[[The Northern Kingdom of Velmira. Home of Wolf Shifters]]
*** ~~PRINCESS LYRIC VAELGOR~~ *** The happiest day of my life was supposed to be my wedding day. Or so I thought. I was glowing with joy, counting down the minutes until I became Jorath Dainvale's wife—the Beta's son, my perfect match. I couldn't wait one more second, couldn't wait to stand before the world and vow myself to him forever. What I didn't know, however, was that I’d be walking into a trap, that I’d be betrayed by everyone I loved that day. "Where are we going, Uncle?" I asked. My uncle, Alpha Tiberan Vaelgor, the Alpha Regent of our pack, was leading me away from the castle gates and into the woods. “To meet your groom, Lyric,” he replied. "Do we have to walk this far? I'm tired, and these shoes are killing me.” "Be patient, Lyric. You'll be with him soon enough." I'd been awake since dawn, enduring hours of preparation—servants scrubbing my skin until it gleamed, arranging my hair with moonstone beads, painting my face with the traditional markings of a royal bride. My feet ached. The corset beneath my gown bit into my ribs. I found it ridiculous that after putting so much effort into my looks, I had to trudge through these woods with every thorny branch and grasping vine snagging my gown. But I swallowed my protests. In less than an hour, I'd be Jorath's wife. And in a few months, when I turned twenty-three, I would take my rightful place as Alpha of ShadowHowl Pack. Then Uncle Tiberan would no longer order me around. "Here we are," Uncle Tiberan announced, stopping abruptly in a small clearing. I glanced around, confused. "Where are the other people?" I asked. My wolf, Oryx, was growling now, sensing danger. Something was very, very wrong. Just then, a figure stepped out from behind a massive oak tree. I recognized my groom, Jorath Dainvale—tall, broad-shouldered, with his dark hair pulled back in the traditional groom's braid. My Jorath, the beta's son, the boy I'd loved since we were children playing in the castle courtyard. I smiled. But my smile faded when I saw who he was holding in his arms. Mae. Uncle Tiberan’s first daughter, my cousin, my best friend. She was wearing a wedding gown. Not just any wedding gown—a perfect mirror of my own, down to the last pearl and moonstone. I stared at them, still trying to piece together the image in front of me. "Jorath? Mae? What's going on?" Mae stepped forward, smiling. "You made it, Lyric." "Of course I did. It's my wedding. Why are you with Jorath? What's with the gown? Bridesmaids don't wear white." “Isn't it obvious? Jorath and I are getting married.” The world stopped for half a second. Then I laughed. “Stop playing around. Where are the other guests?” Mae wasn't laughing, though. "You think I'm joking? You think I’d wear a gown just to make you laugh? Jorath and I are together. We’ve been together all along, Lyric." They were taking this prank too far. I turned to Jorath, searching his face for some sign of laughter. He'd never been good at pranks. You could always tell from his face. He wasn't smiling. "Jorath, what the hell is she talking about?" I asked. He wouldn't meet my eyes. "There'll be no wedding, Lyric. Mae's the one I love. She's pregnant with my baby.” I couldn't believe this. I must have been dreaming. “You’ve been fucking my cousin behind my back?” “We wanted to tell you, Lyric, but we knew you'd react badly, just as you’re doing now. Your uncle has given us a way out." A way out? What did that even mean? I whirled to face Uncle Tiberan, and that's when I noticed that his guards had moved to form a circle around me. Their hands were no longer hovering near their weapons—they were drawn, blades gleaming in the moonlight. "Don't do anything stupid, Lyric," Uncle Tiberan warned, his hand moving to his own sword. Ice replaced the blood in my veins. "What is going on, Uncle? What did you do?” "What I should have done a long time ago. I can't let you ascend the throne. You're not fit to rule this pack.” My wolf was raging now, clawing at my insides, demanding to be set free. "You're such a snake, Uncle. Attacking me in the middle of a forest? I should have known you would betray me.” "Your father was a traitor to the emperor, Lord Draekor, and his seed should never rule our pack. I'm giving you a way out that doesn't involve a massacre. I’m offering you to the emperor." The words didn't make sense at first. Offering me? Like a gift? Like a sacrifice? My real father—High Alpha Lazareth Vaelgor—was the strongest werewolf the Northern Kingdom had ever known. The leader who'd given his life fighting in the rebellion against the Demon King, Lord Draekor Malzareth. Both my father and mother had died that day, their heads presented on spikes to their people as a warning against further insurrection. I had been just a child, too young to remember much beyond the screams and the smell of burning flesh. Too young to take the throne. So Uncle Tiberan had stepped in as regent, ruling in my stead until I came of age. And now, with my twenty-third birthday approaching, I was finally going to claim what was rightfully mine. And Uncle Tiberan wanted to steal it from me? "That throne is my birthright," I snarled. "How dare you try to take it from me?" My wolf surged