Chapter 18 Rune
EIGHTEEN
RUNE
Consciousness crept back slowly, filtered through layers of sensation that felt entirely foreign.
Pain registered first—sharp stabs along his ribs where Birch’s claws had found purchase and the dull throb in his shoulder where teeth had torn flesh.
But beneath the ache, something else hummed.
Peace. Deep, settled contentment that had no business existing in a body this battered.
Rune’s eyes opened to morning light streaming through his bedroom window.
The familiar space looked different somehow, charged with an energy that made his wolf purr with satisfaction.
Electra lay against him, her naked form curved into his side, and her dark hair spilling across his chest. Her scent had changed overnight—deeper now, threaded with something that belonged entirely to him.
The mate mark on her neck caught the light, a small crescent of puncture wounds already healing.
Mine.
He flexed his fingers experimentally. The wounds that should have taken days to heal were already knitting together, tissue regenerating at a rate that defied even shifter healing.
His wolf stirred, smugly pleased. The completed bond.
It had to be. She was healing him simply by existing beside him, by choosing him, by accepting what they were meant to become.
The mate bond thrummed between them like a living thing, no longer the tentative connection of before but something forged in permanence.
He could sense her even in sleep—the steady rhythm of her breathing, the warmth of her dreams, the absolute trust radiating from her unconscious form.
It was intoxicating. Grounding. Everything he’d never allowed himself to want.
She chose this. Chose me.
The memory of last night crystallized. Not the claiming itself, though his body still hummed with the memory of her beneath him, but the moment she’d looked him in the eyes and said she was ready. No hesitation. No fear. Just fierce, beautiful certainty that they belonged together.
He’d been injured, bandaged from her gentle ministrations, exhausted from the duel with Birch.
Any rational part of him should have insisted on waiting, on healing first, on approaching the mating with the caution it deserved.
But nothing could have stopped what happened between them. Nothing should have.
Now, lying in the aftermath, Rune felt fundamentally altered.
Not weakened by love, as he’d always feared, but sharpened.
Focused. The anxious tension that had lived in his chest for twenty years had dissolved, replaced by something that felt like coming home.
He wasn’t bracing against an uncertain future anymore.
He was stepping into it—into love, into permanence—and instead of compromising his leadership, it had aligned him with who he was always meant to be.
If only she could see this, he thought, and for a moment his mother’s face flickered behind his eyelids.
The grief was still there, would always be there, but it no longer felt like a weight dragging him under.
His mother would have loved Electra’s sharp wit, her refusal to be intimidated by Alpha authority, her fierce independence.
She would have understood why he’d risked everything to keep her.
A feeling of rightness settled over him, warm and certain. His mother was watching. Guiding him, even now. The timing of meeting Electra on the anniversary of her death couldn’t be coincidence. His mother’s hand was in this, pushing him toward the happiness he’d convinced himself he didn’t deserve.
His phone erupted into sound, the harsh ring shattering the quiet intimacy of the morning. Rune reached for it without moving away from Electra, checking the caller ID with a grimace.
Forrest.
“This better be important,” Rune growled into the phone, keeping his voice low.
“Oh, it’s important.” Forrest’s tone carried an undercurrent of barely contained excitement. “The council called an emergency meeting. News travels fast in a small town, especially when their Alpha beats the shit out of a rival in the middle of Main Street.”
Rune closed his eyes, already calculating. “When?”
“An hour. They want to discuss integration logistics. You won the challenge which means you now hold Alpha authority over both the Hale Pack and what’s left of Birch’s people. The Fen Pack is yours by right of combat.”
The political implications crashed over him like a cold wave.
This was the moment he’d been preparing for without realizing it.
If the packs were going to evolve beyond outdated traditions, if human mates were going to be accepted into their world, it would happen now. Or it would never happen at all.
“There’s more,” Forrest continued. “They want to discuss pack laws while the packs are merging.”
Rune’s wolf stirred. “They’re moving fast.”
“They have to. Pack members witnessed what you did last night, and the others heard about it before dawn. Everyone knows you fought for her, Rune. The question now is whether the council will support your choice or try to force your hand.”
