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Chapter 3: Three Months of Transformation

Author: omayoza
last update Last Updated: 2025-05-27 10:31:03

The days blend into each other, marked not by sunrises and sunsets, but by sweat, bruises, and power I’d never known lived inside me. Celeste trained me without mercy, her gentle grandmotherly mask long discarded. In its place stood a woman carved by battle, whose eyes held lifetimes of wisdom and pain.

"Again," she barked as I gasped for air, my palms bleeding as I pushed myself up from the forest floor. My muscles trembled, from exertion, my knees skinned raw, but I obeyed.

Three months. of relentless training since the night Marcus broke me. Since I found out I was the last of the Moon Goddess’s royal bloodline. Since I was reborn.

Each morning began before dawn. Celeste woke me with a bucket of cold water and a command. No time for grief, no time to sulk. She believed in discipline, and pain, and pushing beyond limits. It wasn’t about vengeance, she said. It was about power, about becoming what I was always meant to be.

“You have the blood of queens in your veins,” she reminded me daily. “You were not

 made to kneel.”

My body had changed drastically in those months. The softness I once worried made me weak was gone, replaced by hard curves of strength. My limbs moved like coiled lightning. My once-delicate frame now pulsed with power I had learned to control.

Celeste trained me in ancient techniques long lost to most wolves. I learned to shift effortlessly, even mid-air during battle. My senses sharpened to the point where I could hear a squirrel scurrying miles away or sense the heartbeat of a rabbit in the underbrush. My wolf silver-white and massive responded to my every thought now, no longer frightened, no longer hesitant. We were finally one.

But power came at a price.

Some nights, I woke up screaming, the dream of Marcus’s voice rejecting me replaying like a broken record in my mind. I could still see Victoria's smug smile, still hear the laughter of the pack members who found joy in my humiliation. Those memories became fuel embers I fed daily until they roared into the fire that drove me.

Celeste never commented when I woke covered in sweat, panting, tears streaming down my face. She simply handed me a blade and said, “Train harder.”

And I did.

What I didn’t expect was how lonely it felt, this strength. My trust was a shattered thing. I doubted everything. Even Celeste at times. The only one I fully trusted was the wolf inside me, and even she was learning who we were now.

Still, I grew stronger. And each day, the Luna Blackwood who had begged Marcus to reconsider faded a little more. In her place rose someone sharper, more dangerous.

Someone worthy of fear.

Three months to the day of my rebirth, Celeste led me to the edge of neutral territory. “It’s time,” she said, cloaking me in a long hooded robe woven with concealment runes. “You must see the world that awaits.”

The gathering grounds lay in the center of the five major pack regions, protected by centuries-old pacts. Once a season, wolves, witches, fae, and other creatures came together to trade, negotiate, and posture. A political powder keg disguised as a celebration.

As I walked into the crowded square, I could feel the energy shift. Even in disguise, I drew stares. Not just for my presence, but for the quiet power humming off me like electricity. My silver-white aura shimmered faintly under the surface of my skin, concealed but restless.

The crowd was a chaotic sea of colors and scents. Alpha heirs in embroidered coats debated near merchants selling enchanted trinkets. Warriors sparred for sport in a cleared arena, while diplomats whispered over goblets of blood-wine.

Whispers trailed me.

"Is that…?"

"No, she died."

"Looks like her, though. Luna Blackwood, right? The rejected mate?"

"No one survives a broken bond and vanishes for three months. It’s impossible."

Let them talk. I kept my head high, posture fluid and graceful, more predator than prey now. My hair was shorter, eyes sharper, body carved by training. But the old Luna still haunted their memories.

I caught my reflection in a vendor’s polished mirror. I barely recognized myself, cheekbones more defined, gaze more piercing, lips set in a hard line. I looked like someone who could kill.

And yet, deep inside, I was still learning to believe I was more than what had been taken from me.

Celeste lingered in the shadows, watching. She had warned me that the gathering would test more than just my composure. Enemies would watch. Allies might whisper. And somewhere in the crowd, someone was bound to recognize me.

Then I felt it.

A shift in the air sharp and raw, like a thunderclap that never sounded.

Every hair on my body stood on end.

I turned slowly and saw him.

He was taller than any Alpha I’d ever seen. Dressed in black with deep, jagged scars running along one side of his face that only made his sharp features more striking. His dark eyes glowed faintly, like molten silver restrained by force of will. His presence sucked the air from the square. People stepped aside without knowing why.

Kai Nightshade.

I knew the name. Every wolf did. Alpha of the Shadow Fang Pack. A warrior forged in blood. Ruthless. Unclaimed. Unmated. Dangerous.

His gaze locked onto mine, and my wolf stirred violently growling, pacing, alert. My pulse spiked, breath caught in my throat.

He walked toward me with deliberate grace, not caring that people were watching. Not caring that I was cloaked in illusion. His wolf saw me.

And mine saw him.

“You don’t belong here,” he said, voice low and textured like gravel smoothed by velvet. His eyes narrowed. “At least, not as a spectator.”

I didn’t reply immediately. Words felt inadequate under his gaze. My instincts screamed to fight or run.

But I did neither.

Instead, I tilted my head and met him evenly. “And you do?”

A ghost of a smirk played on his lips. “I make it my business to know when something rare enters my territory.”

He stepped closer. Too close. My breath hitched again, and I hated myself for it.

“What’s your name, stranger?”

“None of your concern,” I said coolly.

“Ah,” he said, eyes twinkling with curiosity. “So you’re dangerous and mysterious. I like that.”

The tension between us thickened something primal and electric. My wolf pressed forward, drawn to his energy despite every warning screaming in my head. The pull was undeniable.

He studied me for a beat longer, then nodded as if he understood something I didn’t. “We’ll meet again. Of that, I’m certain.”

He turned to go but the moment shattered.

A scream tore through the air, followed by a guttural growl. Panic exploded across the gathering as rogue wolves leapt from the treeline emaciated, frenzied, eyes wild with bloodlust. Chaos erupted.

“Rogues!” someone shouted. “Protect the elders!”

I watched for half a second too long, torn.

Celeste’s voice echoed in my memory: You must not reveal yourself too soon. There are those who hunt your kind.

But people were dying. Wolves scrambled to protect children. A young face girl was cornered, a rogue lunging for her throat.

I stepped forward. Then I ran.

With a snarl, I shed the cloak, letting the illusion drop. Gasps followed me as I leapt high into the air, shifting mid-motion. My silver-white wolf exploded from my skin, massive and luminous under the moonlight.

I landed between the rogue and the girl with a thunderous growl. One swipe of my claws sent the rogue flying into a tree with a crack of bone.

The crowd watched, stunned, as I tore through the attackers with lethal grace. I felt eyes on me dozens, maybe hundreds but none more intense than Kai’s.

When the last rogue was down, I shifted back without flinching, standing tall and naked in the moonlight, uncaring of modesty or fear.

I looked toward Kai, heart still racing, and found him watching me with something fierce and almost reverent in his eyes.

Celeste rushed forward, wrapping a cloak around me, her voice tight. “They saw, Luna.”

“I know,” I said, pulse still pounding.

The whispers began again, louder this time.

“She shifted mid-air, did you see that?”

“Her aura… that wasn’t normal…”

“That was Luna Blackwood. The dead girl.”

“No... that was something else. Something royal.

As Celeste led me away, Kai's voice carried after me soft but unmistakable:

“Found you.”

In the shadows beyond the gathering, a hooded figure whispered into a crystal orb, “She’s awakened. Inform the council. The royal bloodline has returned.”

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