LOGINAriya Froste knelt in the cold dirt, her hands tied behind her back, her lips trembling.
Her husband, Sergius was standing and staring daggers at her.
“I swear, I don’t know where she is.” she whispered for the fifth time.
Seragio stood above her — tall, sharp-jawed, eyes wild with fury. A coat of furs hung on his shoulders like the hide of something he’d conquered. His voice was low, but it bled violence.
“You think I’m a fool?”
“No no, please...." Ariya choked, her knees scraping the rocky ground as she shifted. “I swear by the Moon. I don’t know where she ran to. I haven’t seen her since dusk!”
“She’s your daughter.” Seragio snarled. “You’d feel her if she bled. You’d sense her if she fell..”
Ariya’s breath caught.
He stepped forward, boots crunching on autumned leaves.
“The Witch.” he spat. “The little swamp-girl.”
He gripped Ariya’s chin, digging his fingers in, forcing her face up. Her eyes shimmered with tears — not of pain, but of regret.
“Do what you must.” She whispered. “But leave Mia out of this.”
Seragio’s smile was slow. Cold.
“Oh, I intend to do exactly what I must.”
He pushed her back to sit.
“Lock her up,” he commanded the wolves flanking him. “If she makes one sound about blood or bond, muzzle her.”
Two males stepped forward and dragged Ariya away.
She tried to beg.
Sergius turned, inhaled deeply and let out a low growl that sent a flock of birds screaming and flying off from the trees.
“Find her.” He said to the dark. “Find the girl. Bring her to me.”
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The summoning ring was scorched.
The stone altar had cracked from the heat of the spell.
And Mia was unconscious.
Her body lay curled at the edge of the summoning ring, cloak soaked with sweat, fingers twitching like they were still weaving spells in her dreams.
A faint glow pulsed from beneath her — the herbs she’d used reacting to the strain of magic that bent time and memory and forged a fake prince out of nothing.
Tiny spirits fluttered around her body in forms of candlelight moths, whispering with concern.
“She bent too far.”
“She risked too much.”
“She will fade.”
“No.” one whispered. “She only needs time.”
And outside the cave, the wind shifted eastward, toward Ashmoore’s gates.
Toward Elowyn.
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Elowyn sat alone on the small settee in her room, her body tense, her hands clasped over the sealed academy parcel resting on her lap.
The package was thick. Tied with a silver cord. The Academy’s insignia — a wolf’s head wreathed in thorned laurel — glared up at her like it was warning her not to open it.
But she had to.
She undid the knot carefully and slowly. Every thread she pulled felt like she was unraveling herself too.
The first thing inside was the uniform.
Three folded tunics. All deep charcoal grey, with heavy collars and a silver-stitched crest on the chest. Alpha crest. No room for mistakes.
The trousers were stiff, thick with reinforced seams. Combat-grade. Made for someone far more muscular than she was. Her breath hitched.
She ran her fingers over the insignia, her fake clan name embroidered beneath it in sharp, clean thread.
Elyan Froste. Draven Lineage.
The name didn’t feel like hers. Not really. But it had to be now.
She moved aside the clothes and picked up a tightly rolled scroll — her combat schedule.
It read:
ASHMOORE'S TRAINING ACADEMY — CADET TIMETABLE: SEMESTER 1
Dawn Routines – 5:00 AM: Morning Run / Blood Threshold Circuit
Combat Studies – 6:30 AM: Wolf Maneuvers (Pack vs Rogue Tactics)
Theories of Pack Politics – 8:00 AM
Survival & Stealth – 10:00 AM (Northern Forest Grounds)
Meal Hour – 12:00 PM
Scent & Resistance Testing – 1:00 PM
Evening Assessment Bouts – 3:00 PM
Meal Hour – 6:00 PM
Dormitory Curfew – 7:00 PM
Elowyn blinked.
Scent & Resistance Testing.
It was real. Not just a threat.
Oh dear....
She clenched the scroll tight until her knuckles whitened. She’d need another full flask by the time that session arrived. And Mia was unconscious at gods-know-where.
Beneath the scroll was a small black pouch. Elowyn opened it. Inside it were three silver ID crests.
One to pin to her uniform.
One to hand over for inspections.
One for identification during cadet trials.
Each one gleamed cold and official. Each one bore the same sigil and false name. She turned one in her palm slowly.
So much weight for something so small.
A final object lay inside the parcel — a thin, navy blue rule log, bound in hard leather. She flipped to the first page:
CODE OF CONDUCT FOR ALPHA TRAINEES — YEAR ONE
1. No cadet may alter or conceal their scent deliberately.
2. If any sign of a bond is felt, both parties must undergo public evaluation.
3. Dormitory infractions must be reported within 24 hours.
4. Failure to attend classes or trainings will result in class demotion and marking.
5. Fighting outside sanctioned matches is punishable by blood-for-blood trial.
6. No Luna-class allowed.
7. Disagreements may be settled through sanctioned physical combat.
8. No deliveries, illusions or contact with non-students.
9. Any false identity discovered will lead to exile.
Elowyn’s eyes stung.
She closed the booklet quickly and pressed it against her chest, heart pounding.
This is it. The real fight begins here.
No more woods. No more sobbing mothers. No more caves with spell circles and candlelight moths.
She was in Ashmoore now. Surrounded by wolves.
Baron. Azpen. And a dozen more she hadn’t even met.
She’d have to fight like a male. Move like a warrior. Think like someone who belonged.
And no matter how much it hurt and scared her, no one must know she was a girl.
