LOGINThe night Lyra Hale’s pack burned to the ground, she saw the Alpha responsible with her own eyes. Kael Draven. The ruthless ruler of the Nightfang Pack. He slaughtered her people, destroyed her home, and left her alive among the ashes. For years, Lyra has lived for one purpose—revenge. But when fate forces her back into Nightfang territory, she discovers a truth far crueler than death. Kael Draven is her fated mate. Bound to the man she has sworn to kill, Lyra searches for proof that he is the monster she remembers. Yet the deeper she digs into the past, the more the story of that night begins to unravel. Witnesses contradict the massacre. Hidden alliances surface. And a powerful rival Alpha begins moving his forces toward war. Because Silvercrest Pack was never meant to survive. It was destroyed to capture something far more valuable. Lyra. As the last heir to a rare Luna bloodline capable of strengthening and stabilizing entire packs, her power could shift the balance of werewolf rule across the territories. Now hunted by enemies and bound to the Alpha she hates most, Lyra must uncover the truth behind the night that destroyed her life. Because the man she believes to be her greatest enemy may be the only one capable of protecting her from the war that is coming.
View MoreThe second explosion hit before Lyra reached the courtyard.
The ground buckled under her bare feet. Burning wood rained from the eastern gate as the blast tore the night open. Sparks scattered across the training ring where lanterns had been hanging only minutes ago, their soft golden glow now drowned beneath smoke and fire. Someone screamed. The sound cut off so suddenly that the air felt wrong. “Lyra—move!” Her mother’s voice snapped through the chaos. Strong hands seized Lyra’s shoulders and shoved her toward the tree line beyond the pack grounds. “Run! Don’t stop running!” Lyra stumbled forward but twisted back immediately, her heart hammering against her ribs. The celebration had started less than an hour ago. There had been music and laughter in the square. The scent of roasted meat drifted from the kitchens while elders argued over old stories. Now the lanterns swung wildly above burning rooftops. “What’s happening?” Lyra demanded. Her mother didn’t answer. She was staring toward the northern ridge. Dark figures were pouring through the shattered gates like a living flood. Black armor. Silver wolf crests. Nightfang. Lyra’s stomach dropped. “No…” her mother breathed, grabbing Lyra’s wrist and dragging her backward. “Inside the forest. Now! Go!.” “But Dad—” “He’ll hold them off,” her mother said quickly, though her grip tightened painfully. “Your father knows what he’s doing.” A roar split the courtyard. Not a roar of fear, but a battle roar. Lyra tore free from her mother’s grip just as her father sprinted across the training field. Mid-stride, his body twisted, bones cracking as his wolf burst free in a flash of silver fur and muscle. He slammed into a Nightfang warrior, sending the larger wolf skidding across the dirt. But more enemies poured through the gate behind them. Too many. The square that had been filled with laughter and celebration moments ago had become a battlefield. Claws ripped through flesh. Wolves collided with bone-shaking force. Someone shouted orders from the west tower, then the platform collapsed in a storm of sparks. Panic clawed its way up Lyra’s throat. “This isn’t a raid,” she said hoarsely. “They’re not stealing supplies.” Her mother met her gaze. For the first time in Lyra’s life She saw fear there. “I know.” Then she shoved Lyra toward the forest. “Run.” Lyra ran. Branches tore at her arms as she sprinted past the last row of houses. Smoke chased her through the trees while the sounds of battle thundered behind her. She barely made it ten steps into the forest when a scream ripped through the night. Her father’s. Lyra froze. Her body turned before her mind could stop it. “Dad!” She sprinted back toward the courtyard. The destruction was worse. The meeting hall burned like a funeral pyre, flames clawing toward the sky. Half the houses had collapsed into blackened ruins. And beside the shattered fountain in the center of the square, her father’s wolf lay lifeless. Lyra’s breath vanished. “No.” A Nightfang warrior stepped over the body and raised his sword. Before the blade could fall, another wolf crashed into him from the side. Her mother. They rolled across the ground in a blur of snapping teeth and flashing claws. Lyra ran toward them, and a figure dropped from the burning roof of the meeting hall. He landed directly in her path. Stone cracked beneath his boots. For a moment, he didn’t move. The fire behind him cast long shadows across the courtyard, but Lyra could still see the black armor and the silver crest across his chest. Not just a warrior. An Alpha. Cold dread flooded her veins. Everyone in the territories knew that armor. Even before he lifted his head, Lyra knew. Kael Draven. The Nightfang Alpha stepped forward slowly, boots crunching over shattered glass and ash. Lyra’s legs locked in place. This was the monster who had destroyed her home. Kael stopped a few feet away and studied her. “You’re the Alpha’s daughter,” he said quietly. It wasn’t a question. Lyra swallowed and forced herself to stand straighter. “If you’re going to kill me,” she said, her voice trembling despite her effort to sound brave, “then do it.” Kael didn’t reach for his weapon. Instead, he glanced past her toward the burning pack grounds. Something flickered across his face. Not triumph. Not cruelty. Anger. “You shouldn’t be here,” he muttered. Lyra blinked. “What?” He stepped closer. Too close. Heat from the burning hall wrapped around them both as his gaze moved across her face like he was memorizing it. Then distant horns sounded from the northern ridge. Nightfang horns. Retreat. Kael’s jaw tightened. “Leave,” he said sharply. Lyra stared at him. “You just destroyed my—” “Run!” Kael snapped. His hand closed around her arm and shoved her toward the forest. Lyra stumbled back in shock. Behind him, Nightfang warriors were already withdrawing across the courtyard as the horns echoed again. The attack was over. Just like that. Lyra looked past Kael at the burning ruins of Silvercrest. “My family—” “Go,” Kael said quietly without turning around. For one frozen moment, she hesitated. Then instinct took over. Lyra ran into the forest. She didn’t stop until the sounds of battle faded into the distance. When she finally collapsed beside a fallen tree, her lungs burned, and her body shook so violently she could barely breathe. Smoke still rose above the trees where Silvercrest had stood for generations. Now it was gone. Her father. Her mother. Her pack. All gone. And the man who destroyed it all had looked straight at her and let her live. Lyra wrapped her arms around herself as the truth settled cold and heavy in her chest. She was the last wolf of Silvercrest. And somewhere behind her in the burning ruins of her home Alpha Kael Draven knew it.