Se connecter
The marble floor burned cold against Lyra Hale's knees.
She stayed down because everyone expected her to. Because this was her place now. Kneeling, waiting and hoping for scraps of kindness that would never come.
"Lyra Hale."
Her wolf stirred at the sound of his voice. Even now, after everything, the stupid creature wanted him.
Lyra lifted her head. Damon stood on the raised platform where the royal matchmaker had called them both. His dark hair caught the light from the crystal chandeliers. Behind him, her stepsister Elara watched with those perfect green eyes, one hand resting on his arm like she owned him.
Maybe she did.
"Stand up," Damon said.
Lyra got to her feet and her legs shook. The entire Royal Matching Hall stretched out behind her, packed with wolves from every corner of the kingdom. They'd all come to witness the sacred mate bonds being confirmed.
No one was celebrating for her.
"You know why we're here," Damon continued. His voice carried across the hall, cold and formal. Nothing like the warmth he'd shown her three months ago when the mate bond first snapped into place. "The bond is real. I feel it. You feel it."
Lyra's wolf whimpered. Yes. They felt it. Every second of every day, pulling at something deep in her chest.
"But a bond is not a command," he said. "And I choose her."
He turned to Elara. She smiled, soft and sweet, the way she always did when other people were watching. When it was just the two of them at home, that smile disappeared. Then came the cutting words. The casual cruelty.
"I, Damon Thorne, reject you, Lyra Hale, as my mate."
The bond snapped.
That's what it felt like anyway. Something vital inside Lyra just broke apart. Her wolf howled. She gasped, pressing her hand to her chest like that would hold the pieces together. But It didn't help.
Pain rolled through her in waves. Hot, then cold, then hot again. Her vision blurred. Someone in the crowd laughed.
"You're supposed to accept it," Elara called out, her voice dripping with fake concern. "Poor thing, she looks confused."
More laughter.
Lyra wanted to run, wanted to shift and tear out of this hall and never come back. But her father sat in the third row with his new wife, Elara's mother. He caught her eye and shook his head once.
Don't embarrass us more than you already have.
She swallowed the scream building in her throat. "I accept your rejection."
Damon didn't even look relieved. He just turned away, already dismissing her. Elara laced her fingers through his. They walked off the platform together while Lyra stood there, still trying to breathe through the pain.
The royal matchmaker, an elderly woman with silver streaks in her black hair, stepped forward. Her attention was fixed on Elara.
"Elara Hale," she announced. "You have been chosen by the Crown to fulfill the Northern Alliance. You will present yourself as bride to Prince Rowan of the North Pack. The ceremony will take place in seven days."
The crowd went silent.
Elara's smile vanished. "What?"
"The treaty requires a bride from your bloodline," the matchmaker said calmly. "Your family pledged this bond generations ago. It is time to honor that pledge."
"No." Elara pulled away from Damon. "I'm not marrying some broken prince in a frozen wasteland. That's not happening."
Lyra had heard rumors about Prince Rowan. Everyone had too. The oldest son of the Northern Alpha King. Once a powerful warrior and unmatched in combat. Then came the accident five years ago. Now he was supposedly crippled, scarred and hidden away in his castle.
Some people said he was barely alive.
"The alliance must be honored," the matchmaker repeated. "If you refuse, your entire family will face the consequences."
Lyra's father stood up. "Surely there's another way. Elara is already matched with Damon."
"Not relevant to the treaty," the matchmaker cut in. "The North requires a bride. They will have one."
Elara's mother clutched her daughter's hand. "You can't do this. She's too precious and too delicate for that kind of life."
Lyra almost laughed. Delicate. Right. Elara, who'd pushed her down the stairs when she was twelve and told everyone she tripped.
"Then perhaps the other daughter," someone suggested.
Lyra felt a sudden shock.
The matchmaker turned to her for the first time. Her eyes were dark and unreadable. "Lyra Hale. You share the same father and the same bloodline. You could fulfill the treaty in your sister's place."
"Absolutely not," Elara said quickly. "She's not suitable and she's weak. The North would be insulted."
But the matchmaker didn't seem to care. She studied Lyra like she was a puzzle to solve. "Can you shift?"
"Yes."
"Can you read and write?"
"Yes."
"Are you of marriageable age and sound mind?"
Lyra hesitated. Was she sound? After what just happened, after feeling her mate bond shatter into nothing, she wasn't sure. But she nodded anyway. "Yes."
"Then you meet the requirements." The matchmaker looked to Lyra's father. "Choose. One daughter goes north, or the entire family suffers the penalty for breaking a royal treaty."
Her father wouldn't meet her eyes. His wife whispered something in his ear. They both looked at Elara, then at Lyra.
She already knew what they'd choose.
"Lyra will go," her father said.
Just like that. No hesitation. No apology.
The matchmaker nodded. "Very well. Lyra Hale, you will travel to the Northern Territory in three days. You will marry Prince Rowan and seal the alliance. Do you understand?"
Lyra lifted her chin. Her wolf was still whimpering from the rejection, but underneath that pain, something else stirred. Something angry.
"I understand."
"Good." The matchmaker's expression softened slightly. "Prepare yourself, girl. The North is not kind to the weak."
She dismissed Lyra with a wave of her hand.
Lyra walked out of the Royal Matching Hall alone. By the time she reached the outer courtyard, the sun had set. She wrapped her arms around herself and tried not to think about what came next.
A servant girl hurried past. Lyra caught her arm. "What do you know about Prince Rowan?"
The girl looked terrified. "Miss, I shouldn't..."
"Please."
