LOGINNight settled over the Shadowfang territory like a heavy cloak, thick and airless.
Most nights, Lyra loved the dark.
It used to feel safe.
Quiet.
Comforting.
But tonight, it pressed down on her chest like something alive.
Something is watching.
She lay on her narrow bed, staring at the ceiling beams, eyes wide open long after the packhouse had gone silent. Wolves slept in nearby rooms, their breathing steady and peaceful.
Everyone rested.
Everyone except her.
Sleep wouldn’t come.
It hadn’t come for days.
Because every time she closed her eyes
She saw the circle.
The firelight.
The entire pack is standing shoulder to shoulder.
Watching her.
Judging her.
Waiting.
And then
Ronan.
Tall.
Still.
Unmovable as stone.
Those silver-gray eyes that once made her feel safe now looked through her like she was nothing.
Like she didn’t matter.
Like she had never mattered.
I reject this bond.
Her stomach twisted violently.
She rolled onto her side and closed her eyes tightly.
“Stop…” she whispered to herself.
But memories didn’t listen.
They played anyway.
Again.
And again.
And again.
Her chest tightened until breathing hurt.
Then
Pain flared across her wrist.
Sharp.
Blazing.
She gasped and shot upright.
The mark.
“Ah!”
It burned as if someone had poured molten metal beneath her skin.
She grabbed her wrist, nails digging into her own flesh as if she could physically hold the pain down.
The faint silver lines of the mark pulsed in the darkness, glowing softly like embers refusing to die.
It wasn’t supposed to glow.
Not after rejection.
Everyone knew that.
Rejected bonds faded.
They went cold.
They disappeared like they’d never existed.
So why
Why did hers hurt more every night?
“Please…” she breathed shakily. “Just go away.”
But the mark only throbbed harder, like a second heartbeat.
Stubborn.
Alive.
Defiant.
Just like the bond itself.
Eventually the pain dulled to an ache, but sleep never returned.
By the time dawn crept through the window, Lyra had given up trying.
She avoided breakfast.
Avoided the hall.
Avoided everyone.
Pulling her hood low, she slipped quietly through the back corridor of the pack house like a thief in her own home.
The wooden floors creaked beneath her steps.
Once, this place had been filled with laughter for her.
Teasing.
Inside jokes.
Friendly shoves.
Now
Every sound made her feel like an outsider.
Two pack members turned the corner ahead.
They froze when they saw her.
The change was immediate.
Conversations stopped mid-sentence.
Smiles faded.
Their eyes dropped instinctively to her wrist.
Even though the mark was covered.
Like they could still see it.
Like it branded her from the inside out.
“Morning,” one muttered awkwardly.
Not warm.
Not friendly.
Just polite.
Distant.
“Morning,” Lyra replied softly.
They brushed past her too quickly.
As if staying near her too long might be dangerous.
She stood there for a moment, staring after them.
Something inside her chest cracked quietly.
So this was how fast things changed.
One day you belonged.
The next
You were something to avoid.
Something suspicious.
Something is wrong.
The training grounds were empty when she reached them.
Good.
That’s why she came early.
No witnesses.
No whispers.
Just her.
She grabbed a wooden staff and stepped into position.
If she kept moving, maybe she wouldn’t think.
Strike.
Turn.
Block.
Step.
Again.
Harder.
Faster.
Her muscles burned.
Sweat dripped down her spine.
Her breath grew ragged.
But the memory still followed her.
I reject
She swung harder.
CRACK.
The staff slammed into a wooden post, splintering the surface.
Her hands trembled.
“Focus,” she muttered.
But she couldn’t.
Because everywhere she looked, she remembered him.
Ronan is correcting her stance here.
Ronan is sparring with scouts there.
Ronan’s deep voice calling commands across the field.
Even now, just thinking his name made her chest ache.
Why did it still hurt this much?
Why couldn’t she just hate him?
Hate would’ve been easier.
Cleaner.
Instead, all she felt was this hollow, aching emptiness.
Like something important had been ripped out of her and never replaced.
She lowered the staff slowly.
“What’s wrong with me…” she whispered.
Maybe Morrigan was right.
Maybe she wasn’t enough.
Maybe fate really had made a mistake.
Maybe Ronan saw something broken in her that everyone else had ignored.
Her throat tightened painfully.
For the first time since the ceremony
Her eyes burned.
And this time, she didn’t fight the tears.
They slipped down quietly.
Unnoticed.
Because there was no one left watching her with kindness anymore.
Only distance.
Only doubt.
Only silence.
Lyra didn’t realize how long she’d been standing there until the morning bell rang from the main hall.
Once.
Twice.
Calling everyone to breakfast and assignments.
Normally, she would’ve gone.
Reported to the scout captain.
Taken patrol duty.
Pretended everything was fine.
But today…
She couldn’t face them.
Couldn’t face the looks.
The pity.
The suspicion.
So instead, she slipped toward the forest trail behind the training grounds, the path scouts used when they needed space or quiet.
The air smelled of pine and damp earth. Sunlight filtered through the branches in broken gold streaks.
Usually, the forest calmed her.
Today, even the birds sounded distant.
Like the world had decided to keep its space too.
Her boots crunched softly over fallen leaves as she walked deeper into the trees.
Step.
Step.
Step.
Alone.
The word echoed in her head.
She hadn’t realized how much of her life had revolved around the pack until she suddenly didn’t belong to it anymore.
Every memory now felt like something she wasn’t allowed to touch.
Laughing during patrols.
Late-night meals.
Training beside Ronan while he corrected her grip, his hand warm over hers
Her chest tightened painfully.