“Are you always this comfortable walking into another Alpha’s territory, or is today special?”The question was out before I could hold it back.Aurora turned to face me. She didn't look shocked or even annoyed. She looked like she had been expecting me to react from the moment she arrived.Up close, she was worse. It wasn't that she was trying to be intimidating, it was that she wasn't trying at all. She stood there with a calm that felt like an insult while the rest of us were still dealing with the aftershocks of what we’ve been through for the past few days. She looked like she belonged here, and I hated her for it.“I go where I’m allowed,” she said. Her voice was annoyingly flat.“Allowed?,” I repeated. I let the word rot between us. “That’s a convenient way to put it.”Aurora didn't flinch. “Oh, you disagree?”I stepped closer. I didn't care if Kael was watching. I wanted to see if I could actually rattle her. “I think most people wait for an invitation.”Aurora tilted her head
The training yard was a mess of half-hearted movement. It wasn't the usual roar of bodies hitting the dirt; it was the sound of wolves going through the motions because they didn't know what else to do with their hands. People were talking, but the voices were low, guarded, like they were afraid that speaking too loudly might draw blood. The air didn't just feel different, it felt stagnant, thick with the smell of sweat and the kind of fear that doesn't wash off.Lyra stood by the edge of the ring, her fingers digging into her own arms. She watched Donovan. He was working with one of the kids, showing him how to plant his feet, but his patience was weird. It was too quiet. Usually, Donovan would be barking or shoving, but now he just moved like he was made of glass.Everyone was broken in a way that didn't show on the skin.Kael was off to the side, his head bent toward Rylan. He looked steady enough, but his eyes were never still. They were darting toward the gates, toward the treeli
The quiet didn't last. It never did.Kael let them have a few minutes anyway. It was just enough time for their heart rates to slow and for Lilith to finish the immediate patchwork on Faolan. He stood on the edge of the group, his focus already pulling away from the huddle and reaching toward the boundaries. Something felt wrong, but it wasn't the kind of wrong that came from a sudden threat. It was the skin-crawling sensation of a familiar place being touched by a stranger.He walked toward the nearest boundary marker without a word. He knew every knot in the wood of these trees, every dip in the terrain. When the marker came into view, a deep notch in an old oak. He stopped.It was still there, but it was strange.Kael crouched, his fingers tracing the edge of the cut. The scent was theirs, but the application was different. It had been smoothed over, the edges of the carving pressed down as if someone had spent time studying the mark before replicating it. This wasn't a breach by a
The boundary didn't announce itself with a roar or a sign. It was a subtle, sickening shift in the air pressure, the sudden, familiar scent of damp pine and old earth rising through the soles of their boots. They had spent so long running through dirt that wasn't theirs that the taste of home should have been a relief. Instead, it felt like a mourning.Kael felt the snap of the border against his skin and stopped.Home. The word felt hollow, a ghost of a concept that didn't fit the jagged reality of the blood drying on his hands. It should have meant something, but as he looked at the shadows stretching across the valley, he felt nothing but the weight of what they had dragged back with them.“Here,” he rasped.The word didn't need volume to carry. It cut through the heavy rhythm of their footsteps, and the pack didn't just stop, they surrendered to the earth. They stood like broken things, their bodies finally catching up to the fact that the hunt was paused, even if the danger wasn'
“She’s here again. Look at her, she’s so beautiful. Alpha is so lucky, because I don’t think I can resist a woman like that.”I didn’t mean to listen, but the words carried easily across the training yard, slipping into the quiet spaces between movement and breath. A few of the wolves near the spar
“You keep getting too close.”I meant for it to sound firm, controlled, something that would create distance between us rather than expose how weak that distance already was. But the moment the words left my mouth, I heard how foolish I sounded. The lack of weight, the way it didn’t land the way I
“Do you always question orders you don’t understand, or is that only when it comes to me?” His voice came from behind me, low and steady, but close enough that it settled straight into my spine before I even turned. I didn’t rush the movement. I let the moment sit for a second, then faced him. “
“You’re not even listening.” Lilith’s voice cut through the conversation just as Donovan finished speaking, and I realized I had not caught a single word he said. I looked up at them, all three watching me now. “I am,” I said. Faolan let out a quiet laugh and leaned back slightly. “You’re not.
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