Chapter 30 Three Wolves, One Pull
POV: The Elite Trio (Alternating - Four Days Until Ceremony)
LOGAN
I haven't slept in three days.
Not properly. Not the deep unconscious nothing that I used to drop into the moment my head hit the pillow, the dreamless sleep of someone whose body works hard and whose mind doesn't trouble itself with complications.
That sleep is gone. Has been gone since Sterling arrived at this Academy and broke something in my brain that I can't seem to fix.
I'm lying on my back at two in the morning staring at the ceiling and trying to understand what is wrong with me.
My wolf won't settle. That's the simplest way to describe it. The animal that lives in my chest and shares my body has been a constant roar of noise and urgency for weeks, pressing against my ribs, demanding I pay attention to something my human mind keeps refusing to accept.
The dreams don't help.
Every time I manage to actually fall asleep, there's silver light. A voice I can't quite hear clearly enough to identify. A presence that makes my wolf go completely, utterly still in a way it has never gone still for anything in my entire life.
My wolf submits in these dreams. Drops to the ground, throat exposed, every dominant instinct it possesses overridden by something it recognizes as above it in a hierarchy I didn't know existed.
I wake up furious every single time.
Because wolves like me don't submit. That's not arrogance, just fact. I'm Defense Minister Steele's son, raised to dominate, trained to never show my throat, built for one specific position in the pack structure and that position is not on my knees.
And yet my wolf keeps dreaming about exactly that.
I've been taking it out on Sterling. I know that. I've been picking fights, pushing hard, trying to force a reaction that will make sense of what I'm feeling. If Sterling is just another wolf, just another student, just another body in a hallway, then whatever is happening to me has an explanation I can work with.
But Sterling doesn't react like another wolf. Doesn't fight back like an Alpha should, doesn't submit like a Beta would, doesn't break like anyone should after the kind of punishment I've been handing out.
Just gets back up. Every single time. Quiet and relentless and wrong in ways I can catalogue but can't explain.
And every time Sterling gets back up, my wolf loses its mind.
Not with aggression. That's the part that keeps me awake.
With something else. Something that feels uncomfortably like pride.
I punch my pillow and roll over and tell myself this is fine. Everything is fine. In four days there's a ceremony and Sterling will have to shift like everyone else and whatever is wrong with this picture will become clear and I can stop feeling like I'm losing my grip on something fundamental.
My wolf stirs in my chest, restless and certain.
Four days, I tell it.
It doesn't find that comforting. Neither do I.
ASHER
I have observation notes on every person of consequence I've encountered since I was fourteen years old.
Notes on their habits, their weaknesses, their pressure points. What they want and what they fear and the precise angle of approach most likely to achieve a desired outcome. I've built an entire personal empire of information and leverage, and it has never once failed me.
Sterling has thirty-seven pages of notes and I still can't solve him.
I'm at my desk at three in the morning reviewing those pages for what must be the hundredth time, looking for the thing I've missed. The variable I haven't accounted for. The explanation that ties together fighting style inconsistencies and scent anomalies and impossible magic and the way my wolf reacts to his presence like nothing else in my life has ever made it react.
The wolf reaction is the part I keep returning to.
I've analyzed it from every angle I know. Dismissed the obvious explanation because the obvious explanation makes no sense and I don't operate on things that make no sense. Tried to find alternative frameworks that accommodate the data without requiring me to accept something irrational.
I haven't found one.
The bond, or whatever this connection is, has been building for months. I feel it as a constant low-frequency signal, a pull that my analytical mind has been studying with detached interest while my wolf completely abandons detachment and simply screams.
Two days ago, when I grabbed Sterling's wrist in the corridor, the bond flared.
I've been processing that flare ever since.
What came through the contact was not what I expected. I'd anticipated resistance, perhaps. Fear. The adrenaline profile of someone who'd been cornered.
Instead I felt grief.
Not abstract grief. Specific, named, enormous grief. The kind that restructures a person from the inside, that becomes load-bearing in the architecture of who they are. Someone had died. Someone who had been everything to Sterling, the absolute center of his world, and that loss had left a shape behind it that Sterling was now using as a blueprint for survival.