“Let them try.” The words came out harder than he’d intended, edged with Alpha authority that made Electra stir beside him.
“Easy there. I’m on your side, remember? But you need to be prepared for pushback.”
Rune ended the call and set the phone aside, his mind already shifting into strategic mode. This meeting would determine everything—not just his leadership, but Electra’s place in his world. Their future together.
Electra’s eyes opened slowly, still soft with sleep and the lingering glow of the completed bond. “What’s wrong?” she murmured.
“The council just called an emergency meeting,” he replied softly. “About last night.”
She blinked, awareness sharpening. “When?”
“Soon. I want you there at my side, visible, acknowledged.”
But instead of agreeing, Electra shook her head gently, surprising him. “I can’t. At least not right now.”
Rune’s wolf bristled with confusion, but he kept his expression neutral. “Why?”
“I need to write.” She sat up, the sheet pooling around her waist, her eyes already distant with the particular focus he’d learned to recognize.
“What happened last night—all of it—it’s too raw, too real.
If I don’t capture it now, while it’s still burning in my chest, it’ll fade. And I can’t let that happen.”
For a moment, Rune wanted to argue, to insist she belonged at his side for something this important.
But then he felt the creative fire burning in her through the completed bond and saw the fierce determination in her green eyes that had drawn him to her in the first place.
This was who she was. Who she’d always been.
The writer, the observer, the woman who turned experience into art.
“Being my mate,” he said carefully, “being Luna of this pack—it will never erase who you are. Your writing matters as much as any Luna duty ever will.”
The smile she gave him could have powered the entire town. “Thank you for understanding.”
They dressed together in comfortable silence, the domesticity of it both foreign and perfectly natural.
Rune pulled on dark jeans and a gray henley, while Electra slipped back into the clothes from the night before.
He watched her move around his bedroom and his cabin with a proprietary satisfaction that should have concerned him but didn’t.
The drive to her cabin was quiet, but the completed mate bond pulsed fierce and bright between them. Rune marveled at the connection. It was stronger now, more defined. He could sense her anticipation and excitement with crystalline clarity, her creative energy building like a storm about to break.
“There’s something you should know,” he said when they finally pulled into her driveway. “The telepathic link—it’s active now. If you ever need me, just reach out with your mind. I’ll hear you.”
Electra’s eyes widened. “I thought that was just a plot device to enhance intimacy.”
“It’s very real. But yes, it’s also very intimate. Turns out you got more right than you knew.”
He kissed her goodbye, his lips lingering against hers as he projected a promise through their telepathic link.
I’ll come back soon.
I know, her voice whispered directly into his mind, clear as if she’d spoken aloud.
The intimacy of it sent a jolt of heat through him. She was navigating and adapting to their completed bond with the same fierce brilliance she brought to everything else.
When he finally pulled out of her driveway and turned toward the pack town hall, Rune felt solid and whole in a way he’d never experienced. The world finally made sense, the pieces of his life clicking into place with mathematical precision.
He had a mate. He had a pack to lead. And he had a future worth fighting for.
The Blackpine town hall stood like a stern sentinel at the end of Main Street, its timber-frame exterior gleaming under the morning sun.
Rune’s boots struck the front steps with a purpose that echoed the certainty in his chest. The completed mate bond hummed within him, a live wire of power and peace that made every sense sharper and every decision clearer.
Forrest materialized from the shadowed doorway. “Took you long enough. They’re already twitchy in there.”
“Let them twitch,” Rune said, his voice a low rumble. He didn’t break stride, moving past Forrest into the cool, dim interior. The scent of old wood, polish, and wolf filled the corridor.
Forrest fell into step beside him. “You look… different. Lighter. It’s unnerving.”
“It’s called having a mate and a chosen bond,” Rune said, a flicker of warmth in his gray eyes. “We completed the mate bond last night, Forrest. Everything else is just logistics.”
Forrest let out a low whistle. “Spoken like a man who’s about to rewrite a century of pack law.”
The doors to the council chamber were heavy oak, and Rune pushed them open without hesitation.