ВойтиLyra Vale has spent almost her entire life inside the last human stronghold, raised by assassins and forged into the perfect weapon against werewolves. Her mission is simple. Infiltrate Alpha Academy — the elite training ground where the three heirs of the most powerful wolf packs in the world are being prepared to rule. Gain their trust. Get close enough. Kill them. But the heirs of Alpha Academy are nothing like the monsters Lyra was taught to hate. One is cold and ruthless. One is dangerously charming. One watches her like he already knows every secret she hides. And the longer Lyra stays inside the academy, the more the truth begins to unravel. Because the heirs aren’t just future rulers… They’re the key to a war that could wipe out humanity. Now Lyra faces an impossible choice: Complete the mission she was trained for… or protect the very heirs she was sent to destroy.
Узнайте большеLyra's POV
When I found the rogue, he was still chewing on the body of one of the Aurelian scouts that had gone out on patrol earlier. Moonlight shone over the ground, turning the snow into glass and the blood into black ink.
I've been trained for this exact moment since I was six years old to be an Assassin.
Pulling my cloak around me, I pulled the silver blade from the sheath on my thigh. Crouching low, I snuck to his side away from the direction of the wind. Doing my best to avoid him smelling my scent, I waited for the exact moment to strike.
Breathe in, Breathe out.
I struck with the precision years of training had given me. Sliding down, I went under him, my body touching the corpse, avoiding the reeking smell of death, I raised my blade, aiming true right into the center of his heart.
His eyes glared at me, not expecting his sudden death. I quickly rolled to the side, his body collapsing with a loud thump, toppling on top of the dead scout.
His wolven body snapped and cracked, shifting back into his human form.
This had been the fifth one this week. We usually had rogues sniffing around, scouting the perimeter of Aurelia.
But the one thing they've underestimated about us humans is that we have a backup plan.
I was part of the backup plan.
Standing up, I brushed the strands of black hair that came undone from my braid away from my face. Looking down at my blade, it still dripped with the thick red and black blood that belongs only to werewolves.
Wiping my blade off using the hard-packed snow to clean it, I shoved it back into my sheath.
"Lyra is it finished? Check in!" Rowan, my best friend of 19 years, spoke over my comm.
"Yes, I'm fine. He was distracted; it was an easier kill than expected. I'm headed back now."
"Ok, but just know Commander Rourke is waiting for you in his office."
Rubbing my hands over my face, I sighed.
This is fucking great.
"Ok, I'm coming. Tell them to open the wall gates in minus four minutes."
"Will do." And the crackling of the comm fizzled out.
The snow crunched under my boots as I approached the massive stone and silver-enforced walls of Aurelia, the last stronghold of humankind.
The guards on the towers noticed it was me and called out, "Open the gates."
With a loud grinding noise, the six-foot-thick silver gates slowly opened, revealing the city within.
Most people would think that, as the last human stronghold, we would be thriving, with ample food, medicine, and education, and a booming birth rate.
That sadly wasn't the case in Aurelia.
Food was rationed so tightly in Aurelia that every meal felt like a borrowed mercy. Miss one distribution of grain and/or bread, and the city didn't slow down to care if you starved.
Our kingdom, if you want to call it that, produced the medication that kept the werewolf kingdoms alive, with only a fraction set aside for humans. Even then, the shelves were never full. Every winter, when infections and viruses were at an all-time high, the average Aurelian would have to wait in hour-long lines or even sometimes have to steal from another when there wasn't enough to go around.
Education was until 8th grade, then you went to trade school. Everyone was required to have a trade in order to keep Aurelia running.
Every year, there were advertisements and government-sponsored programs promoting and encouraging families to have more children. A few years ago, the council members voted on a decree that everyone at the age of twenty would be required to marry. If you did not have a boyfriend or girlfriend at that time, you would be entered into a lottery, and they would match you with your future spouse.
Despite all efforts made, the number of children born each year was dwindling at an alarming rate. Some said it was malnutrition, issues with fertility, curses from witches, and some even said it was biological warfare from the werewolves trying to eliminate us altogether. On that last part, it wouldn't shock me at all.
Walking through the gates, the guards nodded at me with an air of respect, while others quickly moved out of my way, averting their gaze while clutching their little ones tight.
Thirteen years ago, I came to these exact gates. I was a wiry six-year-old with black hair of bob length, gray eyes, olive complexion, and tattered clothes drenched in blood. Commander Rourke had found me seven miles from the stronghold in the wreckage of an armored car, one of many that were carrying the last remaining refugees. Werewolves had attacked our armored car; after wrecking it, they used their strong jaws to rip the doors off the hinges.
My parents, Adam and Olivia, had thrown themselves on top of me, trying to shield me. The last thing I remember is their screams and seeing them being dragged out of the car before being torn to pieces. When I woke up, I was wrapped in a blanket by a tall human soldier with bright red hair and a matching colored beard. He had brought me here and raised me.
Walking across the main square, I entered a side entrance, climbed down two flights of stairs, and opened the door to that floor. Going down the dimly lit hallway, I make it to an office door. The sign above the door read "Commander Rourke: Elite Training Division", which was code for the assassin training program that only a few of us had ever been chosen for.
It was definitely not common knowledge, and we liked to keep it that way.
I knocked on the door. A gruff voice from inside answered, "Enter." A chill ran down my spine as I reached for the handle, having a sensation that everything was about to change.
I opened the door and quickly entered his office. The office was a stark contrast to the exterior's drab grayness. There were bright tapestries on the wall, beautifully designed red carpets lining the floors, and a massive brown oak desk sitting in the middle where Commander Rourke sat smiling at me.
