ログインWhen Afnan walked away from Delph that night, she left behind more than a broken bond, she left behind his children. Two years later, she returns, not as the fragile omega he once rejected, but as a woman guarding a secret powerful enough to shatter his world. But fate doesn’t forgive easily. When Delph the ruthless Alpha of the Bloodstone Pack scents what’s his again, he’ll stop at nothing to reclaim it, and her. Except Afnan isn't the same. And this time, she isn’t running. But how long can she hide the truth when her heart still beats for the man who destroyed her? Love. Betrayal. Power. Secrets. In a world ruled by wolves and loyalty, one truth will rewrite everything they thought they knew.
もっと見るThe rain hasn’t stopped for hours.
It drums against my hood, slides down my face, seeps through the old cloak clinging to my body. My boots sink into the mud with every step, but I keep walking because stopping means thinking, and thinking hurts more than the cold.
Two years.
Two years since I walked away from Bloodstone territory with nothing but a shattered bond and two heartbeats that weren’t my own.
Now I’m back.
A flash of lightning tears across the sky, lighting up the border gates of Bloodstone Pack. Iron, stone, and the heavy scent of dominance in the air. Even from here, I can smell him, that sharp mix of smoke and pine that used to make my heart race.
Delph.
The name alone sends something through me, a memory that tightens my chest. My wolf, Mira, stirs uneasily inside me, whining. He’ll know we’re here.
“I know,” I whisper. My voice cracks. “We don’t have a choice.”
The twins shift in my arms, cocooned against my chest. Their tiny breaths fog against my damp clothes. I pull them closer, tucking them beneath the cloak. Their warmth keeps me steady.
“This is for them,” I murmur, as if the wind might carry the words to the Moon Goddess herself.
I didn’t come back to beg or to love him again. I came because running isn’t living. Because the world outside these borders is cruel to omegas and even crueler to wolves without a pack.
And maybe, deep down, because part of me wants him to see what he threw away.
The guards at the border move when they see me. They recognize the scent before their eyes do. One of them stumbles forward, disbelief written all over his face.
“Luna Afnan?”
The title hits like a blade. Once, that word used to mean everything. Now it’s just a ghost.
“I’m not your Luna,” I say quietly. “Not anymore. Tell your Alpha that I seek entrance.”
They exchange glances. I can hear the whisper of their minds linking with him, their Alpha. My heart starts to pound, each beat syncing with the rain.
He’ll know in seconds. He’ll scent me before they finish speaking.
And he’ll come.
I don’t realize I’ve stopped breathing until I hear it, that low, commanding growl that shakes the ground under my feet. The kind of sound only one wolf in this world can make.
Then he’s there.
Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dressed in black that clings to him like sin itself. Even in the storm, he’s composed, regal, terrifying. The years haven’t softened him; if anything, they’ve made him sharper, colder.
Delph. Alpha of Bloodstone. My former mate.
His eyes find me through the rain steel gray, piercing, unreadable.
And for the briefest second, something flickers there. Shock. Disbelief. Maybe even pain.
Then it’s gone.
“Afnan.” My name rolls off his tongue like a curse and a prayer combined. “You dare to return?”
I lift my chin. The old me would’ve trembled. The woman standing here doesn’t.
“I’m not here for your forgiveness, Alpha,” I say softly. “I came because some ghosts can’t stay buried forever.”
His nostrils flare. His wolf is close to the surface. I can feel it, raw and dangerous. “You shouldn’t have come back.”
“Maybe,” I whisper, “but I did.”
His gaze drops suddenly to the small bundle in my arms. The twins stir, one tiny hand poking out from the cloak. Delph freezes. The air thickens.
For a heartbeat, neither of us moves.
Then his voice, low and cold: “What are you hiding?”
I step back, my wolf bristling. “Nothing that concerns you.”
His growl deepens, the rain hissing against the tension in the air. “Everything that concerns you, concerns me.”
I almost laughed at that. “Since when?”
Lightning flashes again, illuminating his face the fury, the confusion, the faint hint of something he doesn’t want to feel. His jaw tightens, and I see it, the moment realization starts to dawn. The scent of the twins, faint but familiar, cuts through the rain.
His eyes widened.
His control slips for a split second.
And in that heartbeat, I know he knows.
“You will come with me,” he orders finally, his tone leaving no room for argument. “Now.”
The guards hesitate, watching. My pulse hammers, but I don’t move.
I’ve faced rogues, hunger, and fear. I can face him.
“If I come with you,” I say, my voice quiet but firm, “it’ll be on my terms, Delph. Not yours.”
He takes a slow step forward, close enough that I can feel the heat radiating from him. His scent wraps around me, intoxicating and dangerous.
“You forget who you’re speaking to,” he murmurs.
I meet his eyes. “No. I remember exactly who I’m speaking to. The Alpha who rejected his mate for power.”
