/ Paranormal / Marked by the enemy alpha / Chapter 5: Echoes of the Bond

공유

Chapter 5: Echoes of the Bond

작가: Saint Raphael
last update 최신 업데이트: 2025-06-01 21:20:39

The days following Aria’s trials were unlike anything she’d ever imagined.

After surviving three ancient rites and proving herself as Luna, she expected the cold stares and rigid silence of the pack to begin to thaw. But instead, she was met with a deeper, more complex stillness—less like contempt, more like cautious curiosity. The warriors bowed, but not deeply. The Omegas served her, but with eyes that flickered away quickly. Even the children, who once whispered behind corners, now merely stared with wide, unreadable expressions.

It was progress. If progress could be measured in inches instead of strides.

The fortress itself had changed around her, or maybe it was her who had changed. Where she once felt like a prisoner wandering stone corridors carved with the blood of old wars, she now walked those same halls with her chin high. Her wounds had healed, mostly. Her pride, however, was still bruised.

Kael gave her space. He hadn't touched her since the trials, not in the way the bond longed for. But he watched her closely. Always. And when their eyes met in the long candlelit halls or across the stone tables of strategy meetings, something unspoken simmered between them.

Longing? Regret? Desire?

Maybe all three.

---

“You're still not sleeping.”

The voice belonged to Leif, Kael’s Beta, and perhaps the only other wolf in the fortress who dared speak to Aria like she wasn’t a statue made of frost.

She didn’t glance up from the stack of reports on the table. Her study, once an abandoned observatory tucked behind the eastern wing, had become her sanctuary.

“I sleep enough,” she said.

Leif raised an eyebrow. “That’s not what the dark circles under your eyes say.”

“I dream too much,” she admitted. “And when I don’t dream, I feel… empty.”

“Bond symptoms,” Leif said casually as he leaned against the stone windowsill. “You're resisting it. That’s why it hurts.”

Aria set the parchment down slowly and looked at him. “Do I seem like the type to throw myself at a man just because the Moon Goddess drew a line between our souls?”

Leif laughed. “Not at all. You’re stubborn. That’s what makes you interesting. But resisting the bond has consequences.”

She frowned. “Like what?”

He ticked off his fingers. “Emotional instability. Mood swings. Heightened senses. Fatigue. Irritability. Nightmares. And the worst of them—

Aria scowled. “Don’t say it.”

“—uncontrolled desire.”

“I will punch you.”

He grinned. “Only proving my point.”

She leaned back in her chair, sighing. “It’s not that simple, Leif. I don’t even know who I am yet, let alone who I am with him.”

“You’ll figure it out,” he said softly. “But in the meantime, we have a more immediate problem.”

She sat up straighter. “What is it?”

“Scouts returned this morning. Rogues are gathering near the northern borders. That territory once belonged to the Bloodline pack. It’s no coincidence. They’re testing our strength.”

Aria felt a familiar cold settle in her chest. “How many?”

“Not a full force. A few dozen. But bold enough to leave tracks. That’s a message.”

“What’s Kael planning?”

Leif straightened. “He’s preparing to send a scouting force. And he wants you to bless them.”

She blinked. “Bless them?”

“You’re Luna now. They’ll want your voice before they ride. Your presence. Your strength.”

“I’m not a symbol.”

“No. But you are a leader. And leaders inspire fear—or loyalty.”

She exhaled. “Fine. When do they leave?”

“Tonight.”

---

Twilight bathed the training grounds in gold as Aria stood before the assembled warriors.

Two dozen fighters—some seasoned, some barely of age—all stood in disciplined lines. Their armor gleamed under the dying sun. Each carried twin crescent-shaped insignias on their chests, the emblem of Darkfang: the black wolf devouring the white moon.

Aria walked down the line, her spine straight. She could feel the tension in their shoulders. Some avoided her gaze. Others met her eyes as if silently demanding to see if she was worthy of the title she wore.

She stopped in front of the first warrior.

“Return with honor,” she said.

He pressed his forehead to her palm.

Again and again, she repeated the ritual. Her words didn’t change, but the power behind them grew. She could feel it—the connection sparking between them. A Luna’s magic was different from an Alpha’s. It wasn’t domination. It was unity.

And by the time she reached the end of the line, the air felt electric.

