LOGINLyra didn’t remember the walk back to Ronan’s quarters.She remembered the cold stone beneath her feet.The smell of blood.The blue firelight.And Elder Soren’s voice echoing underground like a curse spoken with certainty.The Alpha must be broken.Her body had moved on instinct, slipping through tunnels and hidden corridors until she emerged into Silvercrest’s night air again. The sky above had looked the same as always, the moon hanging silent, and stars scattered like indifferent witnesses.But the world underneath it had changed.By the time she reached Ronan’s door, her hands were trembling.Not from fear for herself.From fear for him.She knocked once.Ronan opened it almost immediately, as if he had been waiting, as if the bond had warned him she was coming in with a storm inside her.His eyes narrowed. “Where were you?”Lyra stepped in and shut the door behind her. The warmth of the room didn’t reach her skin. Her breath came shallow.“Under the council hall,” she said.Rona
Lyra didn’t move.She pressed her back against the tunnel wall, breath shallow, body rigid with the instinct to vanish. The chanting drifted through the stone corridor like smoke, low and steady, threaded with something that felt older than language.Not worship.Ownership.Her aura pulsed faintly beneath her ribs, reacting to the sound as if the walls themselves were warning her to flee. She forced it down with slow breathing, just like Ronan had taught her during training.In.Hold.Out.Control.The chant continued.Lyra crept forward, barefoot against the cold floor, each step careful enough to avoid the slightest scrape. The corridor curved and narrowed until it opened into a wider space, where a carved archway framed the chamber beyond.She stopped just before the opening.A stone panel half-covered the entrance, leaving a narrow gap wide enough to see through if she angled herself correctly.Lyra leaned closer.The chamber beyond was lit by torchlight that burned blue instead o
Lyra began noticing the disappearances the way a hunter notices missing tracks.Not immediately.Not loudly.But through absence, that did not fit the routine.A guard who always stood near the eastern gate was suddenly gone for two nights in a row. A patrol pair that should have rotated at dusk didn’t return until dawn, eyes glassy, refusing to speak. A council attendant who once moved freely through the corridors now walked only in the company of elders, head lowered like a wolf taught submission.Silvercrest had always been full of shadows.Now the shadows were organized.Lyra didn’t tell Ronan at first.Not because she didn’t trust him, but because she could feel his strain already, like a stretched wire ready to snap. Every hour brought new defiance. Every day brought fewer wolves willing to stand openly beside him.If she brought him suspicion without proof, she feared she might become another pressure point.So she watched.She listened.She learned.Her heightened senses were
Tobias didn’t call it a secret.He called it a wound that never healed.Lyra followed him into the narrow chamber behind the healer’s lodge, a place used for storing dried herbs and emergency salves. The door was reinforced, the walls thick, muffling sound from outside. It wasn’t an official meeting room, but that was the point.Nothing official was safe anymore.Tobias shut the door behind them and pressed his palm against the latch as if expecting someone to burst through it.His breathing was controlled, but his eyes betrayed him.He was afraid.Not of wolves.Of truth.Lyra folded her arms. “Tell me.”Tobias stared at her for a long moment, as if weighing whether she could carry what he was about to place into her hands.Then he moved to the small table in the center of the room and laid down a bundle of parchment. It was wrapped in dark cloth and tied with string that looked older than the compound itself.“This was hidden beneath the council hall floor,” he said.Lyra’s gaze sha
The compound felt different after the confrontation in the inner hall.Not louder.Not calmer.Heavier, as if Silvercrest itself had begun adjusting to instability at its core.Lyra noticed it in the way wolves moved through corridors now: faster, more deliberate, less willing to linger in shared spaces. Conversations ended the moment she approached. Eyes slid away like she carried something contagious.Ronan had gone ahead to the council wing earlier that morning, leaving her alone longer than usual.That alone felt like a shift.She didn’t like how quickly she had started measuring absence.Lyra crossed the outer training path, where wooden posts marked sparring lanes. Two warriors practiced there, but neither acknowledged her presence. One of them hesitated mid-swing, then deliberately turned his body away.She kept walking.Every step felt like passing through invisible resistance.When she reached the side corridor leading toward Ronan’s quarters, she stopped.Voices.Low.Contro
The first refusal did not come with shouting.It came with silence.Ronan stood at the edge of the northern patrol yard, watching the rotation schedule being enforced by his own command structure. The morning air was sharp, carrying damp cold from the treeline beyond Silvercrest’s perimeter.Two squads were meant to shift positions at dawn.Only one moved.The second remained where they were, unmoving, eyes fixed forward like stone statues pretending obedience.Ronan’s jaw tightened.Lyra stood slightly behind him, sensing the shift before he even spoke.He stepped forward. “Rotate.”The lead patrol captain didn’t turn immediately. When he finally did, his expression was guarded, uncertain.“Council directive,” the captain said carefully. “Hold position until further notice.”A ripple moved through the surrounding wolves.Not defiance.Not obedience.Something worse.Hesitation being tested.Ronan’s voice dropped. “That is not a directive I approved.”The captain’s throat worked. “We
Night settled quietly over the parklands, but there was nothing peaceful about it.The forest held a different kind of silence now, one that pressed against the skin, thick with tension and something unspoken. Even the wind seemed cautious as it moved through the trees, whispering through leaves th
The shift began quietly.It did not arrive with confrontation or accusation. It moved through the pack like smoke, thin, subtle, and difficult to grasp. By the time anyone noticed, it had already settled into the spaces between conversations, into glances held a second too long, into silence where
Morning settled over Silvercrest with a strange heaviness.The training grounds were crowded, yet the usual energy felt twisted. Wolves moved through drills, but their voices were quieter, their laughter forced. The pack wasn’t relaxed.They were watching.Lyra stood near the edge of the arena, sho
The aftermath of the test did not settle.It spread.Like smoke drifting through the pack, quiet at first, then impossible to ignore.By nightfall, the training grounds had emptied, yet the echoes of what had happened refused to fade. Every movement Lyra had made, every strike, and every impossible







