LOGINAlejandroThe darkness moved. Not like smoke. Not like shadow. Not even like magic. It moved with intent.The moment it spilled from the collapsing doorway, every instinct I possessed erupted into alarm. My wolf lunged against the inside of my mind, claws scraping against restraint, demanding action. Around me, the Haven reacted just as quickly.Koa shifted first. One second he was standing beside Ragnar, and the next a massive silver wolf stood where he had been, muscles taut and fangs bared. Lucien vanished completely. The vampires moved differently from wolves. Where our power announced itself, theirs slipped into the cracks of perception. One moment he was visible. The next, he was nowhere.Ragnar's eyes brightened with that familiar predatory gleam that appeared whenever violence became a possibility. The ancients were preparing. Every single one of them. And yet the First Hollowed did not move tow
AlejandroNo one moved. The thing standing beyond the black doorway did not radiate power the way an Alpha did. It did not carry the crushing pressure of an ancient vampire. It did not possess the vast magical presence of a witch or warlock. And yet every instinct I possessed was screaming.The creature smiled. Not mockingly. Not cruelly. Simply... knowingly. Like someone greeting old acquaintances. Beside me, Eldric had gone pale. I had never seen that before. Not once. The ancient warlock had faced monsters older than kingdoms and horrors buried beneath forgotten civilizations. Fear was not something he displayed.Yet now his hands were clenched so tightly that the veins stood out along his skin. "Eldric." My voice cut through the silence. "What is a First Hollowed?" The creature's smile widened slightly. Apparently, it was interested in the answer too. Eldric swallowed. Then he spoke. "The first victims."
AlejandroThe moment Elysia's voice reached us, every instinct inside me snapped taut. Not because she sounded injured. Not because she sounded afraid. Because she sounded distant. Wrongly distant.The structure sat less than half a mile away. Her voice should have carried naturally. Instead, it felt as though it had traveled across years rather than distance. As though it had crossed layers of reality before reaching us. Beside me, Zenith stiffened. "She’s alive." The certainty in her voice came directly from the bond.The same bond that connected every member of the Haven. The same bond Inferno had forged when this began. I focused on it myself. Immediately, I found Elysia. A thread. Faint and stretched. But present. Alive. Relief hit harder than I expected. Not because Elysia was one of our strongest fighters. Not because she was strategically important. But because she had been there from the beginning.
AlejandroWithin thirty minutes, we were moving. Not the entire Haven. That would have been reckless.The Hollow Arc had already demonstrated intelligence. It observed, adapted, and learned. Marching twenty-nine people into unknown territory would accomplish nothing except give it more information. So we chose carefully. Ragnar. Koa. Lucien. Jax. Eldric. Seraphine. Zenith. And me. The core. The people best equipped to deal with whatever waited beyond the eastern forest.The others remained behind under Valerius and Cassian's command. Neither ancient vampire seemed particularly pleased about it. Valerius crossed his arms. "You are taking half the monsters and leaving us behind." Koa grinned. "Jealous?""Deeply.""Good."Cassian rolled his eyes. For a man who had survived centuries, he somehow managed to look perpetually disappointed by modern life. "Bring Elysia back." It wasn't a request. It was family speaking. I nodded once. "We will." Then we left.The eastern forest felt wrong imm
AlejandroBy dawn, every member knew Elysia was missing. Not because rumors had spread. Because the bond itself carried the weight of it. Loss has a shape and absence has a sound. Anyone connected to a pack understands that instinctively.Even now, standing in the central hall as preparations unfolded around us, I could feel the difference. One thread was missing. Not broken or dead. And that distinction was the only reason I was still calm. Koa wasn't. "Tell me again why we're not already halfway through that forest?"He was pacing now. An impressive achievement considering the amount of space he was covering. Lucien watched him from a chair near the fireplace. "I've counted fourteen laps.""Good for you.""Fifteen."Koa pointed at him. "You are remarkably annoying.""I've heard that before.""Probably daily.""Hourly."Normally I would have ignored them. Today, the familiar exchange was strangely welcome. The Haven needed normality. Especially now. Because beneath the surface, every
AlejandroNobody argued after that. Not because we weren’t concerned. Because Inferno never used that tone. Impossible. Not difficult or dangerous. Impossible. And yet Zenith stood in the center of the corridor with one hand pressed against her stomach, breathing unevenly while that strange crimson-gold warmth pulsed faintly beneath her skin like a second heartbeat.The child had found Elysia. Or at least... It had found something connected to her. Koa recovered first, because of course he did. “Well,” he muttered, dragging a hand down his face, “that’s deeply horrifying.”Lucien glanced toward him. “Your ability to summarize catastrophic supernatural revelations in one sentence remains impressive.”“Thank you.”“That was not praise.”“I’m accepting it anyway.”Normally the exchange would have loosened tension. Not tonight. Because Zenith suddenly stiffened beside me. The energy beneath her skin flickered again. Not outwardly violent but directional. Like a compass turning toward the
AlejandroThe wards did not quiet after the gates closed. Rather, they deepened. That was the difference most did not understand. Silence meant danger. Stillness meant containment. But this, this low, resonant thrum beneath the bones of the mountain villa, meant recognition. The Haven was expanding
Zenith The first thing people misunderstand about power is that it always announces itself loudly.Apparently, it does not. Most of the time, it hums. I felt it before dawn, before the villa stirred, before the lake surrendered its mist. A low vibration along my bones, like a tuning fork struck s
AlejandroThe Haven quieted, yes, but silence here was layered. Breathing beneath breathing. Wards murmuring to stone. Old magic shifting its weight like a beast that trusted the ground it lay on.I stood on the upper terrace long after most had turned in, hands braced on the balustrade, eyes on th
ZenithThe first thing Mireya did after the doors closed behind us was sleep. She did not collapse. Nor did she faint. She just flat out Slept. It caught me off guard in a way battle never could.She did not fight it. Neither did she twitch or burn or fracture reality around her the way she had out







