LOGINDust streamed in from the cracks in the ceiling, the wooden beams above groaning under the force of what seemed like a hundred wolves, the air thickened, charged like the moment before a storm breaks.
I couldn’t breathe, every instinct in my body screamed the same thing-Run! Yet I couldn’t move.
The traveller paced around the room, his movements controlled, yet restless.
“That’s not possible,” he yelled, “he shouldn’t be here now, not this soon…”
Another impact hit, this time, closer, causing the entire structure to lurch violently to one side, the far wall cracked, jagged lines racing towards the ceiling.
The chaos outside was no longer distant, I could hear the screams, the orders and the unmistakable sound of bodies hitting the ground.
My pulse roared in my ears, “Why is he here already?” I whispered, my voice unsteady, “what did you do?”
He didn’t answer me, before I could react, he stepped forward and crouched in front of me , closing his fingers around the rope at my wrists, it snapped, my breath hitched as sensation returned to my hands.
“You need to listen to me,” he said his voice low but urgent, “there’s no hiding now, when he gets here, you do not speak unless I tell you to”
My chest tightened. “Why?”
“Because…” he was interrupted by a shadow passing over the doorway, we both turned, the door didn’t open, It exploded.
Wood shattered inward, splinters scattering across the floor as something massive forced its way through. The guards outside hadn’t even slowed it down, a thick silence followed, and then, he stepped in.
For a second, my mind couldn’t understand what I was seeing, he was larger than any wolf I had ever known, even in human form. Power clung to him like a second skin, thick and suffocating. His presence alone forced the air out of my lungs.
Dark hair, Flaming eyes, not gold like an Alpha’s, but something deeper, something older, something that did not belong to the same world.
His gaze fixed on the traveller, then he turned to look at me, recognition flickered, brief, but unmistakable, then it hardened.
“You disobeyed.” The words were quiet.
The traveller didn’t flinch. “I made a choice.”
That was all it took, the King moved, calm and calculated, yet unstoppable.
His hand closed around the traveller’s throat and drove him back into the wall hard enough to crack stone. The impact echoed through the room.
I gasped, the air shifted violently, pressure slamming into my chest.
The traveler didn’t fight, he didn’t even try to struggle.
Blood touched the corner of his mouth as he exhaled slowly. “I wondered how long it would take,” he said.
The King’s grip tightened, “Do not mistake patience for mercy.”
Something in my chest twisted, sharp, unbearable.
“Stop…” The word slipped out before I could think, everything froze.
The King paused, narrowing his gaze at me, but the floor beneath us shuddered violently. Dust and debris rained down. The walls groaned as if straining under an unseen weight.From somewhere below, a roar tore through the building, deep, primal, unstoppable.
The traveller’s eyes met mine for a fraction of a second. In them, I saw everything he had tried to hide: fear, resignation… and a warning.
He hadn’t just betrayed the King. He had unleashed something far worse.