forward, feeding my rage. I pointed at Mae and Jorath, baring my teeth. "I'm going to kill all of you. I'm going to tear that baby out of your womb and feed it to you, you backstabbing bitch." Mae took a step back, fear finally flashing across her face. Good. She should be afraid. I could tell that everyone felt it—the raw, untamed power of Oryx thrashing beneath my skin. Even the guards shifted uneasily, their grips tightening on their weapons. Not many Alpha wolves in Velmira were as strong as Oryx. And if she were let loose, it wouldn't be a fair fight. "You can't do anything, Lyric. You're surrounded,” Mae said, but her voice trembled. I lunged for her throat, my fingers already lengthening into claws, my teeth sharpening into fangs— Something cold and heavy snapped around my neck. The pain was immediate and blinding. Like a thousand knives plunging into my flesh all at once. I dropped to my knees, my transformation halting as my wolf howled in agony. "Take it off," I gasped, clawing at the metal collar now locked around my throat. Silver, definitely silver, and something else—the acrid smell of wolfsbane burned my nostrils. "Please take it off. It burns." They all just watched as I writhed on the forest floor, my beautiful gown now stained with dirt and my own blood where my nails had torn at my neck. Not one of them moved to help. Not even Jorath, who had once sworn he would die for me. "Don't struggle, Lyric," Uncle Tiberan said, his voice almost gentle, as if he were speaking to a wounded animal. "You'll only make it worse. The King's representative will be here soon." I turned to Jorath, desperation overriding pride. "Help me, please. Please, Jorath."*** ~~LYRIC VAELGOR~~ *** The monster was coming for me, and I was still in chains. My wrists burned. The cuffs had dug deep into the flesh, metal biting with every twitch of movement. Same for my ankles—rubbed raw from all the thrashing. I pulled again. Harder. My muscles screamed. My back arched against the cold iron table beneath me. But nothing gave. I was trapped. And he was still coming. The Khra’gixx had completed his shift, and what stood in front of me now was no longer a man. It was a creature made of hate and magic and violence. His body was grotesquely massive—his shoulders brushed the arch of the ceiling, and his claws pointed out like hooked blades. His eyes were pits of black. He smiled, and it wasn't a cute smile. I tried to scream, but my voice caught. Then it began—whispers. First low. Then louder. Two of them. Inside me. One cold. Quiet. ‘Lie still.’ ‘This is what you were born for. A vessel doesn’t fight. A vessel accepts.’ The second voice was wilde
*** ~~ZEPHIRA MALZARETH~~ *** High Alpha Tiberan Vaelgor’s daughter, Mae, had been in that tub for almost two hours, driving me mad. I’d been sitting in the far corner of the chamber, legs crossed, fingers twitching against the velvet of my robe. She didn’t even seem to notice. Or maybe she did. Maybe that was the point. I’d reminded her at least a dozen times that we had guests arriving soon. She just kept slipping deeper beneath the perfumed water, steam curling around her. This is the price of alliances, I told myself. The price of playing the long game. The price of power. Her head lolled back against the rim of the tub. Her lips were parted, breath coming in slow, steady puffs. Her hands— Gods. I stood. “Seriously?” I asked. “As much as I’d enjoy watching you masturbate at any other time, we have a meeting in a couple of minutes. A very important meeting with a very important man. I didn’t announce to the kingdom that I prefer women and accept your father’s curs
***~~CALIX MALZARETH~~*** My hands were wrapped around Lorcan's throat, and his body was swinging halfway out the window of his chambers.“Let him go, Calix,” Mira begged behind me, her voice shaking. “It wasn’t his fault.”Lorcan grunted, blood trailing from his nose down to his lips. One of his eyes was already swelling shut. I had punched him three times before I even spoke. Maybe more. I wasn’t counting. I didn’t care.“Tell me where she is,” I growled, tightening my grip, “or I swear to the ancestors and the gods, even the goddess of Velmira, that I will throw you off this window, and your head will get to the ground before your body.”“I don’t know,” Lorcan croaked, his fingernails digging into my wrist.I shifted my hold and shoved him forward another inch. His feet scrabbled on the windowsill. Mira screamed.“You’re lying,” I hissed. “You rigged the lottery in Father’s favor.”“Because he’s the king! And he asked me to!”“We had a deal.”“I know you’re scary,” he gasped, hi
I woke up with a pounding headache.And pain.The first thing I registered was the aching stretch of my limbs. My arms and legs were pulled tight, splayed out in an X. Metal cuffs bit into my wrists and ankles. The table beneath me was cold, and it felt like iron. Heavy. Brutal. Like it had seen a thousand prisoners before me.My throat was dry. My lips were cracked. My head throbbed, a dull, pulsing echo behind my eyes.I realized soon enough that something sharp was on my arm.My body jerked against the restraints.“Lie still, wolf,” came a voice.Revka.Her face appeared above me, framed in shadows. Her mouth was flat, her eyes empty. Cold.“It will hurt less if you do.”My vision swam. I could feel something burning through my veins. A thick pull. Like my blood was being siphoned straight out of me.“Where am I?” I asked. My voice was barely more than a whisper.“Somewhere,” she said blandly.“You need to let me go.”“You’re not going anywhere anytime soon, Princess.”I blinked ag
