Epilogue
Dane
The ridge cuts a sharp line against the sky. Not beautiful. Not poetic. Just there—like it’s always been. I walk it slowly, boots pressing into dirt still damp with morning. The sun’s barely up, coloring everything in grays and half-shadows.
This is where Marcus fell.
I stop at the spot, marked only by disturbed earth and memory. No shrine. No marker. Wolves don’t need them. The pack knows.
Three days since Nyxiana arrived. Three days of quietly reinforcing what almost broke. The wolves move with purpose now—careful, focused. Not healed. Not “back to normal.” Just ... continuing.
Nova was right from the start. About Phil. About him being Faelan. About the threat that came dressed as help when we were already cracking. I didn’t see it then; how precisely he targeted our fault lines. Not randomly. Not opportunistically. He studied us. Knew exactly where to press.
The pack nearly fractured before we ever faced a real fight. That’s what keeps me up most nights. Not the battle we survived, but how close we came to destroying ourselves.
I scan the territory from this vantage point.
Ash Hollow spreads below—cabins, training yard, the main lodge with smoke rising from the chimney.
My wolves move through morning routines.
Ben organizing the day’s patrols. Callum at the armory.
Kari’s voice carrying from the training grounds.
The entire pack working to hone their fighting skills—skills they’d started taking for granted. Skills I’d let them take for granted.
After defeating Maelik with Shadow Peak, I thought the worst was behind us. Thought our new pack could finally live in peace, that I could ease up on the drilling, the constant vigilance.
That was my biggest mistake. I let us get soft when I should have kept us sharp.
The land feels different now. Not peaceful. I don’t trust peace. But solid. Grounded. Like it’s holding its breath with us, watching for the next threat. The air carries scents of pine, cold earth, and lingering magic; not distant or abstract, but concrete as gunpowder.
I don’t blame myself for what happened. Can’t afford that. But I see now what I missed: strength isn’t control. It’s adaptation. It’s knowing when to hold the line and when to fucking move.
I turn at the sound of footsteps. Nova appears at the ridge’s edge, hair pulled back tight, face clear in the morning light. She doesn’t smile, but something in her expression settles when she sees me. Relief, maybe. Or just the simple fact that we’re both still here.
She reads everything in my stance, my scent. The weight I’m carrying, the plans forming in my head, the fierce protectiveness that drives every decision.
I don’t soften when she approaches—that’s not who we are. But when she takes her place beside me, something in my chest eases. She’s here. We’re here. Together.
We stand side by side, surveying what we’re building. What we protected. What we’d die before losing.
This ridge holds history now. Blood and magic and choices that can’t be unmade. But it’s not an ending. It’s a marker. A reminder that the pack survived not because I dominated every threat, but because I finally learned when to let others lead.
I place my hand on the small of Nova’s back. Not a claim, a connection. Her body heat seeps through the fabric of her jacket. Solid. Real.
She leans in a little, just slightly. We stand in silence, watching Ash Hollow wake.
“What are you thinking about?” Nova asks quietly.
I don’t look at her right away, still scanning the territory below. “The pack. How everything’s shifted.”
Nova follows my gaze, studying the figures moving around the compound. “You think it’ll hold?”
“Has to.” I shrug one shoulder. “Some edges are still raw.”
She nods, reading between my words. “Harper and Ben?”
“Yeah.” I watch as Harper crosses the yard below, her steps careful, her body angled away from Ben as he checks the patrol roster. “She looks exhausted.”
“She is.” Nova’s voice softens slightly. “Maybe she’d be better off going back with Isla tomorrow. Clean break.”
“Maybe.” I don’t disagree. Ben’s a walking disaster when it comes to anything emotional, and it’s a good thing he’s a solid beta because his personal life is a wreck. “Hell, maybe he’d be better off if she left too. Put them both out of their misery.”
“But I won’t push,” I add. “Their choice. Their pain.”
A brief silence settles between us before Nova shifts her weight. “What about Kari and her attitude toward Rafe? That tension isn’t going anywhere.”
“Doesn’t make sense,” I admit. “But what does lately? At least he’s staying. Him and Ansel both.”
“Why?” Nova asks. “Why are they still here?”
“Because some fights follow you,” I answer. Below, I can see Rafe and Callum near the Lodge, heads bent over what looks like a map—probably the perimeter upgrades they’ve been planning.
Nova follows my gaze. “He told you that?”
“Didn’t have to.” I shift position, still tracking Rafe’s movements.
“A man doesn’t just show up with that kind of training and stay without asking for anything in return.
He’s not settling in. He’s waiting. For what, I don’t know.
But he’s got unfinished business somewhere, and right now, they’re useful to us. ”
“They’re more than that.”
I don’t argue. She’s right. They’ve become something else to the pack—not quite family, but a stability we need.
“Callum’s stepped up,” I say, changing the subject. “Still volatile as hell, but the pack listens to him now.”
Nova makes a small sound of agreement. “They trust him. Different than before.”
“Maybe I should too. Not just as a soldier. As leadership.”
She turns to study my face. “You’re changing how you run things.”
“Have to,” I say simply. “The way I was running things before? That almost got us killed.”
Nova’s eyes drift to where Nyxiana stands near the edge of the training yard, observing without interfering. “She’s changing things too. The energy feels ... different with her here.”
“More stable,” I agree. “Even without saying what she is.”
“You going to ask her?”
“Eventually.” I keep my voice neutral. “For now, I’m just watching.”
Nova goes quiet, her body suddenly alert. I follow her gaze to the northern ridge where a figure stands—distant, still, just watching. The wind shifts, but I catch no scent. Nothing about him reads as a threat, but the timing isn’t random.
“That’s not Faelan,” Nova says, voice low.
“No,” I say, my jaw locking tight. “But whatever Faelan started … I feel like this is just the beginning.”
~ THE END ~