INICIAR SESIÓNLyra couldn't sleep.
The claw marks on her door haunted her every time she closed her eyes. Four deep gouges. A warning and a promise.
You're not safe here.
She sat by her window, watching the moon climb higher over the mountains. The palace had gone quiet hours ago. No footsteps in the halls. No voices. Just silence and cold stone walls pressing in from every side.
A sound broke through the stillness.
Faint and rhythmic.
Lyra stood and pressed closer to the window. The noise came from somewhere below, from the lower courtyards she'd been told were off limits. Ruins, Clara had said. Dangerous. Nobody goes there.
Which meant someone was there right now.
Lyra grabbed her cloak and slipped out of her room. She left the chair wedged under the door handle behind. If someone broke in while she was gone, at least she'd know.
The corridors were dark. Lyra moved quietly, keeping to the edges, listening for guards.
Nothing.
She found a servants' staircase that spiraled down, down, down. The air grew colder with each step. Damper. The walls here were older, rougher. This part of the palace had been built centuries ago, before the current structure rose above it.
The staircase ended at a narrow door. Lyra tested the handle. Unlocked.
She pushed it open carefully.
The lower courtyard spread out before her, overgrown and broken. Crumbled walls, fallen columns, weeds pushing through cracked stone and moonlight turned everything silver and ghostly.
And in the center, surrounded by rubble, a group of wolves trained.
Lyra counted six of them. Five men, one woman. They moved fast, striking at each other with controlled violence. Real combat, not the careful sparring she'd seen in the main training yards. These wolves fought like they expected to die if they lost.
She should have left. Should have gone back to her room and pretended she never saw this.
Instead, she stepped closer.
A twig snapped under her boot.
Every wolf froze. Six pairs of eyes locked on her. Then they moved as one, surrounding her before she could even think about running.
"Well, well." The woman spoke first. She was tall, muscular, with scars running down her left arm. "Look what wandered into our den."
"I didn't mean to interrupt," Lyra said quickly. "I heard a sound. I was curious."
"Curious." One of the men laughed. "That's what gets people killed in this palace."
The woman held up her hand for silence. She studied Lyra with sharp green eyes. "You're the substitute bride. The southern girl."
"Lyra."
"I know who you are." The woman circled her slowly. "Question is, what are you doing down here? These ruins are forbidden."
"I could ask you the same thing."
The woman smiled. It wasn't friendly. "We have permission to be here. You don't."
"From who?"
"That's not your concern."
Lyra lifted her chin. "Then neither is why I'm here."
The wolves exchanged glances. One of the men stepped forward. He was older than the others, gray threading through his dark hair. "She's got spirit. I'll give her that."
"Spirit doesn't mean trustworthy," the woman said.
"No. But it means she might survive." The older man looked at Lyra. "You've been in the palace five days. In that time, your clothes were sabotaged, your food poisoned, and someone left claw marks on your door. Yet here you are, sneaking around in the middle of the night instead of cowering in your room."
Lyra's stomach dropped. "How do you know about that?"
"We know everything that happens in this palace." He crossed his arms. "We also know you've been demanding training. Access to weapons. A purpose beyond being decorative."
"Who are you?"
"Rebels," the woman said bluntly. "Wolves who refused to bow to a usurper king."
The word hung in the cold air. Rebels. Speaking openly about defying the king was treason. Punishable by death.
"Why are you telling me this?" Lyra asked.
"Because you have a choice to make." The older man gestured to the ruined courtyard. "You can go back upstairs, pretend you never saw us, and wait for the next assassin to succeed. Or you can stay. Train with us. Learn to protect yourself."
"You'd train me? Why?"
"Because we've been watching you." The scarred woman moved closer. "The way you carry yourself. The way you don't break even when everyone expects you to. You're stronger than you look."
"I'm not strong. I can barely hold my wolf form for more than an hour."
"Endurance can be built," the older man said. "But the core of what makes a warrior? That's something you're born with. And you have it."
Lyra wanted to believe him. Wanted to believe she was more than the rejected mate, the substitute bride, the girl nobody wanted.
"If I agree," she said slowly, "what happens?"
"We train you. Every night. Down here where no one will see." The woman's expression was serious. "It won't be easy. We'll push you until you think you'll break. But if you survive, you'll be able to defend yourself when the next attack comes."
"And it will come," the older man added. "The king wants you gone. He'll keep trying until he succeeds."
Lyra thought of the claw marks. The bitter taste of poisoned eggs. King Aldric's cold smile and colder threats.
She thought of Rowan too. The way he'd stood when he thought no one was watching. The strength hidden beneath his careful mask.
"I'll do it," she said.
The woman smiled. A real smile this time. "Good. We start now." She tossed Lyra a wooden practice sword. "Let's see what you're made of."
The next hour was brutal.
They tested her speed, her reflexes, her ability to take a hit and keep moving. Lyra fell more times than she could count. Her muscles screamed. Sweat soaked through her clothes despite the cold.
But she got back up. Every single time.
Finally, the older man called for a break. Lyra bent over, gasping for air. Her hands shook.
"Not bad," the scarred woman said. "For a first night."
"I'm Kael," the older man said. "This is Vera." He pointed to the scarred woman. "The others will introduce themselves as you earn their trust."
"Earn it?"
"Trust is currency here." Kael's expression grew serious. "Which brings us to something you need to know."
The other wolves had gone quiet and watching.
"We don't just train for ourselves," Kael continued. "We have a purpose. A leader we follow even though the world thinks he's broken and useless."
Lyra's breath caught.
"Prince Rowan," Kael said quietly. "He's not what he pretends. The wheelchair, the weakness, the isolation. It's all an act. He's been building this rebellion for five years, gathering loyal wolves, preparing for the day he can take back what was stolen from him."
