LOGINThird Person POVSilence did not fall immediately.It came slowly.Like the aftermath of a storm that had torn through everything in its path and was only just beginning to settle.The air inside the broken base was thick with it—blood, sweat, fear, and the heavy weight of what had just happened. Men stood where they were, breathing hard, weapons still in hand, eyes scanning for threats that no longer came.Markus knelt at the center of it all, chained and bleeding, his earlier confidence stripped down to something darker. Not fear. Not yet. But something close to it. Something that had finally begun to understand that the game he thought he controlled had turned.Beside him, Lydia looked worse.Her composure had shattered.Gone was the proud Luna who once walked the halls of Blood Moon like she owned them. Gone was the calculated woman who believed she could manipulate fate itself.What remained was someone cornered.And she knew it.Her eyes moved wildly from Kharl to Ryan, then to
Third Person / Split POVKharl tore through Celeste’s ropes with hands that shook more from rage than effort.The moment her wrists were free, she pulled her arms forward with a sharp breath, the skin there red and bruised from where the ropes had bitten too deeply. Kharl saw it. Of course he saw it. His eyes dropped to the marks, and for one terrifying second his expression went completely blank.Not calm.Not peaceful.Blank in the way a storm becomes silent before it destroys everything.But Celeste had no time for his anger. The moment her hands were free, she turned toward the girls.“Alora,” she breathed, already moving.But Ryan was there first.He entered the room like a blade, fast and controlled, his eyes scanning every corner before settling on the two girls tied near the wall. Alora saw him and burst into tears immediately.“Uncle Ryan!”“I’m here,” Ryan said, dropping to his knees in front of her. His voice stayed steady, but his hands were gentle as he loosened the ropes
Kharl POVNight had never felt this heavy before.The forest stretched out before us in shadows and silence, but beneath it all there was tension. Not the quiet kind that comes with waiting, but the kind that hums through your bones, that sharpens your senses and keeps your body ready for violence.We had found it.Not by chance.Not by luck.But by narrowing every possibility until there was only one place left that made sense.Markus’ base.Hidden well enough to fool most, but not well enough to escape men who had nothing left to lose.I stood at the edge of the tree line, my gaze fixed on the structure ahead. From a distance, it looked like nothing. Just another abandoned outpost swallowed by time and neglect. But I could feel it.The presence.The guards.The faint traces of movement behind walls that pretended to be empty.And beneath it all—Her scent.Faint.But there.Celeste.My chest tightened.Alive.Close.Too close for me to still be standing out here.Ryan stepped up bes
Lydia POV The first crack did not come loudly. It came quietly. In the way Markus looked at a man begging for his life and did not blink. I had seen cruelty before. I had grown up around power, around punishment, around the way Alphas enforced control when it slipped from their hands. But there was always a line. Always a purpose. Even the harshest discipline in a pack had rules behind it, a structure that made it necessary, if not merciful. This— This was different. The man on the floor had been one of Markus’ own. I gathered that much from the way the others stood around, not intervening, not questioning. He had failed in something small, something I did not fully understand, and Markus had called him forward like one might call a servant who had broken a cup. There was no shouting. No raised voice. Just calm instructions. And then pain. The kind that lingered. The kind that made a man understand exactly where he stood without anyone needing to say it twice.
Father spread a smaller, older map over the current one. The parchment was worn and marked with ink that had faded in places, but one location had been circled recently.“There was an outpost,” he said. “Not official. Built during my father’s time and later abandoned after the lower routes flooded. Markus used to go there when we were young. He claimed he liked the quiet, but now I think he liked what it gave him.”I leaned in. “Isolation.”“Yes,” Father said. “And access. It sits between three old paths. Easy to reach if you know the terrain. Easy to miss if you don’t.”Kharl stared at the map, then looked at me. “That matches the movement pattern.”“It also matches the scent break,” I said. “We lost the trail twice near wet ground and old stone.”Father tapped the map. “There are underground chambers here. Storage tunnels. Maybe more if they expanded them.”For the first time that night, something like certainty passed through the room.Not hope.Something harder.Direction.One of
Ryan POVBy the time the night had deepened, the war room no longer felt like part of a palace.It felt like the center of a storm.Maps were spread across the long table, some rolled open halfway, others pinned down with daggers and cups so they would not curl at the edges. Candles had burned low, their wax pooling in uneven circles, and the room smelled of parchment, sweat, and the kind of tension that kept men awake long after their bodies should have given up.I stood at the head of the table, both hands braced against the wood, staring at the map of the northern forest lines while captains waited for orders. Reports had come in one after another for hours now. Patrol routes. Scent traces. Broken tracks. Possible sightings that led nowhere. Every piece of information mattered, but none of it was enough on its own.Not yet.Kharl stood opposite me.That alone still felt strange.If someone had told me weeks ago that I would be standing in a war room with Alpha Kharl, planning side
Kharl POVRyan reached her before Kharl even realized he had stepped back.One moment Celeste had been standing beside him, her composure holding by sheer force of will, her breath still uneven from the attack; the next, Ryan was there, crossing the terrace in a blur, pulling her into his arms with
Kharl POVHe had told himself he would let her walk away.He had meant it when he said he understood.But the moment Celeste turned from him, her face lit by that unguarded, effortless smile as she spoke into the small device in her hand, something inside him twisted with a force that made it hard
Celeste POVThe feeling returned before I saw anything.A quiet prickle at the base of my neck. A subtle awareness that had nothing to do with sound or movement and everything to do with instinct.I was seated beside Ryan in the council hall, listening to a discussion about border patrol cooperatio
Celeste POVThe knock on our door came too fast to be casual.Not loud. Not panicked. But urgent in a way that made my stomach tighten before Ryan even reached for the handle.I was seated at the small table in the chamber, reviewing the notes from the day’s session when the sound cut through the q







