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The Crimson Harvest

Auteur: Ak
last update Date de publication: 2026-05-31 16:33:52

The heavy iron gates hadn't just opened; they had groaned under the sheer weight of the bloodlust pouring out from the Obsidian Hold. Below us, the valley became a churning vortex of silver steel and dark fur. The thousands of elite Southern Peacekeepers who had stood in perfect, mechanical ranks moments ago were now scattered like sheep before a pack of starving winter wolves.

Silas didn't stay on the ramparts to admire the carnage.

With a roar that ripped through the heavy, smoke-laden air,
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    Back in the world of stone and blood, the morning light hit the Gilded City with a clarity that felt like a baptism. The bruised violet haze had vanished, replaced by a sky of such crystalline, pale blue that it hurt the eyes to look up.Kaelen stood on the palace balcony, her hands gripping the cold marble. Beside her, the remaining generals of the Northern and Southern hosts stood in a jagged, silent line. They were waiting for a sign—a message, a miracle, a command—from the throne room. But the throne room was empty.The heavy doors were locked from the inside, and when the guards finally forced them open, they didn't find a Queen or an Alpha. They found a chamber bathed in the soft, fading embers of a fire that had burned hotter than anything the world had ever seen. The obsidian collar sat on the dais, shattered into a thousand harmless fragments of black glass. The air in the room didn't smell of ozone or death; it smelled of mountain air and the faint, lingering scent of pine.

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Silent Threshold

    There was no pain. There was no transition of darkness. There was only the feeling of weightlessness, as if the very marrow of my bones had turned into light.I was standing—or perhaps simply existing—in a place that was not a place. It was a threshold, a shimmering, endless field of silver grass beneath a sky that held both the stars and the sun. It was the space between the worlds, the quiet intermission between the last breath and whatever came next.Silas was there, too. He was human, in the way he had always been when the world was quiet and the weight of the crown was set aside. He stood a few paces away, his silhouette sharp against the silver horizon. When he turned to look at me, there were no scars on his face. The armor, the burden of the throne, the cold, jagged history of the North—it had all been stripped away."Elara," he said. His voice was not the gravelly roar of the Alpha, but the soft, steady rhythm of a heart at rest.I walked toward him, my own spirit feeling lig

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    The journey back to the Northern Hold was not a march; it was a funeral procession for a world that didn't know it was already dead. The sky had turned a bruised, permanent violet, and the sun—once a symbol of the Council’s false hope—now hung in the heavens like a cataract-clouded eye.The vanguard rode with us, three thousand strong. They were silent, their faces grim, their armor adorned with the black banners of the Eclipse. They knew what we were doing. Word had leaked from the palace—the Conductor’s influence had ensured that, a final, sadistic twist of the knife. The people of the capital hadn't rioted. They hadn't begged. They had simply shuttered their homes, waiting for the end.I rode at the head of the column, my hand resting on the pommel of a sword that felt like lead in my grip. I was no longer the conduit, no longer the vessel. I was a hollow shell, the void-taint having stripped away the last of my mortal energy to feed the ley-lines. My hair, once dark, had turned th

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    The desert was a vast, shimmering expanse of dunes that seemed to stretch into eternity, a stark, golden antithesis to the granite and frost of the North. Our caravan, stripped down to a swift-moving cadre of scouts and diplomatic envoys, cut a solitary path through the heat. Silas rode at my side, his eyes scanning the horizon with the relentless, predatory patience of a wolf stalking a desert cat.We were days from the border when the first signs of the Eastern Trade Union appeared—not as an army, but as a sprawling, tented city that seemed to rise out of the heat haze like a mirage. The Easterners were masters of the arid wastes, their influence built on rare minerals and the secret routes that kept the world’s metallurgy fueled.When we reached their perimeter, we were not met with pikes or defensive wards. We were met with silence.The encampment was a labyrinth of silk and woven reed. As we dismounted, a figure stepped from the largest pavilion—a man wrapped in robes of deep ind

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Depth of the Black Stone

    The lower dungeons of the High Council’s palace were built from a dense, volcanic basalt known simply as the black stone. Unlike the pristine white marble that coated the surface world, these subterranean vaults were designed to absorb all light, ensuring that any prisoner locked within their depth

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Weight of Iron Keys

    The keys to the agricultural valleys were surprisingly heavy. Made of raw, unpolished iron rather than the delicate filigree gold favored by the High Council, they felt solid and cold against my palm. As I held them, the permanent star-silver bracer on my right arm gave a quiet, satisfied thrum, it

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Breaking of White Stone

    The iron-reinforced gates of the Golden City did not hold.Silas hit the center of the massive barricade first. In his colossal, nine-foot shadow-wolf form, his sheer momentum was equivalent to a runaway siege engine hurtling down from the northern peaks. The star-silver plating forged over his hea

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Golden Cage

    The smell of expensive cigar smoke and desperation always filled my father’s study, but today, it was suffocating. I stood by the mahogany door, my fingers digging into the palms of my hands until I felt the sharp sting of my own nails."You can't be serious," I whispered, my voice trembling. "Fath

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