Serena POV (as Kael)
Before it was time for me, the metallic taste of blood hung in the air. The sparring ring at Dravenhold had seen that a hundred times over-after sweat, claws, and fists have sunk pride into the soil. Today, the scent was thicker to the choking point, with already rust-stained sand under our boots from previous fights. I, too, installed bone-deep among the other first-years in gray stone benches encircling the pit, fists clenched so tight that my knuckles ached. The crowd was rattling, buzzing like a swarm of hornets, eager for the next display. Entertainment to them; survival for me. "Next"!The instructor's bark cut through that din. My stomach lurched when I realized he was watching
me. For one heartbeat, I could not move. Then I swallowed, forced air into my lungs, and stood. My legs felt heavy as I descended the steps into the ring. Boots sank into packed earth, the ground trembling faintly from the echoes of the last clash. I rolled my shoulders as if to mimic Kael's casual swagger. He had to look like he belonged, like pain wasn't touching him. No weakness. No hesitation. Then my opponent followed suit, dropping into the ring with the weight of a predator. A senior wolf. Broader by half, arms corded with muscle, scar slicing from jaw to collarbone like a carved warning. Instantly, the whispers around us swelled."Not a fair match."
"He'll crush the kid." "Maybe the brat needs crushing."This was not random. Seniors don't usually spar against first-years. This is a test. A punishment.
Someone wanted me broken-or exposed.The senior cracked his neck and bared his teeth in a grin that didn't touch his eyes. "Ready?"
There was no way I could betray the intent of the mouth with words. I only raised my fists.
The gong slammed.
He came at me like a storm-claws flashing, fists blurring. I ducked, blocked another, tried to
guard against my ribs, but it hit me. White pain flared in and stole my breath. I stumbled, and laughter of the crowd rumbled like thunder in my ears. The concealment spell pulsed and flickered from the force. My heart was swelling, threatening to flicker. Not now. Hold. I countered, knuckles cracking against his jaw. He barely flinched. His grin widened, amused."Fast," he said, circling me like prey. "But gonna be enough"
Down came the next attack-all low and penetrating with my stabbing out at legs. I crashed
down, onto my side, cheek scraping against dirt as the ring shrieked with jeers and shouts. Above me rose the senior, his dominance radiating, daring me to stay down. I was tested and tempted to acquiesce to it. To fold, juicing itself right before the crack of that spell. But Serena couldn't come into being here. Only Kael."No."
I breathed.
With an elbow smash into his throat, I surged up. He staggered, coughed, and shock crossed
his face. Forward I pressed, my fists and elbows striking wildly, everything a gamble between survival and exposure. My ribs burned, my arms shook, but I didn't stop. Whispers cut through the noise."Still standing, that one? Kael?"
"Impossible..." "No one lasts this long."The senior's eyes narrowed, fury in place of a grin. With a snarl, he lunged, sweeping me down
hard. The back of my neck hit the earth, breath wheezing off. Heat blistered into my chest, and for one terrifying heartbeat, my body betrayed me-shoulders narrowing, chest softening. The shadow of Serena flickered across Kael.Panic exploded. I bite the inside of my cheek hard for blood, copper filling my mouth. The pain
anchored me, forced the weave tight again.The senior raised his fist for the final strike.
Instinct roared, then I rolled, caught his arm, and with desperate twist drove my fist into his
temple with all the energy I had left.He dropped.
Silence crashed over the arena. For a second, no one moved. Then the crowd erupted in
shouts, gasps, disbelief.The instructor strode in, checking for the limp form of the senior. "Match over!" His voice carried
sharp authority, but even he looked faintly unsettled as the senior was dragged out of the ring.My knees wobbled after such action, mouth rasping each breath against the ribs, my knuckles
streaked with blood, and it burned my eyes with sweat. But I stayed standing.Across the ring, I could feel that-eyes on me.
Darius Blackthorn.
He stood with his arms folded, expression carved from stone. Not mocking, not dismissing.
Studying.Heat flooded me-fear, fury, something even more dangerous that made my heart stutter.
The whispers didn't end.
"Too much stamina for a first-year..."
"There's no way that was luck." "Something's off about Kael."I clenched my jaw, forcing my face into blankness, and walked out of the ring. Each step was a
battle not to be limp, not to let the spell slip.But Darius's gaze followed, burning between my shoulder blades all the way back to the
benches.The other recruits' laughter rang sharp in my ears by the time we reached the dorms. Some
mocked, a few muttered in awe, while others kept staring at me as though I were something unnatural.I lay on my bunker long after the torches dimmed, ribs aching, hands raw. Staring up at the
wooden beams, I replayed the fight in my head-the way my body had betrayed me, the flicker of Serena beneath Kael's skin.It lasted only a breath, but if anyone had noticed...
My heart thudded harder.
The academy was filled with eyes, suspicion, and hungry rivals who would leave no stone
unturned to bring a person down. A single slip, and my disguise would shatter.But it hadn't been the crowd with the most dangerous gaze.
Darius Blackthorn had cast it upon me.
And I did not know if he had seen too much.
And what’s worse than that… we stayed in the same room anything can happen at anytime.