Lyra thought of Rowan walking in the shadows. Standing tall and strong. The conversation she'd overheard about taking back the throne.
"You know," she whispered.
"We more than know." Vera stepped forward. "We serve him. Every one of us would die for him. And now we're offering to train you, not just to keep you alive, but because he needs allies he can trust."
"He rejected me."
"He rejected everyone," Kael said. "To protect them. The king kills anyone who gets close to Rowan. But you're here anyway. Trapped by a treaty. Which means you're a target whether Rowan wants you or not."
The weight of it settled over Lyra. She'd stumbled into something far bigger than a forced marriage. A rebellion. A fight for the throne. Wolves willing to die for a prince the world had written off.
"Does he know you're training me?" she asked.
Kael and Vera exchanged a look.
"Not yet," Kael admitted. "But he will.”
Lyra rode through the palace gates with her heart still racing from the meeting with Seraphine. The weight of the queen’s words pressed on her like a stone. The prophecy. The one who stands between worlds. She had barely spoken on the ride back, her mind turning over every look, every pause, every careful word exchanged in that guarded hall. The alliance was forming, but at what cost? Seraphine’s demand that Rowan stay behind still burned inside her. She needed to see him. She needed to feel his arms around her and know he was still fighting.The courtyard was quieter than usual. Servants moved quickly, heads down, avoiding her eyes. The war had changed everything. Fear hung in the air like smoke. She dismounted quickly and handed the reins to a waiting stable boy, then hurried toward their chambers. Her boots echoed on the stone floors. Every step felt heavier. She had been gone only a few hours, but it felt like days.When she pushed open the door to their private rooms, the silence
Lyra stepped into the guarded hall with her heart hammering against her ribs. The air felt thick, heavy with suspicion and old power. Torches burned along the walls, casting long, flickering shadows that danced across the faces of the Silver Court nobles. They watched her like hawks, their eyes sharp and untrusting. Every step she took echoed in the silence. She could feel their judgment pressing down on her, heavy as stone.Rowan had wanted to come with her. He had argued until his voice grew hoarse, but in the end the weakness in his body had won. He stayed behind at the palace, the shadow mark draining him more each day. The memory of his tired eyes as she left him made her chest ache. She was doing this for him. For all of them. But walking into this hall alone felt like stepping into a cage.Seraphine waited at the far end of the long table. The Silver Queen sat straight and regal, her silver hair braided with threads of moonlight. Her eyes, cold and calculating, fixed on Lyra th
Lyra watched Rowan as he slowly lowered himself into the chair at the head of the war table. His movements were careful, like every breath hurt. The shadow mark was hidden beneath his tunic, but she knew it was there, spreading, eating away at him from the inside. She wanted to tell him to go back to bed. To rest. But she knew he would refuse. He always did when it came to protecting their people.The large chamber was filled with maps, half-burned reports, and the heavy scent of candle wax and tension. Rebel leaders, clan elders, and a few wary representatives from distant packs sat around the long wooden table. Their faces were drawn with exhaustion and fear. The war had taken its toll on everyone, but none more visibly than the man beside her.Rowan reached under the table and found her hand. His fingers were cold, but he squeezed hers gently, trying to reassure her. She squeezed back harder, her heart aching. She could feel how much strength it took for him just to sit here. Yet h
Lyra stood on the ridge overlooking the battlefield, the cold wind whipping her cloak around her legs. Smoke still rose from the villages that had fallen the day before. Rowan stood beside her, his hand resting on the hilt of his sword. She could see the effort it took for him to stay upright. The shadow mark had spread further across his chest, and every breath seemed to cost him. Yet he was here, refusing to stay behind in the palace while their people fought and died. "I should be down there with them," he said quietly, his voice rough. His fingers brushed hers, a small touch that carried everything they could not say out loud. Fear. Love. The quiet terror that one of these days he might not be able to stand beside her at all. "You are exactly where you need to be," Lyra replied. She turned to him, searching his face. The exhaustion in his eyes broke her heart every time. "We fight smarter now. Not harder. You taught me that." He gave her a small, tired smile that did not reac
Lyra paced the small hidden chamber beneath the palace, her footsteps echoing softly against the stone. The healer’s words from the night before still rang in her ears. Only the Shadow King can remove the mark now. She had not slept. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw Rowan’s pale face, the black veins spreading across his skin, and the fear in his eyes that he tried so hard to hide from her. The weight of it pressed on her chest until she could barely breathe.She stopped near the small table where maps and old scrolls lay scattered. Her fingers brushed over one of the symbols from the sanctuary. Light and shadow. That was what she carried inside her. That was what the Shadow King wanted. But she would not give him Rowan. She would not give him anything.The door opened quietly. Rowan stepped in first, moving slower than usual. He tried to hide the pain, but she saw the way he favored his left side and how his hand pressed lightly against his chest. Kael and Vera followed close
Lyra sat on the edge of the bed, holding Rowan’s hand as if letting go would make him slip away forever. The room was quiet except for his uneven breathing and the occasional crackle from the hearth. His skin was pale, almost gray under the flickering light, and the shadow mark had spread further across his chest and up his neck. It looked like living darkness crawling beneath his skin. Every few minutes his body would twitch, and a soft groan would escape his lips. She had not slept. She could not. Not while he lay there fighting a battle inside his own body.She brushed her fingers gently across his forehead. It was damp with sweat. "I am here," she whispered, even though he was only half awake. "I am right here with you."Rowan’s eyes fluttered open. They were cloudy with pain, but when they found hers, something soft and warm flickered in them. "You should be resting," he said, his voice barely above a whisper. He tried to squeeze her hand but his fingers barely moved. "You cannot