Elowyn's lips shook and she ran a hand through her face.
She had to fight.
Elowyn put the balms to work and went about getting ready. She was limping but she felt better than last night.She adjusted her uniform with trembling hands, her limbs still sore from the brutal beatings days ago. She gritted her teeth, pulling her boots on one at a time, suppressing a wince as pain screamed up her thigh.The dorm was still and thick with silence. Baron sat on the edge of his bed with a towel slung around his neck, watching her through his wide open door from beneath long, dark lashes. Azpen stood near the doorway, sipping from a steel flask of warm whatnot.She gave them a shallow bow — barely meeting their eyes — then limped out of the room like a ghost.Baron’s eyes narrowed as he caught the stiffness in her gait.“Did you see that?” he muttered.Azpen blinked and giggled. “Yeah. Limping. Like a gazelle."“He didn’t say a word,” Azpen later added.“Let's see.” Baron said.★★★★★★The whistle blew, and cadets burst into movement across the wide, open field. Elowyn
The halls were too quiet.The guards had been drinking, as usual. A long day had ended with Sergius snapping at everyone, throwing a wine goblet across the room, and retreating to his study to sulk. Most of the house had learned to take his tantrums in stride.But no one heard the whisper of the blade.Not until it had already slit the throat of the first man.Then the second.The two guards were dead before their lungs could carry a scream.Then a third....And a fourth.None of them had been able to make a sound.Haspan’s men moved like shadows — eyes masked, boots soft, blades wiped clean in seconds.They didn’t waste time.They passed the dozing soldiers is sharp strides.One kicked the double doors of the manor’s side chamber open and stormed inside where Sergius was sprawled, shirt open, sweat glistening on his chest. He didn’t even look up until a fist grabbed his throat and slammed him against the wall.“You made a deal, Bezus-Froste,” a thick voice hissed.Another figure step
28 Dear Reader,From the bottom of my heart—thank you for diving into Alpha's Scented Room. Every chapter you read, every moment you feel alongside Elowyn, means the world to me.This story is more than just survival and secrets—it's about fighting back when the world tells you to stay small. And if you've made it this far, you’re a part of that fight too.If Elowyn’s journey moved you, shocked you, made you smile or scream or cry—please tap that react and #vote# button. You can also leave a comment about whatever you think or feel. Your reactions don’t just encourage me—they help this story reach others who need it too.There’s still so much to come....and I can’t wait to take you there.With all my love,AuthorVianelli.Stay right here.Chapter Twenty Eight - Grey Day Elowyn’s steps wobbled as she left the infirmary with Riven holding her. Her side screamed. Her thigh throbbed and she continued to surreptitiously glance at Riven.The satchel of prescribed patches and bitter tablets
The scent of herbs and disinfectant woke her.A ceiling spun above her.She was lying in a cot. Her ribs burned. Her left eye throbbed with swelling. And her entire body felt like someone had folded it wrong and left it in a drawer.She looked and saw the blue-eyed boy standing there.Panicked, she moved to sit—then groaned and laid back.Her whole body throbbed with pain and she cried out.A sharp voice said “Don’t.”Nurse Ebbely stood nearby, shaking a vial.“You’re lucky one of your classmates passing the garden saw the boys dragging your bleeding body in the dirt. Do you know how stupid and lazy you are?”Elowyn wanted to say something clever. Maybe something rude. But her throat tasted like copper and her chest refused words.She only glanced at Riven, nervously.The nurse sighed and leaned in.“They’ve already reported it as ‘aggression during sparring and skipping classes.’ You know how the system works, Froste. You take this quietly or you risk them sniffing further.”Elowyn b
Elowyn hadn’t heard Baron Ortega speak to her in days.Not a side-eye insult. Not a grunt of disapproval. Not a rough push to get her out of his way. Not even one of his famed, soul-pinching glares. Just.... nothing.At first, she thought he was plotting something again. Then she thought he was sick. Then she wondered if he knew. If he’d found her flask the other night. If he could smell the lies clinging to her.By Sunday, it was itching at her chest. She needed to do something so she warmed up.They were leaving the morning stretch drills. She saw him ahead, shrugging on his jacket with Azpen, ready to leave her presence again.She jogged a few steps to close the space.“Alpha Baron—are you.... alright?”He turned. Looked at her like she’d asked if the sky was blue.“I’m fine. You?”His tone was neutral. Almost polite. It shook her more than if he’d growled in her face.“....I’m okay,” she said softly.Baron nodded once and walked off, Azpen giving her a small lingering glance befor
Azpen's voice was soft and Elowyn was confused.“You alright? Heard something.”She took a deep breath, then another. The scent should be fading... right?She rose and opened the door a crack. Azpen stood there, arms crossed, but his face unreadable.Elowyn was trying to sound tough.“Dropped my brush. Sorry.”Azpen clearly wasn't buying it.“Baron says you’re the scent but now, you're a storm."“Then don’t stand so close.” Elowyn replied quietly.There was a pause.Then, Azpen gave a faint smirk, paused and stepped back.“Try not to shake the entire building next time.”She shut the door softly.Behind it, her knees buckled, and she pressed her forehead to the floor, whispering to herself.“Just a little longer... just a little longer.... Holy Moon, I'm safe.”★★★★★★He stood still.The corridor was dim, the air thick, and something... shifted.Not a sound.Not a movement.Just—scent.At first, it was barely noticeable. But Azpen wasn’t like the other cadets. His nose had been train







