LOGINIt was a small blessing that my seventeenth moon day fell on one of my days off. I don't think I could have survived Delta Hester's displeasure at me taking the entire day off otherwise. Small mercies found me in those days, and I never forgot to thank the Moon Goddess for the reprieve.
But that was the only small mercy that graced me on my seventeenth.
All day, I felt a gnawing in my stomach. A deep ache that made me feel sick, as though starving. But the thought of eating made me want to throw up. I drank water and did my best to stay confined to my quarters, but the heat was unbearable. Not outside. Outside, it was overcast, and the winds were high, threatening a storm.
Inside my body, though, fever burned hot and high.
When I was a young girl in the kitchens, one of the older girls worked on the day of her seventeenth moon, and she complained of mild fatigue and increased hunger. She said it was like getting her period, but a bit worse. Hotter and more insistent, but nothing she couldn't handle. But she was a Gamma.
As another wave of pain washed over me and I doubled over on my tattered cot, it felt like my insides were being clawed at by a beast. Perhaps this was the curse of being an omega.
Swallowing hard, I reached for my water on the rickety table by my bedside, drinking my fifth cup down in as many minutes. It was the only thing that helped.
Does it hurt more because I'm weak? Or is this what Doctor Andromeda's medicine was meant to fix?
A few slivers of glass still glittered at me by the door from between the cracks of my floorboards. Pieces I couldn't retrieve the night before that glared at me, damning and condemning me to this unending pain in my stomach.
I should have taken the medicine.
I whimpered internally, gripping the worn blanket beneath me. Seldom had the flimsy cloth been comforting, but I gripped it with shaking hands and more strength than I knew I had as I groaned through another painful arc of heat and pressure.
Every moment of my life played out behind my clenched eyes, sweat beading my furrowed brow. Most of the flashes were of the infirmary, the slow erasure of Doctor Andromeda's smiles as she treated me. Phillipe's fading image at my bedside. The glares and smacks of Delta Hester. The occasional snarl from the Alpha and Luna.
Evangeline was more prominent than I would have guessed. I hadn't realized how much of a fixture in my world she'd been until that moment when it felt like my insides were about to rupture.
Her piercing gaze was often above me. That was her favorite place. Above me. Taking pleasure in stepping on my hand when I dropped a plate. Or kicking my side when I scrubbed a spill from the carpet in her room. Cruel, beautiful Evangeline.
The wave passed, and the memories faded. My ragged breathing filled the small shack, and I rose to refill my water glass. This was going to be a long process. But I was determined to survive. Even as a lowly omega, finally having a wolf would mean I was no longer alone. It would mean I could find my mate one day. And escape life as a servant in Snow Pointe.
That fragile hope held me together through each cycle of pain. And when the moon rose high in the night sky after hours of agony, I opened my threadbare curtains and knelt in front of the window, letting the light bathe me in its cool glow.
"Moon Goddess... I know I am a weak omega. And I know you favor the strong and brave. But please... please give me the chance to be both of those things. Please help me be brave and face the pain. Help me be strong and accept my wolf."
It was a simple, honest prayer. It was a prayer that only someone who has been weak their entire life could pray. I shouldn’t have wasted my breath on it. Someone with more sense would have held their tongue and accepted their fate.
The Moon Goddess abandoned me at birth. I should have died in the wilderness as an infant, per Snow Pointe pack rule. But I didn’t. And she was all I had.
The pain intensified, as did the heat. My back ached as I caved in on myself, clawing at the floor. This was it. My first shift. I was changing.
I'd expected to be dragged into Snow Pointe in chains: ridicule, scorn, hatred. Years of my life wasted in the lowest tier soured my expectations. But when I assented to Olivier's invitation, none of the warriors dared to harm me.There were no insults. No chains. No restraints or condemnation of any kind. Olivier matched my pace, but never strode ahead. The warriors walked behind me, heads lowered. I suppose I shouldn't have been surprised. Wolves in Snow Pointe knew to keep their heads lowered in the presence of more powerful wolves. That was the training that Leon and Gabe spent months breaking me of in Wayfinder. The thought of Leon's sorrowful eyes made my chest ache.I miss him. I miss them all. I lamented quietly.I know. But Olivier swore that you would come to no harm. You'll see them again. Arya's encouragement soothed the small, fearful part of my mind that refused to be silenced. With her words, I straightened up and squared my shoulders. I would enter Snow Pointe, face th
Of course.There would be no other reason to seek out the "useless omega" unless the precious Evangeline Snow was in peril. The idea that her safety would somehow motivate me to return to Snow Pointe was laughable. Why would I care about the spoiled, cruel, deceitful pack brat that made my life miserable? She was the reason I ended up in the isolation ward. The reason I couldn't go out and run during my seventeenth moonday. She kept me small and frightened.I smirked at the Gamma's grave expression as if his sorrowful eyes could motivate me to do anything."And that's my problem, how?" I asked, arms folded across my chest as I glared down at him. Unfazed by my aloofness, Olivier approached slowly."Lady Evangeline fell sick some time ago. Small spells that locked her away from the public eye for weeks at a time," he explained, gaze darkening with what I assumed was sadness. With his perpetually scowling face, it was hard to tell. "The spells wouldn't last long, but they were frequent.
