~Omniscient POV
The moment the spears were raised, Caelum stepped forward slowly, palms lifted into the air. His eyes scanned the masked warriors, reading their body language like old script. “We mean you no harm,” he said, voice clear but calm. “We’re just werewolves seeking shelter.” There was a moment of breathless silence, thick with uncertainty. Then, one by one, the masked figures began to lower their weapons. The tension in the air thinned like morning fog, and with a few exchanged glances, they reached for their faces. Masks fell. Beneath them were elves—but not like those told in fairytale stories. These ones stood no taller than a toddler, small and compact like monkeys, with skin that shimmered faintly green in the light. Their ears were long and sharply pointed, twitching slightly as they took in scents and sounds. Despite their small size, their faces bore ageless wisdom and uncanny beauty. Their large golden eyes gleamed with ancient magic and quiet suspicion. One among them stepped forward. His robe was embroidered with glowing thread, and the others instinctively made room for him to speak. His age showed in the white that streaked his emerald hair, but his posture was straight, his bearing noble. “So sorry about that,” the elder elf said, voice deep despite his size. “We’re a bit edgy about visitors. The last ones stole from our food stores and left us without healing tonics for the winter.” “No harm done,” Caelum replied, lowering his hands. “But how do you even survive out here? The hills of Trepidation aren’t exactly known for their hospitality.” The elf gave a wry smile. “Magic.” “You practice magic?” Eira asked, surprise threading through her voice. “It’s been a while since I met anyone who does,” she added. “I know we’re asking a lot, but… could you help us? Just for a while. Somewhere to rest. Maybe restock our supplies. We won’t overstay our welcome.” “Of course,” the elder said without hesitation. “You’re welcome here as long as you need. Come, come. We have rooms prepared—simple, but warm.” The elves guided them deeper into the village, their feet barely making a sound on the packed earth. Winding paths split off from the main square, leading to clusters of huts shaped like mushrooms and carved tree stumps. At the very center stood the largest structure—round, tall, and crowned with silverleaf ivy that shimmered in the sunlight. Its door was open, and a gentle aroma of herbs and hearthfire drifted out. “This is our longhouse,” the elder said. “Reserved for guests of importance. It is the only hut with multiple chambers.” Eira and Caelum exchanged glances. “Royalty lived here?” Caelum asked. The elf smiled, not answering directly. “Make yourselves at home. Your horses will be cared for, and we’ll bring food and water shortly.” Within the hour, they sat cross-legged on soft woven mats. A low table stood between them, piled with strange fruits, roasted root vegetables, flatbreads, and cups of pale gold liquid that smelled faintly of mint and wild honey. Across from them, the elder elf—now comfortably seated in a moss-cushioned chair—sipped from a carved goblet. “So what brings werewolves this far into the hills of Trepidation?” he asked, watching them with curious eyes. “And so far from your kind” “Exile,” Eira said simply. Her fingers paused halfway to her mouth as she noticed the crescent mark on her neck, now glowing again—softly, like it pulsed with its own breath. She quickly tugged her hood forward, concealing it once more. “Exile?” the elf king asked, setting his goblet down. “What did you do?” “Nothing, actually,” she replied, her tone even. “Disrespecting royalty, apparently,” Caelum added quickly, shooting her a look before she could respond further. “But I didn’t disrespec—” she began, but Caelum nudged her gently with his elbow. She exhaled sharply. “Yes. I guess that was it.” “Ah.” The elf took another slow sip. “I’m sorry to hear that.” He leaned forward slightly, folding his fingers. “So where will you go now?” “Wherever the path takes us,” Eira said. The king smiled faintly. “That’s oddly optimistic.” Eira’s laugh was bitter and dry. “Believe me, you have no idea.” “Well,” the elf said, standing, “I have matters to attend to. You’re free to wander the village whenever you want to.” With a gesture, he and the other elves silently left the room, leaving Caelum and Eira alone in the golden hush. After their meal, Caelum stood and extended a hand to Eira. “Let’s walk. Stretch a bit. See what secrets this village is hiding.” She hesitated, then took his hand. They wandered through the paths between the huts. Elven children darted between the roots of massive trees, giggling and chasing one another. Some of them had tiny wings or glittering markings along their skin. Eira paused to watch them. “They remind me of us,” she murmured. “When the world didn’t demand anything more from us than to laugh and run,” Caelum replied. One of the children, curious, ran up to Eira and offered her a piece of crystallized fruit. She crouched to take it, smiling gently. He giggled and ran off, tripping into a puddle. The splash was quick—but Caelum was quicker. He stepped between the child and Eira, shielding her just as the muddy water splattered upward. His cloak was