INICIAR SESIÓNElira
The horse was brought forward moments after the deal was struck—a towering black stallion, its muscles slick with sweat and moonlight. It tossed its head, snorting like it could smell what I was, like even the beast was smart enough to be afraid.
The Alpha approached me. “Can you ride?”
“Yes,” I said.
He waited. I didn’t move. So he stepped forward, large hands settling on my waist—calloused, hot even through the chill of the air and the layers of my tunic. I didn’t resist, but I didn’t help him, either.
He lifted me easily. Set me on the horse as if I weighed nothing at all.
Then he swung up behind me in one smooth motion, and suddenly his chest was at my back, solid and warm. His breath ghosted past my ear as the Beta handed him the reins.
“Let’s move.”
The pyre remained behind us, untouched. The crowd parted without a word. Some watched with pity. Others with barely hidden rage. I kept my eyes forward as we passed, back straight, chin high.
It wasn’t dignity. It was armor.
The forest swallowed us in seconds. Torches faded to flickers between the trees. The night was dense and damp, the kind that clung to the skin and filled the lungs. His heartbeat thudded behind me, steady—but not calm.
We rode in silence, the only sound the creak of leather and the hush of hooves on frostbitten earth.
Then—
“What’s your name?”
I didn’t answer right away. His voice was too gentle. It didn’t match the way I’d been bought like cattle in the dark.
“Elira,” I said. “My name is Elira.”
“I’m Caelan.”
I let it hang there. Then:
“It doesn’t matter.”
A pause. “What doesn’t?”
“Your name. Mine. Any of it.”
“You think I’ll die soon,” he said.
“I know you will.” I turned slightly. Just enough for him to see the outline of my face in the pale light. “Might as well not get attached.”
He gave a short laugh, low and bitter. “Is that a threat?”
“No,” I said. “A pattern.”
His hands tightened around the reins. But his voice, when it came, was quieter.
“Then let’s hope I’m the one who breaks it.”
“They all say that.”
The road widened as the forest thinned, revealing a long stretch of frost-lit dirt. Wind tugged at my cloak.
I felt his wolf pacing under his skin. The scent of me did that to Alphas. Drew out their instincts. Drove them toward ruin.
They always thought they could control it. Hold it at bay. But it never lasted. Five graves behind me proved that.
Caelan’s territory rose out of the mist like a breath held too long. No patrols stopped us. No sentries challenged the rider beside me. He ruled this land—and they must’ve known he was returning with a curse on horseback.
Cabins emerged in clusters. Smoke curled from chimneys. Firelight flickered behind shuttered windows.
We passed through the center of the village, and I could feel them—Eyes. Some curious. Some cautious. Some already certain of what I was.
“They always stare,” I murmured without meaning to.
Caelan’s voice came low behind me. “Maybe they’ve never seen anything like you.”
I frowned. “You don’t have to lie.”
“I’m not,” he said. “Think about it. Have you?”
“No.”
Because I hadn’t. Not my glassy eyes. Not my pure white hair that grew too fast and refused to darken. Not my skin that bruised too easily and healed too clean.
I looked like something born of moonlight and misfortune. People called it beauty. I called it warning.
Caelan guided the horse toward a long lodge near the village edge—dark timber, iron-bound doors, carved runes across the beams. The air smelled of cedar, meat, and warmth.
A woman stepped out as we approached. Broad-shouldered. Gray braid. Wrinkled scowl. Her eyes narrowed when she saw me.
Caelan dismounted and reached up. I didn’t want his hands on me again—but I also didn’t want to fall. I let him lift me, his touch careful.
“Your wolves won’t like me here,” I muttered as my feet touched down.
“They don’t have to like you,” he said. “They just have to leave you alone.”
“This is Lira,” he told the woman.
Not Elira. Just Lira. Shorter. Safer. Easier to forget if it came to that.
Her gaze dragged over me once, disapproving but not cruel. Then she sighed. “I’ll heat the bath.”
Caelan nodded. “And clothes. Something warm.”
Mirra—he’d called her that—led me inside. Through the main lodge, past firelit chambers, into a quieter hall lined in carved wood and tapestries. She opened a heavy door to reveal a bathing room.
A copper tub stood in the center, kettles of water already steaming into it. Lavender and mint curled in the air like memory. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d smelled anything that wasn’t blood or ash.
Mirra didn’t speak. She helped me out of the cloak, unlaced the tunic, then wrapped a thick blanket around my shoulders as the water finished heating. Her hands were brisk, firm, unafraid.
“You’ll want to soak,” she said.
I didn’t argue.
When she turned away, I slipped into the bath. The heat hit like fire—then folded around me like balm. I sank low, chin touching the surface, steam rising around me in soft white ghosts.
For the first time in a very long time, I felt clean. Not safe. Not whole. But clean.
Mirra brought fresh clothes. A soft tunic. Warm pants. Socks and boots. She didn’t ask about the bruises. Or the scar that was steadily fading where the last Alpha had bitten my shoulder.
She didn’t comment on my scent. Or the way the air seemed to still when I breathed too deep. I liked her for that.
When I stepped into the hallway, dressed and dry, Caelan was waiting. He handed me a mug—warm, spiced, rich with something sweet and dark.
I took it without a word. For the first time in a long while, I didn’t feel like a prisoner. But I wasn’t free, either.
I was just between. A breath before the break. A moment before the next name would go still in the ground.
And Caelan?
He was either the last mistake I’d make…
Or the one who’d make me wish I hadn’t survived the first.
