로그인Alara’s POVThe palace was quiet again. It wasn't a true, structural silence — this house was too old, too heavy with history to ever completely hold its breath. There was still the muffled rhythm of guards rotating through the lower halls, the hushed murmurs of healers tending to the remaining wounded, the careful, deliberate steps of servants moving through corridors that had spent weeks looking like war rooms instead of home.But the marrow-deep fear had vanished.There were no alarms. No desperate, late-night whispers of another border breach. No greasy, corrupted energy crawling beneath the floorboards, waiting to sink its teeth into our minds.There was peace now. Or at least the fragile, bleeding edge of it. And somehow — that silence frightened me more than the war ever had.Because now that the momentum had stopped, the vacuum was pulling everything else to the surface. We were finally being forced to feel the weight of what we had done. The losses. The exhaustion. The sheer
Xavier’s POVThe mountain was collapsing around us. Entire corridors crumbled, dissolving into absolute darkness as the corrupted network finally tore itself apart from the inside out.But through the veil of dust and falling masonry, I only saw Alara.Aurelian’s iron grip had vanished the exact second Lucian’s shadows consumed the remaining corruption binding the core together. One moment Aurelian had stood at the precipice of the abyss beneath the fortress. The next, Lucian ended it.No one even fully understood the extent of what had happened. The shadows didn’t just strike; they obeyed him. They had risen like a wall of living darkness around the collapsing core, swallowing Aurelian whole while silver crescent energy surged violently through the network, cauterizing the tethers.There had been one final shriek. Then nothing.No body. No remains. Just a sudden, vacuum-like silence.And the core shattered immediately after. Now, the entire fortress was dying with him.“Xavier!”Ala
Alara’s POVThe final collapse didn't start with a roar. It started with a whisper.The stronghold was no longer a fortress; it was a tomb in the making. The air was thick with the scent of ozone and pulverized stone, but the psychic pressure that had been crushing my skull for hours had shifted. The network was being hollowed out from the inside.Lucian didn't let go of my hand. His small fingers were cold, but the power radiating from him was a physical heat that pushed back the encroaching chill of the ruins.“He’s at the core,” Lucian whispered, his dark eyes fixed on a point through the solid stone of the floor. “He’s trying to take the light away.”I didn't have to ask what he meant. I could feel the desperate, jagged pulses of Aurelian’s remaining influence. He wasn't trying to lead the wolves anymore. He was trying to collapse the entire connection into a singularity of spite.If he couldn't have unified the race, he would leave us all in a silence so absolute it would drive
Alara’s POVThe connection wasn't just fraying; it was hemorrhaging. Every few seconds, a scream tore through the psychic architecture of the place. The controlled wolves were breaking. The psychic tether binding them was snapping, and Aurelian was losing his grip on the reins.I stood alone in the center of a fractured corridor, my injured hand clamped against my chest. Beneath my skin, the silver crescent light flickered with a violent, uncontrollable rhythm.“Alara!”Xavier's voice was a distant thunder, echoing through the labyrinth of falling stone.Before I could find the strength to call back, Aurelian stilled.He became a statue of ice in the center of the chaos. His dark gaze shifted, looking past me toward the corridors I had just traversed. For the first time since I had looked into his eyes, I saw uncertainty.“You brought him here,” he murmured, his voice barely a shadow.Confusion tangled with my pain. “Who?” But I didn't need an answer. I could feel the change in the ai
Xavier’s POVThe stronghold had gone still.It wasn't true silence. Stone continued to groan and splinter overhead, and the distant, rhythmic snarls of the rogues echoed like ghosts through the collapsing corridors. Beneath our boots, the corrupted network pulsed with a frantic thrum.But the battle itself? It had paused.Every eye in the ruins was fixed on Lucian. My son stood in the center of the wreckage, his small frame silhouetted against the dark. Shadows twisted around him in violent spirals, while a faint, silver crescent light flickered like a trapped star beneath the ink.He looked impossibly small against the backdrop of a falling fortress. And he looked impossibly dangerous.The corrupted rogues had retreated. They weren't ordered back; they were driven back by a primal, soul-deep terror. I could feel the resonance of it through Marcus.The shadows curled tighter, more protective, as Lucian stared at Aurelian with an unsettling calm.“You’re hurting Mama,” he repeated. H
Ronan’s POVSomething changed.It happened in the middle of the carnage — a sudden, tectonic shift that stalled the very air in our lungs.One heartbeat, the stronghold was a theater of chaos. Controlled wolves flooded the corridors, their snarls harmonizing with the groan of collapsing stone while the network pulsed beneath our feet like a feverish heart. The atmosphere was thick with the rot of Aurelian’s corruption, a suffocating fog of fractured consciousness.Then, the silence hit.It wasn’t the absence of sound, but a wrongness in it.The rogues stopped. They didn’t die, and they didn’t freeze; they listened. Every single one of them lifted their heads in a synchronized, haunting motion, low whines vibrating in their throats.My instincts didn't just sharpen, they screamed. “What the hell…”Beside me, Rylan went rigid. And Marcus, the violent, predatory pressure he’d been radiating through Xavier, simply vanished into absolute stillness. It wasn't a retreat. It was a bow. It wa
Alara’s POVThe horn’s cry lingered long after it faded, as if the night itself remembered it.Xavier didn’t release me immediately. His hands stayed firm at my arms, thumbs pressing lightly as though to reassure both of us that this — us standing, breathing, unbroken — was real. Marcus paced benea
Alara’s POVThe peace that followed didn’t arrive loudly.It didn’t announce itself with victory or certainty. It slipped in quietly, between breaths, between heartbeats, settling into places I had kept guarded for years.That evening, after the twins were finally asleep and the house had grown hus
Alara’s POVThe house did not sleep after that.Neither did I.Morning came pale and hesitant, as if even the sun was unsure it was welcome. I stood by the eastern window long after the twins finally drifted into an uneasy rest, watching light creep across the grounds in thin, careful lines. The la
Alara’s POVThe peace broke quietly.Not with screams or blood or the clash of steel but with the subtle wrongness of a dawn that rose too red, staining the horizon like a wound that refused to close.I was already awake when it happened.The Crescent mark had not allowed me any sleep. It pulsed b







