FAZER LOGINThe clearing didn’t dissolve when the ceremony ended.
That was the first thing I noticed.
Usually, once the council dismissed us, the pack dispersed quickly, wolves slipping back into the forest or toward their quarters in loose clusters, laughter and conversation gradually replacing ritual silence. But tonight, no one seemed eager to leave. The full moon remained high above us, heavy and luminous, as if it were deliberately lingering, watching.
Waiting.
I felt exposed beneath its glow.
My wrist throbbed under the fabric of my sleeve, the mark pulsing slowly, deliberately, like a second heartbeat. I kept my arm close to my body, fingers curling into the fabric of my cloak as if I could physically restrain whatever had awakened inside me. It didn’t help. If anything, the mark seemed to respond to my tension, the warmth flaring brighter every time my heart raced.
The pack could feel it.
I could tell by the way conversations stalled whenever I moved and by the subtle shifts in posture as wolves turned just a little too obviously in my direction. Whispers rippled through the clearing, low, cautious, threaded with curiosity and something sharper.
Fear.
I wasn’t supposed to be interesting. I was a scout. Low-ranked. Useful, but replaceable. The kind of wolf who did her job quietly and didn’t draw attention. I’d spent years making myself small, blending into the edges of pack life.
Tonight, the moon had erased all of that.
I sensed him before I saw him.
It was a pressure in my chest, a tightening low in my stomach, and a pull so sudden and strong that my breath caught painfully in my throat. My wolf surged forward, alert and restless, her awareness snapping into sharp focus.
Him.
I lifted my gaze.
Ronan Ashford was no longer standing with the council.
He was walking toward me.
The space around him seemed to part naturally, wolves stepping aside without conscious thought. He didn’t rush. Every step was measured and controlled, radiating an authority so deeply ingrained it didn’t need to be asserted. The firelight caught in his dark hair, tracing sharp lines across his face, highlighting the intensity in his silver-gray eyes.
My pulse stumbled.
I had seen him before, of course. Everyone in the pack had. But distance softened presence. Proximity stripped away illusion.
Up close, he was overwhelming.
Not because he tried to be.
Because he didn’t have to.
I straightened instinctively, shoulders back, spine aligned, every lesson drilled into me since childhood rising to the surface. Respect the Alpha. Lower your gaze. Speak only when addressed.
But when he stopped in front of me, my eyes refused to look away.
The pull intensified.
My wrist burned.
Ronan’s gaze flicked there immediately.
Not casually.
Not accidentally.
He noticed.
A muscle in his jaw tightened.
“Lyra Vale,” he said, his voice lower than it had been during the ceremony, quieter, meant only for me.
My name sounded different on his tongue.
Heavier.
“Yes, Alpha,” I answered, my voice steady through sheer force of will.
“Look at me.”
It wasn’t shouted. It wasn’t harsh.
It was a command nonetheless.
I obeyed.
The moment our eyes locked, something shifted.
The world narrowed until it felt like there was nothing but the space between us, charged, alive, humming with energy I didn’t understand. His gaze was sharp, searching, as though he were looking past my skin, past my rank, past everything I’d ever presented to the world.
As though he were looking for something buried.
I felt seen.
It terrified me.
“How long have you had the mark?” he asked.
The question sent a jolt through me.
“Since tonight,” I said. “It appeared before the ceremony.”
Silence stretched between us.
His eyes darkened, just slightly, the silver deepening like storm clouds gathering.
“You didn’t report it,” he said.
“I didn’t understand it,” I replied honestly. “I still don’t.”
Something unreadable crossed his face.
“Did you feel anything before it appeared?”
The memory rose unbidden: the forest, the howl, the pull that had almost dragged me off my feet.
“Yes,” I said softly. “Last night. During my patrol. I felt… called.”
The word hung between us.
Ronan inhaled slowly.
“So did I.”
My heart slammed so hard it hurt.