My dear readers,Thank you.Truly—thank you for walking through this world with me. For following Elira, Ronan, and Caelan through curses, war, prophecy, heartbreak, found family, and love powerful enough to reshape realms.This story began as an idea about fate, but somewhere along the way it became a story about chosen bonds, healing after ruin, and building light after surviving darkness. And none of it would have meant as much without you reading, commenting, supporting, and believing in these characters with me.Because of you, Shadowhearth lives.And… as you may have noticed, I left a few doors open. 👀Brad’s mate has arrived. The twins have a mysterious destiny. The Flame, Moon, and Earth trinity may not be finished yet.So if you would like to see this world continue—please let me know.The best way to do that is by leaving a rating for the book and dropping me a comment with your rating (I see those comments much more easily there). Tell me if you’d like a continuation, seque
EliraThe twins were trying to summon a dragon out of mud.At least, that was Gregor’s explanation.“It needs horns,” he insisted, crouched in the grass with his hands coated to the wrists in dirt, dark hair falling into his eyes in the exact unruly way Ronan’s did when he refused to tie it back.“It needs wings,” Sylvie corrected with all the authority of a child half convinced she had been born older than her brother.She punctuated this by accidentally making her fingers glow.Again.Gold light flickered around her knuckles, brightening with her frustration until the mud dragon shimmered as if blessed by moonlight.Neither child found this remotely unusual.I did.Every time.Gregor, meanwhile, had inherited his father’s infernal streak in ways both fascinating and exhausting. When angry, the air around him heated perceptibly. When excited, shadows occasionally bent in ways they should not. Two weeks earlier he had opened what Ronan swore was a “very small and harmless” portal insi
EliraThe room that would become the nursery had once been a storage chamber.Caelan had said this with such pride you would have thought he had personally discovered buried treasure rather than cleared out old ledgers, winter furs, and cracked training shields to make space for two unborn children.Now sunlight spilled through widened windows where heavy shutters used to be, turning dust motes into gold. Fresh pine boards lined one wall where new shelving had been built. A carved cradle sat half-finished near the hearth, the wood still raw in places because Ronan insisted on doing some of the carving himself despite repeatedly proving he had all the delicate finesse of a battle axe.I stood in the doorway watching the two of them argue over a cradle rail.Again.“It’s crooked,” Ronan said.“It is not crooked.”“It leans.”“It has character.”“It has a tilt.”Caelan stepped back, folded his arms, and gave the cradle an offended look as if betrayed by lumber.I laughed before I meant to
EliraPeace, I learned, did not arrive with trumpets.It came in quieter ways.In doors left open.In laughter drifting from cabins at dusk.In the absence of people flinching when footsteps approached.In mornings where no one asked who might attack before nightfall.For so long survival had been measured by what we escaped. Now, somehow, life was beginning to be measured by what we were building.And that felt stranger than war ever had.The days after learning of the twins settled into a rhythm so ordinary and miraculous I found myself guarding it almost superstitiously, as though naming my happiness too boldly might frighten it away.Shadowhearth no longer felt like Caelan’s pack reluctantly absorbing Ronan’s displaced wolves.It had become one living thing.Cabins once half-empty now held children racing between porches, borrowed dishes exchanged without asking, and old loyalties dissolving in the practical intimacy of shared life. Former wasteland wolves worked alongside Shadowhe
EliraI lasted perhaps ten minutes after the ceremony before June’s expression unnerved me enough that celebration became impossible.I tried to stay present. I tried to let the congratulations wash over me, to let myself absorb the gravity of what had just happened in the great hall. People pressed my hands and offered blessings. Elders who had once regarded me with suspicion now bowed their heads in acknowledgment. The room pulsed with music, voices, and the strange, beautiful disorder of a people learning how to be one.But beneath all of it, something in me felt unsettled.Not frightened.Heightened.As though the surge of magic that had nearly dropped me to my knees during the rite had left some current still moving quietly beneath my skin.And every time I looked across the room, June was watching me.Not casually.Studying me.It did not escape either of my mates.Ronan noticed first, because Ronan noticed everything where I was concerned, though he often pretended otherwise. H
EliraBy the time we entered the great hall, word had already outrun us.I felt it in the way every conversation softened as we crossed the threshold, in the way bodies shifted aside not out of fear or obligation but with something closer to reverence, though I still wasn’t sure I knew what to do with being looked at that way.The hall itself had changed in the short time since breakfast.Or perhaps it had always been prepared for something like this and I had simply never imagined standing at the center of it.Long tables had been pushed back to clear the middle of the room. Torches burned in iron brackets along the stone walls, their flames casting a warm gold across the old carved beams overhead. Fresh pine boughs had been woven along the pillars in the old Shadowhearth style, but among them hung braided leather cords adorned with bone and feathers—tokens I recognized from the wasteland wolves, markers of survival, kinship, and vows kept under impossible conditions.Two worlds.Int
CaelanThe door shut with a quiet click, sealing us inside the strategy room.No ears. No whispers. No distractions.Just five men I trusted with my life—and now, maybe with something far bigger.Ven stood to my left, arms crossed, tension etched into his jaw. On my right sat Hank and Samson. Acros
RonanThe air shifted the second we stepped back through the portal—biting cold, metallic wind, and the ever-present hum of desperation that lived in the Wastelands. It crawled up your spine and whispered that you were already dead. I exhaled through my nose and watched the breath freeze in the air
EliraThe halls twisted like smoke as Maela led me back through them—no footsteps, no echo, just the silent hush of stone that somehow felt alive. My body hummed. My skin still burned faintly from Ash’s touch, from the memory of being pressed to him, moved by him, seen.I shouldn’t have liked it.B
AshShe sat across from me like a queen in exile, all sharp edges and flickering defiance. The red velvet hugged her in places her pride didn’t want to acknowledge, but I saw it anyway—the way her fingers trembled just once before lifting her goblet. The way her eyes scanned everything in this room







