LOGINThe silence of the packhouse was deceptive. Believe me on that.
On the surface, everything looked the same. Guards at their posts with their shoulders squared, servants moving through the halls with their heads down, and the faint, familiar smell of roasted meat drifting from the kitchens.
But beneath the mundane routine, tension coiled like a snake waiting to strike. I could feel it in my bones, a low-frequency pulse of anxiety vibrating through the stone floors.
The pack knew.
Wolves always know when the wind changes, even before the storm hits.
Slowly, I walked down the corridor, my fingers brushing the rough stone walls.
Every step carried the trace of a ghost.
In my last life, this had been the day I lost everything. I remembered running down this same hall, tears blurring my vision, begging the Moon Goddess for a mercy that never came. Now, my eyes were bone-dry and my heart was a cold piece of flint.
This wasn't the day I lost, it was the day I began to take it all back, piece by agonizing piece.
This time it was different. I didn't head for my bedroom to hide. I headed for the heart of the pack: the Council Chamber. I needed to move before Vance could regain his footing. He was currently drowning in a sea of pheromones and misplaced 'mate' instinct, which made him slow. And in the Eclipse Star pack, slow meant dead.
I pushed open the heavy oak doors of the chamber. The room was empty, save for the dust motes dancing in the morning light, but it smelled of old parchment and the earthy scent of the Elders who had sat here for generations.
I walked to the head of the long obsidian table and pulled out the Alpha’s chair. I didn't sit in it, not yet, but I rested my hand on the back of it, feeling the cold vibe of authority.
“Ready the summons,” I told the young Beta standing guard at the door.
He looked at me, startled by the sheer ice in my tone.
“Call the Elders. All of them. Tell them the Luna has called an emergency session regarding a level-one security breach.”
“Luna?” the boy stammered, his eyes darting to the empty hallway behind me. “Should I… should I find the Alpha first?”
“The Alpha is occupied,” I responded, my tone dropping an octave, becoming something dark and dangerous. “Do as you’re told, or go find a shovel and report to the stables for the next month. Am I clear?”
He didn't ask twice. He vanished.
I spent the next hour preparing. I didn't need to make notes, I had the laws of this pack burned into my brain because I was the one who had spent the last three years drafting them while Vance was out playing. I knew every loophole, every clause, and every penalty. I was going to use his own signature against him like a garrote.
Later that evening, the council chamber filled with the low murmurs of old men.
Elders shuffled in, their heavy robes brushing against the floor, their eyes darting between me and the empty chair where Vance should have been. They looked confused, some even offended, but none of them dared to speak over the charged silence I was radiating.
I stood at the head of the table, not waiting for permission or a formal opening.
“We need to discuss protocol,” I began, affecting a steady, casual tone. “The Alpha has brought a stranger into the packhouse. A rogue girl found in a cage. He claims she is his fated mate.”
Gasps rippled through the room.
Elder Kofi, his beard streaked with silver and his eyes sharp as a hawk’s, leaned forward, his hands trembling slightly on the table.
“Is this true? A rogue, brought inside these sacred walls without a clearing? Amani, that is a violation of the Treaty of the Creek.”
“It’s true,” I agreed flatly. “And it was done against every law we’ve written to keep this pack from being slaughtered in its sleep. Against the very rules that keep us alive while the southern border is currently a bloodbath.”
Suddenly, the door slammed open, the wood groaning against the stone.
None other than Vance stormed in, his aura flaring like a wildfire. He looked disheveled, his hair a mess, his shirt unbuttoned at the collar but his fury was enough to fill the chamber. Thank the Goddess Zebub was not with him but I could smell her on him. That cloying, fake sweetness was like a rot. And the Elders must have noticed this as well.
“You dare call a council without me?” he roared with the strain of his own aura. “You dare question my fated bond in front of the men who raised me?”
I didn't flinch, not even blink.
I just watched him like he was a toddler having a tantrum in a grocery store.
“I dare enforce the laws you yourself signed, Vance. You brought a rogue into our land. You bypassed the holding cells. You ignored the mandatory blood-testing. Explain yourself to the Council, not to me.”
His eyes blazed with a manic heat, but the Elders were watching him now, their expressions shifting from confusion to a cold, judgmental scrutiny. He couldn't simply dismiss me, I was speaking the language of the pack’s survival, and he was speaking the language of a man led by his groin. One point secured, the balance shifted toward me.
“She’s my mate!” he growled, slamming his fist onto the table.
The obsidian vibrated under the blow. “The Moon Goddess chose her. That overrides your petty laws. The bond is sacred! It’s the highest law of our kind!”
I tilted my head, smiling coldly, a thin, cruel expression that didn't reach my eyes.
“Convenient, isn't it? A bond that appears just as our border negotiations are falling apart? A girl who just happens to be in a cage at the exact coordinate where our scouts were murdered last week? Tell me, Vance, did the Goddess also tell you to ignore the safety of your pack for a pretty face? Did she tell you that one girl’s comfort is worth the risk of a Trojan horse in our nursery?”
