LOGINThe hut was small, but the inside was impossibly large. The ceiling stretched up into shadows, filled with hanging bundles of dried herbs, bones, and shimmering crystals. The air smelled of sage and... ozone. Like a storm trapped in a bottle.
In the center of the room sat a woman.
She wasn't the crone I expected. She looked young, her skin unlined and glowing like moonlight, but her eyes were ancient. They held the weight of centuries.
"So," she said, her voice melodic and sharp. "The Wolf King and his little vessel made it through my woods."
She didn't look up from the cauldron she was stirring. "Did you enjoy the walk?"
"We didn't come for small talk," Killian said, stepping forward, keeping me tucked behind him. "We came for a cure."
"A cure?" The Witch laughed. She stood up, and her shadow stretched long and distorted against the wall. "There is no cure for what you carry, Elena Vance. It is not a disease. It is a destiny."
My breath hitched. "You know my name?"
"I know the names of all mothers who walk into the dark for their children," she said softly. She walked over to me, her gaze dropping to my stomach.
"Two souls," she murmured, reaching out a hand but stopping inches from my dress. "One Light. One Dark. The prophecy is true. If left alone, the Dark one will consume the Light before they draw their first breath."
"We know the problem," Killian growled, impatient. "Give us the solution. The Archives said Queen Lysandra sacrificed her wolf. If that is the price, take mine. Take my wolf right now."
The Witch looked at him, amused.
"Always so eager to be the hero, Alpha," she tutted. "But Queen Lysandra's method was... crude. It left her weak. And her son, the survivor, grew up without a mother's protection."
She walked back to her table and picked up a jagged, black crystal.
"There is another way. A better way. But the price is higher."
"Name it," Killian said instantly.
"To save both children," the Witch explained, turning the crystal in her fingers, "You do not need to kill the Dark soul. You need to dilute it. You need a vessel to absorb the excess Rage and Darkness from the infant until he is strong enough to control it himself."
She looked at us.
"One of you must become the Anchor. For the next eighteen years, you will be spiritually tethered to the Dark twin. Every time he feels rage, you will feel it. Every time his darkness tries to take over, it will flow into you."
She paused, her eyes narrowing.
"It will be agonizing. It will feel like burning alive, randomly, day or night. It will drain your life force. It might drive you mad."
The room fell silent.
"I'll do it," I said.
"I'll do it," Killian said at the exact same time.
We looked at each other.
"No," Killian said firmly, turning to me. "You are already carrying them. You are too fragile. I am the Alpha. I am strong enough to take the pain."
"You're the King!" I argued, grabbing his arm. "You have to lead the pack. You can't be distracted by random agony! I'm the mother. It's my job to carry their burdens."
"Elena, I will not let you suffer!" Killian roared, his eyes flashing gold. "I failed to protect you from your family. I failed to protect you from the world. I will not fail to protect you from this!"
"And I won't let you destroy yourself!" I shouted back, tears streaming down my face. "They need a father, Killian! A strong father, not a broken one!"
"Stop it!" The Witch slammed her hand on the table. Bang.
We both froze.
The Witch was looking at us with an expression I couldn't read. Annoyance? Or was it... respect?
"In three hundred years," she said quietly, "I have seen mates push each other into the fire to save themselves. I have never seen two idiots fight over who gets to burn."
She shook her head, a small smile playing on her lips.
"You passed the second test," she declared.
"Test?" Killian scowled. "This isn't a game."
"Magic is all about intent," the Witch said. "The ritual requires a willing sacrifice. If you had hesitated, if you had tried to push it on each other... it would have failed."
She placed the black crystal on the table.
"The Anchor will be Killian," she decided.
"Good," Killian nodded, relief washing over his face.
"But!" The Witch raised a finger. "To perform the binding ritual, I need an ingredient that I do not possess. It is the catalyst for the spell."
"What is it?" I asked.
"The Heart of the Frozen Mountain," she said. "A flower that blooms only in the deepest ice cave on the Northern Peak. It is guarded by a Beast that does not bleed."
She looked at Killian.
"You want to be the Anchor? Fine. But first, you must prove you can survive the cold. Go get me the flower."
Killian looked at the map she tossed him. The Northern Peak. It was miles away, treacherous and deadly.
"I'll get it," he vowed.
"We," I corrected, taking his hand.
Killian looked at me to argue, but I squeezed his hand tight.
"You are the Anchor," I said firmly. "But I am the Compass. Where you go, I go."
Killian stared at me, the fight draining out of him, replaced by overwhelming love. He kissed my forehead, a silent promise.
"Then we go together," he said.
The Witch watched us leave, her eyes gleaming.
"Bring it back before the full moon," she called out. "Or the cradle will be a coffin."