The familiar scents of the Snow Fork Mountains surrounded me as I charged through the trees. Normally, a run like this would soothe my nerves and invigorate me all at once. They reminded me of my connection to the land and the strength of my own body.But this run did none of that.My mind was too loud to silence. Questions, fears, doubts, all building and compounding until they became a beast too powerful to fend off. What would I find when I reached those coordinates? What did Snow Pointe want with me? And how did they know I was still alive?It doesn't make sense, Arya. My breath came in sharp puffs. To Snow Pointe, I was a weak omega. Sickly. Frail. I shouldn't have survived. The night of your escape, half the territory saw me. They would have known you escaped from the cells after the melee. That... doctor shouted to the warriors that you were a traitor.And they would have no reason not to believe her. She made a good point. But after all the time I'd spent with Wayfinder, this
"And you're sure they're looking for me?" I asked, pacing inside the central command tent. Leon and Marcel explained their encounter with the Snow Pointe scout three times. How they were tracked for a few days before the scout approached. The scout seemed agitated and explained that Snow Pointe had been looking for a runaway omega for five years."That story sounds awful familiar to me," Gabe grunted. Taking his adoptive father duties very seriously, he'd insisted on being in the meeting when he overheard Leon mention I was being hunted. "Couldn't be anyone else, Rey. But why are they looking for you now? After five years?""It wasn't after five years. It's been for five years," Leon corrected. "They never stopped looking for her."It still didn't make sense."You deployed sent decoys after leaving the area, right?" I asked, still pacing. Still worried.Leon pulled me into a hug, not letting me squirm away. "We covered our tracks and didn't let them know anything about you. As far as t
Five years.Five years in Wayfinder found me well. Better than well. Thriving. We survived that first winter. Reginald and Mydia celebrated their wedding in the following spring, and I won the bet with Leon. Gabe and Jerica started a sweet romance. The former rogues integrated fully. Mattias had his seventeenth moonday and grew into a full, proper warrior. And I stepped into the role of Leon's second-in-command.Five years.The vision I once had of the strong woman, tall, powerful, and beautiful, became my reality. It took nearly two years for my body to fully recover from what Andromeda did in Snow Pointe. But once I finally grew to the correct size, it was more obvious that I was an alpha wolf. I wasn't as massive as Leon or even Gabe. But much of Wayfinder looked up to me, metaphorically and literally. Being the one who was strong enough to protect others, the one who led runs and training rotations, the one others came to for help... it was everything I'd ever dreamed. Little Aure
Hello! This is not an official chapter, but it is an official statement from the author. First, thank you so much for reading. This story has been on my shelf for a few years. I've been wanting to tell it for a while, but life got in the way, and I kept putting it off. Now that I'm finally writing this story, I am having so much fun. It's reminding me of why I love writing. Second, there was a slight break in my uploads over the last two weeks. That is NOT typical and NOT how I want to post consistently going forward. I've been on the road a lot and am in the process of a long-distance move, which makes writing and uploading consistently a little difficult. Over the last few weeks, multiple chapters were written on my phone, which meant the formatting was off and a little disjointed. I've fixed those chapters, and (hopefully!) they make sense now. Third, "Maybe Someday..." marks the end of the first arc! Aurelia's escape and growth have been so rewarding to write. The next arc begin
Before Leon could reach me, I started running toward the fruit garden, full speed. He fell into line beside me. “An attack. On the Littles in the garden. Noon.” Leon grunted in understanding, our gains syncing up. Marcel naturally fell in line behind us, along with three other warriors. Ro-58 for
Marcel and Leon listened carefully to the details of my vision—everything I could deduce on my own, and additional insights from Arya. Nothing was too small. No detail too vague. Every word was accepted as gospel. I'm not sure why or how, but there was never a moment's hesitation or question from t
The next morning, I walked through camp, cautiously examining every inch of it. Every unburnt tent post. The faces of children covered in sticky sweet fruit instead of soot and blood. The voices of singing elders, no longer cut brutally short and silenced forever.Sunlight filtered through the trees
The training run with Leon healed something within me.We kept up with him, I mused later that evening. Arya laughed. I'd been thinking it for hours. While I was baking with Reginald. While I foraged. While I taught the littlest children a simple nursery rhyme. We kept up with him. No, Auri. You ke







