Selene’s dreams were never gentle.
Tonight, the cold moon spilled silver across the forest in her vision. She shivered at the sight of ancient oaks rising like cathedral pillars around her. The wind howled through them, carrying a low, guttural snarl. She was not alone. Ahead lay a dark altar of cracked stone, overgrown with moss. Chains crisscrossed it, thick as a man’s arm, bolted into the ground. Something massive strained against them. A black wolf. Its fur bristled like razors, eyes glowing gold with fury and pain. Saliva frothed between bared fangs. Every time it thrashed, iron links groaned, and blood leaked from raw flesh where the shackles bit. “Run,” the wolf growled in a voice that was more human than beast. “Run before it’s too late.” The voice thundered in her head, not spoken aloud. The sound of it split the air, like claws raking through her thoughts. She fell to her knees, clutching her skull. “Stop,” she whispered. But the vision wouldn’t obey. The wolf lunged. The chains yanked it back, ringing like church bells. It snarled and howled, screaming for her. The noise rose until the world vibrated with its rage. Selene gasped and woke in her cot, sitting upright. Her nightdress clung to her with sweat. She pressed a hand to her chest, feeling her racing heart. The hut was dark, lit only by the ember-glow from the banked fire. Outside, the wind howled as if echoing the chained beast’s cry. She buried her face in her hands. She’d been here six months, apprenticed to old Mira, the Crescent Vale’s healer. She’d wanted peace. A fresh start. Safety from the arranged marriage her mother tried to force on her in the city. Selene sobbed. Her breath misted in the cold air. This was just another nightmare. She’d had them for weeks now—ever since entering Crescent Vale’s sacred forest to gather herbs and brushing against that old standing stone. Ever since then, the dreams had hunted her. But there was no safety here. Not in this cursed forest. Not when every night was haunted by that wolf. --- She forced herself to breathe. In. Out. Mira had taught her to calm her nerves after a nightmare. Her fingers trembled as she wiped them across her damp brow. She tried to speak aloud, grounding herself. “My name is Selene Lowell. I’m twenty-three. I’m alive.” The dream was over. But even so, the whisper of black wolf lingered in her head like a ghost. She lit a candle. The small flame pushed back the shadows, but they seemed reluctant to go. Selene moved to the wooden wash basin, splashing water on her face. Her reflection stared back, drawn and pale. Silver-gray eyes, her mother’s legacy, looked too bright in the candlelight. Her hair, black and tangled, clung to her skin like a shadow trying to consume her. She hated seeing fear in her own face. She braced both hands on the basin’s edge, shutting her eyes. For a moment she saw chains again glinting in moonlight, wet with blood. She shuddered. She opened her eyes and exhaled sharply. “It’s not real,” she whispered. But that wasn’t true. Because something in those golden eyes felt terrifyingly real. Like a promise she didn’t want. --- She dressed quickly, pulling her cloak over her nightdress. She didn’t want to sleep again. She grabbed her herb pouch and stepped outside. The cold night air slapped her awake fully. Crescent Vale lay quiet, the healer’s cottage at the edge of the settlement. The forest beyond loomed, black and impenetrable. Wind rattled the branches, making them clack like bones. She inhaled deeply, the scent of pine and frost filling her lungs. She hoped it would wash away the memory of blood and chains. But the wind shifted. And for a second she smelled something she couldn’t explain. Musk. Wild. Warm. Like the thick fur of a predator. It made her mouth go dry, her pulse flutter. Fear or something too close to it curled in her belly. She spun to look behind her. Nothing moved. The path was empty. “Get a hold of yourself,” she snapped under her breath. She squeezed the herb pouch so hard the dried lavender cracked in her fist. --- Inside the cottage, Mira stirred at the noise. The old woman’s voice was hoarse with sleep. “Another dream?” Selene swallowed, wiping her eyes. “Yes.” Mira sighed, levering herself up on one elbow. Her long gray braid spilled over her shoulder like a pale snake. “Same one?” Selene nodded mutely. Mira’s face darkened. She made a warding sign with gnarled fingers. “You should never have gone near that ruin, girl. That place is older than our gods.” Selene’s voice cracked. “I didn’t mean to.” Mira’s eyes softened. She gestured for Selene to come closer. The younger woman obeyed, sitting by the bed. Mira took her hand in hers—dry, warm, solid. “Tell me everything again,” Mira urged. “Leave nothing out.” Selene shuddered but spoke. The black wolf. The chains. The blood. The voice. She didn’t omit the scent she thought she smelled tonight. Mira listened, grave as a priest. When Selene finished, Mira squeezed her hand. “The old stories,” she murmured. “About the Sacred Forest. They say there are spirits trapped there. Beasts. Curses.” Selene winced. “So you think it’s real.” Mira didn’t answer directly. “Dreams have power. And here, the Veil is thin. If something calls you —it has chosen you.” Selene recoiled, tearing her hand away. “I don’t want it!” Mira sighed. “Few of us choose the spirits that claim us. But heed my words, child. Don’t go near that ruin again. Don’t answer it. Don’t free it.” Selene’s mouth trembled. She shook her head. “I won’t.” But in her heart, something twisted. A wrongness. A certainty that it was too late. Because it wasn’t her answering. It was the wolf. And it would not stop calling until she listened. --- Outside, in the deep woods, something howled. The chains rattled. And somewhere in the darkness, eyes opened—gold and hungry.The council chamber of Crescent Vale was a cavern of stone and