The forest exploded into chaos.
Kael’s voice had barely left his lips when I turned and saw it—the creature lunging from the shadows, its form twisted, not quite wolf, not quite anything natural. It was twice the size of any rogue I’d ever seen, its fur matted with blood, its eyes glowing like coals. The air reeked of rot and something darker—something unnatural. Kael leapt between us before I could move. His shift wasn’t elegant like I remembered. It was violent, quick, primal. His bones cracked and reformed mid-air, and where Kael had stood, a massive dark-gray wolf landed with a snarl that shook the trees. I froze. For a heartbeat, my body forgot how to breathe. Then instinct roared awake. I turned and ran. The forest flew past in blurs of bark and shadow. My wolf—silent for so long—stirred inside me, pushing at my skin like she wanted out, wanted freedom. But I didn’t shift. I couldn’t. I hadn’t in over a year. Damon had made sure of that. Still, my feet remembered the paths I used to take as a girl. The ones that snaked away from the estate, through the hidden glades, into the deeper woods where even the patrols never ventured. Behind me, the sounds of battle echoed—snarls, crashes, the sickening crack of bones colliding. Kael was fighting alone. And something in me hated that. I skidded to a stop by an old tree split in half by lightning years ago. My breath came in ragged gulps. My heart thudded like war drums in my chest. And still… I hesitated. I could keep running. I could find the old border trail, disappear into the human towns, lose myself in the anonymity of a world without mates or alphas or expectations. But Kael had come back. For me. And whatever that thing was—it wasn’t normal. It wasn’t a rogue. It wasn’t pack. It was something else. Something worse. A snarl cut through the silence like a blade, closer this time. A yelp. A thud. My blood ran cold. Without thinking, I spun and ran back. When I found them, Kael was limping. Blood soaked his fur, deep gashes down his side, but he still stood tall—between me and the beast. And the creature? It was watching me. Ignoring Kael entirely. Its nose twitched, and I felt something… shift. A pull. Not like the mate bond—this was darker. Hungrier. I took a step back, but it mirrored me. “Elara, move,” Kael’s voice rang in my head through the pack bond. “Now.” “I don’t— I can’t shift,” I sent back, panic rising. He growled low, angry at the world, not me. “Then run.” But it was too late. The creature lunged again, and this time, I didn’t dodge. I didn’t need to. Because something inside me snapped. Not like breaking—but like awakening. Heat surged through my limbs, and my knees buckled as pain lanced through my spine. My wolf, my silent, battered wolf, rose with a scream that wasn’t entirely my own. Bones cracked. Muscles tore and reformed. And in the space of seconds, I shifted. For the first time in over a year. My fur was pale silver, streaked with white. Smaller than Kael, sleeker. But fast. Free. And furious. The creature reared back, startled by my sudden transformation. I launched at it with a growl that felt like vengeance and fire rolled into one. Kael joined me instantly, two wolves against the dark. It wasn’t a clean fight. It wasn’t elegant or graceful like the battles in the training yards. It was survival. And it ended when Kael sank his jaws into the creature’s neck and snapped. The forest went silent. The creature collapsed, its body twitching once, then going still. I shifted back, breathless, naked in the dirt and trembling. Kael stood over the creature, his chest heaving, blood dripping from his muzzle. A moment later, he shifted too—back into the man I remembered, though his eyes were darker now, more haunted. “Elara.” His voice was rough. “You shifted.” “I didn’t know I could,” I whispered. My arms wrapped around myself out of instinct and shame. “He said I was too weak. He said—” Kael was beside me in a second, draping his cloak over my shoulders. “He was wrong.” I wanted to cry. But I didn’t. I was done giving Damon my tears. Instead, I asked the one thing I needed to know. “What was that thing?” Kael glanced at the corpse. “Not a rogue. It was twisted. Corrupted. That’s why I came back.” I blinked. “You came back because of the creature?” “I came back because of you,” he said. “But that thing? It’s just the beginning. Something’s happening out here. Packs are going dark. Wolves disappearing. Not just rogues—alphas. Entire bloodlines.” I swallowed hard. “And you think Damon’s involved?” He hesitated. And that was answer enough. We buried the creature under the old oak. Kael didn’t want the pack to know yet. He said it would cause panic. Said we needed more answers first. But the moment we got back to the estate, the air changed. Guards were everywhere. Lights in every window. Damon’s aura pulsing through the ground like thunder. And waiting for me, at the top of the stone steps, was him. Damon. Tall. Perfect. Handsome in a way that never softened. His smile didn’t reach his eyes. “You went for a walk?” he asked, voice silk and steel. “I needed air.” His gaze flicked to Kael beside me. “And you decided to bring back an old flame.” “I didn’t bring him back. He saved my life.” “Oh?” Damon stepped down a stair. “Then I should thank him.” Kael stiffened beside me. “No need.” Damon tilted his head. “You’re on my land, Kael. That makes you my guest. For now.” “Just here for answers,” Kael said flatly. “Funny,” Damon said, “so am I.” And that’s when the guard came running up behind him, breathless. “Alpha. We… we found something near the southern border. Buried under the old graves.” Damon didn’t look away from Kael. “What did you find?” The guard hesitated. “A body. Or… what’s left of one. Female. Young. With a mark carved into her skin.” My stomach turned. Kael’s jaw clenched. “What mark?” I asked, even though I already knew. The guard looked between us, pale. “The same one the creature had burned into its chest.” Damon finally smiled, slow