LOGINLyra Ashbourne, a powerless omega dismissed by fate, is given away by Crown Prince Ronan after he rejects their sacred bond and chooses her sister instead. The most feared Alpha, Kael Blackthorne, was supposed to be her ruin—cold, merciless, soaked in blood, and a war hero rumored to have killed his own mate. But the monster everyone warned her about becomes the only man who has ever made her feel worth protecting. Now Ronan wants her back. A buried prophecy is surfacing. A kingdom is pushing toward war. Lyra must choose between the prince who sacrificed her and the beast who would burn everything before he lost her. Then the prophecy reveals that her choice will reshape the kingdom itself... What if choosing him means becoming the very weapon that destroys her?
View MoreLyra's POV
I learned early that mornings belonged to me.
Not because anyone gave them to me. Because no one else wanted them.
I got up before the sun, dressed in the dark, and slipped out of my room before the house woke. I took the side staircase down to the kitchen. I had stopped using the main one years ago, after a visiting noble walked past me twice in the same hallway without noticing that I was there.
The side stairs were fine. They were quieter anyway.
In the kitchen, I helped myself to bread and tea. Through the corridor, I could see the family dining room's long table, polished chairs, and two place settings already arranged for breakfast.
Not three.
It had always been two.
I ate standing at the kitchen counter and didn't think about it.
By the time I went back upstairs, Elara's room was already alive.
I could hear it from the corridor: voices, the clink of perfume bottles, and the rustle of fabric being adjusted. Someone laughed. Then my sister's voice, low and warm, answered something I couldn't make out.
I walked past her door without stopping.
My father was coming the other way. Dressed already, jacket buttoned, he had the expression of a man with things to manage and no time to spare. He saw me.
"Make sure you're ready on time," he said.
He didn't stop walking.
I stood there for a moment after he turned the corner. Then I kept moving too.
My ceremony gown had been fitted once, three weeks ago.
A seamstress had come, measured me, pinned two places, and left. The gown arrived folded in paper two days later. I had tried it on alone, decided the waist was slightly loose, and hung it up.
Elara's had been refitted three times. I had watched the seamstresses arrive through the window.
I was not bitter about this. I had practiced not being bitter for so long that the practice had become the thing itself. What I felt instead was quieter and harder to name, a kind of tiredness that had nothing to do with sleep.
My wolf had always been gentler than most.
Softer. The other children in the pack had wolves that pressed close to the surface during training, visible, aggressive, and ready. Mine sat deep inside me and stayed still. Watchful, in her own way, but never loud about it.
My father had commented on it once, on the ride home from a training session when I was twelve. "You'll need to work on that." He never brought it up again. He didn't need to. I understood.
I had felt the bond with Ronan two years and three months ago.
We had been at a formal gathering one of those crowded evenings where I spent most of my time near the edges of rooms, waiting for an appropriate moment to leave. He had walked in, and my wolf had surged toward the surface so hard I had gripped the edge of the nearest table to stay upright.
He had looked up.
Just for a second.
But he had looked.
And three weeks later, at another gathering, he had crossed a room full of nobles to bring me a drink I hadn't asked for and said, quietly: "You always look like you're waiting for permission to leave."
I hadn't known what to say. He had smiled, just slightly, and moved on before I could find words.
I had held that moment carefully for two years. Turned it over in my mind without pressing too hard, the way you handle something you're afraid of damaging. It was a small thing. I knew it was a small thing. But he had noticed me when no one else in that room had, and I had built my careful, quiet hope on that foundation.
Today, I told myself that hope could finally stop being careful.
I dressed alone.
I pinned my own hair, simple and flat, because there was no one to do anything more elaborate. I stood in front of the mirror in the slightly loose gown and looked at myself for a moment.
Across the hall, I heard my father knock on Elara's door.
It opened.
"You look perfect," he said.
I picked up my bag from the chair, stepped into the corridor, and pulled my door shut behind me.
I walked to the ceremony hall alone.
The hall was already full.
Hundreds of people arranged in polished rows, dressed in their finest, the kind of crowd that made a room feel smaller just by existing inside it. The candles were lit. The banners of the crown hung high on either side of the dais. Every face was turned toward the front.
I walked the aisle.
I kept my chin level. One foot in front of the other. I was aware of the weight of everyone's attention, and I carried it the way I carried most things: quietly, without showing the effort.
When I reached the dais, I turned to face the hall.
And I found Ronan.
He was standing a few feet away, dressed in formal white, the crown prince's crest at his chest. He looked the way he always looked: composed, certain, the kind of man a room rearranges itself around.
He was looking at me.
But his expression was wrong.