Kael stepped into view, his armor black as a starless night, his presence a force all its own.

The others bowed and cleared the way.

He didn’t speak at first, only watched her with those storm-gray eyes. Then, slowly, he reached out and took her hand.

“You carry the bond well,” he said.

She didn’t pull away. “I carry it because I must.”

He inclined his head. “And one day, you’ll carry it because you want to.”

Her breath hitched.

He turned without waiting for a reply.

---

Later, she found herself in the Moon Garden again. A place Kael had shown her after the trials—tucked away between battlements, filled with silver lilies that bloomed only beneath the full moon.

The night air was cool, brushing across her cheeks like a whisper. She sat on the edge of the stone fountain, watching the petals sway.

Aria had always believed she would die young. Her life in Mooncrest had been peaceful but brief. Then the war came. Then exile. Then the bond. Then the trials.

But she hadn’t died.

Instead, she was here.

Still breathing. Still standing. Still burning.

Footsteps echoed behind her.

“I knew I’d find you here,” Kael said.

She didn’t turn.

“You let them see me tonight,” she said. “Let them see me as Luna.”

“They need to see you. As more than just my mate. As more than just the orphan girl who survived.”

She finally turned to face him. “Do you believe I’m more?”

He stepped closer. “I believe you’re more than any of them deserve.”

She swallowed hard. “Then why do you keep holding back?”

Kael’s jaw tightened. “Because if I give in to this bond now, it won’t be gentle. It won’t be soft. It will be everything.”

“I’m not asking for soft,” she said, voice trembling. “I’m asking for real.”

He knelt in front of her, eyes blazing.

“Then here’s real,” he said. “I don’t want you because of fate. I want you because every time you speak, you sound like the future. Because you walk into every room like it’s already yours. Because you challenge me. And because you survived the worst of me—and still look at me like I could be more.”

Aria’s heart thundered. Her breath came in shallow waves.

“Then stop waiting,” she whispered.

Kael’s lips brushed hers, not like a warrior claiming territory—but like a man asking permission. She leaned forward. Their foreheads touched.

The bond snapped tight between them, not painful this time—but warm. Electric.

And for the first time, she didn’t run.

She let it in.

Let him in.

The garden seemed to breathe with them.

Above, the moon watched in silence.

이 책을 계속 무료로 읽어보세요.
QR 코드를 스캔하여 앱을 다운로드하세요

최신 챕터

  • Marked by the enemy alpha   Chapter 65: Threads of Destiny

    The wind carried the faint scent of blood and ash as dawn broke over the Moonshade territory. A chill had settled in the air—not one brought by the weather but by the creeping presence of war. From the central watchtower, Aria gazed out over the hills, her fingers clenched around the iron railing. Her thoughts were far from the horizon. The dream had come again. This time, clearer—Killian falling to his knees, the roar of his wolf shaking the trees, and the fire devouring their home. And the child’s cry... it had sounded closer. She didn’t believe in omens before. But now, with so much at stake and her mother’s warning still fresh in her mind, she couldn’t afford to ignore the signs. Behind her, the floor creaked. “You’re up early,” Killian’s voice rumbled softly, still husky from sleep. Aria didn’t turn. “I couldn’t sleep.” He moved to stand beside her, resting his forearms on the railing. “The letter?” “The dream,” she confessed. Killian’s gaze sharpened. “It came again?”

  • Marked by the enemy alpha   Chapter 64: Shadows Before the Storm

    The night fell heavy over Moonshade Pack, cloaking the lands in a dense hush. The moonlight trickled through the canopy above the training grounds, where Killian stood, shirtless and glistening with sweat. His fists struck the post with rhythmic precision, each blow a release of the frustration mounting inside him. The council meeting had ended in heated disagreement. Alphas from surrounding allied packs were divided. Some were loyal to Killian, others were still skeptical of his bond with Aria—the daughter of a traitor, they reminded him. It didn’t matter that she had risked her life time and again. The mark on her skin and the blood in her veins became fuel for doubt. "You need to rest," Aria’s voice called from behind, soft but firm. Killian didn’t turn immediately. He could feel her presence, warm and grounding even in the cold air. “I can’t,” he finally said, his voice gravelly. “Not when there are whispers of rebellion among my own allies.” Aria stepped closer, her han

