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VER
. Don't come home early-stay. Your mate might be wait
right after the hurdle," Tricia replied wit
t for you. I was
ed my lashes for the twentieth time and the mirror showed the image I had worked months for: a gown that caught the light in soft waves, h
Luna's ceremony, not a mate-hunt," Tricia
ainst my legs. Last week I'd spoken with the Alpha-two breathless minutes-and something in me had c
d ten. And fifteen-" Tricia sang, smiling. She nudg
ion. "In!" I squeaked, taking Tricia's hand and racing for the front row. I wanted the Alpha to find me qui
id as I dragged her across the e
front so he wouldn't have to search. It would be quick, ceremonial, p
smile set in place, and leaned just close enough for me to hear. "What
spent my life shrinking to make space for other people; tonight I had decided n
lowed, eyes bright with malice. Tricia stepped between us like a shiel
as if her words were a verdict. "Y
answer befitting your status," I said, loud enough that heads turned and whispers snagged like torn thread. They blinked. Her smirk faltere
ing-the tiny signal I had felt in the woods, the way my wolf had ans
ne dared stare at. The priestess's voice dropped into the
n doubt. My chest thudded so loudly it felt like applause in my ears. He was coming my way.
range expectation coiled in my gut. When he passed near my row, I felt nothing. No warm
e the breath I'd been holding needed spac
t lookin
t Tricia
hed the soft skin at the corner of her throat-a tiny, ceremonial bite-and the pri
e edge of my seat until the fabric groaned under my fingers. The song in my
you and calls it yours. She looked at me then, eyes bright with triumph, and for a terrible heartbea
the room contracted into a needle point of white light and my mind felt full of lead, equal parts accusation and amusement. Lana's voice thre
ingers touched my arm, not in comfort but as voyeur
my falter, her small heart thudding as crazily inside me as mine was. We were always told the
y legs were noodles but I forced them to carry me away from the center of noise. Peopl
come, hot and angry and unladylike. I hated the way they dampened my lashes. I hated how small I fe
ed fragile. She touched my shoulder in a way that would have been comforting if she'd
f consolation that smelled faintly of candle wax and new duties. How could she under
e under the same roof-and my chest pinched. I wanted to tell her everything: how the Alpha had felt like
uestion spoken aloud. The night swallowed it. The answer was the sting that marked me: not for lac
and felt the grit under my nails. For the first time since I was a child, I let myself hate. Not in t
nder. I let them clap. I let the sound wash over me until it dissipated
ressure of a single tooth on a sister's throat, then I would find, somewhere, the parts of me the world had not yet seen. I
was only the ac

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