LOGINI knew something was wrong the moment the morning bell rang twice.
Not the single call for daily assignments.
Not the lazy triple ring for patrol rotations.
Two.
Slow. Heavy. Formal.
A council summons.
My stomach tightened.
The hallway outside my room felt colder than usual as I stepped out. Wolves moved through the corridor, but conversations faded the moment I appeared. Some glanced quickly away. Others didn’t bother pretending.
They simply stared.
Not with curiosity.
With suspicion.
As if I had become something dangerous overnight.
I lifted my chin and kept walking. If they were waiting to see me crumble, they would be disappointed.
The closer I got to the main hall, the heavier the air felt.
Two enforcers stood outside the council chamber doors, arms crossed and expressions blank.
Waiting.
For me.
One of them pushed the door open.
The scrape of wood against stone echoed through the corridor like a warning.
“Lyra Vale,” he said evenly.
“They’re waiting.”
The council chamber had always felt intimidating.
Circular stone walls carved with ancient pack symbols. Pale morning light spilled through the skylight above, illuminating the center of the room.
An empty circle of floor.
A space designed for judgment.
Elders sat along the curved benches, their eyes following me as I stepped forward.
Measuring.
Assessing.
Waiting.
Even though my fingers were twitching at my sides, I made them stay still.
Don’t show weakness.
Then I saw him.
Ronan stood beside the Alpha’s seat, tall and silent, his posture perfectly controlled.
My heart reacted instantly.
Like it hadn’t learned anything.
His silver-gray eyes flicked toward me for the briefest second.
Something flashed there.
Regret.
Confusion.
Then it vanished.
The Alpha mask returned.
Cold. Controlled.
Not mine.
Never mind.
I swallowed the ache and focused on the elders.
“Lyra Vale,” one of them began, his voice sharp with authority. “Step forward.”
I moved into the center of the chamber.
The exposed space made every gaze feel heavier.
“We have concerns,” another elder said.
“About what?” I asked calmly.
“Your bond.”
A faint pulse stirred beneath the skin of my wrist.
“You were publicly rejected,” the elder continued. "However, reports suggest that your mate's mark is still active."
Murmurs rippled around the chamber.
“She was seen near Alpha territory yesterday.”
“Training alone.”
“Unusual behavior.”
Unusual.
The word landed like an accusation.
“I’ve done nothing wrong,” I said.
“You cannot be certain of that,” another elder replied sharply.
Before I could respond, a smooth voice drifted across the chamber.
“Intent doesn’t determine risk.”
Morrigan stepped forward from the side entrance.
I hadn’t noticed her arrive.
She moved with quiet confidence, dark hair pulled neatly back, her blue eyes bright with calculated interest.
She went on, "It deserves caution if the bond is acting abnormally."
Her gaze slid toward me, polite but cold.
History demonstrates that unhealthy relationships can result in violence. Even betrayal.”
The room shifted uneasily.
“I believe we should consider precautions.”
The word sounded gentle.
It wasn’t.
“What kind of precautions?” I asked.
Morrigan tilted her head slightly.
“Monitoring. Restricted duties. Perhaps temporary removal from certain pack activities.”
Temporary.
The same word used when Ronan rejected me.
My chest burned not with shame but with anger.
For the first time since that ceremony, the pain didn’t feel overwhelming.
It felt sharp.
Focused.
“Lyra,” one elder said, leaning forward. “State your intentions toward this pack.”
The question stunned me.
“My intentions?”
“Yes. Toward the Alpha. Toward Shadowfang.”
They thought I was planning something.
After everything I had done for them.
My hands clenched briefly.
Part of me wanted to defend myself.
Explain.
Remind them of every patrol. I had served every injured wolf I had carried home.
But another part of me, quieter and steadier, was tired.
Tired of apologizing for something I never chose.
So I simply stood there.
Silent.
The chamber grew restless.
“Well?” one elder pressed. "Are you saying that your mark is no longer active?"
“No,” I said calmly.
The word echoed through the chamber.
A few wolves shifted in surprise.
“You admit it still functions?” another elder asked.
“Yes.”
“And you do not find that concerning?”
