LOGINThey called me a murderer. An Omega. A nobody. A girl whose life was worth less than the weakest Alpha's pride. At Kingsridge Alpha Institute, I spent three years surviving humiliation, cruelty, and endless discrimination. As an orphan with no powerful bloodline, no influential family, and no Alpha willing to claim me, I believed that keeping my head down was the only way to survive. I endured every insult, every punishment, and every betrayal, convinced that graduation would finally set me free. Instead, it became the night I died. Framed for murdering the Alpha heir, I was condemned without a trial. Beneath the Blood Moon, I begged for someone...anyone...to ask the one question that could have saved me: What if she's innocent? No one did. My so-called friends stayed silent. My enemies smiled. The entire werewolf world watched as I was executed for a crime I never committed. Then I opened my eyes. I was eighteen again, standing on my first day at Kingsridge...three years before my execution. The Moon Goddess has given me a second chance. This time, I remember everything. I won't be the weak Omega waiting for someone to save me. I'll expose every traitor, rewrite my fate, and make those who underestimated me pay. But revenge is only the beginning. Hidden beneath the academy lies an ancient secret, and a forgotten power has awakened inside me...one capable of shattering everything the werewolf world believes about Alphas, Betas, and Omegas. The Blood Moon is coming again. So is the murder. Only this time, I won't be the girl kneeling in silver chains. I'll be the woman who destroys every lie, claims the power that was stolen from me, and forces an entire world to bow before the Omega they tried to kill.
View More"Please just look at the evidence I actually provided instead of blindly following these lies," I choke out, the metallic taste of my own blood coating my tongue like toxic syrup.
My knees hit the jagged stone stage of the Moon Ascension Ceremony and the impact jars my teeth. The silver chains anchoring my wrists to the iron pillars bite deep into my raw skin. I look up at the sea of jeering faces. They are beautiful monsters in expensive tailored suits and silk gowns. They look at me with such rehearsed disgust that I almost laugh. Almost. The Alpha King is dead. His royal blood has stained the marble steps, and every single pair of eyes in this stadium is locked onto me like I am the center of some sick, twisted orbit. "Don't pretend you were saving him, you pathetic little gutter rat," the Headmaster hisses, his voice amplified by the stadium speakers to a booming, soul-crushing volume. He holds up a dossier of fake photographs. I see my own face photoshopped into blurry, dark corners of the crime scene. It is a masterpiece of deception. The crowd roars, a primal sound of pure hatred that vibrates through my sternum. I scan the front row. My heart does a stuttering skip when I spot Clara. My best friend. My roommate for three years. The girl who shared my last crust of bread when the dining hall staff refused to serve me. She is wearing a dress that costs more than my entire family's estate. She is not crying. She is looking at me with the cold, bored indifference of someone who has just cashed a very large check. "Tell them the truth, Clara," I whisper, though the sound is swallowed by the howling wind and the jeering mob. Clara steps up to the microphone, her posture perfect. She glances at me, and for one fleeting, devastating moment, our eyes lock. There is no regret in her gaze. There is only calculated ambition. She adjusts her diamond necklace, the stones catching the sickly red light of the Blood Moon. She smiles at the judges, a shy, practiced movement that makes the entire stadium quiet down in anticipation. "Evelyn told me she hated the Alpha King for holding us back," Clara lies, her voice clear and steady. "She said he deserved to bleed out in the dirt just for existing." The crowd erupts again. The sound is a physical force. People are throwing stones, insults, and rotten produce, but I barely feel the impact. I am staring at the three Alpha heirs standing behind the judges. Jayson Ashford. His face is a mask of marble, his blue eyes as empty as a vacuum. He doesn't even look at me. He is looking at his reflection in the glass of his tablet. Simon Ricafort is pacing behind him, his fists clenched, his jaw set in a display of performative rage that makes me want to scream at the absurdity of it all. Then there is Rafael Blackvale. He is leaning against a pillar, his arms crossed, his gaze fixed on the horizon. He is the only one who looks bored. He looks like a man who knows this is all a game and he is simply waiting for the final score. "I didn't do it!" I scream, the words tearing through my throat. The Headmaster turns to the crowd, his arms raised like a conductor leading a symphony of doom. "The Omega Assassin has spoken her final pathetic words. Justice will be served tonight." He nods to the executioner, a hulking man in a leather hood who steps out from the shadows. The blade he carries is ancient, etched with runes that hum with a low, vibrating frequency. I feel the weight of my life pressing down on me. I think about the three years of starvation, the beatings, the constant degradation. I think about the times I walked on broken glass just to keep the academy hallways clean for these pampered, entitled creatures. And for what? So I could die on a stage for a crime I didn't even commit. "Jayson, please," I call out, my voice cracking. "You know I couldn't have gotten past the security wards. You know this is a setup." Jayson finally turns his head. He looks at me for a fraction of a second, his expression showing nothing but detached amusement. He leans over to whisper something to Simon, and they both laugh. A cold, hollow sound that rings in my ears louder than the thunder rolling in from the mountains. They aren't just letting me die. They are enjoying the show. They are the audience for my funeral. "Rafael, you were there!" I shout, turning my head toward him as the executioner raises his weapon. "You saw me in the library when the alarm went off!" Rafael moves. He steps off the platform, his eyes finally meeting mine. There is a spark of something sharp and unreadable in his gaze. It is not pity. It is not even anger. It is curiosity. He looks at me like he is reading a book and he is disappointed in the ending. He doesn't say a word. He just turns his back and walks toward the