LOGINAlara’s POV
The whispers had followed me for three days. Soft, sharp, and pity-laced.
Every pack member who crossed my path seemed to have the same look — eyes wide with sympathy, mouth pressed in a tight line, as though my heartbreak was a terminal illness and they were too polite to state that outright.
“Did you hear? Vivian’s carrying the future heir.”
“Poor Alara… after everything.”
“She must be devastated.”
They didn’t say it to my face. But their glances cut deeper than any blade ever had.
Vivian’s pregnancy announcement had spread through the pack like wildfire. It was a timed explosion, detonating right beneath my feet. Three days, and still the aftershocks wouldn’t stop.
Every time someone’s gaze grazed my neck, my stomach twisted. Every time they looked away too quickly, I felt the mark throb like it wanted to burn right through the high-collared shirts I’d been suffocating myself in.
Of course they didn’t know. No one knew. Not even Emily, who had been hounding me for days with suspicious eyes and gentle questions.
I couldn’t let her see. I couldn’t let anyone see.
The truth was a brand on my skin and a bruise on my soul, serving as a bitter reminder of my cruel fate.
Tonight the weight of it all had driven me here to the empty training grounds. Under the moonlit sky, my breath turned to mist. My fists bled against training dummies that didn’t deserve the abuse. My muscles screamed, but it was better than the scream festering in my chest.
I jabbed again, each thrust landing harder than the last.
The wooden post groaned beneath the force. My knuckles stung but I didn’t care.
Vivian’s words replayed in my mind, vicious in their sweetness.
“I’m pregnant….”
My wolf curled in on herself every time the memory surfaced, whimpering at the echo of betrayal. Astrid, my wolf, hadn’t spoken to me in three days. She was hurt, confused, unable to understand how our world had shattered so quickly.
I drove my foot into the dummy — once, twice, again until pain bloomed up my shin.
But I didn’t stop.
Not until the crack of a twig forced my body to still.
I didn’t turn. I knew that scent, that gait, that ripple of Alpha aura that slipped over my skin like a cold warning.
Kael.
His presence was soft, almost hesitant — as if he feared startling me. As if he cared.
I clenched my jaw, refusing to acknowledge him. My next punch collided with the dummy, rattling it against its post.
His voice broke the silence, low and cautious.
“Alara.”
He shouldn’t be here. Not now. Not tonight. Not after he chose another wolf. Another life. Another future.
“I figured I’d find you here,” Kael said quietly.
The shadows stretched around us, long and heavy. The scent of pine and earth clung to him. Memories pressed in — training sessions under dawn light, sparring until our limbs shook, laughing in between bruises.
That boy was gone.
I kept my gaze forward, fists clenched.
“What do you want?” My voice came out sharper than intended.
He let out a breath. “To talk.”
I laughed under my breath. It came out rusty. “I’m not interested.”
“Alara—”
“No.” My chest heaved. “Not tonight.”
Silence fell. The kind that wrapped around your ribs and squeezed.
“I didn’t leave because I wanted to,” he began, voice thick with something that wasn’t quite guilt. “Vivian was nearly fainting. I had to—”
“You don’t owe me an explanation,” I snapped.
Because he didn’t. Because he’d already made his choice.
His pace faltered behind me, but he didn’t leave.
“You’ve been avoiding me,” he said quietly.
I spun, eyes blazing. “You made your decision, Kael. You chose her.”
His jaw clenched so tightly it looked painful. “It wasn’t that simple.”
“Wasn’t it?” I whispered, the ache behind my ribs flaring. “She’s pregnant with your child. That alone makes it very simple.”
He flinched like I’d struck him.
“You don’t understand,” he murmured. “Vivian’s father — he controls half the warriors stationed at the southern borders. His alliances extend—”
“So this is political,” I cut in, throat burning. “Not personal.”
His silence was confirmation.
The moon cast silver across his face, highlighting every line of tension. He looked older suddenly. Tired.
