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The Storm's Fury

last update Last Updated: 2025-06-05 20:48:35

Serena backed away from Lucian Draven, her black fur bristling. The Alpha of the Nightfang Pack watched her with those calculating amber eyes, not afraid like the others."I have no quarrel with you," Lucian said, stepping closer. "An Onyx wolf could be... valuable to my pack."A howl pierced the air—Silver Ridge wolves, getting closer. Serena's former family hadn't given up the hunt.Lucian's head snapped toward the sound. "It seems Caius Vale wants his daughter back." His smile was cold. "Though I doubt it's for a family reunion."Panic surged through Serena. Trapped between two enemies, with nowhere to run."Come with me," Lucian extended his hand. "I can protect you."Something in his eyes made Serena hesitate. This wasn't kindness—it was hunger. He wanted something from her.The howls grew louder. Serena made her choice.She lunged past Lucian, darting between two surprised Nightfang wolves and sprinting deeper into the forbidden forest. Behind her, chaos erupted as the Silver Ridge hunting party clashed with the Nightfang wolves."Find her!" Lucian's voice boomed over the snarls and growls. "Bring the Onyx wolf to me—alive!"Now two packs hunted her. Serena pushed her tired legs harder, racing through unfamiliar territory.

The trees here were ancient and twisted, nothing like the friendly forest of Silver Ridge. Strange smells filled her sensitive nose, confusing her.Dark clouds gathered overhead, hiding the fading crimson moon. The air grew heavy with the scent of rain.Serena had never ventured this far from home. As a human, she would have been hopelessly lost, but her wolf senses gave her some guidance. Still, this new body felt strange. Her legs were longer, her muscles stronger, but controlling them was difficult. She stumbled often, unused to her own power.The first drops of rain hit her black fur as thunder rumbled overhead. Within minutes, the sprinkle became a downpour. The storm was a blessing and a curse—it would wash away her scent, confusing her hunters, but it also made the forest floor slippery and treacherous.Lightning flashed, illuminating the path ahead for a brief moment. Serena saw she was approaching a ridge. If she could get to higher ground, maybe she could spot somewhere safe to hide.The rain came down harder. Her purple eyes, so sharp in darkness, struggled to see through the sheet of water. Her paws slipped on mud and wet leaves.Another flash of lightning revealed shapes moving through the trees behind her—wolves, though she couldn't tell which pack they belonged to. It didn't matter. None of them were friends.Serena pushed herself up the steep hill, her claws digging into the muddy earth for purchase. The ridge was higher than she'd thought, its side growing steeper as she climbed.A howl cut through the storm's noise—much closer than she'd expected. They were gaining on her.Panic made her scramble faster. Her paws clawed desperately at the hillside. Almost at the top—The ground beneath her front paw suddenly gave way. Mud and rocks crumbled, leaving her scrambling for a hold that wasn't there.Serena slipped, her body sliding back down the hill. She tried to dig her claws in, but the rain had turned everything to slick mud. Her back legs went over the edge of what she now realized was a cliff, not just a hill.For one horrible moment, she hung suspended, front paws still gripping the edge.Then those, too, slipped.Serena fell, tumbling through darkness. Her body slammed against rocks and tree roots jutting from the cliff face. Pain exploded everywhere. She couldn't even howl—the breath was knocked from her lungs.After what seemed like forever, she crashed to the ground far below. The impact sent fresh waves of agony through her body. Something in her left front leg snapped. Her vision blurred as pain threatened to pull her into darkness.Get up! she commanded herself. They're still coming!But her body wouldn't obey. The wolf form that had felt so powerful now lay broken and useless. Serena focused on shifting back to human, hoping her injuries might be less severe in that form.

