The wind reeked of victory and defiance. The once-great Crescent Silver Moon Fang Pack was nothing more than ashes and memories of the past. The Red Crescent Moon Pack's banners waved over the conquered territory, their soldiers standing victorious over the broken bodies of the defeated. The moon, high and unconcerned, watched as the carnage unfolded.
In the heart of the battlefield, the whole of the Crescent Silver Moon Pack—those who survived—knelt before their new masters. Some silently wept, others shook, their bodies battered and grimed with dirt. But among them, one did not cower.
Emereah Blade, daughter of the fallen Alpha King, refused to bend her head.
Her silver eyes, once a sign of nobility, now blazed with defiance. Her breathing was harsh, her clothes ripped, her body screaming in agony at the new slave mark burned into her neck. But she stood strong, her hands curled into fists at her sides.
She could still hear the echoes of her father's final roar, the keen steel of enemy blades cutting through flesh, and the merciless laughter of the Red Crescent warriors as they slaughtered her people. The memory seared as vividly as the mark on her skin.
At the grand dais, Vladimir Crown—the son of the Red Crescent Moon Pack—sat on the Alpha's throne, his posture relaxed but his golden-amber eyes piercing, calculating, assessing. He radiated power, dominance, and cold detachment, as if he hadn't just masterminded the extermination of an entire bloodline.
To her left, shrouded in regal haughtiness, sat Alexandria Reeve, his Luna-to-be. Her lips curled into a sneering smile, sapphire-blue eyes glinting with mirth as she looked upon the broken nobles who had nothing, who were nothing but cattle.
The jeering crowd laughed as, one by one, the prisoners bowed. But when Emereah stood her ground, the atmosphere shifted.
The laughter died.
A cold silence fell.
Alexandria's heels clicked on stone as she stepped forward, standing mere inches from Emereah. She leaned forward, mocking curiosity on her face.
"This one is different," she said, her voice dripping with poisonous sweetness. She leaned forward, tracing a single manicured finger under Emereah's chin, forcing her to look up. "Perhaps she still clings to her past."
Emereah's jaw clenched. Every instinct of her being screamed to snap those delicate fingers in two, but she did not move. She would not be the first to break.
Alexandria leaned in closer, her voice a whisper, but loud enough for all to hear. "Let me tell you something, princess," she sneered, her nails digging slightly into Emereah's skin. "You are nothing. No family. No home. No crown. Just a pretty little toy waiting to be played with."
The crowd laughed cruelly, wallowing in her humiliation.
Still, Emereah did not look away.
Her silence, her refusal to submit, was enough to feed Alexandria's anger.
Alexandria's grip on Emereah's chin tightened as she hissed, "Bow, slave."
A flicker of uncertainty.
And then—
"No."
A collective gasp ran through the audience.
Vladimir, who had been watching with detached amusement, suddenly leaned forward, golden eyes narrowing. The audacity. The sheer defiance.
For a moment, something unreadable flickered through his gaze. But it was gone in the blink of an eye, replaced by icy indifference.
"You don't understand your place." His voice was smooth, deep—though brutally cold. "You don't get to make the choice, Emereah Blade. You are no longer a princess."
His words were keener than any blade.
"You are mine now."
The declaration hung suspended in mid-air. The hum of the crowd altered to aghast whispers, a sadistic thrill glinting in their eyes.
Alexandria's smirk faltered. Her hand on Emereah's chin clamped tighter before she jerked back, her eyes blazing at Vladimir.
"You're keeping her?" she spat, venom creeping into the incredulity. "She should be dead, not standing here like some untouchable goddess."
Vladimir rose, his towering form casting a long, dark shadow over Emereah. His eyes flickered over her with calculated interest—not desire, not lust, but something colder, something deadlier.
"She entertains me."
Alexandria's body stiffened. The crowd murmured again, sensing the tension between the future Luna and her Alpha.
"You're preferring a slave over your mate?" Alexandria's voice cracked, her nails digging into her palms.
Vladimir's lips curled into a slow, cruel smile. "I do not recall ever saying I preferred you, Alexandria."
The crowd stilled, as if the weight of his words had sucked the very air from the battlefield.
Alexandria paled before her fury boiled into something volatile. "She's a slave! You can't prefer her—"
Vladimir turned his eyes on her, his voice a sharp blade cutting through the air.
"I prefer no one. I own everything. Including her."
Emereah felt the cold sting of his words, but she refused to look away. She would not break—not before them, not before him.
Vladimir moved closer, stopping so close his heat was a contrast to the ice in his eyes. He reached out, his fingers tracing the burning slave mark on her neck.
