Se connecterLeah’s POV
The walk home from Blood Moon College was quieter than usual.
Most days, students traveled in groups along the forest path that connected the campus to the nearby pack territories. Today, conversations around me were all about the same thing: the Leadership Competition.
Everyone had theories about how to get the shareholder president’s signature.
Some said he only signed for students recommended by professors.
Others believed you had to request a meeting through the administration office.
A few students claimed he would appear somewhere on campus without warning.
None of them sounded certain.
I kept walking, listening without joining any of the conversations.
They were all searching for someone they had never met.
Someone I had lived with for years.
The thought almost made me smile.
By the time the pack grounds came into view, the sun was already lowering behind the tall trees. I followed the stone path toward the house I shared with my uncle.
The pack members near the training grounds greeted me respectfully as I passed.
“Evening, Leah.”
I nodded politely and continued inside.
The house was quiet.
I could hear the faint sound of papers shifting somewhere deeper inside the study room. My uncle was probably still working.
I knocked lightly before opening the door.
He was seated behind his desk, reading through a stack of documents. His glasses rested low on his nose, and a lantern illuminated the room with warm light.
He looked up when he saw me.
“You’re back earlier than usual.”
“I finished my classes,” I said.
He studied my face for a moment, as if checking whether I was truly fine after yesterday. “I heard the school made an announcement today,” he said.
I leaned against the doorframe.
“So you already know.” He gave a small nod.
“The Leadership Competition.”
I walked into the room and sat in the chair across from his desk.
“There’s a new requirement this year,” I said. “I’m aware.”
I folded my hands on my lap.
“Participants need the signature of the President of the School Shareholders before they can apply.”
My uncle placed his papers down slowly.
“Yes.” I met his gaze.
“I need that signature.”
For a brief moment, silence filled the room.
Then he leaned back in his chair.
“You decided to enter the competition.”
“It seems interesting this year.”
His expression softened slightly, but there was still caution in his eyes.
“You realize that if people discover our connection”
“They won’t,” I interrupted calmly.
No one on campus knew who the shareholder president really was.
To them, he was simply a distant authority figure connected to the school’s funding.
To me, he was the man who had raised me.
My uncle watched me carefully.
“You’re certain this is what you want?”
“Yes.” Another quiet moment passed.
Then he opened one of his desk drawers and removed a document folder. From it, he pulled out a single sheet of paper.
The official application form.
At the bottom was a blank line.
Signature of the President of the School Shareholders. He picked up his pen.
“Very well,” he said.
Within seconds, he signed his name across the line.
The ink dried quickly as he handed the paper to me.
“That was easier than you expected,” he said.
I took the document and slipped it carefully into my bag.
“Much easier than it will be for everyone else.”
A faint smile crossed his face. “Keep it safe.” “I will.”
As I stood to leave, his voice stopped me again. “Leah.”
I turned back.
“Just remember,” he said quietly, “competitions like this reveal more than skill. They reveal character.” “I know.”
And with that, I left the study.
The next morning at Blood Moon College felt busier than the day before.
Students were moving around campus with unusual urgency. Some were heading toward the administration building, while others gathered near professors hoping for advice.
Everyone wanted the same thing.
The signature.
I walked through the main building hallway and noticed several groups already discussing their plans.
“They say the shareholder president might appear at Crescent Hall today.”
“Someone told me the dean might arrange meetings.”
“That means Claire probably already has an advantage.” I kept walking.
Claire.
Of course she would try to use her father’s position.
The locker room hallway was nearly empty when I arrived. I needed to change for combat training before my next class.
Inside the girls’ changing room, the space echoed with the sound of lockers closing and quiet conversation.
Claire stood near the mirror with two of her friends.
They stopped talking when I entered.
Claire’s eyes immediately moved to my bag.
“You’re entering the competition, aren’t you?” she asked suddenly.
I didn’t answer.
She laughed softly.
“That’s ambitious.”
One of her friends leaned against the lockers.
“Claire already arranged a meeting with the dean,” she said proudly.
Claire smiled.
“My father knows the shareholder board members,” she added. “Getting the signature won’t be difficult.”
I ignored them and walked toward one of the bathroom stalls to change.
Claire’s voice followed me.
“Some people should know their limits.”
I closed the door behind me and changed quickly into my training clothes.
When I stepped back out a few minutes later, the changing room was empty.
At least, it looked empty.
I walked toward the sink to wash my hands.
Then the door suddenly slammed shut.
The sound echoed sharply in the room.
Before I could react, the lock clicked from the outside.
I frowned and walked to the door.
It didn’t move.
A familiar voice came from the other side.
Claire.
“Oops,” she said lightly.
Her friends laughed.
“You should stay there for a while, Leah,” Claire continued. “Maybe it will give you time to reconsider entering the competition.”
My jaw tightened.
I pushed the door again.
Locked.
Then I heard another sound.
The rustling of fabric.
My eyes moved to the bench near the lockers. My uniform clothes were gone.
Claire’s voice drifted through the door again. “Looks like someone misplaced her clothes.”
More laughter followed. Their footsteps slowly faded down the hallway.
Silence returned to the bathroom. For a moment, I simply stood there.Claire had always been cruel.
But this was childish even for her. I looked around the room.
The small window near the ceiling was open slightly. The lock on the door wasn’t strong either.
They probably assumed I would panic.
Instead, I exhaled slowly.
Then I stepped onto the sink counter and pushed the window open wider.
Cool morning air rushed inside.
The drop outside wasn’t far. Within seconds, I climbed through the window and landed quietly behind the building.
