Zylia Nightshade has always been the underdog, the pack’s shame. She was an omega who was mocked, ignored and unwanted. When it was revealed that her fated mate was Killian Silverclaw, the Alpha of Howlborne pack, a bond was formed, only for a prophecy to tear it apart. However, terrified of the unknown, Alpha Killian rejects her under the blood moon before casting her out into exile. As Zylia learns to survive among the rogues, she discovers a rare gift connected to the Moon Goddess herself. She must also learn to fight and rise against the fate that has been thrust upon her. As enemies also rise in the shadow, Zylia must decide: will she let the prophecy define her? Or will she forge her own destiny?
View MoreZylia’s POV
My knees were sore from delivering food to the dinner hall. The air was filled with the smell of roasted steak and it clung to my hair. “Present this to the female warriors’ table.” Another server came by to pass me a tray of silver. Moon Goddess please forgive my fumbles, I did. I always trip at the worst times. The festivity was a lively one filled with noise. Of the men that had won great feats of war to tell of, and the women which were mad with laughter, the air was full. I went out into the hall. “She was a scared deer,” a voice said. “More like a rat” went another voice. I looked down. All I wanted was to set the tray down and not cause a scene. I went up to the table and placed the tray. “Careful there,” she purred but it was a false sound. “Our little Zylia is a bit green when the eyes of the world are upon her.” Then a voice broke in. Her friends at the table laughed. I went quiet and my face grew hot. Lilith Storme. The Beta’s daughter. The pack’s pride and joy. She has hazel eyes which light up in the fire and her hair which shimmers. An angel at a dagger when she speaks. I ran my hands over the hem of my servant’s skirt and turned to leave. “Did you see what her hands did?” Lilith said out loud as she got up from her seat. ”They shake as if she’s going to drop everything again. Pathetic.” Her voice echoed in my head. A chorus of laughter followed. My chest tightened. “I wasn’t... I ...”“You weren’t what?” Lilith folded her arms and tilted her head. Her lips curved into something far from a smile, a little grin. “You’re not going to bring your misfortune here and ruin our night...again.”
I opened my mouth but no words came out. Omegas didn’t argue. Omegas bowed, scraped, endured. Hot tears built up in my eyes, but if it dropped, I was doomed. I won’t hear the last of it. Lilith’s friends leaned in closer to me. Lilith came forward and lifted my chin. “Careful, Lilith, you don’t want to get her filth and bad luck all over you,” one of them said. She dropped her hand and rinsed her fingers, sprinkling the water back on my face. She was their queen and I was their entertainment. Leave. A voice in my head said. It was the best idea. I turned to walk away, to find another corner of the hall where I could vanish too, but the heel of my boot betrayed me. They snapped. My pulse climbed itself. I fell to the ground, eating the dust. The skin on my knee peeled and crimson gushed out. The hall went silent. Then, laughter erupted, sharper and louder. “Clumsy Omega!” A warrior jeered. “She can’t even serve food right!" Another added. I stood up, limping. My palms stung from the cold floors. Their laughter echoed, blurring out any other sound in my head. I wanted to vanish, to melt under the shadows and never return. But not even a shadow would claim me. I stood before the people who derived joy in my shame, my humiliation. Lilith’s laugh was the loudest of all. The way she looked at me sent a chill to my spine. She sipped her wine, “After all, she’s an omega. She belonged on her knees.” Laughter erupted once more. Her words sting more than the stung on my knees, cutting deep through my chest.“Moon Goddess, please make it stop,” I prayed, my tears holding in my eyes. I couldn’t afford to let it out.
The words had no power, or so I thought. The hall grew colder. The air thickened, the hairs on my body rose, sending a warning. Did anyone else feel it too? Or was I the only one who could? Their laughter faltered. Even Lilith’s eyes darted across the hall. What was going on? “Enough.” A voice cut through the silence. Alpha Killian. My heart stopped. He scanned the room until his gaze landed on me. I swallowed. His voice was commanding. His aura was dominating. “Clean yourself and leave.” The words were flat, but they struck me harder than Lilith’s insults. He hadn’t spoken them with cruelty or pity. Just dismissal. As though I wasn’t even worth the effort of anger. I bowed and ran out of there. The night air greeted me like a crisp slap. It was suffocating. I hurried down to the dirt path leading to my house. I pushed open the door and my adoptive father’s gaze was the first thing that met me. “Zylia....” His eyes narrowed and he crossed his arms. He had a look of disgust in his eyes. But I didn’t blame him. I was filthy. There was dirt all over me and I was bloodied. “What did you do this time?” His voice was tired and heavy with disgust. “I...uhm...” “Speak!” He roared. “I tripped...and fell.” I muttered but I couldn’t meet his eyes. He kissed his teeth, “You always bring shame to this family. Do you know what they’ll say? That we cannot even raise an Omega properly. That our house is cursed! You’re a living proof of shame!”I flinched. His words cut deep. My jaw clenched and my fingers dug the depth of my palm. I stopped before it made an actual cut.
