LOGINPOV: Aria
I was unable to breathe a moment. I could not take my eyes off the man by the Alpha.
The man from the bar. The very one that I had been making so much effort to forget.
My chest tightened. The crowd had died down to a wailing murmur, and, except for the sound of my own heart being beaten heavily, I heard no more.
The candles surrounding the ritual area became as grey as possible, until a loud shout woke me up again, in a deep, commanding howl that rumbled through the night and drowned out the conversation.
“Lucian Vale, the son of the Alpha of the Blood Moon Pack!” A young soldier yelled.
The name reverberated in the night, as Lucian left his seat next to the Alpha, his father. Every head turned in unison. Gasps and murmurs, murmurs of people who could not believe what they had just heard.
He came out, so calm and so tall, that he did not need to make himself noticeable. He spoke in a voice that was strong enough to silence the rest of the people when he started speaking.
“Good evening, folks,” he said, in a pleasant but firm voice. “It is weird to be standing here once more after so long being away. I dropped this pack when I was a boy, and now I come back when I am a man-- and yet one of you, and still proud to be called one of you.”
There was a ripple of cheers. He smiled, small but genuine.
“My parents,” he added, looking at the Alpha and the Luna, “had always told me that going out of home would make me responsible, that I must first learn to serve, before I could lead. I thought they exaggerated."
Some gentle laughs arose out of the audience. "Turns out they were right. My time in exile taught me that there was nothing like territory, nothing so title, as Blood Moon Pack. It's family."
He stopped and glanced about the crowd, a mere gesture, but it seemed to him he was looking at all, at every face.
"I missed my home," he said. The smell of the forest, the power of our togetherness and the fire of our people. It's good to be back."
Applause followed. He waited till it died, and then proceeded.
“I come back, ready to occupy my place, where the Moon wills,” he said, and his voice grew a little deeper. “I am finished with my education, and I am prepared to serve, as a son, as a soldier, and, should the Moon be kind to me, as a mate.”
A moment his words were suspended in the air. Then he said a little, and smiling, “I can see that I have surprised some of you. I understand you can not fault me, you know, going missing and not coming back in years was not the best thing to do to have a lasting impact.”
There came laughter in the crowd. Even the Alpha smiled, faintly.
Lucian chuckled too. "But tonight isn't about me. It is about us all of us, the ones who will find their destined ones and begin new histories. I pray that the Moon goddess has penned mine somewhere in the stars to-night. Or I’ll have to give another speech next year.” He said, earning another round of laughter from the crowd.
He bowed his head slightly. “May she bless this ritual, and all the ties that are made to-night.”
The crowd erupted in cheers. Howls filled the air. I could not help but be impressed by the strength of his words, by the manner in which he delivered them in a calm, confident, and warm way, as though each word was heartfelt.
Beside me, Lyra was beaming. “He is wonderful, mom, she said to herself.”
I managed a small nod. "He is," I murmured. My throat felt tight.
And there came the Elder, who had a long scroll in his hand. His voice was dramatic and full of pride.
“You have come back to your people, Prince Lucian Vale, strong and honourable. Moon shines on you to-night. You will not be waiting another year to have your mate.”
Lucian blinked, confused. "Elder?"
The old man smiled knowingly. “You already have a mate written in your stars to-night.”
Gasps ran through the crowd. I felt my stomach twist.
The Elder rolled up the scroll and read aloud the name which changed everything.
"Lyra Damien Hale!"
My world stopped. I was deaf with silence though the whole pack had begun cheering and all heads turned to us. My daughter stood still next to me and her eyes were open in disbelief.
"Me?" she whispered.
I couldn't answer. My lips were moving, but no sound was produced.
Lyra looked at me, hesitant. I forced a trembling smile. "Go on," I whispered. "It's your moment."
She paused a moment and then took a step forward. The people cleared a path to her and she slowly strolled towards the stage.
Lucian stepped down the steps, and looked at her with an expression that was gentle. As their hands touched, the crowd that surrounded us screamed, applauded, cheered.
I stood there, acting as though I were smiling, acting as though I were happy. My heart was racing with disbelief, guilt and what can be described as fear.
Since the man before my daughter, the soon to be Alpha, the pride of the pack, was the same man who had touched me in the dark just a few hours before.
I swallowed, my lips closed together, and i whispered to myself.
“My one-night stand,” I said to myself, “will be the future Alpha... and the mate of my daughter?”
