MasukI awoke to the cold dawn creeping through the fortress walls, the gray light washing over the stone floor like liquid iron. My side throbbed with the lingering pain of yesterday’s battle, but my body’s exhaustion was nothing compared to the storm raging inside me.
I had tried—tried to tell myself that I could leave. That I could run and hide, that I could escape Ronan Blackfang, the Lycan King who had effortlessly shattered every sense of safety I had left. And yet… the pull I had felt yesterday had not weakened. If anything, it had grown stronger, more insistent, tugging at my chest in ways that terrified me. I pressed my hands against my temples, trying to push the invisible chains from my mind, trying to deny that the bond—whatever it was—was real. My wolf growled inside me, sharp and insistent, sensing the pull of the Alpha’s presence before I even opened my eyes. “Aria.” The voice was smooth, deliberate. Even in sleep, I recognized it, and my stomach twisted. I wasn’t ready to see him, not yet. Not after the way he had watched me yesterday—calm, dominant, impossible to ignore. “Go away,” I muttered, my voice raw, cracking. “I can’t.” The words came softly, impossibly close. “And you know it.” I sat up, wincing as the pain in my side flared. My eyes caught him standing there in the doorway, tall and unyielding, golden eyes fixed on me like molten fire. His posture was relaxed, but the intensity radiating from him pressed against my chest like a physical weight. “I don’t belong here,” I whispered, my throat tight. “I’m leaving.” “You’re not leaving,” he said flatly. “Not until I say you can.” I rose unsteadily to my feet, taking a step toward the door, only for him to move with impossible speed, cutting me off without even a warning. The air shifted, and I felt his power press against me, as if the room itself recognized his presence and bent to his will. “I don’t need protection,” I said, my voice shaking but defiant. “I don’t need you, and I don’t belong to you.” His gaze didn’t waver. “You don’t belong to anyone,” he agreed. “But the bond doesn’t care about what you want. And neither do I.” My wolf growled low, warning me of the tension in the air. Every instinct screamed at me to run, but the invisible tether between us tightened, pulling at my chest with undeniable force. I stumbled slightly, caught off guard by the strength of the connection, and he noticed. Ronan tilted his head, expression unreadable. “You feel it, don’t you?” I pressed my hands against my chest, trying to silence the thrum that had suddenly taken over my body. “No,” I said, even as my words betrayed me. “It’s… nothing.” “It’s not nothing,” he said softly, stepping closer. His shadow fell over me, large and commanding, and my wolf pressed back instinctively. “It’s the bond. It’s stronger than any pack, any oath, any fear. And it will not break.” I wanted to scream at him, to refuse it, to tear away from this pull that terrified me more than any rogue or enemy ever could. “I won’t be claimed,” I said. “Not by anyone.” “You already are,” he said, his tone almost casual, yet every syllable carried weight like iron. “You’ve been mine since the moment you stepped into my territory. You just refuse to admit it.” My pulse raced. My wolf pressed against the walls of my mind, restless, frustrated. I had run from Kalen, from the pack that betrayed me, from everyone who had ever promised loyalty and love and failed me. I wasn’t going to run again. Not today. And yet… I wanted to. Ronan moved closer, until I could feel the heat radiating from him. The pressure was suffocating, yet magnetic. My heart pounded, my wolf growling in warning, and I realized with horror that the tether wasn’t just pulling at my mind—it was reaching into my very soul. “You think you can survive without me,” he said, voice low and dangerous. “But the bond… the bond will not allow it. And neither will I.” I pressed my hands over my eyes, trying to block the sensation, the pull, the undeniable truth of what was happening. “I… I can’t—” “You can,” he said sharply, and the single word carried authority, a weight that pressed against my chest, forcing me to straighten. “But not alone.” I opened my eyes. He was watching me, golden eyes glowing faintly in the dim light, and for a terrifying moment, I saw not just a man, but something ancient, something powerful, something unstoppable. “You won’t leave me,” he said quietly, almost a statement rather than a question. “I don’t—” I began, but stopped. My wolf growled, pressing against my ribs as the bond tugged violently, refusing to let me lie. Ronan’s gaze softened… just slightly. It was enough to make my stomach twist, to make me feel both fear and fascination. “You can run from packs, from rogues, from everyone,” he continued. “But you cannot run from me. Not from what you are. Not from what you will be.” I shook my head violently, my chest tight with frustration. “I… I will survive. Without you. I don’t belong to anyone!” His lips curved slightly, a shadow of a smile. “Belonging isn’t the point, Aria. Survival isn’t either. The point… is the bond. And it is not broken. Not by distance, not by denial, not by fear. You can fight it all you want—but the moon has already decided.” My knees weakened. My wolf whimpered inside me, desperate, restless, but helpless. Every instinct screamed that I had no choice. The bond pressed against me with undeniable force, invisible threads tightening in ways I couldn’t fight. Ronan stepped back, just enough to give me space, but the air still seemed charged with his presence, pressing down like the weight of the night itself. “Rest,” he said finally. “Your body needs strength. And soon… you’ll need more than strength to survive what’s coming.” I swallowed, chest heaving, torn between defiance and an undeniable truth. I hated him. I feared him. And yet… I could not deny the pull, the thread, the bond that refused to let me go. And somewhere deep, in the shadowed corners of my mind, I realized with a chill that I would never escape. Not him. Not the bond. Not fate.The word echoed through the chamber. “No.” Small. Simple. But powerful enough to shake the mountain itself. The moment the child refused, the silver abyss erupted violently. The connected wolves cried out as energy burst upward in massive waves, tearing cracks through the ancient chamber walls. Stone collapsed from above while the silver veins pulsing through the mountain brightened to blinding intensity. Ronan pulled Aria against him instantly, shielding her body with his own as debris rained around them. “Move!” Marcus shouted. The ground beneath them lurched violently. Garrick barely kept his footing as another shockwave exploded upward from the abyss. “That thing’s coming!” No one needed confirmation anymore. They could feel it. The enormous presence rising from below. Not fast. Not aggressively. Inevitably. Aria clutched her stomach sharply as the third triplet surged again. Fear flooded through her. Not her fear. The child’s. And beneath it— Resistance. T
