LOGINBook Two of the Fatebound Trilogy Born of prophecy. Forged in pain. Chosen by the Moon Goddess—whether she wants it or not. After surviving her father’s brutality and discovering the truth of the white wolf within her, Zahra Larkin thought the worst was behind her. But evil doesn’t die—it waits. Beyond the borders of the supernatural kingdoms, a dark god stirs. Monvar, Lord of Shadows, feeds on fear and faithlessness, twisting hearts and turning packs against one another. As belief in the Moon Goddess fades, his power grows, and Zahra’s very existence becomes both a beacon of hope and a target for destruction. When Zahra is taken by Monvar’s followers, her world shatters again. Tortured, broken, and isolated, she must find a way to survive long enough to escape—and to face what she’s becoming. Because the blood of Selene runs in her veins, and if she falls, the Goddess’s light could die with her. Haunted by trauma and hunted by darkness, Zahra must learn to trust the four fated mates bound to her soul. Together they hold the key to awakening her Lycan power—and saving the supernatural world from annihilation. But love and destiny demand sacrifice. And the girl who was once marked by fate must now decide whether to embrace her divine power… or let the shadows win.
View MoreEryndor’s POV
My boots squelch as I sink into the thick mud at the edge of Mirror Lake, the ooze suctioning me down when I stay too still. The usually crystal water no longer mirrors the sky above as its name suggests. Instead, faint ripples shiver across the surface.
The air feels charged, humming with static, and a shiver runs through me. In all my years as a guardian—centuries spent watching over the Vale—I’ve never seen even a breeze disturb Mirror Lake.
For years now, things have been changing. The fabric of this place grows less stable, small tears appearing here and there, each one needing to be woven shut. The mortals’ faith has been waning for centuries, but never more than in the last fifty years. More and more reject the mate bond, and fewer send prayers to the Goddess. As the ungrateful supernatural races turn their backs on Selene, her power weakens—along with her hold over the Vale, and the prison we guard.
I scent the air. The crisp, clean fragrance that usually marks this place carries a new taint, one I can’t quite place. It stirs memories I’d long buried from my mortal life.
I turn, boots pulling free from the mud with a wet slap, and head back toward the watchtower. The air shifts as I approach the rise where it stands—tall, unyielding, a sentinel in this otherwise flat realm.
The Vale is small. Usually peaceful. Still. The lake stretches wide before the tower, its glassy surface reflecting the faint light that never truly dies here. The meadow that borders it has always offered a strange kind of sanctuary, a quiet I never thought to pray for when I was mortal.
When I died, Selene blessed me with this calling—to stand eternal as one of her Guardians, watching over the Vale and the darkness we hold at bay.
This realm sits between worlds, an in-between, a pocket carved from creation itself. A gatehouse between the mortal and immortal planes. Selene built it as a safeguard, a seal to keep the mortal realm safe from the evil that festers beyond the veil.
As I start up the rise toward the gate, the ground shudders beneath me. I stumble, catch myself, and spin toward the sound. Nothing. Just the lake and the dark beyond it, silent and still as ever.
Then the Watchtower door slams open behind me, and voices call out into the night—my fellow Guardians, roused by the tremor, spilling into the open air to see what the hell just happened.
The wind gusts again. I shouldn’t call it a wind—there isn’t supposed to be wind here. The air in the Vale is always still. If there’s wind, it can only mean one thing.
“There’s a breach!” I yell as the others close in around me. “Find it! We have to seal it.”
“From which side?!” Serit’s voice cuts through the rising noise from my left.
“The mortal realm,” I shout back, my own ears ringing.
“How can you tell?” Kalar demands.
“The smell,” I say, sniffing. “It smells of—”
“Incense,” Aien breathes, catching it too.
Kalea and I echo him in unison. “Incense.”
“Oh, Goddess,” Serit murmurs. “Selene help us.”
“Hurry. We have to find it and repair the breach. There’s not much time!”
We scatter in all directions, running across the Vale’s quiet expanse, searching for the tear. A single rift could unravel everything—one opening could unleash a series of catastrophes upon the mortal realm.
That’s what I’m here to prevent. What we’ve all guarded against for the last eight hundred years.
I sprint along the lake’s edge, the rippling water beside me a terrible reflection of what’s happening to my world. The once-smooth surface quivers and fractures, just as the barrier itself does. The air smells thicker now—cloying, heavy with smoke and ash. And underneath it, something else. Power. Foul and ancient.
Goddess, help me.
The scent grows stronger, the air warmer, and then I hear it: the low murmur of chanting voices. My chest tightens, and I push harder, lungs burning. The sound swells with every step, rhythmic and wrong, like something breathing through stone.
Up ahead, a dim glow pierces the darkness. A thin gleam floats in mid-air, a sliver of light like the crack under a door. It brightens as I approach, and the chanting rises to meet it.
Panting, I skid to a stop in front of the rift.
It’s not large—yet—but its edges shimmer and writhe, a wound in reality itself. Through it I can see shadowed figures, hooded and chanting, their hands raised in a circle. The glow around them pulses like a heartbeat.
Goddess. They’re summoning him.
Fucking idiots.
I snatch the weaving stone from my pocket, fingers trembling as I reach for the rift. The air around it is charged, pressing against my skin like static. I take a steadying breath and begin to weave, threads of silvery light coiling from the stone, ready to close the breach.