The admission sent a shockwave through me, my wolf surging forward with sudden intensity. The pull sharpened, tugging at my chest, my gut, and my very bones. My wrist flared hot, the mark responding eagerly, as if recognizing something it had been waiting for.
Around us, the pack grew quieter.
They could feel it too.
I became acutely aware of every pair of eyes on us, every strained whisper just beyond hearing.
“Is it really?”
“The timing”
“The Alpha”
I swallowed.
“Do you feel it now?” I asked before I could stop myself.
Ronan’s gaze dropped to my wrist.
The glow was unmistakable now, silver-white beneath the moonlight.
“Yes,” he said after a pause. “I do.”
Relief surged through me, swift and dangerous. My wolf pushed forward, eager, hopeful, urging me closer. I took a step without realizing it, drawn by instinct rather than intention.
The mark flared brightly.
The air between us tightened.
Ronan stiffened.
Then he stepped back.
The movement was small.
Controlled.
Deliberate.
It felt like a blade between my ribs.
The pull didn’t vanish, but it stretched painfully, like a tether pulled too tight. Confusion flooded me, followed quickly by a sting I hadn’t anticipated. My wolf recoiled, unsettled, her earlier confidence shaken.
Why?
Ronan straightened, his expression smoothing into something carefully neutral.
“This is not confirmed,” he said evenly. “Speculation spreads faster than truth.”
His words were calm.
His eyes were not.
“I didn’t ask for this,” I said, my voice quieter now.
“I know,” he replied immediately.
The sincerity caught me off guard.
“You don’t understand,” I continued, the words spilling out despite my caution. “One moment I was just doing my duty, and now”
“Now you are visible,” he finished. “And that makes you vulnerable.”
The weight of that truth settled over me.
Behind him, I noticed the council elders watching closely, their expressions tight with calculation. I caught fragments of their murmurs drifting through the clearing.
“Too dangerous…”
“If the bond is real”
“He must be careful…”
Ronan followed my gaze, then looked back at me.
“You should return to your quarters,” he said. “For tonight.”
Dismissal.
Protocol.
Protection.
I nodded stiffly, lowering my head. “As you command, Alpha.”
I turned away before he could say anything else.
Every step felt wrong.
The pull protested fiercely, the mark burning hot against my skin as though rejecting the distance. My chest ached with something dangerously close to loss, even though nothing had truly begun.
I didn’t look back.
But I felt him watching.
I felt the tension in his restraint, the unspoken war between duty and instinct radiating from him like heat.
By the time I reached the edge of the clearing, my heart was racing, not from fear, but from unanswered questions.
Why did he step away?
Why did it feel like he was fighting something just as hard as I was?
And why did my wolf insist, without doubt, without hesitation, that he was mine?
The moon remained overhead, silent and knowing.
And somewhere behind me, Ronan Ashford stood at the center of a destiny neither of us was ready to claim.
Weeks 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
The new moon rose without ceremony.No chanting echoed through the compound. No elders stood on stone platforms demanding knees to bend. No sacred knives glinted under torchlight. The sky was simply dark and vast, as if it had been waiting centuries to breathe again.Silvercrest was quiet.Not the
The tunnel air felt different on the way out.Not lighter because blood had vanished; there was still blood everywhere, thick in the stone’s pores, staining boots and hands. Not cleaner because the night had become kind of still above ground.But something essential had shifted.The pressure was go
Morrigan’s scream did not end cleanly.It fractured inside the collapsing chamber, tearing into echoes that bounced off broken stone and boiling basin residue. The final pulse of the blood seal convulsed through the room one last time, then stuttered like a dying heartbeat, unsure of its own rhythm
The scream of the chamber did not fade quickly.It echoed through the stone like an animal dying, vibrating through Ronan’s bones, through Lyra’s blood, and through Morrigan’s teeth. The basin’s dark liquid boiled over the cracked rim, spilling onto the floor in thick black streams that hissed as t