"You will serve me." His voice was low, menacing. "You will kneel when I command you to. And you will break when I choose you to."
Emereah stood firm, her silver eyes a tempest against his golden blaze. "You will regret this." "You will regret this."The words hung there, a tempest meeting fire.
Vladimir's golden-amber eyes locked with hers, unreadable and piercing, as if daring her to deny him. The flickering flames of the victory pyres cast jagged shadows on his face, and he seemed all the more inhuman—cruel, unapproachable.
Then, slowly, his lips curled into something almost, but not quite, a smirk. Almost.
"Regret?" His voice was low, lethal. "A slave defies me?"
The whole Red Crescent Moon Pack was silent. Anticipation. Tension. No one had ever defied Vladimir Crown and lived.
He moved in closer. Too close. Close enough that Emereah could feel the heat radiating off him, but his eyes were nothing but ice.
"Tell me, little princess," he whispered, leaning in, taunting her title as if it were a dead joke. "What exactly do you think I will regret?"
Emereah gritted her teeth together. She could not show weakness. Not here. Not now.
"Keeping me alive," she snarled, her voice rebellious despite the shackles on her wrists. "Not killing me when I had the chance."
For a moment, something flickered in Vladimir's eyes, something she couldn't quite read. But then it was gone, replaced by that same cold amusement.
"You think that I had no reason to spare your life."
The way he said it so offhand, so unflappable, made something inside of her boil with even more fury.
"You will regret it." Her voice was steel, unbreakable. "Mark my words, Vladimir Crown."
His face was still impassive, but the slight incline of his head told her that she had his full attention.
Then—
Slap!
The jarring shock of impact echoed through the air as Alexandria's palm slapped into Emereah's cheek. The impact of it jerked her head to the side, the metallic rush of blood in her mouth.
The crowd gasped, a mixture of shock and excitement at Alexandria's sudden outburst.
"Enough."
Alexandria's voice was cutting, venomous, trembling with sheer fury.
"I've had enough of her impertinence, Vladimir!" she snarled, turning to face him. "She's a captive! A slave! And you stand here, playing to her like she's worth something!"
The insult cut hard, but Emereah didn't waver.
Instead, she smirked, tilting her head back up, silver eyes glinting with something dark, something dangerous. It wasn't submission. It was challenge.
Alexandria saw it. And it snapped her.With a snarl of rage, she seized Emereah by the hair and yanked her forward, pushing her to her knees.
"Bow, slave," she spat. "You have no right to regard your Alpha as an equal."
Vladimir said nothing. Watching. Evaluating.
Emereah's scalp seared, but she did not give. She would not give Alexandria the satisfaction.
Alexandria leaned in, her breath hot and angry against Emereah's ear. "I will make your life hell. Every moment you draw breath in this pack will be agony, I swear it."
Emereah breathed out, slow and deliberate, before raising her gaze once more, meeting Vladimir's eyes.
"If I am to be a slave," she said, voice full of quiet defiance, "then why is she so afraid of me?"
Alexandria tensed.
For a split second, a crack appeared in her perfect mask of control. The crowd murmured, sensing the break.
Vladimir's smirk returned amused, intrigued, dangerous.
"Interesting."
The single word sent a shiver of tension through the air.
Alexandria turned back to him, eyes wild with disbelief.
"Vladimir, she—"
He raised a hand. The command was silent, but absolute. Alexandria bit her lip, furious but unable to disobey.
Vladimir moved forward again, looming over Emereah.
"You amuse me, Emereah Blade," he said finally, his voice carrying across the entire pack. "Let's see how long that lasts."
Then without breaking eye contact he raised a single boot and pressed it against her shoulder, pushing her fully onto the ground.
The crowd erupted.
Emereah landed on the dirt, her cheek scraping against the cold earth, but still she did not break.
Not today.
Not ever.