“I didn’t mean...” “Enough!” He snapped at me. “Go to your room before I say anything I regret.” I nodded quickly and dashed off the stairs, my chest aching with unspilled tears. Inside my small room, I sank onto the wooden stool and pulled up my torn skirt to wash the wound on my knee. I went into the bathroom The water stung, pink clouds swirling as blood slipped into the basin. I scrubbed harder, desperate to erase every trace of tonight’s humiliation. The blood didn’t wash off. Neither did the shame. It still lingered. The fall. Lilith. The Alpha. Their laughter. The urge to vanish after the incident swelled inside me. A knock came on my door. It was my father. “Get downstairs, you have a visitor.” A visitor? Why would I have a visitor? Why would someone want to see me? When I got downstairs, it was....Killian’s POVThe word cursed still echoed in my head long after the Priestess said it.The air had turned thick, hard to breathe. The Priestess was still on her knees, whispering to herself, her lips moving faster than her prayers could catch up.Outside, the wolves began to howl.Not the kind of howl that spoke to the moon , this one was pain.I turned and ran for the door.,The ground shook under my feet as I stepped out. The scent of blood hit me first. Then came the cries.Warriors stumbled across the courtyard, their bodies covered in strange marks , glowing faintly silver, burning through their skin. One man fell in front of me, gasping for air. His claws were out, but he couldn’t shift back.“Alpha…” he choked, eyes wide. “It hurts.”I knelt beside him, trying to calm him with my aura, but when I reached for him, a sharp burn ran up my arm. I pulled back fast. My hand shook.My bond wasn’t working.That shouldn’t be possible.“Get the healers!” I shouted. “Now!”Lucien ran to
Killian’s POVThe temple was cold tonight.Colder than it had ever been, as though the moon itself refused to look down on us. The marble floor bit into my knees, and the scent of smoke clung to the air like a wound that wouldn’t close.The Priestess moved in a slow circle around the moon bowl, her veil fluttering with every chant. Silver light shimmered across the water, and for a heartbeat, I thought maybe,just maybe,the Goddess would answer.“Luna,” the Priestess called, her voice trembling. “Hear the cry of your wolves. We have obeyed, we have bled, we have given. Tell us,why do you turn away?”The torches bent with the wind. Shadows crawled up the walls.I stared at the reflection of the moon in the bowl, watching it tremble. “She won’t come,” I said under my breath.“She always comes,” the Priestess whispered, dipping her fingers into the water. “If we’ve not angered her beyond forgiveness.”My jaw tightened. “Then we’ll beg for it.”The air shifted.The moonlight dimmed, then f
Killian’s POVThe moonlight stretched thin across my room, through the window and bounced on my bed.I just got out of the bath, a towel wrapped around my waist.I stood in front of the mirror, examining myself. Being Alpha was supposed to be strength. Leadership. But lately, it felt more like trying to hold a dying beast together by its horn.The door creaked before I could speak.“Working yourself to death again?”Her voice was silk and low, sweet, and venomous all at once.Lilith.Lilith stepped into the room without waiting for permission. The candlelight found her curves before her face, silver gown clinging like smoke. Her lips curved in that practiced smile that never reached her eyes.“I thought I made it clear,” I said, not looking up, “you don’t walk into my quarters without…”“Without knocking?” She laughed softly, the sound sharp enough to cut through the silence. “You never minded before.”“I mind now.”That only made her smile widen. She came closer, slow, deliberate, he
Zylia’s POVI could’ve sworn none of them blinked throughout.The Hollow had changed something in the air, also in me. The whisper that had called my name still clung to my thoughts, threading through every heartbeat like a warning I couldn’t shake.Night came without stars.The ruins looked different in the dark , alive in a way that made my skin crawl. Every stone seemed to hum beneath the moonlight, as if the carvings themselves breathed. The air was thick, electric, waiting.Raven sat by a low fire, cleaning her blades in silence. Mason sharpened his knife beside her, his jaw tight. Sparks flickered between them, small and mean. I sat a few steps away, watching the faint shimmer still glowing on my palm. It hadn’t faded, not completely. My skin still remembered what it had done.“Don’t stare too long,” Raven said without looking up. “Things that change you don’t like being looked at.”“I wasn’t…” I started, then stopped. She was right. Whatever this was, it wasn’t meant for
Zylia’s POVThe forest changed the deeper we went.The air grew colder, heavier, like it carried the ghosts of everything that had died here. Even the wind sounded different. It blew lower, almost human.No one spoke. Not Raven, not even Mason.We just followed the fading path that wound through the mist, where the trees bent toward each other like they were whispering secrets we weren’t supposed to hear.When the ruins appeared, it didn’t feel like finding something. It felt like something finding us.Stone arches clawed at the sky, covered in moss and frost. Symbols were carved along the walls , old, sharp, wrong. I didn’t recognize the language, but my bones did. My skin prickled as if my blood remembered what my mind couldn’t.Raven was the first to step closer. “The Hollow,” she said quietly. “Didn’t think it was real.”Her voice carried something I’d never heard before , fear.Mason looked around, his jaw clenched tight. “Looks real enough to me.”He brushed a hand across one
Mason’s POVThe fire hadn’t gone out. It hissed and spat, throwing light over her body. Zylia lay where the blast had dropped her. She was too still, too pale, and the dirt beneath her still scorched black.Raven stood a few paces away, knife in hand, face carved into something unreadable.“She’s not breathing,” she said. No fear in her voice. Just fact.“She is.” I knelt beside Zylia, fingers finding the pulse beneath her jaw. Faint, fluttering. “Barely.”Raven’s boots crunched the ash. “Whatever that was, it wasn’t wolf magic.”“I noticed,” I muttered. The air still smelled wrong, metallic and burntRaven circled her, “You saw what she did. That light, no wolf can do that. Not even Alphas. We should leave her.”The words hit like a slap. “You mean kill her.”“I mean survive.” Her gaze lifted, hard and cold. “That’s what you taught me, remember?”I swallowed the old memory she’d thrown like a blade. “She’s not a threat.”Raven tilted her head. “You’re sure?”No. Not even close. But t
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