“Congratulations.” Darius said as he walked into the room. “Also watch your back. You’re now
the hot cake.”Serena's POV (as interpreted by Kael)I never felt right using the word "ritual." At Dravenhold, it had nothing to do with candles, chants,and sworn oaths. Here, it meant teeth bared, blood spilled, and shattered pride until one wolfstood tall enough to claim its dominance.This morning, the circle for the dominance trials glistened with rain water, while countless bootschurned the dirt floor. Three names were called, and mine was the last."Kael Draven."The courtyard noise in the dorms escalated the moment I entered the ring. Everyone lovedthese rituals-praise moments-in their ideas, almost like watching wolves tear each other apartwas camaraderie.In front of me, three second-years prowled into place. Bigger. Older. Smirks reflected on theirmouths. One knuckled his fist, loud enough so that it echoed. Another tore his disdainful gazeover me, as if I were not worth the effort of him even wasting claws on."What are the rules?" I kept my voice steady.A grin full of teeth appe
Serena POV (as Kael)Before it was time for me, the metallic taste of blood hung in the air. The sparring ring atDravenhold had seen that a hundred times over-after sweat, claws, and fists have sunk prideinto the soil. Today, the scent was thicker to the choking point, with already rust-stained sandunder our boots from previous fights.I, too, installed bone-deep among the other first-years in gray stone benches encircling the pit,fists clenched so tight that my knuckles ached. The crowd was rattling, buzzing like a swarm ofhornets, eager for the next display. Entertainment to them; survival for me."Next"!The instructor's bark cut through that din. My stomach lurched when I realized he was watchingme.For one heartbeat, I could not move. Then I swallowed, forced air into my lungs, and stood. Mylegs felt heavy as I descended the steps into the ring. Boots sank into packed earth, the groundtrembling faintly from the echoes of the last clash.I rolled my shoulders as if to mimi
Serena’s POV (as Kael)The academy klaxon ripped me out of sleep before dawn, a brass note that rattled my bones. I shot upright, heart hammering, and my hand flew beneath the blanket on instinct.Flat.A shaky breath slid out of me. The concealment still held—broad shoulders, straight lines, no softness left to betray me. Serena was buried; Kael Draven stood in her place.I dressed fast—coarse training tunic, boots laced tight with clumsy, trembling fingers. Every muscle throbbed from a night spent sleeping too still, too careful. The cot had been nothing but a battlefield of restraint, every twitch monitored so I wouldn’t roll onto my side and give myself away.This wasn’t a normal morning. It was the first trial. The one that would decide whether I could stand shoulder to shoulder with boys bred for war—or whether I’d be flung out into disgrace before I’d even begun.Outside, the world was iron-gray and bristling. Recruits clustered across the yard, laughing too loud, stretching li
Serena’s POV (as Kael)My palms wouldn’t stop sweating.I curled them into fists and drew in a slow breath, standing stiffly in the line that snaked across the courtyard. The first light of dawn burned gold against Dravenhold Academy’s massive blackstone walls, throwing shadows across the waiting boys. Real heirs. Born leaders. Future Alphas.And then there was me—hidden in Kael’s identity, clutching his forged papers, praying my heartbeat wasn’t loud enough for everyone to hear.“Next!” a voice bellowed.I flinched.“Kael Draven!”That was me.I forced my legs to move, carrying me into the registration chamber. Behind a wide desk sat a tall official with iron-gray hair, his sharp eyes cutting into me like blades. He accepted the documents with no hint of expression—bloodline record, crest seal, and the crafted ID Ryan and I had poured nights into perfecting.“Draven lineage,” the man murmured as his thumb traced the crest. “It’s been some time since one of you came through these hall
Serena’s POVAlpha Magnus Draven looked up from the parchment he had been reviewing, his features carved in stern lines. But when his eyes met mine, the severity eased.“Serena,” he said, his voice gentling as he set the scroll aside. “Why do you look so grave, child?”I forced a small smile, stepping closer as I held out the letter Kael had forged. “Papa, we need to talk.”He accepted the parchment but didn’t open it immediately. His dark brows lifted. “And what is this?”“I’ve been listening,” I said carefully, shaping each word before I let it pass. “To you. To the council. To all of them saying this pack needs a strong Alpha. And that they’d never allow a woman to lead.”Concern flickered across his face. “Go on.”“So… I applied to Selvara Academy,” I confessed, my heart slamming against my ribs. “I told no one. Not even you. I didn’t know if they’d accept me. But I couldn’t keep fighting a losing battle. If I can’t be the Alpha Ironfang needs—”I swallowed, forcing the words out
Serena’s POV“I did it,” I laughed into the wind. “I actually did it.” I urged my mare faster, trees whipping by as the sun threw gold bars across the trail. I had to keep one hand on the reins and the other clenched around the letter that was changing my life.Dravenhold Academy had accepted me.Accepted Kael Draven, technically—but Kael was me, or would be, if I pulled the rest off.The granite gates of Bloodfang groaned open, guards dipping their heads as soon as they saw me. I slid from the saddle in one motion and jogged for the main house, heart drumming a battle rhythm.My uncle—Alpha Corvin Draven—sat on the porch like a mountain in a chair, silver-shot beard catching the light. “Well, well,” he rumbled, opening his arms. “Ironfang’s wild cub returns.”I crashed into his hug. “I missed you.”He squeezed once, then eyed me. “That look says ‘trouble.’ Let me guess—you need Kael.”“Do I ever.” I grinned. “Is he in?”“Same mess, same room.”I was already taking the stairs two at a