Silence consumed the chamber after the vision faded.Even the mountain seemed to pause.Aria remained in Ronan’s arms, trembling slightly as fragments of impossible memories continued echoing through her mind.Not hers.Never hers.But somehow connected to the child growing inside her.The third triplet pulsed softly now.Not distressed.Calm.Almost relieved.Ronan held her tighter.“What did you see?” he asked quietly.Aria swallowed hard.Because saying it aloud would make it real.Still—She answered.“The child…” Her voice shook slightly. “It isn’t just connected to the entity.”Marcus frowned.“Then what is it?”Aria slowly lifted her eyes toward the silver abyss below.“It’s connected to what the entity used to be.”The chamber went still.Malrik’s expression darkened immediately.“No…”Aria nodded faintly.“When it split itself apart… one part refused.”Ronan’s body stiffened.“Refused what?”Aria’s chest tightened painfully.“To become whole again.”Silence hit harder than an
The mountain trembled beneath them.Dust rained from the ceiling while silver light climbed higher through the massive opening in the earth, illuminating the ancient chamber in cold, unnatural waves.No one moved.No one breathed.Because the voice had spoken directly to the child.Not Aria.Not the entity.The child.Ronan’s arm tightened protectively around her instantly.His entire body had gone rigid beneath the force of his fury.“You do not speak to my child,” he growled into the darkness.The voice answered softly.“But it remembers me.”The silver light pulsed brighter.The connected wolves lowered their heads almost reverently as the mountain continued shaking around them.Marcus stepped closer to Garrick, keeping his claws extended.“I officially hate this place.”Garrick didn’t answer.Because his eyes remained fixed on Aria.Or more specifically—On the faint silver-gold glow beginning to pulse beneath her skin.The third triplet stirred violently now.Not painfully.Emoti
The sound came again.Low.Ancient.Breathing.It echoed through the tunnels like the mountain itself had become alive.Every wolf froze instantly.Marcus lifted his torch higher, though the trembling flame barely touched the darkness ahead.“That,” he said quietly, “does not sound asleep.”No one answered him.Because they were all thinking the same thing.Aria stood perfectly still at the center of the tunnel, her pulse thundering painfully against her ribs as the third triplet stirred harder than ever before.Not fear.Recognition.The realization made her stomach twist.Ronan moved closer immediately.“We turn back,” he said firmly.Aria looked toward him sharply.“You know we can’t.”“Yes,” he growled. “We can.”Another deep sound rolled through the tunnels.Closer this time.The walls vibrated beneath it.Dust rained softly from the ceiling above.Garrick’s expression darkened.“We’re running out of time.”Marcus nodded grimly.“If that thing fully wakes before we understand wha
They found the entrance just after midday.It wasn’t marked.It wasn’t guarded.It wasn’t even meant to be found.A crack in the mountain’s lower ridge, hidden beneath layers of collapsed stone and dead roots, opened like a wound in the earth.Aria stopped the moment she saw it.Her breath caught sharply.Ronan noticed instantly.“Aria?”She didn’t answer at first.Because she could feel it now—clearly.Not just below them.Ahead of them.Waiting.Marcus stepped closer, narrowing his eyes at the dark opening.“That’s it?”Garrick crouched slightly, inspecting the ground.“No guards. No traps. Nothing.”“That’s worse,” Marcus muttered.Aria slowly stepped forward.Ronan immediately moved to block her path.“You’re not going in first,” he said firmly.She looked up at him.“I have to.”“That is not a discussion.”Her voice softened slightly.“It’s calling me, Ronan.”His jaw tig
They left before sunrise.Not as an army.Not even as a full council decision.Just a small group moving quietly through the fortress gates while most of the kingdom still slept—because if too many knew, too many would try to stop them.Or follow them.And Ronan couldn’t allow either.Aria rode beside him in silence, her cloak drawn tightly around her body as the cold wind cut across the open land beyond the fortress walls. Ahead of them, Marcus led the path, while Garrick and a handful of elite warriors followed behind at a careful distance.No one spoke much.Not because there was nothing to say.But because everything had already been said.The mountains loomed in the distance like dark teeth against the pale sky.Every mile they moved toward them felt heavier than the last.Aria’s hand rested against her stomach almost constantly now.The third triplet was awake.Not fully.But aware enough that she could feel it respon
The rebellion did not begin with strategy.It began with a scream.The sound tore through the fortress corridors—raw, furious, and unmistakably wolf. Then came the clash of steel, the crash of splintering doors, and the thunder of boots striking stone.Stone Ridge had chosen its side.And it was no
The fortress shuddered under the first echoes of attack.I woke to the distant roar of steel against stone, the growl of wolves, and the faint thrum of the triplets' pulses within me—urgent, alert, alive. Ronan's presence was immediate, shifting beside me, body tense, golden eyes blazing like molte
The fortress slept—or it tried to.Moonlight spilled across the stones, pale and silver, but the shadows beneath the battlements seemed alive. My wolf stirred beneath my skin, restless, sensing danger—but also something else, something I couldn't name until Ronan appeared at my side."You should no
The smell of smoke clung to everything.It seeped into the stone walls, into my hair and clothes, into my lungs until every breath tasted like burned earth and iron. Dawn crept slowly over the fortress, pale and hesitant, as if even the sun was unsure whether it was welcome after the bloodshed of t







