LOGINWeeks passed, and Silvercrest learned how to breathe again.The compound no longer woke to alarms or screams. The healer lodge, once overflowing with blood and panic, grew quieter with each sunrise. Maera still moved through its halls with steady urgency, but now she carried bundles of herbs instead of emergency bandages. Wolves still arrived with injuries, yet most were ordinary sprains from training, cuts from hunting, or bruises earned from rebuilding.Pain that belonged to life.Not war.The pups returned to the open grounds.Above the smell of smoke and pine, their laughing blended into the morning air. They played without flinching at sudden sounds. They chased each other across the courtyard stones that had once been stained with fear.Even the mothers began smiling again.Not often.Not easily.But enough to prove survival had finally become something more than endurance.Every week, without fail, the pack walked to the burial ground.Not as a punishment.Not as a reminder mea
The full moon rose over Silvercrest like a clean blade of light.It did not feel like the old moon, the one that had watched wolves kneel under council chants, the one that had witnessed blood rites whispered in stone chambers. This moon carried no weight of obedience.It simply shone.Cold, bright, and honest.The central grounds filled slowly, not because anyone was summoned, but because wolves came willingly. They arrived in quiet groups, shoulders brushing, eyes lifted toward the sky. There were no ritual torches planted in a circle, no carved altar, no sacred platform draped in council cloth.Only open air.Only the pack.Fire pits burned low around the edges, enough to warm the night but not enough to dominate it. The true light came from above, bathing every wolf in pale silver until fur and skin seemed softened by the same glow.Lyra stood beside Ronan near the center of the gathering.Her throat mark was no longer hidden.The scar shimmered faintly beneath the moonlight, heal
The ridge remained silent after Ronan’s words.The full moon hung above them like a witness that no longer demanded sacrifice. It simply existed, bright, distant, and untouched by council lies. Its light fell across Lyra’s skin and Ronan’s hands, turning their shadows into something softer than the past.Lyra’s throat was exposed.Not in existence, bright,Not in surrender.In trust.Ronan’s breath brushed her collarbone as he leaned closer, his fingers steady at her waist. His dominance did not press outward, did not force the world to bend. It stayed contained, controlled, shaped by care instead of command.Lyra felt the bond tighten, not like a noose, but like a thread finally pulled into its rightful place.Her pulse hammered.Not with panic.With certainty.Ronan paused, eyes lifting to meet hers one last time, asking without words if she still chose this. Lyra answered by tilting her head slightly, giving him clearer access, offering the scarred mark with quiet bravery.Ronan’s
The ridge above Silvercrest was quiet in a way the compound below could never be.steady,No firelight reached this high ground. No voices carried far enough to disturb the wind. Only the moon dominated the sky, full, silver, and steady, casting pale illumination across stone and grass like a world washed clean of past violence.Lyra stood at the edge of the slope, her cloak pulled loosely around her shoulders. Below them, Silvercrest glowed faintly with distant firepits from the feast that still lingered in memory. Laughter had not fully faded from the night, but here, on the ridge, everything felt suspended.Still.Honest.Ronan remained a few steps behind her at first, watching the horizon as if he were measuring the distance between who they had been and what they were becoming.The bond between them hummed softly now, no longer erratic, no longer shaped by fear or survival. It had matured through war, loss, truth, and rebuilding. But it seemed to be waiting tonight.Lyra turned s
The feast began without an announcement.No horns sounded from the watchtowers. No council bell rang through the compound. No ritual summons demanded wolves gather under command.It started with smoke.Then scent.Then laughter that arrived like something shy, creeping into Silvercrest as if unsure whether it was allowed to exist here again.Fire pits burned across the central grounds, their flames dancing high enough to throw warmth into the night air. Hunters returned with meat that had been cleaned and prepared openly, not distributed by rank. Women carried baskets of roasted roots, bread, dried berries, and herbs steeped in bitter tea.No one stood on a platform.No one recited laws.No one forced kneeling.Wolves simply came.Some arrived cautiously at first, lingering near the edges like they were still expecting punishment for enjoying anything. Others came with shoulders loosened, eyes tired but softer than they had been in months.The war had ended, but grief still clung to t
The nursery lodge sat at the edge of Silvercrest like a fragile promise.It had always been there, always guarded, always kept warm even during the worst winters. Yet after the war, it felt different, less like a shelter and more like a sanctuary.The pups poisoned during Morrigan’s sabotage had survived.Most of them.That truth alone still felt unreal to the pack mothers, as if saying it too loudly might tempt fate into reversing it. Some pups had regained their strength quickly, chasing one another in short bursts before collapsing into exhausted sleep.Others remained weak.Small bodies are too thin.Breaths are too shallow.Eyes too tired for their age.Lyra entered the lodge quietly, letting the warmth of the hearth wash over her. The air smelled of milk, herbs, clean cloth, and the faint metallic scent of healing tonics.It was not the scent of battle.It was the scent of rebuilding life.Several mothers sat in a wide circle on woven mats, their backs straight despite exhaustio
Dawn arrived without softness.It came as a blade dragged across stone: slow, inevitable, unavoidable.Lyra felt it before she saw it: the shift in the compound’s emotional structure. The bond no longer rested quietly between moments. It trembled constantly now, reacting to every distant movement,
Night did not bring rest to Silvercrest.It brought pressure.The kind that built inside walls, inside lungs, inside silence itself until even breathing felt negotiated.Lyra stood in the Alpha wing, staring at her reflection in the darkened glass panel. The compound outside was quieter now after t
The first scream came from the northern storage line.Not the courtyard.Not the council perimeter.The supply yard.It tore through Silvercrest like a crack splitting ice, sharp, sudden, impossible to ignore. Within seconds, it was followed by another. Then another. Voices overlapped, rising in pa
The council hall doors shut behind them with a finality that felt too clean for what had just been declared.Too orderly.As if war could be introduced through etiquette.Lyra stepped into the cold corridor beside Ronan, but the air no longer belonged to safety. It belonged to consequence. The bond