She glanced around, then leaned in close. "They say he's barely human anymore. Crippled from the waist down, covered in scars and his mind is broken too. Cruel when he speaks at all."
Lyra's throat tightened. "Why?"
"He's violent and unpredictable. Most people think he'd be better off dead." She pulled away. "I'm sorry, miss. I have to go."
She disappeared into the castle.
Lyra stood there in the dark, alone, with those words echoing in her head.
Crippled, cruel and better off dead.
That was who she was being sent to marry.
The beast lunged at Lyra with its smoky arms raised high. She threw up another wall of crownfire but it was too late. The creature smashed through and knocked her to the ground. Pain shot through her side. She tasted blood in her mouth.Rowan roared and drove his sword deep into the beast’s back. Kael and Vera attacked from the sides. Their blades cut through smoke again and again. Lyra pushed herself up and sent one final blast of white fire straight into the creature’s chest. The crownfire burned hotter than before. The beast screamed and exploded into black mist that scattered in the wind.Silence fell over the ruins. Lyra breathed hard. Her body ached but she was still standing.Rowan rushed to her side. "Are you hurt?""I am fine," she said. She looked at the burn on his arm. "But you are not."Vera wiped blood from her face. "We need to keep moving. More of them could come."They mounted their horses again and rode toward the coordinates on the old map. The wind howled through t
Rowan did not wait. He kicked his horse forward and swung his sword in a hard arc. The blade cut through the beast’s shoulder. Black smoke sprayed out but the creature did not bleed. It simply reformed and struck back.Its long arm slammed into Rowan’s horse. The animal screamed and fell. Rowan jumped clear just in time and rolled on the ground. He came up with his sword ready."Stay back!" he shouted to the others.The beast roared. It swung again. Rowan dodged but the edge of the smoke arm caught his side. He flew backward and hit the stone wall of the ruins hard. He gasped in pain and pushed himself up slowly. The shadow mark on his chest burned bright under his shirt.Kael and Vera charged from the sides. Their swords flashed. They cut into the beast’s legs and body. Smoke poured out but the creature grew stronger. It whipped its arm and knocked Vera off her feet. She crashed into the dirt and did not get up right away.Lyra felt her crownfire surge inside her. The power pushed ag
The small group left the palace under the cover of early dawn. Rowan led the way on his black horse. Lyra rode beside him. Kael and Vera followed close behind with two other trusted guards. They carried light packs and weapons. No banners. No big escort. Speed mattered more than safety in numbers.They rode hard for the first few hours. The palace walls disappeared behind them as they entered the wild northern lands. Ancient forests rose up around the narrow path. Trees with thick trunks stood like silent watchers. Moss covered old stones that looked like they had once been part of buildings long forgotten."This land feels old," Lyra said quietly to Rowan. "Older than anything in the South."Rowan nodded. His eyes scanned the trees. "These woods remember things. My father used to say the ground here still holds old magic. We must be careful."The air slowly changed as they pushed deeper. At first it was just a chill. Then it grew sharper. Lyra pulled her cloak tighter around her shou
Lyra stared at the glowing symbols on Rowan’s skin. They moved slowly across his chest and shoulders like living light. Silver lines twisted into shapes she had seen before. In her blood memories. In the visions of her parents and the old sanctuary."Rowan," she whispered. "These symbols. I know them."He sat up slowly, still breathing hard from the surge of her power. He looked down at his own body. The symbols continued to glow faintly against the dark mark. "What are they?"Lyra traced one with her finger. It felt warm. "I saw them when I did the blood ritual. In the memories of my mother. They were on the walls of a hidden room. On an old stone tablet."Rowan stood and pulled on his shirt. The symbols faded but did not disappear completely. They left faint silver traces on his skin. "We need to find out what they mean. Now."They moved quickly to the large table in the corner of the chamber. The room was still a mess from the explosion of light. Papers lay scattered on the floor.
The messenger’s words still rang in the chamber. Shadows pouring through the eastern border. Hundreds of them. Coming straight for the palace. But right now, Lyra could only think about Rowan.She closed the door after the man left and turned back to her mate. He stood by the table, fists clenched, staring at the maps. The weight of his secret pressed down on both of them."We do not have time to wait," Lyra said. She walked to him and placed her hand on his chest. "Let me try to heal the mark. Now. Before the shadows get closer."Rowan caught her wrist gently. "It is too dangerous. You saw what happened in training. Your power is still unstable.""I have to try," she replied. "If you die, the Shadow King wins everything. I will not let that happen. Please, Rowan. Trust me."He looked at her for a long moment. Then he nodded slowly and pulled off his shirt. The dark mark stood out clearly on his skin. It stretched from the side of his neck down across his shoulder and chest like twist
For a moment, the powerful king looked like a scared boy. His hands shook as he held the Herald against the wall. The dark poison continued to spread across the floor, hissing and eating away at the stone."Get out," Rowan snarled at the creature. "Get out of this body and tell your king to rot in the shadows."He shoved the Herald hard. The cloaked figure slid down the wall, black liquid pouring from every opening. Vera stepped forward and drove her sword through the Herald’s chest with one clean strike. The body jerked once, then went still. The black eyes faded. The echoing voice stopped. Only silence remained.The poison slowed but did not stop. It left deep black scars on the floor and walls."Clear the hall," Rowan ordered. His voice was rough. "Burn the body outside the gates. And get someone to deal with this mess."Kael and the guards moved quickly. They dragged the Herald’s body away. Vera stayed close to Lyra, watching her with worried eyes, but Lyra only had attention for







