“Exile taught me how to survive shame, but nothing prepared me for returning to the wolves who wanted me gone.”
The Shadowfang border is both familiar and foreign, like touching a scar that still aches beneath the skin. My boots sink into soil I once called home, damp with evening mist. Each step is heavier than the last, as if the land itself resists me, remembering the decree that banished me three years ago. The trees whisper with the wind, and I swear they carry voices. She’s back. The disgraced one. The cursed heir. My wolf paces beneath my skin, restless, uneasy. She wants to howl, to announce our return, but I bite down on the urge until blood fills my mouth. The pack doesn’t deserve my voice. Not yet. Not when their last memory of me is Damien’s rejection, the sneer of the council, and the exile that carved me hollow. The path curves toward the heart of the territory, and every step sends another wave of memory crashing into me. Nights of laughter that turned to silence. Faces once warm that twisted with suspicion. Friends who vanished when the word Shadowfang became more curse than bloodline. I press my palm against the nearest tree to steady myself. My vision flashes—the battlefield from my dream, wolves tearing each other apart, my own voice crying out from a dead wolf’s throat. The images strike so sharply I nearly stumble. I shake it off. Not now. Not here. The Moonlight Ceremony is already underway. Its glow pulses like a heartbeat in the distance—the council altar blazing with blood-flames, the entire pack gathered to watch. My stomach twists. I remember standing there once, years ago, hopeful, proud. Before everything shattered. Now, every whisper in the wind sharpens into words I can almost hear. Why would she come back? Does she think she still belongs? Shadowfang blood only brings ruin. I ignore them, focusing on the rhythm of my steps. If I falter, if I show weakness, the wolves who hated me will devour me alive. Still, the air feels heavier the closer I get. Torches burn along the stone path, their light throwing long, jagged shadows across the ground. The scent of pine and ash mixes with something more bitter—anticipation. The ceremony’s chant hums low through the night. Deep, resonant voices rise and fall in unison, echoing off the cliffs. I draw nearer, my chest tightening with every note. The council altar emerges into view. A massive stone dais carved with runes older than the pack itself. Flames flicker in braziers, blood-red and hungry, fed by the offerings of those who swear loyalty. Wolves crowd around the circle, their eyes glinting in the firelight. And then I hear the whispers shift. Louder. Sharper. Aria Thorn… she’s here… the exile… the cursed heir has returned. My presence cuts through the air like a blade. Wolves turn, shoulders stiffening, jaws tightening. Some bare their teeth, others avert their eyes, but all of them feel it—my return is a disturbance, a crack in their carefully rebuilt world. My heart slams against my ribs, but I don’t stop. I step into the clearing, my shadow spilling across the dirt. The whispers rise into a storm around me, but I keep my gaze fixed on the altar. And then—my breath freezes. Because standing there, at the very center, is Damien Blackthorn. My ex-lover. The boy who once kissed me beneath these very torches, who swore he would never let me fall. The man who broke me with a single rejection, whose ambition burned hotter than any bond we shared. He stands tall, shoulders squared, his dark hair gleaming beneath the moonlight. His hands rest on the stone, palms cut open, blood dripping into the altar fire. His lips move with steady precision, each word laced with hunger. A Blood Oath. The ritual that binds wolf to pack, swearing loyalty, claiming power. And Damien—Damien, of all wolves—is the one kneeling there, offering himself to the flames, his voice carrying across the clearing. I can’t breathe. The air thickens with smoke and tension. My wolf snarls inside me, claws scraping against my skin. My legs want to move, to run forward, to tear him away from the altar, but I remain frozen at the edge of the crowd, my heart a storm of rage, fear, and disbelief. How dare he? He, who cast me out. He, who whispered poison into the council’s ears. He, who left me to rot while he clawed his way to power. Now he kneels before the altar as if the moon itself blesses him. And worse—no one stops him. The council watches with solemn faces. The pack listens in reverent silence. They see him not as the betrayer I know, but as a leader, a savior. Heat scorches the back of my throat. My fists tremble at my sides. My vision blurs with fury. No. Not him. Never him. The flames leap higher as Damien’s oath builds to its crescendo. His voice cuts through the night, commanding, persuasive, dripping with ambition. He doesn’t just swear loyalty—he claims destiny. And in that moment, every eye turns from the altar to me. The whispers die into silence. The air holds its breath. I stand exposed in the torchlight, every scar of exile written on my skin. Damien’s gaze lifts from the altar and collides with mine. For a heartbeat, the ceremony falters. His lips curve into the smile I know too well—sharp, mocking, dangerous. My pulse roars in my ears. Because in that single look, I know. Damien saw me coming. He wanted me here. And whatever Blood Oath he swears tonight, it isn’t just for the pack. It’s for me.The scent of blood still clung to the sand. My blood.My knees shook as the whispers rippled through the arena, their weight heavier than the wounds still burning across my skin. They doubted me. They judged me. Some even looked hungry for me to fall.Then the ground itself seemed to tremble.Riven.He stalked into the Trial ring like a storm given flesh, his eyes blazing with a fury so raw the crowd fell silent at once. The growls in his throat weren’t for the warriors I’d slain. They were for me—no, for what had been done to me. His gaze locked onto mine, and I swore the air itself thickened, every wolf present holding their breath.I had never seen him look so close to losing control.“Enough,” his voice cracked like a whip, commanding silence. He didn’t even glance at the elders, or Damien smirking from the shadows. His stride cut through the blood-soaked sand, every line of his body radiating possession, dominance, fury.Before I could find words, his hand clamped around my arm,
