Chapter 130
Xavier
“Alpha,” one of the guards said, chin dipping. “East gate. Alpha Zion, Beta Theo, and Felix request entry.”
The kitchen shed its warmth in a single heartbeat and then put it back on like a coat. Dad didn’t look up from the pan. “Tell them we have coffee,” he said, which in our house means bring them in.
“Escort them in,” I told Niall. “No weapons past the porch. Straight to the dining room.”
He was gone before I finished the sentence.
Envy’s hand brushed my arm. “I’ll move the kids to the sunroom,” she said. “Mum’ll make it a game.”
Mum was already moving, plates gathered, voices low, Macey bribed with the world’s tiniest muffin. Elliot looked at me, asking without asking if this was the kind of meeting he should worry about.
“Boring grown–up talk,” I said. “Pirate ship after.”
“Stealth pirate ship,” he reminded me, dead serious.
“Obviously,” I said, and touched the back of his neck. He softened under my hand and let Macey tow him out, Fergus tucked like a loaf under his arm.
We shifted the dining room to its war–table setting without changing a chair. Map rolled open. Pens. A carafe of coffee. Enough cups to make a point: we were expecting more than one conversation today. Levi took the head for a breath, read the room, then slid his chair half a space so I could sit where the paper creased. Noah poured. Tommy took the door, easy and watchful.
Niall ushered them in a minute later, Zion first, every inch the alpha without trying, Theo half a step behind at his left shoulder, Felix on the right, older and all edge, a man who’s seen too much and still shows up. They’d left their knives with Niall and he hadn’t had to ask twice.
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Chapter 130
“Zion,” I said, standing. “Theo. Felix!” We clasped forearms, no theatrics. “Coffee’s better than last year.”
Theo huffed. “Low bar.”
They took seats. Felix stayed standing long enough to scan the corners; when he sat, he did it like a man who might need to stand fast.
“What’s got you at our fence?” I asked. No sense circling.
Zion’s mouth went grim. “Odd attacks,” he said. “Last three nights.” He traced a quick line along our eastern ridge on the map and then out beyond our border to his side. “Here, here, and at the old mill. They don’t come to finish. They come to look almost, but still
attack.”
Noah slid the coffee toward him. “Describe the wolves.”
“Off,” Theo said, before Zion could temper it. “Eyes are wrong. They move like they’re listening to another room. Scent’s blunted, like river and ash over the top. We tagged two with paint, set them loose and they still peeled off at the culvert like they’d taken a
wrong turn on purpose.”
Felix reached into his battered satchel and set three things on the table, one by one, a cloth scrap streaked gray and gritty, a little glass vial with residue stuck to the sides, and a bone charm wired with rusty twist–tie. He didn’t look pleased to be carrying any of it.
“Found under the bridge at Orchard Run,” he said. “Ash and mud, like the boys said. Vial smells like bitter, not sweet. Charm was tied low in the grass, wrong side of the wind. We snipped it off.”
Aleisha slipped in quiet, passed me a look that said Haiden was still outside sweeping our circles. She took a seat, elbows on knees, eyes on the charm like it had told a bad joke in church.
Levi nudged the vial with a pen. “We’ve pulled the same,” he said. “Empty bottles, ash rings, charms placed where a patrol head dips without thinking. We’ve been scrubbing culverts since dawn.”
Zion exhaled like someone had let a notch off his chest. “So it’s not just us losing our minds.”
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Chapter 130
“I’m going to tell you this part because it touches your fences,” I said, and let the rest stay where it belonged, with Elliot. “The envoy said the ones pushing rogues call themselves
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