Chapter 4 Who is she?
Kael Solaris (POV)
The problem with mornings was that people expected them to be peaceful.
Mine never were.
Not because of chaos.
Because of awareness.
There’s a difference.
Chaos is loud.
Awareness is quiet… and constant.
I was already at school before most students arrived. I liked it that way. Less noise. Less pretending. Less people convincing themselves they mattered more than they did.
Rowan leaned against the wall beside me, eating something that looked like it had been dropped once too often.
“Do you ever sleep?” he asked.
“I do,” I said.
“Liar.”
I glanced at him. “You look like a disappointed raccoon.”
He paused mid-bite. “That’s not even an insult. That’s just my natural aura.”
I almost smirked.
Almost.
Then I felt it.
The shift.
Not in sound.
Not in sight.
In air pressure.
My wolf lifted its head instantly inside me.
Not fully awake.
Just… alert.
Rowan noticed my change immediately.
“…Oh,” he said quietly. “That again.”
I didn’t answer.
Because I was already looking toward the entrance.
Something was coming.
Not physically aggressive.
Not loud.
Just present.
Like the world had subtly changed direction without telling anyone.
Rowan straightened slightly. “Pack report didn’t mention anything arriving today.”
“It wouldn’t,” I said.
My voice came out calmer than I felt.
That was the problem with being Alpha.
You weren’t allowed to look surprised.
Even when your instincts were screaming.
And mine were.
The front gates opened.
Students flooded in like usual.
But I wasn’t looking at them.
I was looking for the source.
And then I saw her.
Ivy Sinclair.
The file name clicked in my mind instantly, like memory wasn’t something I had to search for—it just existed when needed.
She walked in like she didn’t belong to the noise around her.
Tank top. Jeans. Simple clothes. Nothing trying too hard.
But it wasn’t the clothes that mattered.
It was how she moved.
Balanced.
Controlled.
Not soft.
Not fragile.
Not the kind of human who needed protection just because she existed.
Rowan followed my gaze.
“Oh,” he said slowly. “That’s her.”
“Yes,” I said.
“That’s… underwhelming,” he added.
I didn’t respond.
Because my wolf had just done something it almost never did.
It paused.
Completely.
Not asleep.
Not active.
Just… silent.
Which was worse.
Much worse.
I narrowed my eyes slightly.
“She’s human,” Rowan said quietly.
“That’s what the file says.”
“And you trust the file?”
“No.”
That made him pause.
I watched her as she moved through the crowd.
People didn’t react to her like they should’ve.
No awe.
No fear.
Just normal student reactions.
Except—
No.
Not normal.
There was a gap.
A subtle one.
Like people instinctively gave her space without realizing why.
My wolf shifted again.
Not reacting to danger.
Reacting to recognition.
That thought made something tighten in my chest.
“Kael,” Rowan said more carefully now. “You’re staring.”
“I know.”
“That’s not a denial.”
“I’m aware.”
He sighed. “This is going to be one of those situations, isn’t it?”
“What situation?”
“The kind where you say it’s nothing and then it becomes absolutely everything.”
I finally tore my eyes away from her.
“Don’t be dramatic.”
Rowan raised an eyebrow. “You just stopped breathing for half a second.”
“I did not.”
“You did.”
I paused.
“…I was thinking.”
“About not breathing?”
“Yes.”
“That’s worse.”
I saw her again near the courtyard.
Closer now.
Too close.
She stopped walking for a moment, as if she felt something too.
That made my attention sharpen instantly.
Her head turned slightly.
Not toward me directly.
But close enough that instinct screamed noticed.
Impossible.
Humans don’t sense pack presence like that.
Unless—
No.
My thoughts cut off.
Because Cassia appeared beside me.
Of course she did.
“Hey,” she said, looping her arm through mine like she owned the space beside me. “You disappeared this morning.”
“I didn’t disappear,” I said.
“You weren’t answering my messages.”
“I was breathing.”
She smiled, but it didn’t reach her eyes.
“I don’t like when you’re distracted.”
I almost sighed.
Almost.
“Then lower your expectations,” I said.
From the corner of my eye, I saw Ivy again.
She was looking in our direction now.
Not at Cassia.
At me.
That pull tightened again.
Sharp.
Immediate.
Cassia followed my gaze.
Her expression changed instantly.
“Oh,” she said softly.
Dangerous softness.
I didn’t like that tone.
“She’s new,” Cassia continued.
“Yes.”
“She’s looking at you.”
“I noticed.”
Cassia’s grip on my arm tightened slightly.
My wolf reacted to that before I did.
Not aggression.
Annoyance.
Great.
Even my instincts had opinions now.
I gently pulled my arm away.
“Cassia,” I said calmly.
“Yes?”
“Don’t start anything.”
She smiled wider.
That was never a good sign.
“I’m not starting anything,” she said. “I’m observing.”
“That’s worse.”
I watched Ivy move again.
She adjusted her bag strap.
Small movement.
Normal.
But my attention locked onto it anyway.
Rowan leaned closer to me. “So… what is she?”
“I don’t know.”
“That’s new.”
“Yes.”
“That’s also concerning.”
I didn’t respond.
Because I didn’t know what to say.
She wasn’t acting like a threat.
But my instincts were reacting like she was… significant.
There’s a difference between danger and importance.
Danger makes you ready.
Importance makes you unsure.
And I didn’t like being unsure.
A group of students passed between us.
For a second, she disappeared from view.
My wolf shifted immediately.
Annoyance.
Sharp.
Possessive—
No.
That thought stopped me.
I frowned slightly.
“What the hell,” I muttered under my breath.
Rowan looked at me. “Did you just growl?”
“I did not growl.”
“You did.”
“I was clearing my throat aggressively.”
“That’s not a thing.”
“It is now.”
Rowan stared at me for a long moment.
“…You’re losing it.”
“I’m fine.”
“You’re reacting to a human girl.”
“I’m not reacting.”
My wolf disagreed.
Which was extremely unhelpful.
The bell rang.
Students started moving toward classes.
I finally saw Ivy clearly again as she walked toward the main building.
And for a brief moment—
She looked back.
Right at me.
No hesitation.
No confusion.
Just direct eye contact.
Like she knew exactly where I was the entire time.
My wolf went completely still again.
Not silent this time.
Focused.
Alive.
Cassia noticed my expression immediately.
“…You felt that,” she said.
“Yes,” I replied quietly.
Her smile faded slightly.
“Interesting.”
I didn’t look at her.
I was still watching Ivy disappear into the building.
Rowan exhaled slowly beside me.
“Well,” he said. “This is going to be a fun semester.”
I didn’t answer.
Because for the first time in a long time…
I didn’t know what was starting.
But I knew it had already begun.