I had spent two years studying his face from careful distances. I knew the way he looked when he was bored, when he was amused, and when he was being deliberately charming for an audience. I knew the particular stillness he carried when a conversation was going somewhere he hadn't planned for.
This was none of those things.
This was the look of someone who had already finished making a decision. Nothing left to consider. Nothing left to weigh. Just the still, flat aftermath of a choice already made.
My wolf shifted inside me.
Not forward.
Back.
The officiant stepped forward. The formal words began the opening of the ceremony, the old language of bonds and bindings and what the Moon Goddess had ordained. I had heard these words at other ceremonies. I had imagined hearing them for myself for two years.
Now they moved past me like water.
I was watching Ronan.
He was not watching me back anymore. His gaze had moved. Just slightly. Just enough. To the back of the hall.
I didn't want to turn around. Something in me already knew, the same way my wolf knew, the same way the body understands things before the mind is ready to catch up. I turned anyway.
Elara stood near the far doors, dressed in silver.
She was looking at the floor.
The officiant finished the opening words.
Silence settled over the hall.
Ronan stepped forward.
I made myself meet his eyes. I don't know where I found the composure to do it. Years of practice, maybe. Years of standing in rooms where I was not the point, learning how to hold myself upright anyway.
He looked at me for a long moment.
Then he opened his mouth, and everything I had held carefully for two years and three months came apart in a single breath.
"Before this hall and the Moon Goddess who watches over us," he said, his voice clear and formal and carrying
to every corner of the room, "I cannot accept this bond."
The silence that followed was absolute.
"I reject you, Lyra Ashbourne."
Lyra's POVThe question was still sitting with me the next morning.What did you want before all of this?I had gone to bed without answering it and woken up no closer to one. That bothered me more than I wanted to admit, not because the question was unfair, but because I had spent so many years being certain about what I wanted that the absence of an answer felt like discovering a room in a house you thought you knew completely.I got dressed, pushed it to the back of my mind, and went to find Kael.He was in the study off the east corridor, standing at the large table with a map spread open in front of him. One of his senior wolves stood across from him, pointing at something near the northern border. They both looked up when I appeared in the doorway.Kael said something quiet to the man, who rolled the map and left."I want a formal role," I said, stepping into the room. "Something functional. Something that puts me inside this pack rather than beside it."Kael looked at me. "Not
Lyra's POVI stood at that window for a long time.The courtyard stayed empty. The torches burned. The forest beyond the walls gave nothing away. Eventually the feeling of being watched faded enough that I could move away from the glass, but it didn't disappear entirely. It just settled into the back of my mind and stayed there, quiet and persistent, like a sound you can't quite identify but can't stop hearing either.I went to bed with it still there.By morning, I had made a decision.If something in Blackthorne was paying attention to me, then I was going to pay attention right back.I had noticed Maret on the third day.She had been assigned to my personal care the morning after I arrived, quiet, efficient, and unremarkable in the way that people are when they have learned to be unremarkable on purpose. She laid out my clothes, tidied my Chambers, and brought water for washing. She did everything she was supposed to do without being asked and without drawing attention to herself.
Lyra's POVThe dream came that night.Not the kind that fades the moment you open your eyes. This one stayed sharp and specific, the way a real memory stays. I was standing somewhere I had never been, in a light that wasn't quite moonlight and wasn't quite day, and a voice spoke that I didn't recognize and couldn't locate."Chosen," it said.Just that one word. It landed in me the way certain things land when they are true, settling somewhere deeper than thought before I had the chance to question it.Then the light pulled back, and I was awake.The room was dark. The fire had burned to almost nothing. My heart was moving faster than sleep should have left it, and the mark on my wrist was warm, not glowing this time, just warm, the way skin feels after something has been resting against it for too long.I stared at the ceiling and went through the dream twice, trying to hold the shape of it.It didn't dissolve.That was the part that stayed with me most.Gretel arrived the next mornin
Lyra's POVBy the time the sun came through the east window, I had already been awake for an hour.I dressed in the grey morning light, chose the plainest thing in the small wardrobe that had been stocked before my arrival, and made a decision: I was going to learn this Keep on my own. No guide, no Gretel waiting in the corridor with a schedule. I hadn't asked for one, and I wasn't going to start now.I had spent years learning spaces that didn't particularly want me in them.I could manage one morning.I found the kitchens on the first try, ground floor, back of the main building, warm and smelling of bread and woodsmoke. A young woman handed me a cup of tea without being asked and decided not to make conversation. I appreciated that, took the tea, and went outside.The main courtyard was different from how it had looked the night before.Last night it had been lined with watching wolves and heavy silence. Now it was full of movement: wolves crossing between buildings, horses being l
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