soaked. Eira was spotless. She blinked in surprise. Caelum just smiled. “Can’t have you walking around puddle-drenched.” She laughed—a genuine laugh, clear and real. Caelum froze at the sound. She hadn’t laughed like that since before the Moon Calling. He didn’t say anything. He just looked at her and smiled. Her laughter was the most beautiful sound he had ever heard. He just watched her with a smile on his face as she went around touching everything, behaving like a kid again. --- Far across the village, in a hidden chamber of roots and stone, the elf king stood with his council. “What are we going to do about them?” a voice asked, low and tight. “Who? The werewolves?” the king responded, folding his hands behind his back. “They don’t pose a threat.” “For now.” Another council member stepped forward. “You know they’re stronger than all of us. If they ambush us, we’re dead.” “We can’t give them the chance to,” a third voice added, sharp and quick. The king turned to face them fully. “What do you expect me to do? Call an attack on guests? We’d lose. They’re werewolves.” “You don’t attack stronger prey head-on,” said a taller elf, stepping from the shadows. His voice was smooth. His smile, colder. “You don’t face them. You bleed them. You strike from behind.” He stepped into the firelight. “That’s why I put silver powder in the food they just ate.” Gasps filled the chamber. “They won’t feel it yet,” he continued. “But by morning, their strength will be halved. All that’s left…” He let the sentence hang, savoring it. “…is the final blow. And then, the location of our village remains forgotten. As it should be.” The king stared at the fire, silent. Then he sighed. “What do you have in mind?”~AeronBeing Alpha was nothing like I imagined.They all tell you the crown is made of iron and duty. They don’t mention the weight that crushes you slowly. They don't talk about the rot behind the council chamber doors, or the way your soul starts to erode under the constant weight of decisions that offer no victories — only sacrifices.There’s no pleasure here. No laughter. No space to bleed.Just… ruling. Day in. Day out. Meetings. War talk. Pack tensions. The Eastern borders creeping with rogue beasts. Bloodlines to protect. Laws to uphold. Lies to maintain.I haven't seen the sky without urgency in a while.I thought power would taste like freedom. Instead, it tastes like ash. Like all the things I couldn't save. Like her name caught on the back of my tongue, never spoken, always burning.And worst of all, I wake up next to someone who isn't her.The first thing I felt was light.The filtered kind — morning sun crawling across cold stone. Then the heaviness of sleep finally loos
~Omniscient POVThe steady rhythm of hooves beat against the earth like a slow, pulsing drum. Dust curled into the wind with every step, stirred by two horses making their way through a winding path between the hollow hills. One horse led the way—an obsidian mare with strength in her gait, a second horse trailing behind, quiet and loyal.Eira stirred.Her body swayed slightly with every bump on the road, her head resting lightly against something warm—firm, steady.She groaned, blinking slowly as light stabbed through her eyelids. Her muscles ached. Her wrists throbbed with fading burns. She felt movement. Wind. Open air.And then she realized—she wasn’t walking. She was riding.Her eyes opened fully.She was slumped against Caelum’s chest, his arms loosely around her, one hand holding the reins, the other gripping the saddle. She was seated in front of him, her legs draped over the saddle horn. The second horse, hers, trotted faithfully beside them.Eira slowly sat up and yawned, bru
~Eira“Eira… Eira…”The voice drifted through my head like smoke, curling at the edges of my dream. Soft. Distant. Familiar.“Mmm… five more minutes,” I mumbled, turning over, half convinced I was still home, still wrapped in warm blankets, still safe in a time that didn’t exist anymore.“EIRA!”The voice snapped like a whip.I jolted upright, gasping—and the movement yanked my wrists hard against the cold metal shackling me to the wall.Pain shot through my shoulders. I hissed.“What the—?” My vision swam. My head pounded.The cell was pitch black, save for a flickering torch somewhere near the door. The air was heavy with the stench of mold, blood, and rot. Something skittered across my leg—small, quick. A rat.Lovely.Chains clinked across from me. Caelum sat against the far wall, blood dried around his temple, his eyes sunken but awake.“Hey,” he said. “How are you feeling?”“What’s going on?” I asked, trying to shake the haze from my skull. “Why are we in a… gods, this place smel
~Eira The sky was bleeding. I stood at the edge of a crumbling cliff, wind whipping through my silver hair, the ground beneath my feet fractured and charred. What had once been a valley of lush forests and crystalline rivers was now a blackened wasteland—skeletal trees twisted like broken fingers, soil cracked open like a wound. And the screaming. Gods, the screaming. Below me, the earth split and groaned, coughing fire into the air like it had a soul to purge. Shadows moved within the flames—giant, hulking shapes with limbs like serpents and skin made of molten bone. Their eyes glowed blue—no pupils, no mercy—just that dead, ancient blue, like frozen galaxies. Revenants was what they called themselves. They spoke in a language that was foreign but for some reason I understood them perfectly. They were telling me that since I refused to cleanse the world, they’ll do it themselves. They tore through what was left of the land, their massive forms crushing buildings and
