LOGINThe silver light did not fade immediately.It pressed.Heavy.Unforgiving.Like the very will of the heavens had descended and refused to move.The Moon Goddess stood at the center of it all, her presence forcing the fractured chamber into a fragile, temporary stillness.Even the darkness recoiling from the cracked earth hesitated beneath her gaze.For a moment—Everything held.Aurelia trembled in Lucien’s arms.Not violently now.Not like before.But like something inside her had been pushed back… not gone.Waiting.Watching.Her fingers clutched weakly at Lucien’s shirt.Her breath uneven.Her eyes—Still rimmed with crimson.But no longer lost.Lucien didn’t loosen his hold.Didn’t dare.His chin rested briefly against her head as if grounding himself in the reality that she was still here.Still his.Still fighting.But the silence didn’t last.It never did.“You delay the inevitable.”Damon’s vo
The air didn’t just tremble. It fractured. Aurelia stood at the center of it all—power spilling from her like a storm that had finally found its sky. The ground beneath her feet cracked in jagged lines, crawling outward like veins, splitting stone and shaking the very foundation of the chamber. Lucien felt it in his bones. Not just the force of it— But the wrongness. This wasn’t just power. This wasn’t just her wolf. This was something older. Something buried. Something that did not belong to the present world. “Aurelia…” Her name left his lips carefully this time. Not commanding. Not desperate. But grounding. Calling. Reaching. Because beneath all that chaos— He knew she was still there. She had to be. Her head tilted slightly at the sound of his voice. Just enough to show she heard him. Just enough to give him hope. But then— That crimson glow in her eyes deepened. And the hope cracked. Damon rose slowly from where Lucien’s stri
The forest had gone silent.Not the natural quiet of dawn or dusk—but something deeper. Something instinctive. As though the land itself had recognized a force it could not withstand… and chosen to retreat.Lucien didn’t slow.Branches snapped beneath his horse’s hooves. Wind tore past him in violent gusts, his cloak whipping behind him like a dark omen. His eyes burned—not with rage alone, but with something far more dangerous.Fear.Not the kind that weakens.The kind that sharpens.The bond pulsed again.Stronger this time.But wrong.Twisted.As if something was pulling at Aurelia from beneath the surface of her own existence.Lucien’s grip tightened on the reins.“Hold on,” he growled under his breath. “Just a little longer.”Then—He felt it.A surge.Massive.Ancient.It crashed through the bond like a tidal wave, forcing his horse to rear violently as Lucien’s body tensed in response.His breath hitched.“…What the hell…”That wasn’t just power.It wasn’t wolf.It wasn’t anyth
Darkness was not supposed to feel like this.It wasn’t empty.It wasn’t silent.It wasn’t even still.It breathed.It pressed.It watched.Aurelia drifted somewhere between consciousness and void, her body unmoving, her mind trapped in a space that did not belong to sleep and did not resemble waking. It was heavy—like something sat on her chest, forcing her down, holding her there.Her wolf clawed at the edges of it.Furious.Wild.But something ancient held it back.Something stronger.Something wrong.Aurelia’s fingers twitched.Her breath hitched.And then—She woke.Cold.That was the first thing she felt.Not the gentle kind of cold from wind or night air—But a deep, biting chill that sank into her bones.Her eyes snapped open.Darkness surrounded her—but not entirely.Faint red symbols glowed around the edges of the space, etched into stone walls that curved into a wide circular chamber. The air smelled of iron and something older… something decayed.Aurelia tried to move.She
The palace had never felt this quiet before.Not even in the deepest hours of the night.Not even in the stillness before dawn.But now—mid-morning, with sunlight pouring through tall windows and servants moving carefully through halls—it felt… hollow.Like something vital had already begun to slip away.Aurelia stood in the center of her chamber, unmoving.Her bags were packed.Not many.She hadn’t taken much.She didn’t want to.Because taking too much would make it feel permanent.And she wasn’t ready to admit that yet.Her fingers brushed lightly over the edge of the bed.This room.This place.So many memories.Soft ones.Laughter.Quiet conversations.The way Lucien would stand by the window, watching her like she was something rare.Her chest tightened painfully.She pulled her hand back quickly.No.Don’t.Don’t think about him.But it was impossible.Because even now…She could feel him.That bond.Still there.Still strong.Still alive.And it hurt.Gods, it hurt.Aurelia cl
The knock did not come again.It didn’t need to.Aurelia stood frozen where she was, her hand hovering inches from the door handle, her breath shallow, uneven. Her heart was beating too fast—loud enough that she was certain he could hear it from the other side.Lucien.He was here.Not sending for her this time.Not waiting.Not giving her space.He had come himself.Her throat tightened.“Open the door, Aurelia.”His voice was quieter now.Not commanding.Not cold.But controlled.And that… unsettled her more than anything.Aurelia closed her eyes for a brief second.Don’t open it.Her mind was firm.Clear.Protective.If you open that door, everything will fall apart.But her hand—Her traitorous, aching hand—Moved.The lock clicked.The door opened.And there he was.Lucien stood on the other side, tall, still, his presence filling the space instantly. But something about him was different.Not in appearance.Not in strength.But in his eyes.They weren’t calm.They weren’t unread
Before the Sun RoseAurelia left before dawn.The gates of ShadowFang opened without ceremony, iron hinges whispering instead of groaning, as though the fortress itself understood the gravity of letting her go alone. No banners. No escort. No farewell.Just her.She wore traveling leathers instead
The forest had learned to hold its breath.Aurelia felt it before she saw it—the pressure, the way the trees leaned inward, the way the wind no longer carried scent but warning. Her hand slid to her blade as she slowed, boots silent on damp earth.“Show yourself,” she said, voice steady. “I’m tired
Back in Shadowfang—A message arrived at dawn.It did not come with guards or ceremony. No royal envoy, no banner, no trumpet to announce its weight. Just a single falcon—silver-feathered, Moon-marked—landing on the outer parapet of ShadowFang as though it had always belonged there.Aurelia was alr
Hellspawn felt Rafael die.Not as loss.As insult.The scream tore through realms unseen, a rupture that split the veil between worlds. In the Abyss Beyond—the place that was not hell, not earth, not sky—Hellspawn rose from his throne of void and bone.Rafael’s blood-mark shattered.The tether snap