And underneath the grief: love. Not for me. Not for anyone at this Academy. For whoever was gone. Love so complete and permanent it made everything else look temporary.
I've been trying to manipulate Sterling for months. Have been using every psychological tool I possess to find the crack, the weakness, the pressure point.
I haven't found one because the grief is load-bearing. You can't crack the foundation without bringing down the entire structure, and the structure won't come down because it's the grief itself that's holding Sterling up.
I couldn't break him if I tried with everything I had. And I have tried.
That's an uncomfortable thing to admit at three in the morning. I'm very good at breaking people. Sterling apparently isn't breakable by conventional means.
My wolf has known this from the beginning. Has been trying to tell me that the appropriate response to Sterling is not destruction but something else entirely, something my wolf has a very specific name for that I'm not ready to use out loud yet.
Four days until the ceremony.
Whatever Sterling is hiding comes out then.
I add one more note to page thirty-seven.
The grief is structural. Stop looking for weakness. Start looking for what's being protected.
I stare at those words for a long time.
Then I close the notebook and sit in the dark and think about silver light and someone named Rafe and a grief that functions as a spine.
JAX
I've been standing outside Sterling's door for eleven minutes.
I know the exact duration because I checked my watch when I arrived and I've checked it twice since and each time the information has failed to prompt me to either knock or leave, which means I'm standing in a corridor at three in the morning for no reason I'm able to justify rationally.
My wolf is the reason. My wolf brought me here and is now preventing me from doing anything useful because useful would mean either engaging or retreating and my wolf doesn't want either of those things. It wants to be near Sterling. Wants the proximity. Has been demanding proximity with increasing desperation for weeks while I've been resisting on the grounds that wanting proximity to another male wolf for no explicable reason is not something I'm prepared to examine.
Except I've been examining it anyway. It's not something you can choose not to examine when your wolf won't stop howling about it.
I've gone through every logical framework available to me.
Territorial instinct. Dismissed, because territorial instinct presents differently and I know what that feels like.
Competitive aggression. Dismissed, because Sterling isn't competition. Doesn't behave like competition, doesn't register as competition to my wolf.
Threat response. Partially valid. Sterling is a genuine unknown quantity, the magic alone qualifies as a threat to Academy order, and my wolf's hypervigilance could theoretically be explained as heightened threat awareness.
Except threat awareness doesn't make you stand outside someone's door at three in the morning because the bond is pulling and you just want to know he's there and breathing.
I've run out of logical frameworks.
My notes on Sterling are the most comprehensive I've ever compiled on any subject. Thirty days of systematic observation. Documented anomalies. Behavioral patterns. Physical changes that I've correctly identified as some kind of transformation process. The fighting techniques that belong to no known pack tradition. The scent that slides wrong under all those suppressants, never quite resolving into something I can categorize.
The dreams.
I've been having the same dream for two weeks. Silver light, a female voice I can't quite resolve into clarity, a presence that makes every dominant instinct I possess drop away like shed weight. My wolf in the dream doesn't fight or assert or calculate.
It kneels.
I wake from those dreams profoundly unsettled. Not because of the kneeling itself. My wolf kneels to two things in traditional pack structure: its true Alpha and its mate.
I've never had a true Alpha. Sterling is a male wolf, which means the mate explanation makes no sense.
Which means the dreams make no sense.
Which means I've been standing in this corridor for thirteen minutes making no sense right along with the rest of it.
Through the bond, I feel Sterling's presence in the room on the other side of this door. Awake. Moving through something methodical in that quiet relentless way he has. The constant low-level pain he's in, the seal cracking more each day, the wolf underneath fighting to emerge.
He's in pain and he's still working. Still pushing forward. Still doing whatever it is he came here to do with the kind of determination that my wolf apparently finds more compelling than any single thing it has encountered in twenty years of existence.
I check my watch.
Fifteen minutes.
I turn around and walk back to my room. Sit at my desk. Open my notes to the last page.
I write one line.
Four days until the ceremony tells us what logic hasn't been able to.
I look at it for a long moment.
Then I add underneath:
Whatever Sterling is, my wolf has already decided. I'm running out of reasons to tell it it's wrong.
I close the notebook.
Four days.