The transformation was agony. Broken bones and torn muscles protested as they reshuffled. When it finished, Serena lay naked and shivering in the mud, rain pelting her human skin. Her left arm was definitely broken, twisted at an unnatural angle. Cuts and bruises covered her body.Lightning flashed again, revealing a small opening in the cliff face nearby—a cave, partially hidden by bushes. Shelter.Serena dragged herself toward it, biting her lip to keep from screaming as pain shot through her broken arm. Each movement was torture, but the howls above drove her forward. If they found her like this, helpless and injured, she wouldn't stand a chance.After what felt like hours but was probably only minutes, Serena reached the cave entrance and pulled herself inside. The space was small but dry, extending back into darkness. Using her good arm, she pulled some of the bushes across the opening, hiding her shelter from view.Only then did she allow herself to collapse, shaking with pain, fear, and exhaustion."What am I going to do?" she whispered to the darkness.Twenty-four hours ago, she had been Serena Vale, beloved daughter of the Alpha, future Luna of the Silver Ridge Clan. Now she was nothing—a cursed outcast, hunted like prey, broken and alone in a storm.Tears mixed with the rainwater on her face. Everything was gone. Her home. Her future. Even Elias had turned against her.Elias. The memory of his face twisted in fear and disgust made her chest ache worse than her physical injuries. How could he reject her so completely? They had grown up together, trained together, promised to rule the pack side by side. One night had erased all of that.Above the cave, howls echoed. The hunters were searching the ridge, but the storm worked in her favor, washing away her scent. As long as she stayed hidden, they might pass by without finding her.Serena huddled deeper into the cave, trying to warm her shivering body. The adrenaline that had kept her going was fading, making every injury throb with renewed intensity. She needed to set her broken arm, find food and water, treat her wounds—but she had no idea how to do any of that. She'd always had the pack to rely on."I can't do this," she whispered, despair washing over her. "I can't survive out here alone."Something stirred in response—that strange power she had felt when confronting her father. It pulsed within her, almost like a second heartbeat. Warm energy spread through her limbs, focusing on her injuries. The pain in her broken arm lessened slightly.Serena gasped, looking down at her arm in the darkness. Was she imagining it, or had the bone shifted straighter?The energy faded as quickly as it had come, leaving her exhausted but slightly less pained. What was happening to her? Was this part of being an Onyx wolf?The curse must be purged, Elder Thorne had said. But was it really a curse? This power—it had helped her, not hurt her.Outside, the storm raged on. Inside the cave, Serena's mind raced with questions no one had answers for. What was an Onyx wolf, really? Why had her transformation triggered such fear? And what had Elder Thorne meant about her mother? Isolde Vale had died when Serena was just a baby—at least, that's what she'd always been told.

A flash of lightning illuminated the cave entrance, revealing something Serena hadn't noticed before: scratches on the cave wall. Not random marks, but symbols—crude drawings of wolves and moons, and something that looked like writing in an alphabet she didn't recognize.She wasn't the first to shelter here.Reaching out with her good arm, Serena traced the markings with her fingers. They seemed old, the edges worn smooth by time. One symbol caught her attention—a drawing of a wolf with glowing eyes, standing beneath what looked like an eclipse.An Onyx wolf, like her.Her heart beat faster. Was this a message? A sign?Another howl, closer now. Serena froze, holding her breath. Heavy paws padded past the cave entrance, so close she could hear the wolf's breathing over the storm.The bushes concealing the entrance rustled. Serena pressed herself against the back wall of the cave, praying the darkness would hide her.A massive shadow blocked what little light filtered through the entrance. A wolf stood there, water streaming from its fur, its shape blackened by the night behind it. Serena couldn't tell if it was Silver Ridge or Nightfang—only that it had found her.The wolf's head lowered, sniffing the ground where Serena had dragged herself inside. Then, slowly, it raised its muzzle and looked directly to where she huddled in the darkness.Glowing amber eyes met hers.Lucian Draven had found her.

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  • Torn Between Alphas   Chapter 103: The First Shadow

    Shaking stopped, yet the quiet afterwards was far from reassuring.They paused on the old trail and waited for any noise. Nothing moved. They heard no birds, felt no wind, and there was no longer the constant sound of the river they had just crossed. Overhead, the sky was dull grey—not indicating a storm, but instead a thin blanket laid over the sunshine.Serakha pulled her pack in and clutched it harder. “That did not sound like the mountain,” she said quietly. “That came from below.”He forced his hand into the earth and rested a moment on the cold ground. His eyes closed silently for just a moment.He said the ground sheltered some sort of activity. “Not close… but it’s moving.”Lucian looked ahead. The way ahead separated into three, much as Renak’s map had shown would occur. Three paths were dividing the road, with each heading off toward a different part of the forest. Only the path

