We stood in the dim hallway between our rooms. The air shifted, becoming thicker, seemingly moving slower.
He was close. Too close. My back brushed the wall.
He looked at my mouth. I looked at his. He didn’t say anything, and neither did I. I tucked a loose strand of hair behind my ear and cleared my throat.
“Night, wolfboy.”
He stepped back. “Night, Mags.”
We went into our respective bedrooms. Neither of us closed our doors all the way.
I dreamed I was standing in a field that didn’t belong to any real place. It was like it had slipped between worlds and gotten stuck there. A thick fog curled around my ankles and laced between my fingers, clinging to my skin like regret.
Everything shimmered under a soft silver light, even though there was no moon in the sky. The grass was cold and wet beneath my bare feet. Each step I took made a squishing sound, until I suddenly couldn’t move. My body was a statue carved out of confusion and quiet fear.
Shapes moved in the mist. I didn’t hear them approach. One moment I was alone, the next I was surrounded.
They weren’t men. They weren’t wolves. These creatures were something in-between. Hulking shoulders and animal eyes, fur that shifted in and out of form, too-long limbs, and teeth that glinted even when they weren’t smiling.
They circled me like I was prey. A curiosity. A threat. A mistake.
“She smells wrong.”
“Human.”
“Weak.”
Each syllable sliced through my skin like a scalpel. My breath caught. I didn’t look at them. I knew if I met their eyes, I’d see what they saw. I’d see everything I wasn’t.
I had no magic. I had no ability to shift. I was just flesh and flaws.
They saw me. Not the version I’d curated with eyeliner and sarcasm. Not the polished mask I kept on for other people’s comfort. Just… me.
Raw. Too soft. Too small.
And then, like he’d been summoned by the worst parts of me, Roman strode out of the fog.
He didn’t emerge so much as arrive, like he’d been there all along, waiting for his cue. His expression was locked on me with that same intense, laser focus he had when he was pissed off on my behalf. He was real. The weight on my chest eased the second I saw him.
Relief warmed me like sunlight cracking through cold glass. My legs buckled under the weight of it, and I stumbled toward him.
Seraphina appeared behind him, so smooth it felt choreographed. Her arms slid around his waist like they belonged there. The curve of her body folded into his effortlessly and possessively.
Roman let her touch him, hold him, keep him.
He turned his attention to her and never looked back at me. Seraphina smirked at me in triumph. She didn’t need to gloat. Her presence alone said enough:
He is mine. You never had a chance.
When the wolves started laughing, I broke.
It wasn’t a cruel sound. No, it was worse. It was amused. As if the whole thing-me standing there like an idiot in my bare feet and borrowed confidence-was some inside joke I didn’t get.
I turned and ran.
The fog dragged at my legs like it wanted to keep me. Everything tightened-my chest, my throat, my grip on reality. It didn’t matter where I ran to. I just needed to not be there anymore.
A clearing opened around me. At the center, a koi pond shimmered like a mirror. Still. Too still. The surface didn’t ripple, not even when I dropped to my knees beside it, gasping for air like it had been stolen from me.
I leaned forward and looked into the water, expecting to see myself looking sweaty, panicked, and pathetic.
Instead, I saw Roman and Seraphina in the pond’s reflection, naked and twined together. His mouth was on hers, her hands fisted in his hair. It wasn’t a still image-it moved. Real and vivid and wrong. His back flexed. She dug her nails in.
My stomach lurched.
The version of me in the dream didn’t look away. She watched and let herself hurt.
I wasn’t like Seraphina. I wasn’t ethereal or magical. I didn’t laugh like bells or glow under moonlight. I didn’t have the kind of energy that made men want to fight for me. I wasn’t her.
And I wasn’t enough.
In the distance, I heard my name. The fog stirred.
“Mags.”
A beat later. “Mags, wake up.”
A hand on my shoulder, real and grounding. The dream fractured like ice under pressure, cracks racing across it until everything collapsed.
Gasping for breath, I sat up, drenched in sweat. My T-shirt clung to my back, and my sheets were a twisted mess around me. My lungs strained, like I hadn’t breathed properly since I fell asleep.
Roman was crouched beside my bed, his hand still on my arm, his brows drawn tight. “You were moaning, and not in the sexy way.”
I was too disoriented and raw to come up with a joke. My insides were hollowed out, and I felt extremely exposed.
He didn’t push.
“Come on,” he said, standing slowly. “Let’s bake something. It always helps.”
His hair was mussed with sleep, and his heavy-lidded eyes were locked on me with that steady kind of care he didn’t even seem aware he offered.
He wasn’t Seraphina. Or Eric. Or anyone I’d ever tried to be enough for.
He was Roman. Solid, present Roman.
“It’s midnight,” I croaked.
He shrugged. “There’s no wrong time for cookies.”
A beat passed, then I nodded. “Okay.”
Roman extended his hand, and I took it without hesitating.
Roman arranged the ingredients across the counter: flour, sugar, chocolate chips, eggs, butter. Measuring spoons and cups lined up with military precision, like they were part of a ritual.
The whole scene looked less like a baking project and more like a strategic war documentary- using kitchen tools instead of blueprints to coordinate maneuvers. Not a single grain of sugar was out of place.
I let the warm fragrance of butter and vanilla wrap around me like a hug I desperately needed.
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