The air in the arena was thick with dust, the scent of sweat and iron curling around me like a predator. My heart slammed against my ribs, each beat echoing in my skull as the crowd’s murmurs rose like a low tide. I stepped onto the sand, and it crunched beneath my boots. One wrong move, one misstep, and it would swallow me whole.Three warriors waited for me. Trained, precise, their eyes gleaming with hunger for victory. The Elders had chosen this Trial to test me—to see if I was worthy of the Shadowfang legacy. And yet, in their eyes, I was already a curiosity. A girl who had returned from exile, alone, untested, yet standing on the precipice of survival.I clenched my fists. “I am Aria Thorn,” I whispered to myself. “Shadowfang’s blood runs through me. I survive.”The first warrior lunged, steel glinting under torchlight. My body moved before my mind did, ducking under the arc of his blade. The sand sprayed into the air as I rolled, claws grazing the ground—not literal claws, but i
The council chamber was colder than any grave. Shadows clung to the carved stone walls, tall torches hissing like they could sense blood would be spilled before the night was over. My grandmother’s words still rattled in my skull—two Alpha corpses, and you standing between them… one you love must die.I couldn’t shake it. Not when the council’s heavy silence weighed like chains across my shoulders. Not when every eye in the chamber glared at me as if my very breath was treason.Alpha Riven stood at the head of the circle, carved from shadow and ice. His gaze found me, unreadable, cold. But it lingered—long enough to scald.“Aria Shadowfang,” Elder Theron’s gravelly voice broke the hush. “You are accused of betrayal. Of conspiring with enemies, of destabilizing the balance of this pack. Do you deny it?”My throat burned. “Yes.”The word was barely more than a whisper, but it cracked against the chamber like lightning.Murmurs hissed through the crowd—wolves snarling low in their throat
The air in my grandmother’s hut always smelled of sage and smoke, thick with herbs that clung to the skin. Tonight, though, it felt heavier—like the walls themselves were pressing in, suffocating me with secrets. The fire crackled low in the center, shadows dancing against the rough wooden beams, and my grandmother sat hunched before it, her eyes glassy, staring not at me but at something I couldn’t see.“Grandmother?” My voice wavered, soft, like I feared disturbing whatever fragile thread tethered her to this world.Her head turned slowly. The sight of her eyes sent chills racing down my spine. The cloudy whites shimmered faintly, pale silver bleeding into her pupils as though the Moon Goddess herself had dipped her gaze in light. Her visions were coming again.“You feel it too,” she whispered, her voice cracked and thin, but every word pierced like steel. “The threads of fate tugging tighter. Fire. Blood. Shadows entwining with light.”I froze. My heart thudded painfully, rememberi
The sting of silence was worse than the whip of any blade.Dozens of eyes pinned me in place, some gleaming with pity, others sharp with contempt. The council chamber smelled of burning resin and sweat, a suffocating mix that made the air heavy in my lungs.Riven stood before the assembly like carved stone, his voice a blade cutting through the murmurs.“Aria Shadowfang,” he declared, my family name ringing louder than my heartbeat. “From this day forward, you are stripped of your title. No longer heir. No longer of standing in this pack.”The words slammed into me, harder than claws. My knees threatened to give, but I forced them straight. Pride was the only shield I had left.A ripple tore through the crowd. Whispers spread like wildfire.She’s nothing now.Disgrace to the Shadowfang name.Why does he keep her here at all?I didn’t dare look at them, but I felt every sneer, every narrowed eye searing my skin.And then there was Damien.He leaned lazily against one of the stone pilla
The ruins breathed with silence. Dust swirled in the moonlight slanting through cracked stone walls, and the journal trembled in my hands. My father’s handwriting—firm, deliberate—spoke of fire, of blood, of a prophecy that reeked of doom.I should have felt relief at finding a piece of him, but all I felt was cold dread.“You shouldn’t be here, Aria.”The voice curled around me like velvet dipped in poison. My grip on the journal faltered as I turned. Damien leaned against a broken pillar, his smile sharp, his golden hair catching the pale light. His eyes—wolf-bright, calculating—were fixed on the book in my hands.“I should’ve known you’d sniff around the past,” he drawled, pushing off the pillar and circling me slowly, like a predator who had all the time in the world. “Tell me… did you find the part about the curse? About how it all leads back to you?”My heart hammered. He knew. Or at least, he wanted me to believe he knew.“This doesn’t concern you,” I said, forcing steel into m