ログインRyan POVI watched him more than I wanted to admit.Not because I trusted him.I didn’t.Not fully.Maybe not even halfway.But Kharl had become impossible to ignore inside our lives now. He was there in the mornings when the children came down for breakfast. He was there during training, standing a little distance away as Rune and Blaze practiced basic stances. He was there in the evening when Alora demanded stories and Amelia sat quietly near him like she was still afraid to ask for space, but also afraid to be left out.And Celeste…That was what bothered me most.Celeste was letting him in.Slowly.Carefully.Not with open arms. Not with foolish softness. But still, she was letting him in.At first, she only allowed him near the children when she was present. Then she allowed him to take Alora to the garden for a short walk. Then Rune asked him a question about shifting, and Celeste didn’t interrupt when Kharl answered. Yesterday, Blaze sat beside him for almost ten minutes withou
Celeste POVThe palace had never felt so quiet.Not peaceful.Not calm.Just… quiet.The kind of quiet that comes after something terrible has already happened, when everyone is still waiting for the next thing to break.Even the air felt different.Heavier.As if the walls themselves had seen too much and were holding onto it.I walked slowly down the hallway, my hand resting gently on Alora’s head as she stayed pressed close to my side. She hadn’t let go of me since we returned. Not once. Not even when the maids tried to take her to wash up or change her clothes.She refused.And I didn’t force her.I couldn’t.Every time I moved too far from her, even just a step, her fingers tightened around me like she thought I might disappear again.So I let her hold on.Amelia walked on my other side.Quiet.Too quiet.That was what scared me the most.She wasn’t crying.She wasn’t clinging.She wasn’t asking questions.She just walked.Head slightly lowered, hands folded in front of her like
Kharl POVThe crowd had dispersed, but the weight of what Markus said had not.It followed me.Through the halls.Through the guards who tried not to look at me too long.Through the quiet that had settled over the Pack like something waiting to break.You think I was working alone?The words kept repeating in my head, steady and cold, refusing to fade.By the time we reached the lower chambers again, I had already made the decision.Public justice was one thing.Truth was another.And I needed the truth.Markus was already back in chains when I entered the room. This time, the space was smaller, tighter, built for containment rather than display. No crowd. No elders. No voices to interrupt.Just him.And me.He didn’t look up immediately when I stepped in.He already knew I was there.Of course he did.“You took your time,” he said after a moment, his voice calm, almost bored.I didn’t respond.I walked forward until I stood directly in front of him, close enough to see every detail
Third Person POV (Kharl / Ryder / Celeste)The courtyard had never felt this full.Not during celebrations. Not during war announcements. Not even during Alpha transitions.This—This was something else.Both Packs had gathered.Blood Moon.Golden Sky.Side by side.Not as allies in peace.But as witnesses to judgment.The tribunal platform stood at the center, raised high enough that no one could claim they did not see, did not hear, did not understand what would happen here today. Elders sat in a semi-circle behind the main stand, their expressions carved in stone, their presence alone enough to command silence from even the most restless warriors.Around them, the people filled every available space.Warriors.Citizens.Servants.Young and old.All watching.All waiting.Because this was not just a trial.This was a message.And everyone knew it.Kharl stood at the front, just below the platform, his presence alone enough to keep the restless murmurs under control. His posture was
Ryder POVThe dungeon was colder than the rest of the palace.Not just in temperature.But in feeling.It was the kind of place where silence settled deeply, where even footsteps sounded heavier, where the air itself carried the weight of everything that had happened within those walls.Ryder walked down the stone steps slowly, his hands clasped behind his back, his expression calm in a way that only came from years of control. Guards stepped aside the moment they saw him, lowering their heads slightly out of respect, but he barely acknowledged them.His mind was elsewhere.On the man waiting below.Markus.It had been a long time since he had last seen him like this.Not as a rival in whispers.Not as a shadow from the past.But as a prisoner.Bound.Defeated.And yet—Knowing Markus—Not broken.The final door opened with a low creak, and Ryder stepped inside.Markus sat against the far wall, chains binding his wrists and ankles, his head slightly lowered as if he were resting. But
Third 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
Celeste POVThe council chamber felt sharper that morning.Not louder. Not more crowded. Just more alert.Word of yesterday’s successful proposal had spread, and today’s discussion involved broader policy—how similar disputes would be handled across multiple territories in the future. It was no lon
Celeste POVThe council chamber felt heavier that morning.Not tense. Not hostile. Just expectant.Delegates filled their seats earlier than usual, conversations quieter, eyes sharper. Word had spread that today’s session would involve the first formal presentations from the assigned problem-solvin
Ryan POVRyan knew the exact moment it happened.Not because there was lightning. Not because his heart raced or the world tilted. It was quieter than that. More dangerous in its certainty.Janet was standing beside him near the western garden path, watching a pair of delegates argue in low voices
Celeste POVThe corridor outside the mediation chambers was quieter than usual.Most delegates had already dispersed to evening discussions or returned to their quarters to prepare reports for the next session. The stone walls held onto the fading warmth of the day, and the soft lantern light cast







