INICIAR SESIÓNLUCY’S POV
I didn’t sleep the night before. My body felt too heavy to move, yet too restless to stay still. I kept hearing my father’s words again and again—“You have to do it whether you like it or not.” But underneath that, buried and stubborn, Adrian’s voice kept cutting through everything: “Have some self-respect… wolves don’t mate without desire.” Those two voices battled in my head until dawn broke. By morning, I felt like something inside me had cracked open. Something dark. Something tired. Something ready. My father said the witch had already sent for us before sunrise—that the ritual had to begin under the half moon. I didn’t argue. I didn’t complain. I didn’t ask questions. I simply walked behind him, my feet dragging on the path, my mind numb. We reached the shrine a little after noon. The air was dry, smoky, heavy with burnt herbs. The trees bent inward like they were listening. The stones around the old shrine were dark with time and something I didn’t want to name. My father held the sealed urn of ashes with both hands, clutching it as if it were some sacred treasure and not the remains of a vampire general whose life had been taken for power. Beside him, two men carried the dead werewolf—the prisoner he said was “necessary.” I tried not to look at the body. But the stench of dried blood still clung to it, mixing with the bitter smell of the forest. When the witch appeared, she didn’t walk. She seemed to glide. Her robes dragged across the dusty ground, sweeping it clean like a living shadow. Her eyes glowed faintly—too bright for daylight, too knowing for my comfort. She didn’t greet us. She only looked at me long and hard, then turned to my father. “You came early,” she said in a low voice that felt like wind scraping through bone. “The earlier, the better,” my father replied firmly. “We don’t have time. The council is restless.” The witch nodded once. “Follow me.” She led us down a path behind the shrine—a narrow, winding descent that I never knew existed. The deeper we went, the colder the air became. The forest noises faded until everything was hollow and still. Then, suddenly, the trees parted, revealing a clearing with a massive stone door carved into the hillside. The witch raised her hand. The stone slabs shuddered… Groaned… Then slowly opened with a crackling sound. “The forbidden oracle,” she said. My breath caught. I’d heard whispers about it since childhood—an underground chamber where rituals that were too dangerous, too unpredictable, too cursed were performed. But I never believed it was real. I never imagined I’d be brought here. I never imagined I would be the reason it was opened again. The witch stepped inside first, then motioned for the men to bring the body. My father followed after her, still gripping that urn like his life depended on it. But when I tried to step in, she lifted her hand sharply. “Only the father may enter with the offerings.” I froze. My father didn’t hesitate. He walked in, vanishing into the darkness of the stone doorway. I stayed outside, shivering despite the heat. Minutes stretched. Maybe hours. I couldn’t tell. When he finally came back out, the witch was behind him. She handed him a cloth to wipe his hands, and I didn’t ask why the cloth was stained dark. “You will wait outside,” the witch told him. “I need to speak with your daughter alone.” My father looked at me, nodded once, then walked away toward the trees where the shade swallowed him whole. The witch turned to me, her face unreadable. “Come.” I stepped inside. The air inside the oracle was colder, thick, and humming with something ancient. Torches burned with blue fire, casting long shadows that stretched in impossible directions. Symbols carved into the floor glowed faintly beneath my feet. The witch led me to the center of the chamber. “Before anything begins,” she murmured, “I must know something.” She stepped closer until I could feel her breath on my skin. “Do you truly want to do this?” My chest tightened. Adrian’s voice echoed instantly—“Have some self-respect…” His eyes, his disappointment, his refusal, all of it collided with the council’s threats, my father’s pressure, my rank hanging in the balance. The witch tilted her head. “Do you want the power? The safety? The validation? Or do you want revenge?” I swallowed hard. My reasons tangled together—anger, humiliation, pressure, desperation, a desire to prove myself, a desire to punish someone… maybe even myself. But I forced all of it down. All that mattered… was that I was tired of being powerless. “Yes,” I whispered. “I want to do it.” The witch watched me in silence, her eyes piercing into places inside me I didn’t want anyone to see. Then she nodded slowly. “Very well. But listen carefully. If you break my instructions—if you flinch, resist, or let your mind wander during the binding—there will be consequences. Not for me. Not for your father. For you.” I shivered. “I understand,” I whispered. “Good.” She motioned for me to step deeper into the oracle. The floor beneath me vibrated lightly as she began drawing lines around me with a powder that glowed faintly—silver and blue. Then she placed three objects before me: The sealed urn. A bowl containing the werewolf’s blood. And a black stone knife. “Do not speak,” she warned. “Do not move unless I tell you to. And do not—under any circumstance—look away from the flame when it appears.” I nodded. The witch began chanting—low at first, like a murmur beneath the earth. Then louder. Then louder still. The air around us thickened until every breath felt like swallowing dust. The ground pulsed, vibrating under my bare feet. A thin line of light broke through the darkness. Then another. Then the torches flared violently, their blue flames stretching upward like claws. The witch’s voice grew sharper, twisting through the chamber like the shriek of something waking from centuries of sleep. She lifted her arms, and the symbols beneath me throbbed, lighting up with painful brightness. My heartbeat slammed against my ribs. Suddenly, everything went silent. Utterly, terrifyingly silent. Then— A blinding flash erupted. The world around me dissolved. The oracle vanished. The torches vanished. The witch vanished. Everything went white. Then black. Then nothing. I felt myself falling—slowly at first, then faster, as if pulled by