~Omniscient POV The moment the spears were raised, Caelum stepped forward slowly, palms lifted into the air. His eyes scanned the masked warriors, reading their body language like old script. “We mean you no harm,” he said, voice clear but calm. “We’re just werewolves seeking shelter.” There was a moment of breathless silence, thick with uncertainty. Then, one by one, the masked figures began to lower their weapons. The tension in the air thinned like morning fog, and with a few exchanged glances, they reached for their faces. Masks fell. Beneath them were elves—but not like those told in fairytale stories. These ones stood no taller than a toddler, small and compact like monkeys, with skin that shimmered faintly green in the light. Their ears were long and sharply pointed, twitching slightly as they took in scents and sounds. Despite their small size, their faces bore ageless wisdom and uncanny beauty. Their large golden eyes gleamed with ancient magic and quiet suspici
~Eira “We can’t stay here for long,” Caelum said, tightening the cloth around his shoulder pack. His voice was steady but low, like the cave walls might eavesdrop. “We’ll need food. Water. If you’re feeling up to it, we can walk around a bit and see what we can find.” I rolled my eyes and shifted on the rock. “I told you I was fine.” He arched a brow then carried his cloak and used it to cover my crescent birthmark which was no longer glowing as brightly as it was before. “Where’s Eve?” I asked. “Who’s that?” “My horse,” I said dryly. “The only friend I have left in this godforsaken world.” “Oh. Your horse.” He scratched the back of his neck. “She’s just outside.” “That’s nice.” I stood and stretched, grimacing as my shoulder tugged under the bandage. “Let me go and check on the only person in this world that actually cares about me.” I gave him a cold glare before walking out into the light. He sighed—deep and exasperated—but didn’t say a word. The mornin
~Eira They came for me like hunger given shape. The Wyrmfangs lunged from the dark, claws bared, bone masks gleaming in the slivers of moonlight spilling into the cave. My horse screamed, her hooves kicking against stone, but I couldn’t focus on her. Not now. The first one reached me in a blink, teeth snapping, and I did the only thing I could—I changed. It wasn’t like the usual shift. This was no slow unraveling. It was instant. Reflexive. Violent. A flash of pain shot through my spine like lightning. My bones cracked, realigned. My fingernails split open, elongating into deadly black claws. My teeth ached as they pushed out of my gums into long, curved fangs. My limbs stretched, muscles thickened. A white streak burst through the center of my hair like a flare in the dark—wild, bright, and unrelenting. My heart thundered in my chest. And then I was no longer just Eira. My wolf was awake. I let out a low snarl, the sound echoing off the stone walls, and launche
~Eira The wind tore through the Hills of Trepidation, lifting the edges of my cloak, whispering warnings I no longer cared to heed. The horse beneath me shifted restlessly, her hooves crunching over brittle, frostbitten ground, but I didn’t stop riding. Not for the cold. Not for the ache in my bones. Not even for the sob locked in the back of my throat like a secret I refused to voice. Beyond the borders of Obsidian, the world looked like it had been scorched by time itself. The sky hung dry and brittle above me, the color of bleached stone. No clouds, no breeze, no softness. The earth was cracked and hostile beneath my boots, and each step of my horse’s hooves sent up small puffs of ash-gray dust. I passed the remains of trees that looked more like claws than branches. Scattered bones littered the edges of hills—some the size of rabbits, others the size of men. The deeper I rode, the more the silence thickened around me, like the world had forgotten how to speak. “I hope yo
~Eira The wind bites like it knows my name. It tears through the Hills of Trepidation, lifting the edges of my cloak, whispering warnings I no longer care to hear. The horse beneath me shifts restlessly, hooves crunching frostbitten earth, but I don’t stop riding. Not for the cold. Not for the ache in my bones. Not even for the sob locked in the back of my throat like a secret I refuse to give voice. I know what you’re thinking. Why is she riding away from everything she’s ever known? From the people she loved? From the only home she had? The truth? I’m not leaving because I want to. I’m leaving because I wasn’t given the option to stay. I was cast out—tossed aside like something unworthy, something unwanted. Exiled without explanation. Banished by the very hands that once held me in celebration. But for you to understand the mess I’ve been dragged into—the betrayal, the humiliation, the cruel twist of fate—I have to take you back. Just a few hours. That’s all it