“I find it confusing,” I replied. “Not dangerous.”
The faint pulse beneath my skin warmed again, like a quiet heartbeat.
I ignored it.
"I surely might have dealt with it if I had power over it," I responded. Do you feel that I like the way I'm treated?
That forced several elders to pause.
Isolation wasn’t something anyone would willingly choose.
Before the silence could turn in my favor, Morrigan spoke again.
“Intent doesn’t eliminate danger,” she said smoothly. “Lyra isolates herself. Trains alone at unusual hours. Walks near Alpha territory without explanation.”
Each sentence painted a darker picture.
I said quietly, "I feel like a criminal basically because of you."
She smiled.
“I’m being cautious.”
“Lyra Vale,” the eldest council member said firmly, “answer the question clearly. What are your intentions toward this pack?”
My pulse pounded.
For a moment, instinct urged me to explain everything.
To reassure them.
But the feeling faded quickly.
Why should I?
I had bled for this pack.
Where were these questions when I stood guard through storms?
When I carried wounded scouts home.
Now suddenly I had to prove my loyalty.
No.
I lifted my chin.
“My intentions are the same as they’ve always been,” I said evenly.
“To protect Shadowfang.”
“That answer lacks clarity,” Morrigan interrupted.
“It’s the truth.”
“And the Alpha?”
The room fell silent.
I could feel Ronan’s presence like gravity pulling at me.
Heavy. Unavoidable.
I forced myself not to look at him.
"The pack is not threatened by my feelings," I muttered. “And if they did… he already rejected me.”
Whispers began to circulate across the room.
The words were hurtful to say.
But speaking them aloud stripped them of their power.
I finally glanced at Ronan.
Just once.
Waiting.
Hoping.
Maybe he would say something.
Maybe he would tell them I wasn’t a threat.
That I had always been loyal.
But he remained silent.
Jaw tight.
Hands clasped behind his back.
Alpha first.
Always Alpha.
Something inside me settled.
Not anger.
Understanding.
After several tense moments, the elders leaned together, murmuring quietly.
Judging.
Deciding.
Finally, the oldest elder straightened.
“For now,” he said slowly, “Lyra Vale will remain within the pack.”
Relief flickered briefly in my chest.
Then he continued.
However, she will be monitored because of the strangeness of her bond.
The words felt heavier than any sentence.
“You will report your movements,” he added. “Training will be supervised. Any unusual behavior documented.”
Documented.
Like I was an experiment.
Or a threat waiting to happen.
"Consider it a form of defense," Morrigan remarked gently.
It sounded more like a cage.
The meeting dissolved soon after.
Wolves stood and filed out, their whispers following me through the chamber.
But something inside me felt different.
They hadn’t broken me.
They hadn’t made me beg.
If anything, I felt steadier.
Stronger.
As I passed Ronan near the doorway, our shoulders almost brushed.
His voice came out low enough that only I could hear.
“Stay strong, Lyra.”
Two simple words.
But they wrapped around my ribs like armor.
For the first time since the rejection, I didn’t feel like prey.
If they wanted to watch me…
Let them watch.
Because I wasn’t going to crumble.
I was going to survive.
even if I were the only one doing it.
