LOGINFour years ago, Eirlys Thorne saved an injured stranger with no memories. For two perfect months, he was simply Kael, the man she loved with all her heart. He fixed fences, burned dinner, carved little wooden wolves for the village children, and promised he would always come back to her. But he disappeared. Now he is back. Only this time, he is not the gentle, nameless man she remembers. He is Kaelor Drakhar, the feared Crown Prince and heir to the Alpha Warlord. "I never abandoned you," he says, voice rough with pain. Eirlys laughed bitterly, eyes bright with unshed tears. "Really? Then where were you when I gave birth to our son alone? Where were you for every night he asked about his father?" For the first time in his life, the powerful Alpha Prince had no answer. He simply bowed his head in deep regret, the weight of four lost years crushing him.
View MoreEirlys POV:
"Daddy's coming today." My hands froze right in the middle of kneading the bread dough. Flour puffed up around my fingers as I looked down at my little boy sitting cross-legged on the worn kitchen floor. He was happily scraping uneven lines into a chunk of firewood with a dull butter knife, his tongue poking out the corner of his mouth in total concentration. Those dark curls kept falling into his silver-gray eyes...the same eyes I saw in my dreams and nightmares every single damn day. "Auren, honey," I said softly, wiping my hands on my apron, "don't play with knives like that, okay?" "It isn't even sharp, Mama. Look." He grinned up at me, all proud of himself, and pressed his little finger right against the blunt edge. "See? No ouch." I let out a long sigh and walked over anyway, gently taking the knife from his hand. "Still. Better safe than sorry, my love." He tilted his head, those big eyes watching me. "You've said Daddy's coming every morning for almost a year now." My chest squeezed tight. "Because one day I'll be right, sweetheart." Kids weren't supposed to carry hope that heavy. It broke something in me every time he said it. Auren dug into the pocket of his tiny patched overalls and pulled out the little wooden wolf. The carving was smooth and shiny now from all the years of his small fingers rubbing over it. It was the only thing his father had ever left us. "Daddy made Wolfie for me," he said, smiling like it was the best thing in the world. "He promised he'd come back to us." My throat burned like I'd swallowed hot coals. "Yeah... he did promise," I managed to get out, my voice rough. "So why is he so late?" Auren asked, turning the little wolf over in his hands. I didn't know why exactly. Maybe because promises are cheap and easier to make. Maybe because sometimes love isn't enough to make someone stay because people can vanish when life gets hard and the world doesn't care how much you need them. I swallowed all those bitter truths before they could slip out. Instead, I forced a smile and ruffled his curls. "Maybe he just got lost on the way home, huh? The mountains are tricky sometimes." Auren nodded slowly, like that made perfect sense to him. "I'll wait then." He always did. Every single day. Every sunset he'd race to the front gate, standing on his tiptoes to see farther down the path. Every sunrise he'd ask if today was finally the day. Every birthday candle he blew out came with the same quiet little wish I wasn't supposed to hear. *Bring Daddy home.* I turned away fast so he wouldn't catch the tears stinging my eyes. Three years. Three long years since the man I loved with every piece of my heart had disappeared without a single word. No letter. No message. Nothing. Just... gone. Some days I told myself he must have died. It hurt less than thinking he'd chosen a life without us. A loud knock suddenly banged against the front door. Three sharp raps that made my heart jump straight into my throat. "Stupid. Ridiculous." I cussed at myself. After all this time, I still reacted like that. Still hoped. Still wondered 'what if?' Auren was already scrambling to his feet. "Daddy!" He took off running toward the door before I could grab him. "Auren, wait!" I hurried after him, quickly wiping the rest of the flour off my hands onto my apron before yanking the door open. It wasn't him. Just old Mrs. Brindle from across the stream, her face already pinched in that familiar disapproving frown. "I heard your boy was pestering strangers in the village again," she said, arms crossed tight over her chest. Heat rushed up my neck. "I'm really sorry about that, Mrs. Brindle." "You should be." Her sharp eyes slid over to Auren, who had tucked himself behind my leg. "It's a downright shame. A little pup who doesn't even know his own father." Auren's head dropped, staring at his scuffed shoes. My hands curled into fists at my sides. "He knows exactly who his father is." "Does he now?" She let out a harsh snort. "Because none of us have ever laid eyes on the man. Not once." *Neither have I. Not in three years.* "He'll come back," Auren whispered from behind me, his voice so small it nearly killed me. Mrs. Brindle gave a dry laugh. "Men like that? Irresponsible types who run off? They don't come back, girl. It's a real pity you couldn't give that child a better father." Something inside me cracked wide open. "My son doesn't need your pity, Mrs. Brindle." "No," she shot back coldly, already turning to leave. "What he needs is a father." The words hit like a slap across the face. She shuffled off down the path without another word. I stood there for a second, then slowly closed the door, the latch clicking loudly in the quiet cottage. Behind me, Auren's voice came out shaky and small. "Mom... did I do something bad?" I spun around so fast my skirt whipped around my legs. "No, baby. No, you didn't." I dropped to my knees right there on the floor and pulled him into my arms, pressing quick, desperate kisses into his soft dark curls. "Then why doesn't Daddy want us?" he asked, his little voice cracking. I cupped his sweet face in both hands, looking straight into those silver-gray eyes. "Listen to me, Auren. You are the best thing that has ever happened to me. The very best." "But Daddy—" "I don't know why he left," I whispered, the truth spilling out raw and honest. "I wish I did. But whatever his reasons were... it was never, ever because of you. Okay?" He sniffled hard, a fat tear rolling down his cheek. "Promise?" "I promise, sweetheart. Cross my heart." His tiny arms wrapped tight around my neck, clinging like he was afraid I'd disappear too. "I'll protect you, Mama. I will." A watery laugh slipped out of me. "Oh yeah?" He