Grayson Sinclair has always kept to the shadows, hiding parts of himself from everyone around him. Forced to move to the small town of Haven’s Light at a young age, Grayson faces new challenges—and unexpected connections.
Drawn into the world of a wolf pack, he begins to navigate the delicate balance between friendship and something deeper—while guarding the secrets he’s never shared, even as the brooding alpha heir, Ronan Kincaid, watches from the edges
But old dangers don’t stay buried, and the fragile safety Grayson has built begins to unravel. To protect the home—and the people—he’s come to trust, he’ll have to confront the secrets he’s spent a lifetime hiding.
A story of trust, belonging, and the kind of love that sees every part of you—and stays.
Content This story contains themes that may be sensitive for some readers, including an on-page scene involving non-consensual physical contact during a sports game (unwanted touching/grinding). It also includes mild violence, the death of a secondary character (not graphic), and references to trauma and past danger. The story concludes with a hopeful, healing resolution and includes non-explicit MM romance and off-page mpreg.
3.5 ⭐️ Rounded up Very sweet book, with strong found family vibes.
Greyson and Ronan are fated mates that are kept apart by secrets. In their time apart, Greyson find his place with a group of wolf shifters. Eventually, Greyson and Ronan find their way to each other just in time to stand against those secrets that Greyson was hiding.
This isn’t advertised as a YA/New adult but it definitely read that way. The characters are high school aged. Very much coming of age and stepping into your own vibes. No spice/closed door.
I really loved watching Greyson grow up. I loved seeing his friendships grow and blossom. The friends he makes are nothing short of incredible. I also really loved that Greyson ends up being the one that saved the day. Not Ronan.
There were some parts that were a tiny bit repetitive. The various POVs (more than just the two MCs) occasionally got confusing as they weren’t always labeled. And I do wish we’d gotten to see a little more development between Ronan and Greyson.
Overall, I really enjoyed this story and would read this author again