The journey back to the Blackwood territories should have been a victory march. We had the cure. We had survived the fall of a god. But as we reached the iron gates of our home, the air didn't smell like pine and safety.It smelled like betrayal and silver-smoke.The grand banners of the Blackwood Pack—the silver wolf on a field of midnight—had been torn down. In their place hung the cold, sterile flag of the Lycan Council."Silas," Killian growled, his hand gripping the steering wheel of the rugged SUV so hard the leather cracked. His body was still covered in bandages from the Solar Spire, but his eyes were burning with a lethal, golden hunger."They moved fast," Mord whispered from the backseat, his hand resting on his rusted blade. "They didn't wait for the news of Solas’s survival. They assumed you died in the collapse and declared the Forbidden Wing an 'unstable zone'."We rounded the final bend, and the palace came into view. It was surrounded. Hundreds of Council Enforcers in
Solas stood amidst the burning wreckage, the Tear of the Sun pulsing in his hand like a dying heart. The sheer intensity of the light began to melt the stones beneath his feet, turning the ruins into a lake of liquid gold."I am the Sun!" Solas screamed, his voice a distorted, metallic screech. "And you... you are nothing but a stain on my world!"He leveled the crystal at me, and a beam of pure, white-hot divinity erupted. It was enough to vaporize a city."Elena!" Killian roared, launching himself forward to take the blow.But I didn't move. I didn't hide.I stepped into the light.As the beam hit my chest, the Mark of the Devourer didn't burn. It opened. My skin didn't char; it turned into a swirling vortex of violet-black smoke. I felt the agonizing heat enter my veins, but instead of destroying me, it found a bottomless hunger waiting for it.I wasn't just holding the light. I was drinking it."Impossible!" Solas’s remaining eye widened in horror. "That is the fire of creation! Y
The world didn't end with a bang; it ended with the suffocating silence of falling ash.The Golden Spire, once a needle of light piercing the heavens, was now a jagged mountain of broken glass and twisted metal strewn across the Forbidden Peak. The air was thick with the smell of scorched stone and the fading hum of dying magic.Killian Blackwood clawed his way out of a pile of white-gold rubble. His tunic was gone, his chest covered in a map of bleeding shadow-scars and burns. He didn't feel the pain. His Alpha heart was beating with a single, frantic rhythm: Find them. Find them. Find them."ELENA!" he roared, the sound tearing through the settling dust. "LUCIAN! NYX!"Silence."If you have taken them from me," Killian whispered to the ruins, his claws extending until they cracked the stone beneath his hands, "I will not just kill you, Solas. I will erase your entire lineage from history."A faint, violet shimmer caught his eye near the tilted base of the central tower. It wasn't th
The air inside the Void-Chamber was thick with the scent of ozone and ancient, stagnant magic. Solas, the Solar King, stood before the massive vortex of solidified darkness, his white-gold armor reflecting the unnatural swirl of the abyss. He looked like a god, but his eyes—wide and hungry—betrayed the dying mortal underneath."Open it, child," Solas commanded, his voice vibrating with a terrifying desperation. He shoved Lucian toward the swirling vortex. "Your light is the key. Pierce the veil, and I will make you a prince of a world that never knows night. You will be more than a Blackwood; you will be the Sun itself."Lucian stood before the wall of absolute shadow. He looked so small in that cavernous room, his tiny hands trembling. The heat from the Spire's core was making his golden hair damp with sweat. He looked back at Solas, then closed his eyes, searching for that one thread of warmth that never failed him.“Now, Lionheart!” Killian’s voice erupted in his mind, a primal roa
"You look surprised, Elena," my sister purred, swirling a cup of golden liquid that smelled of honey and sunlight. "Did you think the Great King Solas was a saint? Did you think he built this empire of light on prayers and sunshine?"I gripped the edges of the golden divan, my breath coming in shallow rasps. "He hates shadows. He called me an abomination. Why are you here?""Because Solas is a hypocrite," she laughed, her green eyes flashing. "He is dying, Elena. Just like you. The pure light he commands is eating him alive. He needs the Tear of the Sun to stabilize his own power, just as you need it to save your humanity."My heart skipped a beat. "He can't find it himself?""The crystal is hidden in the Void-Chamber, a place where light cannot enter. He needs a Vessel. He needs someone who can touch the shadows without being consumed instantly. He needs... us.""He’s using you," I spat."We are using each other," she corrected, standing up and walking toward the glass wall. "He give
The border was no longer silent. The air crackled with the sound of burning ozone as more Sun Guards descended, their light-discs illuminating the canyon like a dozen miniature suns.Killian stood over the fallen guard, his claws dripping with a mixture of blood and molten brass. His golden eyes were fixed on the ridge above, where a single, blinding figure stood, radiating a heat that made the very air tremble."Enough!" a voice boomed—not with vocal cords, but with the resonance of a thousand trumpets.The guards immediately froze, dropping to one knee.The figure descended slowly. He wasn't on a disc; he was walking on a staircase of solid, crystallized light. He wore armor of white gold, and his hair was a literal mane of flickering fire.Solas, the Solar King.He landed gracefully on the scorched earth, his gaze ignoring the carnage and landing directly on us. He didn't look at Killian first. He looked at Lucian."A child of the sun," Solas whispered, his voice vibrating with a t







