تسجيل الدخولThe air inside the sanctum felt alive. Not warm. Not cold. Aware. The moment we crossed the threshold, the heavy stone doors behind us groaned shut with a deep echo that rolled through the underground passage like distant thunder. Cassian immediately turned. “Tell me that wasn’t intentional.” “It was,” I said quietly. Because I felt it. The connection had changed the second we entered. Above ground, the network had felt spread out threads stretched across the territory. Down here everything narrowed. Focused. Concentrated into a single overwhelming presence pulsing beneath the ancient stone beneath our feet. Kael stepped slightly in front of me as we descended the narrow staircase carved deep into the earth. The walls were old far older than Blackthorn itself. Strange markings covered the stone, faded with time but still visible beneath layers of dust and age. Symbols. Not words. Not any language I recognized. But somehow they felt familiar. My chest tightened. “Y
The deeper we moved into the territory, the quieter everything became. Not peaceful. Never peaceful. Wrong. The usual sounds of Blackthorn territory had vanished completely. No warriors training. No movement from the barracks. No distant conversations drifting through the night air. Nothing. Only silence. And beneath that silence the connection. I could feel it everywhere now. Threads stretched beneath the territory like veins beneath skin, pulsing faintly with synchronized energy. Every few seconds, another pulse rolled outward, moving through the ground, through the air, through the people caught inside it. The network was stabilizing. And that terrified me more than chaos ever could. Because chaos could be fought. Order calculated order was far more dangerous. Kael walked beside me without speaking, his presence steady enough to anchor me against the pressure building in my chest. Cassian stayed slightly behind us, eyes constantly scanning the darkened paths betwee
The first scream came from the west barracks. Then another. Then another too close together to be coincidence. And just like that, the territory stopped feeling like a place. It started feeling like something breaking apart. I moved before anyone gave an order. Not because I was told to. Because I could feel it. Every step I took across the grounds tightened the thread inside me the same connection that had once been a guide, then a warning, and now felt like a live wire stretched across the entire pack. “It’s spreading faster,” I said sharply. Kael was right beside me instantly. “Where first?” I didn’t hesitate. “Everywhere.” Cassian cursed under his breath. “That’s not an answer.” “It is,” I said, pushing forward. Because this wasn’t like before. Before, it had been fragments. Isolated points. Something we could chase. Now it wasn’t chasing us. It was inside the system itself. Inside the pack. Inside people. We reached the first barracks at a run. The doors
The silence after the fracture didn’t feel like relief. It felt like an aftermath. Like something had already happened that we hadn’t fully understood yet. I stayed kneeling for a moment longer than I needed to, my hand still pressed against the cold ground where the fragment had been pulled back from the edge of consumption. My breath was uneven. Controlled, but thin. “It didn’t win,” Kael said beside me. I almost laughed at that. Because it wasn’t that simple. “It didn’t lose either,” I replied quietly. Cassian stepped closer, scanning the fractured earth. “So what did we just do?” I closed my eyes briefly, focusing on what I could still feel. The connection was different now. Not gone. Not weaker. Just… altered. Like something had been rewritten inside it. “We interrupted it,” I said finally. “And that matters,” Kael added. I looked up at him. “It bought us time,” he continued. “That’s all.” Cassian exhaled sharply. “Time for what? It already knows we can inter
“It’s moving already.” The words left my mouth before I could stop them. Because I felt it. Not faint. Not distant. Not waiting. Moving. Fast. Kael’s attention sharpened instantly. “Where?” I turned slightly, focusing past the trees, past the territory, past what could be seen. “It’s not here anymore,” I said. “It’s pulling away.” Cassian frowned. “That’s a good thing, isn’t it?” “No,” I said quietly. Because I understood what it meant now. “It’s going for the fragments.” Silence dropped like a blade. Because that confirmed it. Everything we feared everything we were trying to prevent was already happening. Kael didn’t waste another second. “Get the horses. We move now.” The command cut clean through the air, and the warriors scattered instantly. No hesitation. No questions. Because now There was no time left for either. We didn’t speak much as we prepared. There wasn’t anything left to say. We all understood what this meant. If it reached even one fragme
The connection didn’t open. It was consumed. There was no gradual pull this time. No careful crossing between two sides. The moment I reached for it it surged back. Hard. Violent. Absolute. My breath vanished as the world around me shattered into fragments of light and shadow, collapsing into something far deeper, far larger than anything I had faced before. This wasn’t the clearing. This wasn’t a fragment. This was the core of it. Or something dangerously close. Aflira. The voice wasn’t just around me anymore. It was everywhere. Layered. Powerful. Complete. And for the first time it said my name. My chest tightened sharply. “You don’t get to use that,” I said, forcing the words out despite the pressure crushing in around me. You are no longer separate from this. “I told you before,” I snapped. “You don’t define me.” The space around me shifted violently, darkness rising like a storm, but not chaotic. Controlled. Directed. Focused entirely on me. You step
The forest had gone quiet again.Too quiet.Even after they left, the silence didn’t feel like peace. It felt like something waiting like the aftermath of a storm that hadn’t truly passed, only paused.Kael didn’t let go of me.Not immediately.His arm remained firm around me, steadying, grounding,
The silence that followed those words was suffocating.“She’s hiding something much stronger.”The sentence echoed in my mind long after the gray-eyed man finished speaking.Every wolf in the valley stared at me now not with curiosity anymore, but with something sharper.Fear.Suspicion.Even hatre
The world didn’t feel the same anymore.Everything was louder.Sharper.Alive in a way I had never experienced before.The moment the voice inside my head spoke again, something shifted permanently within me. The dull emptiness I had carried my entire life, the silence that marked me as broken, was
The howl echoed through the valley long after the sound itself faded.For a few seconds, everything around me seemed to freeze. The warriors who had been sparring moments earlier stopped mid-movement, their attention snapping toward the distant mountains. Even the wind brushing through the trees fe