It was the scent of rain, wild lilies, and the stubborn, fierce spirit that had been haunting my every thought.I caught her by the scruff of her neck to steady her, my heart hammering against my ribs in a way that had nothing to do with the shift. She was smaller than I last saw her, her fur ruffled and her eyes wide with a mix of shock and desperation.“Amani! What are you doing here?!” I roared, the words half-human, half-growl as I shifted back fully. “Shift!”At my order, she scrambled back, her paws sliding on the moss as she returned to her human form, breathless and wild-eyed. She looked like a ghost in the night, her skin pale in the moonlight, but her gaze was a furnace.“I was following her,” she gasped, clutching a robe to her chest that she must have stashed nearby. “She left the house, Menelik. She’s meeting someone. I had to know.”I grabbed her by the shoulders, my grip probably too tight, but I couldn't help it.The sheer recklessness of her being out here, drained an
Menelik’s Point of ViewPatience was a luxury I was running out of.I leaned against the rough-hewn timber of my hut, watching the mist roll off the neutral ground like a funeral shroud. Somewhere across that border, the Eclipse Star was being picked apart by a parasite, and the woman I had searched years for was being drained of her very soul to fund the feast.I’d watched the packhouse for days. I’d seen what Vance and his rogue inflicted on Amani. It was a pure insult. Every time they had sex, a piece of Amani withered. I could smell the decline in her scent, the way the vibrant, forest-pine aroma of her spirit was being replaced by clinical exhaustion.Zebub wasn’t just a mistress, I could tell she was an executioner. She was pulling the strings of a triangle bond as it fit her plans, waiting for the exact sign to end Amani permanently.“You’re brooding, Menelik,” a voice rasped from the dark.I didn’t turn. I knew the scent. “Brooding is for poets. I’m calculating.”One of my sco
The moment my boots hit Eclipse Star soil, I knew things would change drastically.And I didn’t have to wait long. Out from behind a twisted old oak, my father appeared, clutching a worn leather satchel. His face was etched with exhaustion and cold fury. “The treasury’s bleeding out, Amani,” he said bluntly, skipping any pleasantries.He pulled a thick wad of papers from the bag, printouts, digital receipts, each one telling a story of reckless greed.I stared at the figures, my eyes widening.These were not in the ledgers, it was the first time I’d seen them.Damn! Vance hadn’t just been distracted, he’d been stealing from the pack. And that was a serious crime, the Elders had agreed to separate private from business accounts. Luxury cars, jewelry enough to fund a militia, and, most damning of all, a private island in the Atlantic. A getaway for his ‘treasure.’ He’d also drained our joint money and was now gutting the pack’s emergency funds.“This man is crazy”, I hi
I stepped into a dream carved from silver light, where the air crushed the breath from my chest. My knees shattered against a floor of glass flowers that cut into my flesh.Then, she appeared, not just an ordinary woman, but a cold, glowing presence that felt like the moon had taken a human shape just to sneer at my mortality.Selene, the Moon Goddess.This time, she didn't radiate warmth but something more like a terrifying disgust.“You look pathetic, Amani,” the tone vibrated through my bones rather than my ears.I tried to stand, the glass slicing into my skin.“I’m being bled dry. My mate is in another woman’s bed, and my wolf is in pain. What do you expect?”“I expect the Luna I chose, not the victim you’ve become,” she snapped, her stare like frozen stars. “Stop showing them your weakness. Not to the coward who wears the title, and certainly not to the scavenger at his table. You weren't made to be a footnote in Vance’s tragedy. You were meant to take Eclipse Star to heights th
The packhouse had shifted from a place of authority into a cruel, drawn-out torment chamber.Strange enough, Zebub didn’t kill me with a single strike using the incomplete bond, that would’ve been too quick, too merciful I think, for a fifth wheel in the relationship. Instead, she chose a more insidious method. She kept Vance in her bed almost nonstop, knowing that the tether between us was still alive, a live wire that burned with every passing hour.Because she refused to accept the triangle mating, torturing me with the pain of the betrayal of my mate was her best bet.Most days, I was slumped against the cold stone of my office floor or curled in a corner of the library, gasping as phantom heat and disturbing sensations tore through my body. It was a violation on a unimaginable level. Every touch Vance gave her, every breath she drew from him, vibrated through my skin, making me feel haunted by a ghost that refused to stop screaming.‘Make it stop, Amani. Please,’ Sara’s whimpered
Utterly humiliated, I sprinted into the clearing, tears blurring my vision, and crashed headlong into a solid wall of muscle.Menelik caught me just in time, his hands steady on my shoulders, preventing me from collapsing face down into the mud. I froze, forehead pressed against his chest, gasping as if the air might refuse to fill my lungs. My ribs ached with each breath, and my soul felt laid bare, exposed for him to see.“Amani? What’s wrong?” His voice was calm, a steady anchor in the storm raging inside me.At that moment, the dam shattered.Words spilled from me. I told him about the Council’s decision, Zebub’s smug smile, how Vance looked at her as if I were just a forgotten ledger to be tucked away. I kept the secret of the Lycan’s bite, the horror my father had revealed, locked in my throat. But everything else erupted, spilling out like a wound torn open. Humiliation at being replaced, the cold hall, my husband practically handing my life over to a rogue.Menelik listened, j