The next few seconds happened in a blur.Calix shoved me behind him so fast I nearly stumbled, his body coiling in front of mine like a shield. And then his sword was out. The sound of metal unsheathing sent silence through the room.All around us, guards flinched. Steel scraped in response.One by one, the king’s soldiers drew their blades, stepping forward. Boots marching against the stone floor echoed around the room, louder than they should have. The elites and royals who hadn’t left yet started backing away, their fine robes rustling like leaves caught in a gust.They were frightened. They should be.Calix’s blade was steady in his hand, his body taut with fury. But I knew that if he made a single wrong move, they’d all come for him. Even his own guards would come too. Yes, they were as alert as they should be to protect their commander.But still, in the end, the king was the grand commander of the Khra'gixxian army.This wasn’t just a prince versus a kingdom.This was a prince
I felt the king's stare like a claw digging into my spine, but I didn’t flinch. I leaned into Calix instead, lifting my chin. Let him look.When Lorcan had rattled off the rules earlier, he’d mentioned that the royal family had to draw last, as some sort of show of leadership.Lucky us.I scanned the room again, taking in the other Khra’gixxes with the royal markings.Some were old, their bodies shriveled and hunched.Some were young, looking almost as terrified as the invaders they were supposed to claim.Others looked somewhere in between—middle-aged and cold-eyed, ready to add new blood to their aging lines.Cousins. Uncles. Grandparents. And so on.The lucky invaders were the ones picked by one of the old Khra'gixxes. A wrinkled, broken thing would be too tired to use them properly.I watched the royal members step up one after the other to pick from the baskets.One by one, names were drawn. One by one, the invaders were claimed.But somehow—miraculously—Mae was still there.Stil
Back in Velmira, reaching into Mae's mind had been as easy as breathing. I could mindlink with her without thinking. A simple nudge, a focused thought, and the connection would slip open like a door left on a latch.But here—In this large hall with so many supernatural bodies, it was like shouting into a hurricane.I narrowed my focus. Tried again. Reaching, searching.Mae.Mae.Mae.Nothing.The threads tangled and twisted against each other, too many open minds coming to me at once.Frustration burned through my chest. I wanted to shake her. I wanted her to know I was coming for her, that there would be no rest for her here.I pushed harder.And that was when I realized something was wrong.I wasn’t just brushing against minds anymore.I was in them.Reading them. People's thoughts. I'd been so focused on Mae that I hadn't realized the significance of the words I could hear.‘Weak humans. They won’t last one breeding session.’‘Heard the mages are good in bed, with their spells and
His body jerked in surprise, but he didn’t pull away. He let me. He wanted me to. My wolf's teeth broke the skin at the curve of his neck. His blood flooded my mouth. It was like drinking lightning. My entire body lit up, the bond roaring to life between us until I couldn’t tell where I ended and he began. Calix growled low and deep, his cock thrusting up into me again as I drank from him, matching his savagery with my own. He was mine too. And I would claim him as ruthlessly as he claimed me. When I finally tore my mouth away, blood smeared my lips, my chin, his skin. He stared down at me, wild and wrecked, his hand cradling the back of my head like I was the most precious thing he’d ever touched. “My beautiful, vicious wolf,” he whispered, voice wrecked. “You were made for me.” He caught my mouth in another kiss—filthy, desperate. Blood and spit and hunger slicked between our lips. Our teeth clashed, tongues tangling messily, neither of us caring about grace or tenderness.
When his lips fell on mine, the world swept away. Calix kissed like he fought—ruthless, claiming every sound, every breath. His tongue slid against mine, deep and slow, making my body tremble. One of his hands fisted in my hair, tugging just enough to make me gasp against his lips. The other hand gripped my waist, pinning me beneath the full heat and weight of him. I arched against him, desperate for more, for all the things he’d denied me the past week. His teeth grazed my bottom lip before he bit down gently, pulling a whimper from my throat. He swallowed the sound with a growl, his hips grinding against mine. “You are so stubborn,” he rasped against my mouth. “You make me want to break every bone in your body, and at the same time, you make me want to protect you.” “By protecting, do you mean caging?” I whispered back, dragging my nails down his back, feeling his muscles ripple under my touch. He pulled back slightly, just enough to look at me. His eyes weren’t just hungry—the