เข้าสู่ระบบRAFE'S POV
The cell was exactly what I thought it would be.
Stone, damp and cold, chains thick and silver-laced, bolted to the wall, clasped tight around my wrists. The smell of mildew, stale water, and my own blood.
My left eye was swollen, nearly shut from the guard’s fist, my ribs ached with every breath, but the pain was just light, the only thing that mattered was the bond.
It was still there, a steady and humming warmth in my chest, Luca was alive. He was scared, but alive.
I focused on it, letting it feed my anger, using the anger to burn through the cold and the hurt.
They’d thrown me in here hours ago, after the fight in the tunnels. I’d taken three of Caleb’s goons down before a fourth got a lucky hit with a silver-weighted club. The world had gone dark, and I’d woken up here.
The door was solid iron, with a small slot at the bottom for food. No window. The only light came from a flickering torch somewhere down the hall, casting weak, dancing bars of orange through the grate.
I’d tested the chains, they were solid. The silver in them burned if I pulled too hard, tearing my skin. I had to stop testing.
Instead, I listened and breathed deep, sorting through the scents. Damp stone rat droppings the musky, wild smell of rogue wolves. And underneath it all, faint but crushed violets and moonlight, Luca. He was above me. Not far away.
The bond tugged gently in that direction. Up.
I pulled at the chains again, ignoring the fresh burn. I had to get to him, the thought of Caleb anywhere near him, breathing the same air, made my wolf snarl inside my head.
The sound of boots echoed down the hall. Heavy, confident. Not the slow steps of the guard who brought the watery sop they called dinner.
The boots stopped outside my door, and a key turned in the lock.
I straightened up as much as the chains allowed, squaring my shoulders. I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of seeing me beaten.
The door swung open.
Caleb stood in the doorway, a smirk already on his face, he’d cleaned up. The bruise I’d given him on his jaw, had started fading. He leaned against the doorframe, looking me over like I was a piece of meat at a market.
“Comfortable?” he asked.
I said nothing. I just stared back, letting my Alpha energy roll off me, even chained. It wasn’t much, but the air in the cell grew heavier.
Caleb’s smirk didn’t falter. He stepped inside, the door staying open behind him. “I just came from seeing your little mate. He’s adjusting well.”
A growl ripped from my throat before I could stop it. “You stay away from him.”
“Or what?” Caleb spread his hands, laughing.
“You’ll rattle your chains at me?” He took another step closer, well within striking distance if my arms were free.
“He’s fascinating you know, I offered him a place at my side.” He smiled, drawing his words slowly.
“A chance to be more than an Omega. He told me to shove it.” He sounded almost admiring.
“Stupid, but brave.”
Relief battled with fury. He’d said no. Of course he’d said no. But Caleb knowing he’d said no was dangerous.
“He’ll never be yours.” I said, my voice low and rough.
“See, that’s where you’re wrong.” Caleb crouched down in front of me, his dark eyes level with mine.
“He’ll be exactly what I need him to be,
because I have you.”
Fear and cold trickled down my spine. “What?”
“The Moon Trial is tomorrow, if he passes, the rogues keep him, they’ll protect their precious Lunar Omega. If he fails…” Caleb’s smile turned vicious.
“They will give him to me, so I made him a new offer, a simpler one, all he has to do is fail the trial. And in exchange, I let you live, and even set you free.”
The world narrowed to Caleb’s smug face, I felt like punching the smirk out of his ugly face.
He’d backed Luca into a corner with my life as the bargaining chip. Luca would do it, I knew he would. He’d sacrifice himself in a heartbeat.
“He won’t believe you.” I spat out.
“He doesn’t have to believe I’ll let him go, he just has to believe I’ll kill you if he doesn’t obey.” Caleb reached out, and before I could jerk back, he tapped a finger against the silver chain around my right wrist. It sizzled against my skin.
“And I will, it would be easy and it would be a shame, for a made Alpha like you, to be snuffed out.” He said, clicking his teeth.
The words landed like blows, a made Alpha. He knew, of course he knew. He’d probably read the same records I was looking for in the archives.
The shock must have shown on my face. Caleb’s eyes lit up. “Oh, you didn’t know? You thought you were just special?” He laughed, a mean, cruel sound.
“You’re a science project Rafe, my father’s little experiment, he took the power of a dead rogue Alpha and stitched it into a weak Beta pup.”
“He created you, a custom-built Alpha, designed for one purpose.” He leaned in, his voice dropping to a poisonous whisper.
“To control the Lunar Omega, to be his leash.”
My breath seized abnormally, the memory of the bite in the forest, the instant, overwhelming need to claim Luca… was that even me? Or was it just my programming kicking in?
No. The feelings were too real. The bond was too real. I shut the doubt down, clinging to the warmth in my chest. Luca.
“You’re lying.” I snarled, but it sounded weak.
“Am I?” Caleb stood up, looking down at me with pity.
“Why do you think your bond formed so fast? So perfectly? It’s what you were made for, you’re not his fated mate, you’re his handler.” He walked toward the door.
“Think about that while you’re sitting here. Tomorrow, your little Omega is going to fail his test to save your pathetic life, and then he’ll be mine, because that’s what you made him do, his sacrifice will be your fault.”
He stepped out into the hall.
“Wait!” The word tore out of me.
He paused, glancing back.
“Don’t make him do this.” I said, the plea tasting like ash.
“He doesn’t deserve your games.”