invisible hands. My ears rang. My vision blurred. My knees buckled beneath me. Pain shot through my head so sharply that I gasped—but no sound came out. The whiteness swallowed everything. Then my legs gave out. And I collapsed. Flat against the cold stone floor. My last thought before darkness dragged me under was a whisper I couldn’t control, a final betrayal of the mind I swore to harden: Adrian… Then everything went blank.Adrian POV The phone buzzed in my hand, Caleb’s voice already running over the line before I could even say hello. He has been in his mansion for over three days now. “Adrian, it’s been a week. Still haven’t seen Lucy. She’s ignoring your calls, man. You sure she’s alright?” I ran a hand down my face, leaning back into the chair behind my desk. “I know, Caleb. I know.” My tone was clipped, but inside… I was frustrated. She was acting more unpredictable than ever. The council forced people into positions, and Lucy… she had her pride shattered. The last encounter with the girl wasn't cool. “Don’t worry,” Caleb said, his voice casual, but I knew him well enough to hear the underlying amusement. “The council will force her back to your place. You’ll see. She’s acting like this now, but—” “Caleb,” I interrupted sharply, “I’ll call you back. I have someone coming.” It was that moment that I smelled her before I even saw her. Lucy. The air in my office shifted. The faint perfume on
Lucy POV The sunlight hurt my eyes. Blinding. I groaned and rolled to the side, only to realize that I was lying on something hard, cold, and… not my own bed. Panic clawed at my chest, my heartbeat spiking as I tried to remember where I was, how I got here, and why my body felt like it had been through a storm. I opened my eyes fully, wincing. Everything was unfamiliar yet chillingly familiar at the same time. The stone walls were carved with intricate sigils and charms that glimmered faintly in the pale morning light that filtered through the high windows. My stomach churned as I realized I was still in the witch’s shrine. The same shrine where my father and I had performed the ritual. My mind struggled to recall the details of the last moments, but it was hazy, blurred by exhaustion, magic, and fear. I slowly tried to sit up. My body screamed at me—muscles stiff, joints aching, and a sharp, persistent pain at my lower back. Something was… wrong. I felt along the
Damion Pov The throne room was colder than usual today. Not because of the weather—our kingdom sat buried beneath ancient stone that never warmed—but because something in the air felt wrong. An itch in my senses. A disturbance in the night that wouldn’t let my instincts settle. I felt it long before anyone said a word. My court gathered at a respectful distance, heads lowered, careful not to meet my eyes. I wasn’t in the mood to tolerate anyone’s trembling, so the silence served me well. I leaned back on my throne, waiting for the inevitable bad news I already felt creeping toward me like a whisper on rotten wind. When the double doors burst open, my suspicion hardened into certainty. A young vampire—blood-scent still fresh on his armor—ran inside. He didn’t stop at the usual ten-pace distance. He crossed it. He practically stumbled to his knees right in front of me, panting, terrified. Good. Fear was appropriate. But interruptions were not. I let the silence stretch, just to
LUCY’S POV I didn’t sleep the night before. My body felt too heavy to move, yet too restless to stay still. I kept hearing my father’s words again and again—“You have to do it whether you like it or not.” But underneath that, buried and stubborn, Adrian’s voice kept cutting through everything: “Have some self-respect… wolves don’t mate without desire.” Those two voices battled in my head until dawn broke. By morning, I felt like something inside me had cracked open. Something dark. Something tired. Something ready. My father said the witch had already sent for us before sunrise—that the ritual had to begin under the half moon. I didn’t argue. I didn’t complain. I didn’t ask questions. I simply walked behind him, my feet dragging on the path, my mind numb. We reached the shrine a little after noon. The air was dry, smoky, heavy with burnt herbs. The trees bent inward like they were listening. The stones around the old shrine were dark with time and something I didn’t want to
POV – Rose The moment I had a free second in my new apartment, I reached for my phone. My fingers hesitated over her contact, my mother’s name blinking softly on the screen. I wanted to call her, to tell her everything, yet the words wouldn’t come. How could I explain any of this to her without frightening her? How could I tell her about Adrian, about the packs, the vampires, the rituals, and all the chaos I had been dragged into? Still, I dialed. The line rang twice before her familiar voice answered, soft and warm, yet laced with worry. “Rose? Is everything alright, dear? You sounded… different when you left your messages. And why have you been so quiet lately?” Her voice made me pause. She didn’t even know what had been happening. My chest tightened at the thought of how much she cared, and how far removed she was from the mess of my life. “I… I’m fine, Mom,” I said, keeping my tone light. “I just… had to make some changes.” There was silence on the other end for a moment, an
Adrian’s POV The morning light filtered through the tall windows of my office, painting sharp angles across the sleek floors of Wolfe Enterprises. I was leaning against the edge of my mahogany desk, black suit sleeves rolled up, fingers drumming a slow, deliberate rhythm. My mind wasn’t on the reports sprawled in front of me or the meeting I was supposed to attend. It was on her. Lucy. Caleb leaned against the opposite side of the desk, holding a glass of water. His calm posture clashed with the tension radiating off me. “She hasn’t been around since last night,” he said, breaking the silence. His voice was casual, but I could hear the undercurrent of concern he always had for her—though he’d never admit it out loud. I turned to him, letting the anger and frustration show. “She went to them. The council. They threatened her, Caleb. Stripped her of her powers if she refused. And she… she didn’t know what else to do.” Caleb’s eyebrows rose. “They can’t just do that. She’s a general,







