Riven clapped his hand and maids appeared,clearing the shattered glasses while quickly bringing in a new one. He handed over the dress he chose for her.
The silk robe slid over her body like liquid dusk.
Deep crimson, trimmed in black fur, fitted to her curves but regal enough to demand obedience. Her skin was still warm from the bath, and though her throat no longer glowed, the phantom ache of the mark pulsed beneath the silk collar stitched to hide it.
Riven adored her body with his eyes,he watched her face from the new mirror that had been set,then she looked up to meet his gaze, the silence between them buzzed.
“Your throne room is being prepared,” he said, voice low. “They await their Queen.”
Raya gave a slight nod, sliding her fingers through her damp hair. “How many are assembled?”
“More than usual. Word of your success traveled fast.”
She caught his tone,measured, but proud.
She didn’t respond.
Victory should have tasted sweet. But all she felt was a strange emptiness beneath her ribs. As if something had been taken from her in that wild night... and something else had been left behind.
She stepped out into the corridor, head high, eyes hard. The scent of burning pine filled the halls,an ancient tradition for returning alphas. Her footsteps echoed off the stone floor as she approached the towering arched doors of the throne room.
Two guards flanked the entrance, fists to chests in salute. The doors swung open.
And the room fell silent.
Every head bowed.
Every knee bent.
Her wolves, her court, her soldiers. Cloaked in furs, polished armor, tribal beads and war paint. They knelt as one, eyes averted.
A sea of loyalty.
But all Raya could feel was the weight of her own pulse in her throat.
She moved slowly through the aisle, the robe trailing behind her like flowing blood. The throne,a towering obsidian seat wrapped in bone and carved vines,stood at the far end, raised above the court. Her steps never faltered.Their headaches were down till she climbed up the stairs and sat on her throne.
Riven stood by the base of the platform. He offered his hand without a word, and she took it.
When she ascended and sat, the court rose with a thunderous sound,howls, chants, pounding of fists to chests.
“Glory to the Alpha Queen!”
“Daughter of Moon and Fire!”
“Breaker of Bloodlines!”
The titles rang through the hall like scripture, passed from warrior to warrior, reverberating in the bones of the mountain.
She lifted her chin. Cold. Beautiful. Unshakable.
Until they began to bring the spoils.
First came the weapons, blades laced in silver, taken from the enemy’s dead.
Then the armors, shattered chest plates, smeared with blood as proof of victory.
Next came the banners,ripped and scorched, the sigils of fallen houses dragged across the stone floor like defeated ghosts.
And finally, the prisoners.
Half a dozen rogues knelt in chains, heads bowed.
Her eyes passed over them like frost.
Her court bowed again. The high war priest stepped forward, ancient and twisted, wrapped in ceremonial furs and bone jewelry. His voice echoed loud.
“The Queen returns triumphant. The land is blood-bound again. But there is still a shadow.”
Raya narrowed her gaze.
“Speak.”
He opened a scroll. “There are whispers of poison,seeping through water, through air. Not made by our kind. Something older. Something foreign. And some say… something called.”
The court murmured. Raya stilled them with a raised hand.
“Where?”
“In the western riverlands. Near the border you crossed, my Queen.”
Her stomach clenched.
Of course.
Of course.
She rose from the throne, robe rustling, descending the steps with quiet command. The war priest moved aside, revealing a low table set with a single item.
“What is that?” She asked…
“A little something we need to show you,” replied an elder.
A large picture was covered with a veil.
It glowed faintly blue.
“The water that is cursed,” he said. “This is all we could extract. The healers say the land resists cleansing.”
“And the antidote?” she asked.
The priest didn’t answer.
Riven stepped forward, gaze locked on her.
“There is one,” he said quietly. “But… you must see it yourself.”
Raya frowned.
The veil was lifted,”what the…”
And then she saw it.
Not on the table.
Not in the room.
But in her mind.
The air rippled.
Her knees buckled.
Riven lunged to catch her, but the world was already fading.
She was standing in the woods again.
Naked.
Moonlight poured over her skin like liquid ice.
And he was there.
The rogue.
The man from the night.
He stood barefoot in the grass, surrounded by silver mist. His eyes glowed pale blue. His hair hung damp around his face. No scars this time. No blood.
Only a strange stillness.
She took a step toward him. Her breath steamed in the air.
“You shouldn’t be here,” she said.
“I never left you,” he replied, voice deep and echoing in the bones of the dream.
“You don’t belong to me.”
His lips curved into a soft, haunted smile. “Don’t I?”
She trembled. Her body remembered him. Her soul ached.
He stepped closer.
She felt it,the warmth rising again in her throat. The same mark. But now… it glowed.
He reached toward her.
She didn’t flinch.
When his fingers touched the spot just below her collarbone, her breath hitched. Her knees went weak. But then he vanished.
She was alone now,in a huge hole of darkness,every inch was quiet,she had no idea if she was standing or floating.
“You were meant to lead,” something whispered against her skin. “But something else is waking in you.”
She looked around and saw no one and the voice came again,like a motherly voice but laced with something dangerous.
“Welcome home, my love. Do what you must,I'm waiting.”
She gasped as a palm pressed flat against her chest,and suddenly a surge of heat slammed through her, too fast, too wild.
Light burst behind her eyes.
Everything vanished.
Raya's body hit the floor of the throne room, unconscious.