Stop thinking about him.
But that was the problem.
No matter how hard she tried…
Everything circled back to Ronan.
To the rejection.
To that moment in front of everyone.
Her pride hadn’t just cracked.
It had shattered.
And she wasn’t sure there was anything left worth picking up.
She didn’t notice where her feet were taking her until a strange heat pulsed through her wrist again.
Sharp.
Sudden.
She hissed and grabbed it.
“What now…?”
The mark flickered faintly beneath her skin.
Not the slow glow from before.
This was violent.
Unstable.
Like lightning trapped under flesh.
Her heart skipped.
This was different.
She looked around.
The trees here were taller.
Denser.
The air is heavier.
Then she recognized it.
Her stomach dropped.
Alpha territory.
She’d wandered too close to Ronan’s private grounds.
Instinctively, wolves avoided this place out of respect. Only high-ranking members entered freely.
She should turn back.
Now.
But the moment she stepped forward
The mark flared.
Pain shot up her arm so hard her knees buckled.
“Ah!”
She caught herself against a tree, breathing hard.
It burned hotter the closer she moved.
Like it was reacting to something.
Or someone.
“No… that’s not possible,” she muttered.
Rejected bonds didn’t react.
They didn’t pull.
They didn’t hurt.
They didn’t feel anything.
So why did it feel like an invisible thread was tightening around her chest, dragging her forward?
Like something deep inside her wolf was whispering,
Closer.
Go closer.
Her pulse thundered.
Was it
Him?
Was Ronan nearby?
The thought terrified her more than it excited her.
Because if her body still reacted like this…
Then maybe the bond hadn’t broken at all.
Maybe it never has.
A twig snapped behind her.
Lyra stiffened.
“Relax,” a familiar voice drawled lazily. "You would already be down if I decided to harm you."
She turned.
“Tobias.”
He leaned casually against a tree, arms crossed, green eyes sharp and observant as always.
Like he’d been watching for a while.
Which… knowing him…
He probably had.
“You’re terrible at sneaking,” he added lightly.
“I wasn’t sneaking,” she muttered. “I was walking.”
“Toward Alpha territory?” He raised a brow. “Bold choice for someone everyone’s whispering about.”
Her jaw tightened.
“I didn’t ask for commentary.”
“Didn’t say you did.”
He pushed off the tree and stepped closer, studying her face more carefully than she liked.
“You look like hell, Lyra.”
“Thanks.”
“Didn’t mean it as an insult.”
Silence stretched.
Then his gaze dropped to her wrist.
His expression shifted.
Serious now.
“It’s still reacting, isn’t it?”
She froze.
“…What?”
“The bond,” he said quietly. “It didn’t die.”
Her heart pounded.
“How would you know that?”
Tobias shrugged one shoulder.
“I watch things. Patterns. Rejected mates don’t glow after three nights. They don’t get worse.”
Her stomach twisted.
“So what are you saying?”
“I’m saying…” He leaned closer, his voice low. “Something about your bond isn’t normal.”
A chill slid down her spine.
“That’s not comforting.”
“It’s not supposed to be.”
Before she could respond, his gaze flicked past her shoulder.
Toward the packhouse.
Then the treeline.
Like he sensed something she didn’t.
“You might want to head back,” he said.
“Why?”
He smirked faintly.
“Because you’re being watched more than you think.”
Her blood went cold.
“Watched?”
“The council doesn’t like ‘abnormal.’ And right now?” His eyes darkened. “You’re very abnormal.”
When she returned toward the pack grounds, the feeling didn’t leave.
Eyes.
Everywhere.
Whispers cut off when she walked past.
Two enforcers standing near the hall entrance who definitely hadn’t been there before.
Even Morrigan across the courtyard, speaking quietly with a council elder
And staring directly at her.
A slow, calculating stare.
Like she was already deciding Lyra’s fate.
Lyra swallowed.
Something was changing.
Something dangerous.
And for the first time since the rejection
Fear crawled up her spine.
Not heartbreak.
Not shame.
Fear.
Because this wasn’t just about being unwanted anymore.
This felt like being monitored.
Judged.
Measured.
Like prey.
As she stepped inside the hall, voices drifted through the half-open council doors.
“…unstable”
“…bond abnormal."
“…risk to the pack."
“…should be restricted."
Her breath caught.
They were talking about her.
Deciding something.
Something that didn’t sound good.
Her wrist pulsed again.
Hard.
Alive.
Defiant.
Like it refused to surrender.
And suddenly one terrifying thought hit her
What if they didn’t just want to reject her…
What if they wanted to remove her completely?
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 path to the seal chamber no longer felt alive.When Tobias descended into the tunnels alone, the air was colder than he remembered, not from weather but from absence. The hum that once vibrated through stone had vanished. The pressure that used to tighten lungs and twist instincts into obedienc
Dain had not slept in three nights.Ronan knew it before the man spoke a single word.It showed in the way Dain’s eyes tracked movement too sharply, in the way his shoulders stayed tight even when there was no threat. It showed in the bruised shadows beneath his gaze and in the way he kept rubbing
Silvercrest gathered beneath a sky that no longer felt hostile.The new moon had passed, leaving a night softened by stars instead of shadows of control. The compound’s central ground, once a place of trials, judgment, and fear, had been transformed into open space. No platforms. No chains. No carv
The forest beyond Silvercrest carried a different kind of silence.Not the tense hush of patrol routes or ambush trails. Not the careful quiet of wolves listening for enemies. This stillness felt older, deeper, and untouched by council laws or Blood Seal commands.Lyra followed Ronan through the tr