The pack’s whispers followed Lyra all day.After the gathering, she couldn’t walk across Silvercrest without hearing fragments of conversation snap shut behind her. Wolves didn’t hide their fear anymore. They didn’t pretend she was simply another member of the pack.They looked at her like she was a storm waiting to destroy them.And worse than their fear was their confidence.As if the council’s words had given them permission to judge her openly.Lyra spent the afternoon pretending she didn’t care.She trained until her muscles burned, forcing sweat to drown out anger. She worked through Tobias’s breathing techniques, forcing her aura to stay tight beneath her skin. She refused to give them another excuse.But the entire time, her thoughts kept circling one thing.The border markings.The altered signs she had already seen once.If someone was manipulating patrol paths, then the changes would continue. They wouldn’t stop simply because wolves were afraid. They would grow bolder.Lyr
Lyra felt the shift before anyone said a word.After the training ground incident, the air around Silvercrest changed. Wolves moved differently. Conversations stopped when she passed. Eyes followed her with sharper awareness, not just fear but calculation.The pack wasn’t only watching her anymore.They were watching Ronan.Lyra noticed it first at the morning gathering.The elders sat in their usual place near the council platform, cloaked in ceremonial robes that marked them as law and tradition. Their faces remained calm, but their gaze kept drifting toward the Alpha’s entrance, waiting.Morrigan stood at their side, hands folded neatly, her posture graceful and controlled. She looked like loyalty carved into flesh, the perfect Beta beside her pack’s leadership.But Lyra had seen the ink in the margins.She had seen the hidden instructions.Morrigan’s calm was not peace.It was strategy.Ronan arrived late.The moment he stepped into the gathering circle, the mate bond reacted in L
Lyra didn’t sleep.She returned to her cabin with Ronan’s words still burning in her ears, and the mate bond still humming beneath her skin like a wound that refused to close. The moment she shut her door, she pressed her palm against her wrist, feeling the mark pulse faintly as if it were alive.It wasn’t broken.It had never been.It was only restrained, buried under rejection and pride, and now it was clawing its way back to the surface.Lyra sat on the edge of her bed for a long time, staring at the floorboards, listening to the distant sounds of the pack settling for the night. Every creak outside made her tense. Every whisper of wind against the window felt like someone watching.She hated that Ronan’s warning had made sense.She hated that fear was no longer a distant possibility but a shadow attached to her heels.By dawn, her anger had turned sharper.Clearer.If Ronan refused to stand beside her, then she would stand alone.She left her cabin early, before the pack fully wok
Lyra didn’t expect the summons to come so quickly.She was still carrying Corvin’s warning like a bruise when a messenger found her near the outer cabins, breathless, eyes avoiding hers. He delivered the order in a stiff voice that sounded less like a request and more like a command.He continued, "The Alpha has asked for your presence." At once."Lyra almost laughed.Nothing about this pack felt like a request anymore.She followed without hesitation, though her instincts stayed sharp. The pack grounds were quiet, but not peaceful. It was the kind of silence wolves kept when they were waiting for something to snap.As Lyra walked, she felt eyes on her from doorways and shadowed corners. Some wolves lowered their heads quickly; others turned away as if her presence was dangerous.Fear moved faster than truth ever could.When she reached the Alpha’s hall, the guards at the entrance stiffened. Their hands hovered near their weapons, their expressions blank but tense.Lyra didn’t bother
Lyra didn’t return to her cabin immediately after leaving the archive.The weight of what she had seen sat heavy in her chest, pressing against her ribs like a stone. Morrigan’s handwriting in the margins of patrol reports wasn’t a rumor anymore. It wasn’t suspicion.It was proof.But proof alone didn’t guarantee safety.In Silvercrest, truth could be buried as easily as bones.Lyra moved through the dim corridors near the council hall, keeping to the shadows. Torches flickered against stone, their flames low, as if even fire feared drawing attention.She could still hear Tobias’s warning in her mind.They will ruin you if you reveal the wrong name.Lyra didn’t intend to expose anything yet.Not openly.Not until she understood how deep the rot went.She reached the smaller council office wing, where assistants and recordkeepers worked during daylight. Most wolves were asleep now, but Lyra knew one of them stayed late to organize scrolls.Elder Assistant Corvin.A thin, sharp-eyed wol
The archive felt colder than the night outside.Lyra moved carefully between shelves stacked with history, her footsteps muted against stone. The air smelled of old ink, dried parchment, and dust that had settled for years. It was a place built to preserve truth, yet everything about it felt designed to bury it.A single lantern burned on the main desk, its flame flickering weakly, throwing long shadows across the walls. The light barely reached the far shelves, leaving half the room swallowed by darkness.Lyra’s fingers brushed across the spines of old ledgers as she passed. Each title was written in neat script: Territory Boundaries, Council Orders, Patrol Rotations, and Supply Logs.Every book carried authority.Every page carried control.She found the patrol records tucked behind heavier volumes. A thick ledger sat low on the shelf, bound in cracked leather, its cover stamped with the pack crest.Lyra pulled it free and carried it to the desk.The book landed with a dull thud.Sh