The silence after that could drown the thunder. His wolf roars beneath his skin, I can feel it in the air, wild and desperate.
Then, softly, almost brokenly, he says, “You should’ve stayed gone.”
Maybe I should have. But as I look down at the twins one with my eyes, one with his I know I couldn’t have.
Because ghosts don’t stay buried.
And some secrets… aren’t meant to be kept forever.
POV: DelphNight settled slowly over the Eastern forest.Not like the wild, open skies of Bloodstone.Here, darkness gathered in layers.Between branches.Under roots.Inside the spaces where light never quite reached.Delph stood at the edge of the settlement, just beyond the last ring of watchfires, where the forest began to swallow the world again.He preferred it here.Closer to the unknown.Closer to whatever might come.Because if something was coming,he would meet it first.Behind him, the camp had quieted.The Eastern Wolves kept their distance, their movements ghostlike between trees, watchful even in stillness. Delph had learned quickly, this pack did not sleep the way others did.They listened.Always.But tonight, even that constant awareness felt… strained.As if something deeper than instinct had unsettled the land itself.Delph exhaled slowly, his breath visible in the cool night air.Then he turned.His gaze found them immediately.Afnan and the twins slept beneath a
POV: AfnanThe air in the Eastern grounds felt different at dawn.Not lighter.Not calmer.Just… aware.Afnan stood at the edge of a clearing carved into the forest, where the trees grew in a perfect circle as if shaped by intention rather than nature. Their trunks twisted inward slightly, branches arching overhead to form a living dome that filtered the morning light into soft, fractured beams.It reminded her of the chamber beneath Bloodstone.Of the Gate.Of something watching.She inhaled slowly, steadying herself.Across from her, the Keeper of Bones stood motionless, their presence as quiet and rooted as the forest itself.“You feel it,” the seer said.Not a question.Afnan nodded.“It’s stronger here.”The mark on her wrist pulsed faintly beneath her sleeve, as though answering the very ground beneath her feet.The Keeper inclined their head.“This land sits closer to the echo of the Gate.”Afnan’s fingers curled slightly.“Echo,” she repeated.“Yes.”The seer stepped forward,
POV: CorinThe cave breathed.That was the first thing Corin noticed as he stepped past the threshold.Not wind.Not echo.Something deeper.Slower.Like the place itself was alive.Behind him, the forest had been thick with quiet tension, the hidden pack watching from the trees, their presence impossible to ignore. But here,Inside the sacred cave of the Eastern Wolves, the silence was different.Heavier.Older.It pressed against his skin like memory.A torch burned low near the entrance, its flame bending slightly as if disturbed by an unseen current. Beyond it, the cave stretched into darkness, its walls glistening faintly with moisture and something else,something pale that caught the light in unsettling ways.Bones.Corin stepped further inside.They were everywhere.Not scattered.Arranged.Deliberately placed along the walls, stacked into arches, woven into patterns that curved upward like ribs of something long dead. Skulls rested in niches carved into the stone, their hollow
POV: AfnanThe forest thickened as they moved east.By midmorning, the path they had followed since leaving the ruined village had all but vanished, swallowed by roots and undergrowth that seemed determined to keep outsiders away. Towering trees closed in above them, their branches woven so tightly that even the twin moons’ lingering presence from the night before felt distant now.Still, Afnan felt watched.Not by the same presence as before.This was different.Closer.Breathing.Living.She slowed her horse slightly, her gaze sweeping the shadows between the trees.Delph noticed immediately.“What is it?”Her voice remained low.“We’re not alone.”That was all it took.The entire group shifted.Kael’s hand moved to his blade.Sera’s fingers brushed the string of her bow.Corin straightened in his saddle, scanning the forest with renewed sharpness.The twins went quiet.Even the wind seemed to hold its breath.Then,A twig snapped.To their left.Another behind them.Then one ahead.
(Afnan’s POV)The valley sang in whispers.Not of wind or water, but something softer, like the breath of the Moon herself, woven through the mist. Every step I took felt like trespass and blessing all at once.Lyra walked ahead
Afnan's POVDawn crept softly over the forest, pale and cold, like it was afraid to wake the dead.Mist clung to my hair, heavy and damp, as I trudged through the undergrowth. The twins slept against my chest, wrapped in a rough sling I’d made
(Afnan’s POV)The mountains breathed silver as dawn broke over the valley, the mist parting like a dream reluctant to wake.I stepped across the threshold of Moonfall Valley, the air humming softly with lunar energy. Mist curled around ancient stone
(Afnan’s POV)Night pressed close, heavy and velveteen, as the valley gathered around the spring. Lanterns of woven willow hung from low branches, their flames tremoring like watchful eyes. The air tasted of wet earth and crushed herbs; it hummed with expectation, as if the land itself had paused t
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