fire. Torches lined the walls, their flames snapping in the draft, casting jagged shadows across the carved wolf totems that loomed over the chamber like silent judges. The long table of dark oak stretched between the gathered elders, betas, and generals, each seat filled with a wolf whose voice carried weight over the fate of the pack.At the head sat Luna. She wore no crown, but her presence was heavier than steel. Her armor had been stripped, replaced with a black tunic that emphasized the corded strength in her shoulders. She leaned forward, knuckles against the table, eyes like sharpened silver blades.Selene sat at her right, though not by choice. Rowan had led her there, his hand steady on her shoulder when her knees threatened to give. She wanted to be anywhere but here, yet the very fact that she had been seated at the Alpha’s side told the entire council what this meeting was truly about.The air was already thic
The fortress gates groaned open at dawn. The mist still clung to the mountains, curling through the pine trees and stone ramparts like ghostly fingers. A hush fell over the courtyard as three figures entered hooded, robed in white trimmed with threads of gold. Their presence was heavy, not of muscle or steel, but of something older, colder: the weight of divine authority.The priests of the Moon Goddess had come.Selene felt it before she even saw them. The bond thrummed sharply in her chest, a warning. She had been tending to a feverish child in the healer’s wing when the ripple of unease swept through the pack. Whispers traveled faster than fire. By the time she stepped out into the corridor, wolves were already pressing toward the balconies and windows, craning for a glimpse.Her stomach twisted. She pulled her shawl tighter around her shoulders, the instinctive shiver of prey under a predator’s gaze even before their eyes found her.“Stay back.” Rowan’s voice cut through the murmu
The council chamber reverberated with silence after selene’s words. Her plea for diplomacy still hung in the air like incense soft, cloying, and easily dismissed in the choking heat of hostility. Luna sat on her obsidian-carved throne at the head of the chamber, her silver eyes narrowed to dangerous slits. The faintest curl of a smirk touched her lips, not of amusement, but of a predator humoring a prey animal that thought it had claws.“Diplomacy,” she repeated, her voice velvet laced with steel. “with callista.” She leaned forward, resting her elbows on the carved arms of the throne. The light from the braziers flickered across the scars on her forearms, trophies from old wars. “Do you think she wants words, little dove? Do you think she wants peace? She doesn’t want crescent vale at the table, she wants it at her feet.”Selene’s hands tightened around the folds of her gown. She stood tall, though her heart was thrumming like a trapped bird. “I know she wants dominance. But if you m
The council chamber was a storm of voices. Harsh growls, furious arguments, the thrum of warriors’ fists pounding the great oak table that split the room in two. War banners hung from the vaulted ceiling, their silvery threads catching the dim torchlight, casting crescent vale’s crest the crescent moon and twin wolves into every shadow.At the head of the table, luna sat like a carved statue of fury, her golden eyes narrowed, her posture rigid, her aura pressing against every living body in the chamber. The air itself seemed to bow before her wrath. Even the most battle-hardened generals lowered their gazes when her gaze swept their way.Selene sat opposite her, silent but trembling, her hands folded in her lap as she forced herself to breathe. Every word spoken, every violent proposal, pressed against her spirit like a weight. She could feel the currents of the bond pulling at her, dragging her into luna’s state of mind a hunger for war, for blood, for destruction. And yet, selene k
The night dragged on with no peace.The fortress felt like a mausoleum, its stone walls echoing with the groans of the wounded, the whispers of wolves who had lost their kin. Fires burned low in the great hall, and the storm outside refused to cease, a restless chorus against the shutters.Selene sat curled in luna’s lap, the Alpha’s arms wrapped protectively around her, as if sheer force of will could banish what haunted her dreams. Luna’s heartbeat was steady, but Selene felt the tension in her body the way her muscles remained coiled, her hand never far from her sword.Neither of them slept.“Luna,” Selene whispered at last, her voice small, brittle. “What if she’s right?”Luna’s arms tightened around her. “She’s not.”“But I feel her. Even when I’m awake. She’s… inside me somehow. Like a shadow that doesn’t belong.” Selene’s voice cracked, her nails digging into Luna’s tunic. “What if I hurt you? What if one night I—”“You won’t.”“How can you be so sure?”“Because you’re stronger
The battlefield was eerily quiet.Snow had begun to fall again, drifting over blood and ash, softening the jagged edges of the carnage. Wolves padded through the ruins, their fur stained crimson, their eyes still alight with battle-rage. Human soldiers groaned where they lay, some clutching wounds, others too still to rise.And above it all, the fortress of luna’s people loomed dark and heavy, its banners tattered but still standing.Selene sat on the frozen ground, her breath coming in shallow gasps, her fingers trembling in her lap. The silver glow that had poured out of her during the battle had left her drained, her body fragile as glass. She could feel the pull of unconsciousness tugging at her mind, but Luna’s warmth beside her held her tethered.The alpha crouched low, one arm steady around Selene’s waist, her golden eyes sharp as she scanned the field. Her sword was still in her other hand, dripping with blood, her armor cracked where spells had burned against her. Yet not onc