  • Marked by the enemy alpha   Chapter 63 — Whispers of Echoes Before War

    The wind shifted just before dawn, carrying the scent of iron and frost through Moonshade’s valley. It was subtle—almost indistinguishable from the natural forest aroma—but Aria noticed it instantly. Her senses had grown sharper with every day of training, every night spent in quiet preparation for what was to come. She stood just outside the newly reinforced camp wall, her eyes scanning the horizon where the trees thinned toward the eastern hills. A pale mist hugged the ground, curling around tree trunks like serpents. The silence was eerie, the kind that came before a storm or a massacre. Behind her, the camp stirred awake. Warriors stretched and gathered their gear. Omega wolves fetched supplies. The young sparred under the guidance of older fighters, their grunts and growls punctuating the still morning. Fires crackled low, and the scent of cooked meat drifted lazily on the breeze. But Aria’s thoughts were not on breakfast or training drills. She was focused on the ancient run

  • Marked by the enemy alpha   Chapter 62 — The Gathering forged by unity

    Moonshade’s forest had always been a sanctuary—an ancient, sacred place where the pack thrived under the watchful gaze of the moon. But tonight, the familiar rustle of leaves felt different. The wind carried whispers of fear, betrayal, and impending doom. Aria stood at the edge of the cliff, overlooking the dense expanse of trees that stretched far beyond the horizon. The pale silver light of the full moon bathed the land in an ethereal glow, but it did little to soothe the storm raging inside her. Her mark, a dark sigil burned into her flesh by the enemy alpha, pulsed faintly under her skin. It was a constant reminder that she was tethered—caught between two worlds. Behind her, footsteps approached—silent but deliberate. “Kael,” she said without turning, her voice steady but edged with weariness. He stepped beside her, his broad frame silhouetted against the moonlit sky. His eyes, sharp and unwavering, held a storm of their own. “The council has sent word,” he said. “They want a

  • Marked by the enemy alpha   Chapter 61 — The Unseen Threat

    The forest of Moonshade whispered ancient secrets beneath the fading light of dusk, a serene yet uneasy calm that cloaked the land. Though the pack had survived the recent battle, the wounds it left behind were not only physical but spiritual. The echoes of violence seemed to linger in the air like a thick fog, and Aria felt its weight pressing on her chest with every breath she took. She moved through the towering trees with practiced grace, the soft crunch of leaves underfoot the only sound breaking the silence. The shadows stretched long, entwining with the roots and branches as if reaching for her very soul. Her thoughts swirled with worries — the enemy was not defeated; they had merely retreated, biding their time to strike again. And worse yet, there were whispers of betrayal lurking within their own pack. Arriving at the clearing, the firelight flickered against the faces of the elders gathered in solemn discussion. Kael awaited her near the fire pit, his sharp gaze filled wi

  • Marked by the enemy alpha   Chapter 60 — Shadows Within the Pack

    The aftermath of the battle left Moonshade scarred but unbroken. Dawn’s first light revealed the extent of the damage — fallen trees, shattered nests, and the silent figures of fallen comrades. The pack moved with heavy hearts, yet a steely determination in their eyes. Every loss was a reminder of the stakes, every breath a vow to fight harder. Aria walked through the camp, her senses sharp despite the exhaustion pulling at her bones. She stopped beside the circle of elders, where voices murmured low with concern. “The enemy’s strength is growing,” Riven said grimly. “They’re no longer just outsiders. We’re facing a force with knowledge of our weaknesses.” Kael joined them, wiping the blood from his blade. “It’s not just strength,” he added. “There’s a darkness within our pack. Betrayal that still festers.” A cold silence fell over the group. The name of Kaelen—the Shadow Twin—hung unspoken but heavy in the air. His betrayal had wounded them deeply, but Aria knew others might yet b

더보기
좋은 소설을 무료로 찾아 읽어보세요
GoodNovel 앱에서 수많은 인기 소설을 무료로 즐기세요! 마음에 드는 책을 다운로드하고, 언제 어디서나 편하게 읽을 수 있습니다
앱에서 책을 무료로 읽어보세요
앱에서 읽으려면 QR 코드를 스캔하세요.
DMCA.com Protection Status