Gasps echoed across the court. Riven was at her side in a flash, cradling her head, shouting for the healers. The vial of blue poison shattered nearby, rolling across the stone.
And on her throat,hidden by silk but visible just for a moment,a mark glowed like silver fire beneath her skin.
The air was thick with dampness, anger, and something else—something heavier. A tension so dense, even the stone beneath our feet seemed to tremble. The torches lining the chamber walls flickered, their flames cowed by the storm of emotion spiraling through the room. Shadows twisted along the damp stone walls like spirits stirred awake.I stood in the middle of it all, posture stiff, breath shallow. Nyxara—my wolf—paced restlessly inside me. Her rage swelled like a rising tide, clawing at the edges of my control. She howled for blood, for vengeance. But who she howled for—Humphrey—was her enemy.The more the merrier, I thought bitterly.Humphrey just watched me at the far end of the chamber, shackled in silver. The metal bit into his wrists, hissing faintly where it kissed his skin. His shirt was torn at the chest, ripped from the scuffle that led to his capture, but he didn't look defeated.He looked calm.Too calm.He sat like a king deposed, jaw set, dark eyes unreadable. The flick
I ignored what I saw as I grunted and turned sharply, storming across the dungeon chamber. My heart was still thrumming in a rhythm that didn’t feel like mine. The air smelled of blood, metal, and the undeniable scent of him. My hand curled into a fist. I needed to breathe. I needed to forget.But I couldn't.Instead, I reached for the small black pouch I always carried. Salt. A reminder of pain. Of purification. Of consequence. I dipped my fingers into the coarse grains, each crystal like a grain of war history, and turned toward him slowly, my boots echoing across the stone floor.He watched me in silence, chest heaving, sweat glistening down his battered torso. The whip marks along his back were raw and open—each one like a cursed mark I had placed there myself. Because I had. And each one felt heavier than the last."Turn around," I said, my voice rougher than I intended.His brow arched with slow amusement, but he did as I commanded, his chains rattling with the movement. His bod
I winced again!And this time I felt the pain around my body.The whip fell from my hand,it's leather still warm from contact,but it felt like Iike it had struck me instead of him. Deeper and sharper this time.He let out aow,breathless chuckle,lips curling despite the fresh blood trailing down his chest.“Careful Alpha,” he rasped,a voice laced with that maddening drawl, if you keep hitting me like that,I might start thinking you're into me”.My teeth ground together. “You're disgusting!.”“Am I?” His head tilted,chains rattling slightly. Because you didn't say that when you were moaning my name.”What the fuck? Who in the world gave him such audacity to talk to me In such a disrespectful manner?I grunted,fury flaring hot behind my eyes and without hesitation I slapped him. Hard.His head snapped sideways,the sound like thunder in the silence. Blood trickled from his lips,slow and crimson.His grin faltered.I stepped forward and grabbed his face with one hand, my fingers digging in
I didn’t know when my fingers wrapped around the handle of the whip.Perhaps it was the silence that filled the courtyard after the prisoner’s screams had faded into weak sobs, or the burning need for answers clawing at my insides like wildfire. Maybe it was the memory of his howl in the night—low, guttural, and haunting—that pulled me toward the edge of my restraint.My claws retracted with a soft hiss as I exhaled through my nose.I turned to Riven, my beta. His cold gaze was fixed on the whip in my hand, unreadable but piercing, like he could feel the tug of hesitation storming in me. I didn’t need to speak; I only gave him a nod. A command.He hesitated, his dark brows furrowing just slightly, his jaw tight. But finally, with a slow step back, he bowed. “As you command, My Queen.”Still, his gaze lingered on me as if asking silently—Why the sudden fear? Why the hesitation?I didn’t even have an answer.When his footsteps finally disappeared into the wind, I turned back to the only
The first rays of sunlight crept over the horizon, casting a soft golden hue over the garden. I stood at the fountain, the cool water rushing over the stone edges as my thoughts churned, unsettled by the echo of his howl.I flexed my claws, feeling the familiar shift of power within me, the raw, primal energy that surged with every breath. The sun was fully risen now, warming my skin, but inside, I was as cold as ever.As the breeze stirred the air around me, I heard the sound of footsteps approaching. I didn’t turn around at first. I already knew who it was—the unmistakable scent of leather, musk, and blood filling the space before the figure even came into view."Your Majesty," she said, her voice low and respectful.I finally turned, meeting the eyes of my warrior. Thalira Ironmoon. She had returned from her journey, and though his presence was familiar, there was something unsettling about her posture—something different in the way she carried himself. She stood before me, head
Raya’s POVSleep didn’t come as fast as usual.Something around me didn’t feel right.The suffocating silence wrapped around me like a blanket, yet I could breathe. My lungs burned for air that I didn’t need. I was drowning, suffocating beneath an invisible weight, but there was nothing to hold me down. My body ached as if I had been submerged in a cold ocean for too long. But there was no water, no deep abyss—just an emptiness that pressed on my chest.I felt eyes on me. Heavy, predatory eyes. I couldn’t see them, but I could feel them, dark and knowing, pricking my skin like a thousand unseen needles. My breath quickened, each inhale sharp and shallow. It was as though the weight of centuries was in the gaze that followed me, creeping through my veins, entwining with my blood.Then the whispers started."Welcome home."The words were soft, like a lover’s breath, yet the meaning hit me like a blow to the gut. Home? I was already home. Wasn’t I?Something grabbed me—icy fingers brushi