Dust streamed in from the cracks in the ceiling, the wooden beams above groaning under the force of what seemed like a hundred wolves, the air thickened, charged like the moment before a storm breaks.I couldn’t breathe, every instinct in my body screamed the same thing-Run! Yet I couldn’t move.The traveller paced around the room, his movements controlled, yet restless.“That’s not possible,” he yelled, “he shouldn’t be here now, not this soon…”Another impact hit, this time, closer, causing the entire structure to lurch violently to one side, the far wall cracked, jagged lines racing towards the ceiling. The chaos outside was no longer distant, I could hear the screams, the orders and the unmistakable sound of bodies hitting the ground.My pulse roared in my ears, “Why is he here already?” I whispered, my voice unsteady, “what did you do?”He didn’t answer me, before I could react, he stepped forward and crouched in front of me , closing his fingers around the rope at my wrists,
Dust streamed in from the cracks in the ceiling, the wooden beams above groaning under the force of what seemed like a hundred wolves, the air thickened, charged like the moment before a storm breaks.I couldn’t breathe, every instinct in my body screamed the same thing-Run! Yet I couldn’t move.The traveller paced around the room, his movements controlled, yet restless.“That’s not possible,” he yelled, “he shouldn’t be here now, not this soon…”Another impact hit, this time, closer, causing the entire structure to lurch violently to one side, the far wall cracked, jagged lines racing towards the ceiling. The chaos outside was no longer distant, I could hear the screams, the orders and the unmistakable sound of bodies hitting the ground.My pulse roared in my ears, “Why is he here already?” I whispered, my voice unsteady, “what did you do?”He didn’t answer me, before I could react, he stepped forward and crouched in front of me , closing his fingers around the rope at my wrists,
Consciousness returned in fragments in a dark room, there was nothing but the dull rhythm of hooves striking earth and the cold bite of air against my skin; my arms tired behind my back, rough rope cutting my wrists, the scent of unfamiliar wolves. The memory rushed back all at once; the gardens, the well, hands grabbing me, the cloth over my face. I gasped for breath and quickly calmed down–panicking wouldn't help me now.Slowly, and carefully, I shifted my hand in a bid to loosen the rope, but the more I tried, the further the fibres dug into my skin; then it hit me, struggling was pointless and so was calling for help.I held still and listened. At first it was nothing, then a faint sound reached me through the walls, low voices, I couldn’t recognise any of them, nor the scent. My stomach tightened at the thought of what they might do to me, someone had planned this I was sure, another thought followed quickly behind it, why me?The sound of footsteps approaching the door interru
The moment the guards left, the strength drained out of my spine.I gripped the edge of the war table before my knees gave way. The maps scattered beneath my hands, parchment crumpling as a violent pulse tore through my chest–Pain.Not mine, Hers.A sharp, sudden jolt; like a rope yanked tight between us.I inhaled sharply, Impossible.“I rejected her,” I said under my breath, forcing the words into the empty room as if speaking them could make them true. “The bond should be gone.” But It wasn’t, I could still feel her. Faint, distant, but alive.Every heartbeat… I knew it. Every flicker of fear…it echoed inside my ribs. My wolf paced restlessly beneath my skin, claws scraping against bone, refusing to settle.You failed, it seemed to growl.I slammed my fist into the table and the wood cracked under the impact. A rejection from an Alpha should sever the mate bond completely, It always had, for generations, what had changed?Yet the thread between us still held, I closed my eyes, and
I woke to a heartbeat that was not my own. I kept getting flashbacks of the events from the night before, perhaps, that could be the reason why sleep had abandoned me. The room was quiet, filled only with the soft breathing of the other girls. The words of the traveller from the night before continued to ring in my head, and somewhere inside the territory, Alpha Xander was awake, I could still feel him, so much, I didn’t notice someone had walked in.“Water for the Lady’s bath,” the head servant said, bringing me back to reality, placing an empty pail into my hands. “The inner wells are reserved. Use the courtyard well.” My fingers tightened around the handle. “Yes.”The courtyard roared with activity; sparring wolves, shouting commands, metal striking metal. I kept close to the wall as I walked, eyes lowered, wishing I could disappear into the stone. No one spoke to me, but I felt it. The looks, the quiet hostility. A rejected mate was a bad omen. I reached the well and wrapped the
There was an air of confusion in the crowd, wolves looked between me and the platform, unease rippling through the crowd. A rejection from an alpha should sever the mate bond instantly. Everyone knew it, yet the air still felt wrong. On the platform, Alpha Xander remained bent forward, one hand braced against the stone, as though steadying himself, in one swift movement, he stood straight.Selene stepped closer to the Alpha, sliding her arm through his as if nothing unusual had happened. Her smile was soft, composed, perfectly measured.“An emotional backlash,” she said lightly, addressing the crowd before anyone else could. “The Moon resists sudden severance. It happens.”The elders exchanged uncertain glances.I was still kneeling where the guards had left me. The bond throbbed faintly in my chest , not broken, not gone. Just… buried.Alpha Xander did not look at me.One of the elders frowned. “It should have severed.”Xander’s jaw tightened, “And it did!” A small pause, “Remove







