Morgan’s POV
The most terrifying thing about love is discovering it has no interest in being singular.
When coherence finally returns, I’m collapsed against the mattress with Zane draped across my back, both of us panting and sweat-slicked and utterly destroyed.
The sheets beneath us are damp and tangled, the air thick with the copper-salt scent of exertion and release.
And somewhere deep in my consciousness, Nireya howls a single word.
Mate.
The declaration reverberates through my bones, settling into marrow and sinew with the weight of absolute certainty.
I’ve suspected for weeks, hoped and feared in equal measure, but hearing my wolf claim him with such finality changes something fundamental in my understanding of what we are.
Zane pulls out of me, turning my body beneath his hands before either of us can catch our breath.
The cool air of the bedroom rushes against my overheated skin, raising goosebumps along my arms and thighs, and I shiver at the sudden emptiness, a whimper escaping my swollen lips.
He settles between my thighs and gathers me against his chest, and his heartbeat hammers against my ribs, rapid and uneven, matching the chaos pulsing through my own veins.
“Zane, what—”
“Look at me.” The command comes out rougher than I expect from him, stripped raw by what just happened between us. “Morgan, I need you to look at me.”
My eyes flutter open, and the breath leaves my lungs in a rush.
His irises are ringed with gold, the amber bleeding outward from his pupils in a pattern I recognize from my own reflection during moments of intense emotion.
In the dim light filtering through the curtains, the gold seems to glow with its own inner fire, ancient and knowing.
Shadows pool in the hollows of his cheekbones, sharpening features that usually read as gentle into something fiercer, something that makes my pulse stutter.
His wolf is right there, pressed against the surface, staring back at me with an awareness that transcends human understanding.
“You feel it too.” The words escape him without permission, half-question and half-statement. “Your wolf—she recognized me.”
My expression flickers between confusion and something that feels almost like fear. “I don’t—”
“Don’t lie to me.” He cups my face in his hands, holding my gaze with an intensity that rivals his brother’s. His skin is fever-hot against my cheeks, his pulse jumping where his thumbs rest against my jaw. “Tell me you feel it, Morgan. Tell me I’m not imagining this.”
The silence stretches between us, fragile as spun glass.
Then my hand rises to cover his where it rests against my cheek, and my eyes glisten with tears that haven’t yet fallen. A single drop escapes, trailing down my flushed skin, and he catches it with his thumb before it can disappear into the pillow.
“Nireya called you mate,” I whisper, my voice cracking on the word, rough from screaming, thick with emotion I can’t quite contain. “Right when we—she said it.”
The confirmation hits him with the force of a physical blow.
His forehead drops to mine, our breath mingling in the small space between us, and I feel something in my chest crack open—a fissure in the wall I’ve been maintaining since the day I first realized I was falling for two men who share the same blood.
His exhale ghosts across my lips, warm and unsteady, and I taste salt where our tears have begun to mingle.
“I just want the baby safe,” I whisper. “I stopped caring about paternity weeks ago. I stopped caring about whose DNA lives in these cells. All I care about is protecting this child from the people who want to hurt us.”
“Then that’s what we do.” Zane’s hand presses firmer against my belly, protective and warm. “Paul and I—whatever else divides us, we agree on this. We keep you safe. We keep the baby safe. Everything else is just details.”
“Details,” I repeat, and something between a laugh and a sob escapes my throat. The sound is ugly, wet, nothing like the composed version of myself I try to project. “You make it sound so simple.”
“It’s not simple.” His lips brush my forehead with devastating tenderness. “But the important things rarely are.”
The last light of evening paints him in shades of amber and rose, and he has never looked more beautiful or more terrifying than he does in this moment.
I study him in return, watching my gaze travel across his features before settling on his eyes.
“Your eyes,” I say softly. “I never noticed how much gold lives in the brown.”
“It’s always been there.” His smile carries edges of sadness and wonder in equal measure. “Waiting for you to see it.”
My palm presses against his chest, feeling the steady drum of his heartbeat beneath warm skin.
Two mates. One child. A future I never imagined and can’t begin to navigate.
But lying here in the fading light with Zane’s hand curved protectively over my belly, the cotton sheets cooling against my back and the weight of him warm against my front, the impossibility of it all feels slightly less like drowning.
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