“I wouldn’t do that if I were you,” a cold voice says behind me.
I spin, heart slamming against my ribs, as Corren steps out of the gloom.
“Why?” I ask, though my stomach is already clenching. He shouldn’t be here. He was on duty away from the tower today. He shouldn’t know, and he should damn well want me to weave this rift.
“What are you doing here, Corren?”
My heart skips. “What have you done?” The words leave me as a whisper.
“What needed to be done,” he snarls.
He lunges. I flinch. For a heartbeat I think he missed. Then I look down and see my life spilling warm over my tunic. The unnatural blade must be so sharp I didn’t feel the cut.
The Vale shudders again. The chanting swells.
I reach for Corren, desperate to stop whatever he intends, but my legs give out and I drop to my knees.
Horror clamps cold around my ribs as he lifts the knife and makes a snagging motion in the air. Something catches with a bell-like clang. The ground rumbles. The breeze becomes a gale, screaming through the grass.
Corren drags the blade down. A dark seam splits open mid-air. A foul stench rolls out as shadows pour through, racing across the Vale and surging toward the mortal rift.
Oh Selene, I’ve failed. After centuries of watching, we’ve failed.
He carves again, widening the tear, and laughs, high and manic. Then he turns to the fissure from which light spills and sets the knife against its edge. He forces it in. Steel protests with a shriek. I flinch at the aural assault, but the widening wound holds me.
The shadows thicken, boiling through. A hand grips the edge from the other side. My breath turns shallow. My heartbeat staggers. My eyelids drag toward closing.
I can’t. I won’t let my goddess down.
I force my eyes open as a figure steps through. Darkness coils around him. His form seems less flesh than condensed shadow given shape. Eyes like polished onyx pin me. His mouth curves, slow and hungry.
Monvar.
My heart kicks wild. I can only watch as he steps through the man-sized tear and into the mortal realm.
Corren looks back at me as my head tilts toward the earth.
My heart gives out. My eyes close. With my last thought, I send up a prayer to Selene.
Tobias's POV 🌶️🌶️I take the palace stairs two at a time. My watch flashes half three in the morning. The castle is silent. A few guards nod as I pass, but otherwise the corridors feel hollow and cold.I doubt I’ll sleep. Not after sinking into hours of unconsciousness in that chair beside her, no matter how fucked my posture was.The residence door clicks shut behind me. The only light on is a small lamp in the living room. Everyone must be asleep. Felix is off visiting a friend’s pack as usual. My parents’ and Lotty’s scents linger faintly, they must be asleep.I head straight upstairs. My quarters feel too empty. Too neat. Too quiet. I strip down to my boxers and collapse onto the bed, staring up at the ceiling. The shadows outside tilt and sway with the breeze, shuddering across the ceiling like restless ghosts.I forgot to close the curtains. But now I can’t be bothered to get up and do it.Instead, I lay there and watch them. Thinking. Thinking about my beautiful mate, and the
Tobias's POVThe crunch of my boots on the gravel drive sounds too loud in the quiet of the night. Nothing stirs around me. The warm air slides across my skin, soothing the last remnants of the hospital’s sterile chill, but it does nothing to settle the mess in my head.My emotions are a fucking tangle.On one hand, I feel more at peace than I have in three years.I slept beside my mate. I held her.Hours of her warm little hand in mine. Her scent soft against my skin. For the first time in so long, the aching hole in my chest eased. Thor is deeply asleep for the first time in years. My head is clear and I feel like myself again, like someone scraped away three years of weight from my ribs, and fog from my eyes.And on the other hand,My mate looks like she went through a fucking meat grinder.And she won’t look at me.The image of her lying broken on that hospital bed slams into me again, cold and vicious. It claws straight up my throat until a sob threatens to break loose. I swallow
Zahra's POVThere is a long, heavy pause. Then I hear the quiet shaky exhale he tries and fails to muffle. The sound scrapes at something deep inside me. I don’t want it to affect me, but it does. I made myself look at him just now, and the image won’t leave my mind. He looks drawn and exhausted. His shoulders slump as if he’s been carrying something far too heavy for far too long. There’s a leanness to him he didn’t have before, like sleep and food have been optional for a while.And damn him, but I’m worried about him, even after everything. The realisation annoys me almost as much as the pain radiating through my body.The door clicks shut.Silence settles over the room again. I try to shift and immediately regret
Zahra's POVThere is a knock on the door just then, and the doctor steps back into the room.“Good news, Cadet Larkin. Everything’s in the right position. I’m happy to wake your wolf now, so she can speed up your healing.” He holds up a syringe between two fingers. “Once I give you this, she should wake within twenty minutes. Any questions?”“No, sir,” I say, giving a small shake of my head.He crosses to the side of the bed. Zach moves back to let him in. The doctor takes my arm and rolls it outward, and only then do I notice the cannula taped into the crease of my elbow. How the hell did I miss that earlier?He pulls a wipe from his pocket and a small saline tube, tears the packet open, swipes the port clean, then clips the saline bottle to the top. A gentle squeeze sends a cold rush creeping beneath my skin.“Sorry, it’s cold,” he murmurs when my face tightens. He slots the syringe into the port and pushes slowly. The second wave of cold spreads up my arm in a slow, icy bloom. When
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