomacy."
"And when you stopped being useful?"
"They made plans to ensure that was permanent." He stopped near the low stone bench at the garden’s far edge. Didn’t sit. "Kael’s border offer was open for two years before I accepted. I kept waiting to find the trap in it."
"Did you find one?"
"No." A beat. "That was the most unsettling part."
I almost laughed. I caught it before it escaped but from the way his eyes moved I think he heard it anyway.
The heat was louder now. That slow roll I was starting to recognize — not the feral wave, not the pulse, but the awareness kind. The kind that ant my biology had noticed sothing and was filing a report whether I wanted it to or not.
My thumbnail found my finger.
His gaze dropped to my hand. Back up.
"It responds to recognition." Even. Informational. "Not dominance. Your blood knows mine — sowhere in your lineage there was a vampire-hybrid, and that thread runs forward. What you’re feeling isn’t a threat response."
"I know what I’m feeling."
"You know what suppressants let through." He looked at steadily. "That’s not the sa thing."
I opened my mouth. Closed it.
He wasn’t wrong and I hated that too.
"I’m not agreeing to anything." My voice ca out flatter than I ant it to.
"Nobody asked you to." He turned back toward the house like the conversation had reached its natural end. "I’m giving you information. What you do with it is yours."
I watched him go. Precise steps. Not a single movent wasted.
Don’t mistake it for harmless, Riven had said.
The heat rolled through , warm and certain, and I pressed my fingers against my sternum and breathed out slow.
Behind , sowhere in the oldest part of the garden where the oak trees grew too close together, sothing shifted.
I turned around.
Nothing there.
Just shadows between the trees. Perfectly still. The kind of still that wasn’t empty — the kind that ant sothing had decided to be very, very quiet.
I stared at the tree line for a long mont.
The shadows stared back.
I went inside. Counted the exits on the way. Told myself the prickling on the back of my neck was just the cold.
I almost believed it.
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