Students were walking across the courtyard, unaware of what had just happened inside the locker room.
I brushed the dust from my training clothes and adjusted my bag.
The signed application form was still safely inside. Claire might have thought she delayed me.
She hadn’t.
I walked calmly toward the administration building.
Across the courtyard, I noticed Claire and her friends again.
They were talking with Derek near the staircase.
Claire looked confident, explaining something while Derek listened.
Probably about her plan to get the signature.
For a brief moment, Derek’s gaze shifted across the courtyard. His eyes landed on me.
Claire followed his line of sight.
The moment she saw me standing there calm, unbothered, her smile disappeared.
She clearly hadn’t expected me to get out so quickly.
I held her gaze for a second.
Then I simply turned and continued walking.
Inside my bag, the application form remained safe. Already signed.
The next morning at Blood Moon College, the atmosphere had shifted. The raw, buzzing excitement of the previous day had distilled into a heavy, quiet anticipation. The students gathered near the main hall were no longer just spectators; they were witnesses to a cull. The first stage had already begun its work, thinning the herd and reminding everyone that in this competition, elimination was a cold, constant reality.Leah walked toward the gathering participants, her pace steady. She noticed the change in her peers—some were isolated, buried in their notes, while others huddled with their teammates in low, urgent whispers.Victor was the first to spot her. “There you are,” he said, his eyes scanning her for any sign of the morning’s tension. “We thought you might be late”.“I’m not late,” Leah replied, her voice a calm anchor.Daniel checked his phone, a habitual gesture of precision. “Five minutes early, actually”. Beside him, Maya clutched a notebook. “I’ve been trying to guess what
The territory felt quieter after the first stage of the competition ended. Pack members were still talking about the results, but the excitement had settled into something more watchful. Now that everyone knew who had finished first, the attention had shifted. I could feel the weight of it as I walked across the pack grounds. A few wolves glanced at me before quickly looking away, while others whispered as I passed. Finishing first had made our team noticeable. Victor seemed to enjoy the newfound status. "Did you hear that?" he said as we walked toward the training hall. "Someone just said we outran Derek’s team". Daniel gave him a sideways look. "Relax. It was only the first stage". Maya nodded in agreement. "And the next stage could be completely different". Victor sighed. "I know. I just think it’s nice that we actually did well". We entered the main hall together, the corridors filling with students heading to their afternoon sessions. Our team stopped near the weapon locker
The moment Derek and I reached the fork in the forest path, we both started running. Neither of us said a word. The wooden marker was tight in my grip as I followed the path Maya had guided me through earlier. Leaves crunched beneath my shoes, and branches brushed against my sleeves as I moved quickly between the trees.“Leah, what’s happening?” Maya’s voice called faintly from the forest edge.“I found the marker,” I replied between breaths.“That’s great,” Daniel said. “Head straight back toward us.”“I’m already on my way.”A few steps behind me, I could hear Derek moving just as fast. His pace was steady, confident. He clearly knew the direction he was heading. For a moment, I considered taking a different path, but Maya’s instructions were still clear in my mind. The safest choice was to follow the route we had already planned.Sunlight began to appear between the trees ahead—the forest edge.“Leah, we see you!” Victor shouted from somewhere outside the trees.I pushed forward th
Leah Pov The lunch hour at Blood Moon College was a blur of hushed whispers and sharp, calculating glances. I sat with Maya, Daniel, and Victor at a corner table, the air between us thick with the kind of tension that only comes when you're suddenly tied to the success of strangers."We need to be ready for anything," Victor muttered, his eyes darting toward Team Two. Derek was there, looking as unshakeable as a mountain while Claire hovered nearby like a storm cloud waiting to break. "Look at them," Maya whispered, her fingers nervously tracing the edge of her tray. "Claire already has Marcus and Rowan acting like bodyguards. And Derek... Derek doesn't even need to speak. People just fall in line behind him."I watched Derek from across the cafeteria. He wasn't eating. He was leaning back, his large frame relaxed but his eyes—dark and predatory—were scanning the room. He was an Alpha in every sense of the word, and in a competition like this, that made him the biggest target. "Don
Leah’s POVBy the time I reached the administration building, the campus was already more crowded than usual.Students stood in small groups along the stone walkway leading to Crescent Hall. Some were holding application papers, others were arguing quietly about rumors of where the shareholder president might appear.Everyone looked tense.I walked up the wide steps calmly.Inside the building, the atmosphere was even more serious. Several tables had been set up near the entrance where school staff were checking application forms before allowing students to proceed further.A long line had already formed.I joined the back of it without drawing attention.In front of me, two boys from the combat training class were whispering.“I heard Claire’s father arranged something with the dean.”“Of course he did,” the other replied. “If anyone gets that signature, it’ll be Derek.”The first boy nodded.“He’s probably already submitted his application.”I said nothing.My bag rested comfortably
Leah’s POVThe walk home from Blood Moon College was quieter than usual.Most days, students traveled in groups along the forest path that connected the campus to the nearby pack territories. Today, conversations around me were all about the same thing: the Leadership Competition.Everyone had theories about how to get the shareholder president’s signature.Some said he only signed for students recommended by professors.Others believed you had to request a meeting through the administration office.A few students claimed he would appear somewhere on campus without warning.None of them sounded certain.I kept walking, listening without joining any of the conversations.They were all searching for someone they had never met.Someone I had lived with for years.The thought almost made me smile.By the time the pack grounds came into view, the sun was already lowering behind the tall trees. I followed the stone path toward the house I shared with my uncle.The pack members near the trai