He was a man in his mid-forties whose whole demeanor commanded awe and respect. He was one of the last surviving officers in the last major war between humans and werewolves. I was five when that war happened, old enough to remember my house being destroyed. We had fled to the safe zone in the middle of the night with only one sack of clothes for the three of us. I remember the relief once we reached the safe zone, knowing that we would be coming here. The sad fact of it all is that we never did make it... or maybe I should say, my parents never did.
Focusing my mind back to the situation at hand, "Sir, reporting for duty."
Gesturing to the chair opposite him, "Lyra, you know there are no formalities between us, please take a seat."
"Yes, Commander."
As I lowered myself into the chair, the bitter, rich smell of coffee hit my nose. Knowing me too well, he slid a mug across the table towards me.
Picking up the mug, I found it contained espresso with a hint of cream, a rare treat in the compound.
Taking a sip, I savored the intense flavor, letting out a slight moan of enjoyment.
"Lyra, we have a lot to talk about, so let's get down to business."
Noticing the tone in his voice, I knew that this was not a normal briefing.
Lyra’s POVRowan stopped outside the bakery like it was just another stop on a route.He took a last drag from his cigarette, slow, controlled, like he didn’t care about it at all. Then he stubbed it out on his shoe and dropped it into the trash-and-ash tray by the door.He lingered half a second before going in.I noticed anyway.We followed him inside.Amber didn’t hesitate at all. She was already halfway to the counter like she belonged there.The café area was in the back—small tables, warm lighting, quiet voices, the smell of sugar and butter so strong it hit immediately.Rowan slid into a booth first, stretching out like he was relaxed, even though his eyes were already moving around the room.I sat across from him.Amber dropped into the seat beside us. “Okay. This place is dangerous.”Rowan glanced at her. “It’s a bakery.”“Exactly,” she said. “Dangerous.”A w
Lyra’s POVAmber pulled the car into a small parking area at the edge of Ravenmere and cut the engine.For a few seconds, none of us moved.Rowan was the first to break the silence. “That’s… not what I expected.”I didn’t answer right away. I was still looking out the window.Ravenmere wasn’t what I had been bracing for.Timber-framed buildings lined cobblestone streets, white plaster walls crossed with dark wood beams. Flower boxes spilled over with color beneath nearly every window, and iron lanterns hung from curved brackets that swayed slightly in the breeze.It looked… put together.Not rich in the loud way. Not flashy.Just cared for.Like something out a children’s story book.And that was what made it sit wrong in my chest.Because all I could think about was Aurelia.Tall brick buildings packed too tightly together. Narrow streets that always felt temporary,
Lyra’s POV By Saturday morning, I was one lecture away from stabbing Professor Lunatic with my own pencil. The week had been an endless cycle of classes, combat training, and the ridiculous group project he’d dumped on us. Thankfully, we’d finished it the night before over greasy pizza and cheap beer, which meant today was ours. Saturday was the only day students were allowed outside the Academy gates, each of us given a day pass from nine in the morning until nine at night. Our destination was Ravenmere—the small village bordering campus. I’d never stepped foot inside a werewolf-controlled village before. Alpha Leon had assured Rowan and me that Ravenmere was perfectly safe for students. Safe. Right. I adjusted the twin blades hidden beneath my jacket and rolled my shoulders. I hadn’t survived this long by trusting anyone else’s definition of safe. Unlike Rowan and me, Amber had been practically vibrating with excitement about today all week. Of course she had. Ravenmere wasn’t
Kael’s POV The door to my apartment slammed hard enough to rattle the walls, the sound echoing throughout the suite. “Crazy,” I muttered, dragging a hand through my hair. The Omega—Maria, maybe? Mia? Something with an M—hadn’t taken rejection well. All I knew for sure was that she worked in the kitchen and was pissed as hell when I told her to leave. Everyone knew I didn’t do serious relationships. I didn’t keep sugar babies, and I definitely didn’t do friends with benefits. I wasn’t interested in commitment—not until the Moon Goddess handed me my mate. Until then, I saw no reason to deny myself a good time. Being an Alpha heir came with perks. Attention was one of them. Endless, exhausting attention. Ever since I turned eighteen, it was like every she-wolf within a thousand miles suddenly found me irresistible. Maybe it was my height, physique, and blonde hair. Maybe it was the title attached to my name. Most of them had the same hope anyway—that after one night together,
Lucian’s POVThe human girl, they call her Lyra, is now sitting beside me in the dimly lit classroom. I had tried to object, to move away or protest, but I knew Professor Judith would quickly call my dad or, worse, my mom—both known for their strict discipline and no-nonsense attitudes. That sounde
Lyra’s POV I quietly slipped out of the bed, my senses alert as I observed that Rowan was taking his time. I swear, he could be more prissy than a woman. But then again, what I had said to him earlier, especially after us having sex, might have gotten him in his feelings more than he let on. With
Lyra’s POV My fingers gently traced the lamented itinerary pressed against my hand. The glint of the plastic catches the fluorescent ceiling lights, listing the classes I’ll be attending this semester, arranged in a four-block system: Leadership Classes - Senior Block 1: Diplomacy - 8:30 AM Blo
Lyra’s POV “Welcome to Alpha Academy” Not trying to look at the Alpha any longer than necessary, we both muttered, “Thank you, Alpha.” This man is seriously creepy, but in an odd way, why did he look vaguely familiar? Shaking it off, I grabbed Rowan’s hand, and under the order of the comman


















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