Lucian’s POVBy morning, the Vale no longer felt like home.It felt like a place holding its breath.I stood at the long table in the strategy room, hands braced against the wood, eyes fixed on the map spread before me. Patrol routes. Healer paths. Council access points. Everything looked orderly.That was the problem.Selene didn’t break systems.She slipped inside them and rewired quietly.“She’s filed three new requests overnight,” Elias said from my left. “All legal. All approved through secondary Council channels before we could stall them.”“Which records,” I asked.“Bloodline registries,” he replied. “Minor Houses. Maternal lines. Nothing obvious… but the dates overlap.”I already knew which ones.“Hale,” I said.Elias nodded once. “She’s narrowing.”“She’s not hunting,” I said. “She’s measuring.”The room went quiet.Mara Hale sat near the far end of the table, posture straight, hands folded. She hadn’t spoken much since dawn. She didn’t need to. Her presence alone shifted the
Aria’s POVThe lights steadied again, like nothing had happened.But the damage was done.I stood there, my hand still locked in my mother’s, my heart pounding so loudly I was sure everyone in the room could hear it. The word Hale echoed in my head, bouncing off old memories and buried moments I’d never fully questioned.Six years ago.That wasn’t just a year. It was a fracture line.Lucian dismissed the guard with a sharp nod and turned the lock himself. The sound was final. Heavy. Like the house had just sealed its lungs.“Full lockdown,” he said calmly, though I knew him well enough now to hear the strain beneath it. “No one enters or leaves without my word.”Mara released my hand slowly and folded both of hers in her lap again, posture composed, face unreadable. If someone didn’t know her, they’d think she was unaffected.I knew better.“You should sit,” Lucian said to me.“I am sitting,” I replied, realizing only then that I’d lowered myself onto the edge of the bed without remem
Aria’s POVI felt her before I saw her.That deep, quiet pull in my chest… the one I’d ignored for days because everything else had been louder… fear, strategy, and a deeper sense of survival. But this was an instinctive, familiar feeling.My mother was in the Vale mansion.I was standing near the window when it hit me, fingers curled around the edge of the sill, watching dusk bleed slowly into the mountains. The estate lights flickered on one by one, soft and deceptive, like nothing underneath them was wrong.Everything was wrong.Frantic knocks came seconds later.I turned slowly.“Come in.”The door opened and Lucian stepped inside first. His posture was upright, but his eyes searched my face before he spoke, like he was bracing for impact.“She’s here,” he said quietly.I nodded once. “I know.”That made his brows draw together. “You felt her.”“Yes.”He hesitated, then stepped aside.Revealing her standing behind him.My dear mother stood just inside the doorway, hands folded nea
Lucian’s POVMara Hale didn’t move past the threshold.That alone told me everything I needed to know.Most people stepped into the Vale estate like trespassers trying to prove they belonged. Mara stood as though the house itself was on trial, and she was here to observe, not plead.“Mrs. Hale,” I said evenly. “You weren’t announced.”She inclined her head, polite but unapologetic. “I didn’t expect to be.”Her gaze flicked briefly to Elias, then back to me. Sharp. Measuring. She was taking inventory… of guards, of exits, of the tension in the air.Of me.“I requested passage at the outer gate,” she continued. “They allowed me through.”I glanced at Elias. His jaw tightened.That would be dealt with later.“Walk with me,” I said.She did, falling into step without hesitation, her pace calm, unhurried. No awe. No discomfort. As though she’d walked halls like these before… not this one specifically, but halls built on power and silence.“You came a long way,” I said.“Yes.”No embellishm
Lucian’s POVI kept tossed on the couch in Aria's room till the break of dawn… I just couldn’t sleep.I circled the room, heavy and restless, but never settled. I lay on my back staring at the ceiling, listening to the slow rhythm of Aria’s breathing on the bed beside me, every inhale a quiet reassurance and every exhale a reminder of how much there was to lose.The night after a war always feels like this. No sense of peace.I slipped out of the couch before dawn, careful not to wake her. She gently stirred in the bed, one hand drifting instinctively across the sheets… she’s so sensitive to any sound. I walked over to the bed, slightly bending and planting a kiss on her forehead.When her fingers brushed my wrist, my chest tightened.“I’ll be back,” I murmured softly.Her eyes fluttered open, hazy but alert.“Don’t disappear,” she said.“I won’t.” I said departing the room.It was a promise I made lightly.The corridors were quiet as I moved through the estate, guards posted at eve
Aria’s POVThe silence in my room felt staged.Everything looked calm on the surface. Curtains drawn. Fire dying low. Clock ticking steadily on the mantle like nothing in the world had shifted. But my chest felt tight, like I’d been holding my breath for hours without realizing it.I sat on the edge of the bed with my hands resting over my stomach. I kept catching myself doing that. Not consciously. Just instinct. Protective. Like if I stayed still enough, quiet enough, the secret inside me would remain invisible.Damien was gone.Banished. Stripped. Removed from the Vale like a rot cut cleanly from bone.I should have felt relief. I tried to tell myself I did. But the air felt thinner instead. Sharper. Like the real danger had simply stepped back to get a better angle.A knock sounded at the door.I flinched.“Aria.”Lucian.Before I even opened it, I felt him. The pressure of his presence bled through the wood, raw and unsettled. This wasn’t the calm Alpha who’d commanded the Assemb