  • Torn Between Alphas   Chapter 102: The Long Road Below

    There was no longer any cold on the route leading down from the mountain.A light breeze took the place of the cold wind, caresingly passing over Serakha’s cloak. It did not appear that the trees were sleeping now. The trees stood tall, their branches curling over them like sentinels, and their silver-green foliage softly hummed as light passed through.Lucian walked ahead, his flame, hidden beneath his skin, vibrating lightly as if pulsing.Leaving the city was not complete; memories of it continued with them. They carried that memory with them as they went: Because the route curved in the right place beneath them, warmth hung on their backs, and a gentle silence filled the morning.He brought up the rear, his normal quietness intact, yet his steps steadied the rest. He scanned the ground ahead, as though he expected something to happen. She stayed in the middle, her hand resting lightly on the seed kept inside her. It was not heavy. It was calm.

  • Torn Between Alphas   Chapter 101: What Comes After

    The sky was still sparkling with its dim shine.The first flash of the sunlight reached on the icy pinnacles, and flowed softly in the fine golden mist that was spread low in the sky, as if it had been spun from the heavens. There was an unexpected warmth to the light that somehow wasn’t comfortable. It was warm like sun, but soft like fire’s touch. It appeared to linger about somewhere between a ghost of a memory and a soft exhalation.A little more he waited, standing at the edge of the cliff gazing out. Down below the first signs of life were being established in the city.Whispering was gradually returning into the air. A trickle of water. A bird’s call. Leaves brushing in soft wind. He watched the rooftops glimmer with colors they did not reveal a day before as if the buildings had come to life, slowly and exhaling after centuries of slumber.Serakha joined him. She wrapped her cloak around her and peered over the horizon and over t

  • Torn Between Alphas    Chapter 100: The Forgotten City

    The morning was still.There was a soft peace upon everything as the sky soon turned peaceful early azure. Lying below, the city was peaceful like it was always asleep, not disturbed and still with the mountain shielding it.Lucian awoke first. He rolled himself out, and was careful not to wake up the peaceful sleep of the Serakha beside him. Her hand rested beside his chest. His glance rested on her with gratitude and as he turned to gaze on the valley. He was caught breathless again upon the scene.The silver leaves of the trees hardly fluttered, as if the forest was breathing slowly. Time seemed to have left no trace on the city that lay under them. No broken roofs. No fallen stones. In the very centre of the valley there was a massive building of the form of an open volume, its walls encrimsoned in the palely dancing spiral glyphs.response“To go down, it’s time,” Lucian said conspiratorially.Arden replied, grabbing his

  • Torn Between Alphas   Chapter 99: The Ascent

    They broke camp at dawn. Behind them a grove was pewter still and golden, in perpetual hush as a prayer is. The silver tree was its center, the knot now in the folds of its roots. There was a faint glow from it, like a heartbeat, slow, warm. Birds stirred from the upper branches. Leaves sang good-byes to the wind.Lucian stood on the perimeter of the grove and looked up to where the path went yet higher.“We head north from here,” Arden said, folding a dog-eared map. “There is a pass over the cliffs narrow and ancient. The Vertical truly begins there.”Serakha came up next to Lucian and grabbed his hand. He glanced down at her and smiled, as he felt the strange, proven weight of joy in his chest. They had been successful at the Fields. They had returned the memory. They had chosen each other.Now the world beyond waited.They walked in a single file as the path went narrow and the gradient increased. It was one traveled infrequently at best, j

  • Torn Between Alphas   Chapter 98: The Vertical

    Daybreak moved into the world, literally whispered over the trees. The world had changed again. The Mirror Fields were behind, misted out of sight and out of mind and the steep slope of the Vertical, the great mountain chain that flung itself straight across the end of the world, was ahead.Lucian stirred first. Their fire had died down; dew had rested on the grass. He sat up gently, stretching his arms, and turned around. He was awake, on a flat rock, sharpening a thin piece of wood with a practiced still hand. Next to the knot, Serakha slept on, her features lax as he rarely saw them. She looked peaceful.Lucian smiled, allowing himself the quiet time before the day’s ascent.Soon Serakha blinked awake. His eyes met hers and the warmth between them appeared to be increasing like a sullen fire.“Morning,” she whispered.‘Morning’, he said, as he brushed away some leaves from her cloak. “You slept well.”

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