exit. He doesn't care. None of them do. They are the wolves, and I am just the sheep they decided to slaughter for the sport of it. The executioner stands over me. I smell the ozone and the heavy, metallic tang of the blade. I look up at the Blood Moon, the crimson orb glowing like an angry eye in the night sky. The pain is starting to fade into a numb, surreal detachment. I see my own life flashing before me, not in a grand cinematic sweep, but in tiny, pathetic fragments. A cold dorm room. A pile of laundry. A professor laughing while he failed my exam. The betrayal of a friend. The indifference of an Alpha. "Wait," I gasp, my lungs burning. The blade swings. It is quick. It is efficient. It is everything they promised me I would never be. I feel the cold steel bite into my neck, the world rushing away from me in a dizzying blur of red and shadow. I hit the floor, the stone biting into my cheek. The last thing I hear is the sound of the crowd cheering, a deafening wave of triumph that washes over me like a freezing tide. My vision starts to tunnel, the edges of the world turning to pitch black. "Regret is for people who think they had a choice," the Headmaster mutters, stepping over my dying body to address the crowd. I feel my heart stuttering, a frantic bird trapped in a cage of bone. I look at my hands. They are stained with my own blood. I look at the platform. The blood is spreading, a dark, Rorschach stain that looks suspiciously like a map. I think about the future I will never have. I think about the power I never realized I held in my own veins. I think about the lies they told and the secrets they kept buried in the foundations of this cursed academy. And for the first time in my life, I don't feel like an Omega. I don't feel like a victim. I feel like a fuse that is about to explode. "If I could do it all again, I would burn this entire place to the ground before I let one of you touch me," I whisper, my voice barely audible over the roaring triumph of the mob. The darkness closes in, thick and suffocating. I welcome it. I embrace the void with the desperation of a girl who has finally run out of tears. I feel the life slipping from my pores, the heat leaving my skin, the weight of my existence finally lifting. I am gone. I am nothing. I am just a ghost in the making, waiting for the wind to carry my ashes away. "Check her pulse one more time to make sure this little rat is truly finished," a voice says from somewhere very, very far away."She is moving through the corridors like she owns the damn map to this building, and I want to know how," I snap, not bothering to look away from the floor-to-ceiling windows of the student council office as I watch Evelyn Roda navigate the courtyard below.My deputy council member shifts uncomfortably by the door, but I don't give him the satisfaction of a glance. I have been tracking Evelyn’s movements for the last three weeks, and the data is infuriatingly erratic. One day she is the quiet, invisible Omega who keeps her head down and avoids eye contact like it is a physical contagion. The next, she is dismantling entire social traps with a single sentence, leaving my most vicious upperclassmen looking like idiots in front of the entire student body. She isn't just surviving anymore. She is calculating. She is purposeful. And for a reason I cannot yet articulate, it feels like she is preparing to execute a plan that makes my own governance look like a playground game."Sir, she is
"Stop wasting your time, Omega, because those books haven't been touched in over a century for a very good reason," a rough, gravelly voice calls out from behind the heavy oak library doors.I don't look up from the brittle pages of the historical registry. My hands are steady, a stark contrast to the trembling, frantic mess I was in this timeline three years ago. I am currently deep in the restricted section, ignoring the warning symbols etched into the mahogany shelves. The air here tastes like stagnant time and rot. I am looking for the mention of the Lunar Shrine, the place the history books claim was just a myth, a bedtime story told to keep young wolves from wandering into the dangerous foundations of the Blackthorn institute. I find a page that has been crudely ripped out, the jagged paper edge sharp enough to draw blood."I just prefer reading things that have been forgotten, and I don't see why that should concern a champion fighter like you," I reply, my voice casual as I sl
"You seem to be carrying a lot of weight for someone who supposedly has nothing to worry about," I say, my voice cutting through the library’s suffocating quiet as I lean against the shelf across from her.Evelyn Roda doesn't jump. She doesn't gasp like the other Omegas, who usually treat my presence like a divine visitation or a death sentence. Instead, she slowly closes the leather-bound book in her hands, her fingers lingering on the spine with a possessive, almost protective, grip. Her gaze lifts to mine, and for a moment, the world feels less solid. Her eyes are not the dull, submissive pools of someone beaten into compliance. They are sharp, analytical, and layered with a depth that suggests she has seen the end of the world and found it profoundly boring. I have been watching her for weeks, trying to pin down why she feels like a glitch in the rigid social architecture of this institute."I just like reading, Rafael, and I don't see why my choice of literature should be any of
"Class, please note that history is a selective narrative, and those who ask the wrong questions often find themselves erased from the footnotes," Professor Vance says, his eyes locking onto mine with a synthetic warmth that makes my skin crawl.I keep my head down, burying my face in a notebook that contains nothing but scrambled, fake lecture notes. In my past life, I idolized Vance. I thought he was the only faculty member who genuinely cared about the history of the pack, the only one who didn't see me as a servant. Now, I know exactly what he is. He is a high level courier for the Shadow Council. I smell the ozone and charcoal lingering on his robes, the distinct scent of the secret rituals they perform beneath the academy. My heart is a frantic drum in my chest, but I force my movements to remain slow and deliberately fragile."Evelyn, are you even listening to the lecture, or are you too busy daydreaming about being anywhere but here?" Vance asks, tapping his cane against the e






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