and dangerous. “Well,” he said, “looks like you brought back more than trouble, Elara.”The ground trembled as the silver-flamed figure descended, the sky above still torn open like a wound that wouldn’t close. I couldn’t move. Not because of fear—though gods knew I felt it—but because the sheer power radiating from the being before me froze the air, turned my bones to ice. Kael staggered, his wolf form crouched low, ears flattened, a growl rumbling deep in his throat. Damon stared, his monstrous face twisted in a snarl, as if even he hadn’t expected this. The god landed, silver fire crackling at its feet, and raised its gaze—two eyes like twin stars burning in the night. “Elara,” the voice echoed, deeper than thunder, older than time itself. “Luna of the Star. You have tampered with the balance.” I forced myself to stand straighter, the Luna Star’s light pulsing wildly in my chest. “The balance was shattered the moment he—” I pointed at Damon, “—let the dark god inside him!” The silver god tilted its head, studying me like a curious child might study a wounded b
The darkness wasn’t empty. It pulsed. It breathed. Like I’d been dragged into the chest of some ancient beast, and all I could hear was the pounding of its monstrous heart. “Ilara?” I called out, my voice barely a whisper against the suffocating black. No answer. Kael? Silence. Panic surged up my throat—but I forced it down. No. Not now. Not when everything balanced on the edge of a blade. The Luna Star’s light still flickered in my chest—small, but alive. I focused on it, pulling it close, feeding it my will, my rage, my hope. Slowly, the darkness began to peel back. Shapes emerged. The battlefield was unrecognizable. Craters gouged the earth, fires burned where stars had fallen, and the air crackled with wild magic. Kael lay slumped near a shattered boulder, his wolf form bruised, bleeding—but alive. His chest rose and fell, shallow but steady. “Elara,” he rasped, shifting painfully back to his human form, silver eyes dazed but fierce. “You’re… okay?” I nodded, though m
Light consumed everything. It wasn’t warm, like moonlight. It wasn’t comforting, like the glow of a fire. It was blinding. A raw, searing force that burned through my skin, my bones—through me. Like I’d become nothing but energy, scattered across the void. For a heartbeat, I didn’t know who I was. Then I heard him. Kael. His voice, ragged and fierce, cut through the storm: Elara. Hold on. Don’t let go. I clawed at the bond, at the thread that tethered me to him, to this world. My magic surged wildly in response, trying to anchor me as the altar’s explosion tore the battlefield apart. When the light finally faded, I was on my knees, gasping for breath, the ground cracked and scorched around me. The altar was gone—obliterated. The god’s form flickered like a broken shadow in the sky, howling in fury. And Ilara— Ilara stood across from me, her blade lowered, helm shattered, face pale as death. Her eyes—so much like mine, but haunted—were wide with disbelief. “You weren’t suppos
The world stood still. Kael froze, his body coiled tight as a bowstring, breath ragged from battle. I could feel his confusion, his rage, his desperation pounding through the bond. The god-slayer—this figure of myth—stood motionless, blade leveled at my heart, armor gleaming like forged moonlight. The runes across the sword shimmered with lethal promise, as if the weapon itself hungered for my blood. “Who are you?” Kael growled, stepping between me and the blade. The god-slayer didn’t answer. But the fused creature let out a twisted laugh, its body still crackling with dark magic. “You see now, little Luna?” it sneered. “There is no savior coming. There never was. The gods have chosen their champion—and it isn’t you.” “No,” I whispered, heart hammering. “That’s not possible.” I was supposed to be the one to end this. The Luna Star. The chosen. The rebellion. Every vision, every prophecy—they couldn’t all have been lies. Could they? The god’s presence darkened the sky, its rag
I wasn’t falling. I wasn’t flying. I was nothing. The god’s grip dragged me through realms I couldn’t name. Shadows coiled like serpents around me, whispering truths I didn’t want to hear. I felt my body dissolving at the edges, my soul fraying thread by thread. “Elara…” The god’s voice echoed within my skull, everywhere at once. “You were meant for this. For me.” “No,” I rasped, though I didn’t know if the word left my lips or just echoed inside the shattered remains of my mind. “I am no one’s.” “Wrong.” The god’s laughter was the collapse of galaxies. “You are mine.” The darkness thickened, and for a terrifying moment—I believed it. But far away, like a star at the end of a dying universe, I felt it. Kael. His magic. His fury. His love. It burned brighter than the void. And that spark… that spark was enough. I latched onto it. Clung to it like a drowning soul to a lifeline. And I pulled. Kael tore through the battlefield like a storm given flesh. The god’s minions tri
The air trembled as the sky tore open. Kael’s wolf pressed against me, shielding me with his body as shards of light and darkness rained down from the heavens. The First Wolf and the fused creature clashed before us, silver and shadow locked in a brutal, ancient dance. Every strike of the First Wolf’s claws sent shockwaves through the valley; every retaliatory blow from the creature bled shadows into the earth, staining it black. But none of it compared to what loomed above. The god was descending. A shape of pure void, edged in starlight, so massive it blotted out what little moon remained. Eyes like burning suns, mouths that whispered in a thousand dead tongues. And as it fell, the stars themselves seemed to dim in terror. Kael’s voice was a growl in my ear. “We have to run. Now.” “No,” I said, though my heart raced so fast I could barely breathe. “If we run, we die. If we stand, we might still die—but at least we die fighting.” “Elara—” “This is bigger than us,” I said, cut