nodded, dead serious. "When I get big and turn into a strong wolf, I'll make sure Mrs. Brindle and anybody else stops being mean to my mummy!" My heart swelled so much it hurt. I smiled and gently messed up his hair with my fingers. "My brave, brave boy." Outside, thunder rumbled deep across the mountains. The wind picked up fast, slamming against the windows so hard the whole cottage rattled. Auren suddenly went stiff in my arms. "Mama..." "What's wrong, honey?" I asked, pulling back to look at him. "My head hurts really bad." His voice was tiny. Before I could even react, his small body started trembling. Then he let out a sharp, awful scream that tore right through me—nothing like I'd ever heard from him before. His eyes flashed. Not just gray or silver anymore. They glowed bright like molten moonlight. And right there in front of me, my four-year-old son... shifted. A tiny silver wolf burst out of his little body in a shimmer of light and fur. The cottage fell completely silent except for the storm outside. I stopped breathing. I couldn't move. Shock crashed over me like ice water had been dumped over me because every wolf alive knew one impossible truth. No child had ever shifted this young. Not once in all of recorded history. For one full minute, I couldn’t move. Couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t even scream. The tiny silver wolf stood right where my son had been only seconds ago, wobbling unsteadily on paws that still looked too big for his little body. He tilted his head like he couldn’t figure out why the world had suddenly grown so much bigger around him. Then he sneezed. A tiny, ridiculous little sneeze that somehow broke straight through my frozen panic. “Auren!” I dropped to my knees so fast my skirt pooled around me on the floorboards. The little wolf looked up at me with those same frightened silver-gray eyes I’d kissed a thousand times before. Eyes I knew better than my own. “Mama…” The word came out as a soft, high-pitched whine instead of my little boy’s voice. “Oh, Moon Goddess…” Tears flooded my vision as I scooped him into my arms, holding his warm, furry little body close to my chest. His fur was impossibly soft, like the finest down, still carrying the familiar scent of my son...bread dough, wood shavings, and that sweet milky smell he hadn’t quite grown out of yet. His tiny heart hammered against my skin, racing so fast I worried it might burst. “It’s okay, baby,” I whispered, rocking him gently even though nothing felt okay. “Mama’s right here. I’ve got you.” He buried his little muzzle under my chin, trembling all over. “It hurts, Mama…”Eirlys POV:The village had become entirely too quiet lately. Not in a peaceful way. It was the kind of quiet that meant people were watching instead of talking openly.I felt their eyes on us everywhere. From behind windows. Across the market stalls. Behind half-open doors. Every time Auren laughed loudly, someone would look over. Every time a soldier passed by, whispers followed like shadows.I hated it so much.Just after noon, someone knocked on the door.Three gentle taps. It was not Rhydian. It was not Kaelor either.When I opened the door, Elder Miriam stood outside holding a clay bowl wrapped in a clean cloth."I brought stew," she said softly, almost shyly.I looked at the bowl. Then at her. "You have never brought me stew before."A shadow of embarrassment crossed her face. "No, I have not.""No, you have not," I repeated.Neither of us spoke for several long moments. Finally, she sighed heavily."I owe you an apology, Eirlys."That... I had not expected at all."For what?"
Kaelor's POVI remembered writing it. Alone in my chambers, unable to sleep, certain I would find her eventually."I searched every border village," I said, my voice sounding distant even to my own ears. "I hired the best trackers I could find.""I remember," Rhydian replied quietly."I offered rewards. Big ones.""You did.""I thought..." I laughed bitterly, the sound hollow. "I thought she had decided she deserved better than me."Rhydian did not answer. Because there was nothing to say.I reached the bottom of the box. One final envelope remained. Smaller than the others. Inside rested a delicate silver bracelet. Tiny. No bigger than my palm. Engraved with four simple words.For Our Little Wolf.I stared at it for a long time.My chest ached so badly it felt hard to breathe."I bought this before I left," I whispered.Rhydian looked surprised. "You knew?"I smiled sadly and shook my head. "No. I only hoped."I remembered standing outside Eirlys’ cottage that final night. She had la
Kaelor POVI had faced armies without fear. I had stood against rogue Alphas twice my size. I had walked through battlefields where the ground ran red with blood and never once hesitated.Yet a four-year-old boy asking me if fish liked worms had nearly brought me to my knees."...Daddy, do they get lonely in the water?" The question still echoed in my head as I sat alone inside the abandoned mill, staring at the wooden walls."Daddy."He had said it so naturally. Not because he truly knew me yet. But because he wanted to.I closed my eyes and let out a long breath.Moon Goddess...How had I deserved that? I had not.Not after everything I had missed. His first breath. His first laugh. His first word. His first steps. His first shift. His first scraped knee. His first nightmare. Every single memory that should have belonged to me... belonged only to Eirlys.A knock sounded on the half-open door.Rhydian entered quietly, his footsteps steady and familiar."You should be resting," he sa
Eirlys POVJust before sunset, there was another knock on the door.This time... I did not mind opening it. That realization alone irritated me.Kaelor stood there holding a fishing rod. Not for himself. A much smaller one rested against his shoulder."I thought..." He hesitated, looking a bit uncertain. "If Auren would like... perhaps we could go fishing together."I folded my arms across my chest, studying him carefully."He does not know you," I said."I know," he replied softly."You cannot simply appear and expect to become his father overnight.""I do not expect that," he said, his voice steady but gentle. "I would never expect that.""Then why bring the rod?" I asked."Because..." His eyes dropped to the smaller fishing pole. "...when I was little, my father took me fishing after every lesson I hated. It was our way of making things better."I said nothing, waiting for him to continue."He never caught many fish," Kaelor continued with a tiny smile touching his lips. "But he a
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