Caleb’s expression softened into something truly terrifying, something almost like sympathy. “It’s too late for that, the game is already in motion.”
The only move left is his.” He signaled to someone in the hall. “Make sure he’s ready for the trip.”
Two large rogues stepped into view. They carried a thick, bl
ack hood and a set of heavier manacles between them.
Panic kicked in.“Ready for what? Where are you taking me?”
ZAYNE'S POVI knew what the emissary was talking about, I'd seen the stirring in the deep places, felt the ancient hunger in my bones. I'd spent years hunting rogues, tracking monsters, following rumors into places most wolves were too smart to go. I'd found things, old things. Things that should have stayed buried.I just never wanted to admit it was real, Luca found me at dawn, two days after the emissary appeared. I was on the eastern ridge, watching the sun rise over the forest, trying to pretend I was just scouting. He didn't say anything, he just sat beside me on the cold rock quietly.The sun crept over the horizon, painting the sky in shades of gold and rose. Below us, the compound was waking up wolves moving between cabins, smoke rising from cookfires, children running to the new schoolhouse. "You know something elder brother." Luca said finally.I didn't answer right away, the sun climbed higher, burning off the last of the morning mist. Somewhere in the forest, a bird beg
LUCA'S POVThree days after my mother told me the full prophecy, I was walking the eastern border with Kael, checking the new patrol routes. The morning was cold but clear, frost glittering on the grass, birds singing in the trees, normal and peaceful.Then the world went silent, the birds stopped mid-song. The wind died as if it had been holding its breath, even the frost seemed to pause, the glittering crystals frozen in place. The silence was so complete I could hear my own heartbeat, loud and urgent in my ears.Kael's hand went to his knife in a motion so fast I barely saw it. "What is that?"I couldn't answer but I was already running. It stood at the edge of our territory, just beyond the marker stones.A being of solidified moonlight, taller than any wolf I'd ever seen, thinner than any tree. Its surface shimmered constantly, shifting between solid and translucent, between silver and white and something that wasn't quite a color at all. Where its face should have been there was
ELARA'S POVI dreamed of Theron last night, he was young again, the way I remembered him from before the Council took him. His silver eyes sparkled with mischief, his laugh was warm and unguarded. We were in the forest behind the old compound, the one that burned when Cain rose to power. Sunlight filtered through the leaves, dappling his face with gold."You have to tell them." He said. "Before it's too late."I woke up with his voice still echoing in my ears. The cabin was dark, I'd gotten used to sleeping alone over eighteen years in a hole, but somehow this felt worse. Here, I could hear the pack moving outside, families laughing, children playing, I was surrounded by life and still felt utterly alone.I pressed my hand to my chest, feeling the slow thump of my heart. Theron had been dead for twenty years, but he came to me still, in dreams and waking moments, whispering warnings I didn't want to hear.You have to tell them, tell them what? That the prophecy wasn't just about Luca
LUCA'S POVCaleb hadn't spoken in three weeks. I visited him every few days, sitting on the floor of his cabin, watching him stare at the wall. He didn't eat much, neither did he sleep, from the look of the dark circles under his eyes.The pack didn't know what to do with him. Half wanted him executed, he had tried to kill Rafe, after all, and would have burned the Haven to the ground if it got him what he wanted. The other half thought he was too broken to be a threat, a cautionary tale rather than a danger.I wasn't sure either side was wrong.But Morwen had taught me that every wolf had a thread, even the tangled ones, even the black ones. And Caleb's thread, when I looked at it with Selene's gift, wasn't entirely black. It was grey, but underneath, buried deep, there was still gold.I didn't know if that gold could be saved. But I had to try.Today was different. When I entered his cabin, he was sitting in the same spot, staring at the same wall, but his eyes moved when I sat do
RAFE'S POVDuskwind wasn't just leaderless, it was broken. I learned this slowly, painfully, in the weeks after the ceremony, every day brought a new crisis, a new wound, a new reminder that twenty years of corruption didn't disappear because we'd killed the man responsible.The food stores were nearly empty, Cain had hoarded supplies in the tower, but most of it had rotted or been poisoned by the same magic that sustained him. What remained was barely enough to feed the pack for a month.The housing was a disaster, omegas had been crammed into tiny quarters near the tower, their cabins little more than sheds with roofs. Warriors lived in relative comfort, but the disparity was sickening, and fixing it meant convincing wolves who'd had privileges for twenty years to give them up.The borders were a mess, Cain's patrol system had been designed to control the pack, not protect it. Sentries were posted to watch for escape attempts, not external threats. The Kindred had already spotted t
LUCA'S POVThe Kindred came three days after Morwen's funeral and Rafe's coronation.I felt them before I saw them, they moved through the forest like wolves who had spent their whole lives learning to be silent.Rafe was in a council meeting, the elders had been arguing for hours about food distribution, border patrols, the hundred small details of rebuilding a pack. I'd slipped out when my eyes started feeling heavy, I needed fresh air.I stood at the edge of the compound, watching the tree line, Kael emerged first.His scarred face was unreadable, but his thread pulsed with hope, behind him came a dozen Kindred warriors…..the ones who had fought beside us at the compound, who had watched Morwen die, who had knelt when Rafe was named Alpha. They moved in loose formation, weapons sheathed, hands visible.Kael stopped at the border, waiting for permission to enter. I walked toward him."You're alone." He observed."The Alpha is in a meeting." I said. "I felt you coming."His eyes flic







