LOGINMenelik’s Point Of View
I stood in the mud and watched shifted and run into the woods until she was nothing more than a memory against the dark trunks of the trees. The silence of the forest rushed back in to fill the space she’d left, but it felt hollow now.
Thirteen years.
I’d spent more than a decade searching for the girl who had pulled a broken, wolf-less boy out of the dirt and told him that if he didn't fight, he deserved to die. I could still feel the scar on my ribs where the rogues had tried to gut me when I was eight, I was too young to have Farkas, wolf, leaving me defenseless. I could still hear her voice, small, fierce, and utterly confident, telling me she wouldn't let them take me. She’d fought them off with nothing but a silver pocketknife and a stubbornness that shouldn't have existed in a pup.
She’d forgotten me.
To her, I was just another stray, an unknown entity she’d excised from her mind to make room for a life with a man who didn't deserve to breathe her air. But a Royal Lycan doesn't forget a life-debt. We don't forget the scent of the wolf who owns our soul. And Amani had owned mine since the moment she’d wiped the blood off my face and told me to run.
“Prince,” a voice muttered from the shadows behind me.
Torin stepped out, dropping to one knee in the mud without a second thought. He was followed by the rest of my guards, their armor making them look like tears in the fabric of the woods. These were the most lethal men in the Lycan kingdom, and right now, they were standing in the middle of a dying pack’s territory like they were the ones who owned the dirt.
“Rise,” I said, the ‘weary traveler’ persona vanishing instantly. My voice turned cold, hard as the throne I’d walked away from to find her. “Did you see her? Did you see how she handled that scavenger?”
“We did, Sire. She is… exactly as you described. Perhaps more.”
“She is a Queen being treated like a servant,” I snapped, my aura flaring out.
I felt my wolf pace behind my ribs, a tectonic growl vibrating in my chest. The trees around us seemed to lean away from the pressure.
“She’s keeping that entire pack together with her bare hands while that fool, Vance, chases a rogue girl around the packhouse. She’s wasting her life, her beauty, and her brilliance on a man who wouldn't know a Queen if she sat on his chest and told him he was a failure.”
I thought of Vance.
I’d spent the last few days watching him from the shadows of his own home. He was weak, not in body, but in spirit. He was led by his scent, governed by his instincts rather than his head. He was exactly the kind of man who would lose a kingdom because he liked the way a girl smelled.
“I want a full report by dawn,” I ordered, turning to Torin. “I want to know every word Vance has said to her since she returned. I want to know who in that packhouse has been loyal to her and who has been a snake. If anyone has made her life difficult, if any of those Elders have looked at her with anything less than absolute respect, I want their heads on a list.”
“And the rogue girl he brought in, Sire? The ‘mate’?”
I let out a dry, mirthless laugh that didn't reach my eyes.
“A toy. A piece of bait. It doesn't matter. What matters is that Amani is finally biting back. She’s moving the silver, she’s talking to the guards, and she’s building a fortress around her heart. She thinks she’s doing it alone. She thinks she has to be the one to carry the burden of that pack’s survival.”
I looked toward the distant lights of the Eclipse Star packhouse, a dark, possessive smile tugging at the corners of my mouth. Amani thought she was scraping for survival in a world that had forgotten her. She had no idea that the boy she’d saved, the one who was the Prince of the Lycans, was standing right behind her, waiting for the perfect moment to hand her the world.
“Let her finish her work,” I whispered to the dark. “Let her tear Vance apart. Let her see exactly how little he is worth. And when she’s standing in the wreckage of that pathetic pack, wondering what comes next… I’ll be there to show her that a Luna was always too small a title for her.”
“Torin,” I called out as I turned to head back to our hidden camp. “Make sure our supplies are moved closer to their southern border. If she needs resources, if she needs silver, make sure it ‘happens’ to be found by her scouts. But keep out of sight. I want her to remember me on her own terms, not because I forced my way into her life.”
“Yes, Prince.”
I walked into the dark, my mind already on the next time I’d see her.
She wasn't just a Luna. She was the she-wolf who had saved a Prince, and it was about time the world started treating her like one.
And yes, I knew her game, she was reclaiming her power and taking revenge on a cheating mate. But holy goodness, what had possessed her to accept such a loser in the first place!
Vance was just hiding behind her skirt, she did the heavy lifting while he claimed the glory. The pack knew it, but stayed silent for the sake of peace.
My scouts reported that she was beloved by her people, yet one dark shadow lingered over her, one point of failure Vance could exploit.
Amani hadn’t produced an heir.
No future Alpha for Eclipse Star.
Every pack needed the assurance of a guaranteed lineage to feel secure. I could bet my life that Vance would use this void to strike back, attempting to cast that rogue girl as the pack's only hope for a future.
But in doing so, he would make his final, fatal miscalculation.
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