The council chamber emptied slowly, the heaviness of Emereah's last words bearing down upon each back turned away from the firelight. Some departed with urgency, others with fear. But all with burden.Vera stayed behind, arms crossed, regarding Emereah across the dancing hearth."You've just declared war," she blurted."No," Emereah whispered, her gaze still fixed on the dying fire. "War declared itself. I simply gave it a name."Vera said nothing else. She only put a hand on Emereah's shoulder—quick, insistent—and departed.Emereah breathed out, alone once again, her back straight though her heart was worn. She slowly turned to see Vladimir still standing close to the door, regarding her. Not as a soldier. Not as a shattered man. But as something nearer. Something nearer than she wished. Something nearer than she was willing to acknowledge."You should rest," she whispered."So should you," he said. "But we both know you won't."She smiled softly, tired and knowing. "No. I won't."Vl
The flame of the candle danced in the stillness of Emereah's room, casting the black shadows against the walls of stone. Lunareth slept with a soft snore within her crib, her own breathing in strange contrast to the oppressive quietness within the room. Vladimir stood in the threshold, his hand on the frame, debating whether to come in or stay outside.He had never been much good at this. At feeling. At the subtle dance of truth and trust.Tonight, though, he wasn't given a choice.He breathed deeply and shoved open the door.Emereah sat close to the fire, her hair spilling over her shoulders as she mindlessly played with the bracelet on her wrist. She saw him enter and raised her gaze, her eyes inscrutable, the silence between them held."What is it?" she asked, voice low-key—opposite the tempest she held back.Vladimir entered cautiously, drinking in the room's softness—the heat, the security. The things he had yet to accomplish."We discovered something," he replied, voice serious.
Silence.And then Emereah stepped forward, her voice cutting through the tension like a knife through fog."Rhovan," she said quietly. "What do you see now?"He looked between them—at the man who had destroyed their world, and the woman born from its embers."I see a man attempting," Rhovan said hesitantly. "I see a man crawling on the ash of what he has scorched."Vladimir rose, voice steady. "I'll crawl till it's finished. And I'll continue to mend what I've broken."Rhovan set his jaw, but a glint flashed over his eyes."Then crawl for a purpose," he told Vladimir. "Prove it. Ride with me tomorrow. We're going south. Something's in motion out there. Not rebels. Not loyalists. Something more—silence. Too quiet. Too empty."Vladimir nodded once. "I'll be ready."“Be more than ready,” Rhovan warned. “Be someone my brother might have chosen to stand beside… instead of falling beneath.”With that, he turned and disappeared into the dark.As the fire dimmed and the camp slowly returned t
The sun rose gently, golden light twining across the sanctuary like a soothing balm. Emereah stood beneath the tall arch of the observatory, Lunareth sleeping lightly against her chest. The baby's weight anchored her—but her eyes were elsewhere.Down below, in the courtyard, Vladimir knelt in the dirt, sleeves rolled high, smudged face black with soot, the three children huddled round him. They were no longer afraid of him. Not quite. One reached out and pulled his hair.Vladimir didn't jump back. Instead, he gave the smallest girl a carven fox and showed the oldest boy how to tie a sparring wrap.A woman came to him—a widow of a baker, who had been quiet for so long since the Rebellion. She offered him a tray of warm flatbread. Emereah stiffened, his heart still.But Vladimir accepted graciously with a nod of his head and offered the bread to the kids before dipping his own.The woman said something to him that Emereah couldn't catch.He responded with something.She laughed.It shock
Morning dawned pale and chill, mist winding low around the outer courtyard in the fashion of forgotten spirits' breath. Vladimir woke before the sun—as he had woken every morning since Emereah had given him her hand—not in love, not in forgiveness, but in something possibly far more perilous: hope.He stood alone, rolled-up sleeves to the elbow, wrists still wrapped in linen. His hands ached from work, the calluses crackling again, but he savored the pain. It indicated that he was earning each stone he heaved."You're early," spoke a low voice behind him.Older Marrek, guarded by two younger men, looked at him as if Vladimir were an open sore that would not heal. He used to bow to him. Now he stood and watched him construct walls with the same hands that had ordered them torn down."Peace comes with morning," Vladimir said calmly. "Before the rumors begin."Marrek snorted. "Rumors are easier to bear than swords. Be thankful for that.""I am."The old man glared, unconvinced.Vladimir
The courtyard was no longer filled with the cries of the past, but the silence bore them still—like specters. Emereah stood at the top of the tall walkway of the outer wall of the sanctuary, her cloak rippling on the wind. Below, workers labored: Red Crescent and Silvermoon together, still cautious of each other, still recovering.And among them—Vladimir.He was slumped over a broken wall, picking up stones with raw hands. His palms were bandaged in linen, their crimson stains from the strain. He did not cease. Not when they muttered. Not when they glared. Not even when one of the elders spat on the ground beside him.Each brick that he placed, he placed without strength. Without authority. Only will.Emereah stood above, her arms crossed over her chest. Vera slipped up beside her, a bowl of herbs cradled in her hands, eyes focused on the same individual below."You're spying on him once more," Vera said begrudgingly."He's constructing the southern barrier all over again. It was neve