“I can’t reject her,” he said. “Not now. Not with the baby. Her wolf is weak — if I break the bond, it could kill her. And the child.”
The blood in my veins went cold.
“So you’re locking yourself in a bond with her for the sake of an unborn heir?”
He took a step closer. “I’m doing what’s necessary for the pack.”
“And what am I?” My voice trembled despite every attempt to steady it. “A convenience you can cut loose when things get complicated?”
He swallowed, eyes dragging — not to my face, but to the edge of my collar where the fabric strained.
His voice cracked.
“I never meant to mark you.”
The world tilted. A cold wind swept across the training grounds, cutting through the fabric, straight into my bones.
Those words hurt more than Vivian’s triumphant smile.
He stepped closer, but I backed away.
“Alara… it was a mistake. I was blinded by anger. Hurt. Confused about where we stood. I shouldn’t have done it.”
A mistake.
The mark pulsed under my shirt, a cruel reminder of the day everything had changed.
“And what happens now?” I whispered. “What do you expect me to do?”
His eyes softened. Pity flickered in them, twisting the knife deeper.
“You have to let this go,” he murmured. “I can’t keep both bonds — it’ll tear one of you apart. It’s already too dangerous.”
My wolf let out a low, hollow sound.
He moved closer, lowering his voice.
“I never wanted to hurt you.”
“Then why are you?” My eyes stung. “Why does it feel like you’re choosing everything but me?”
“For the pack,” he said again.
Always for the pack. Never for me.
His aura shifted — the air thickened, vibrating with power. My knees weakened under the force of it.
His next words shattered something inside me.
“Alara Hawthorne,” Kael whispered, eyes burning with pain and resolve, “I reject you as my mate.”
The ground shifted. My lungs seized. My wolf howled, her anguish tearing through me like claws made of fire.
I fell to my knees.
The rejection hit like a blade plunged straight into my heart — twisted, dragged, and pulled until I couldn’t breathe.
Kael’s face broke. He took half a step forward but stopped.
He couldn’t touch me.
He wouldn’t.
“Alara…” His voice cracked. “I’m sorry.”
The words reached me from underwater, distorted and distant.
I looked up at him — at the man who’d once been my future — and felt the last thread between us snap.
He turned away first.
He walked into the darkness, leaving me collapsed in the dirt, gasping around pain that wouldn’t stop clawing through my chest.
I pressed a trembling hand to the mark beneath my collar.
It burned.
A silent, cruel reminder that my future had just been rewritten without my consent.
And that the man who’d marked me… was no longer mine.
Poor Alara... as if the unintentional marking wasn't bad enough. Kael did her worse.
Alara's POVBeing a mother had taught me many things. I knew how to survive entirely sleepless nights, and how to remain perfectly calm when a five-year-old Lucian had opened a raw shadow gateway in the middle of the palace corridor simply because he wanted to find me. I knew how to stop a young Artemis from accidentally healing half the royal staff whenever she tapped into a new aspect of her Crescent powers.I had learned how to smile right through my deepest fears. Because if motherhood had taught me one universal truth, it was that children never truly realize how much their parents worry.Xavier stood before the shattered western section of the training arena, silent and still. Below us, the physical damage was already being repaired. Stonemasons worked tirelessly to clear the rubble, warriors hauled away broken pillars, and servants whispered frantically amongst themselves. The masonry would be fixed within days. The whispers, however, would linger much longer.I joined my hus
Selena's POVThe silence that followed was entirely different. The suffocating tension evaporated, leaving behind something profoundly honest and entirely unshielded. Slowly, deliberately, Lucian walked back to the edge of the bed. He stopped right beside me, close enough that I could see the dark circles under his eyes. He clearly hadn't slept a wink."You shouldn't give me that kind of power," he murmured, though there was no heat in it. "It's dangerous."I smiled up at him. "Too late. The decision's been made."His shoulders sagged, a look of utter defeat washing over his face, though the ghost of a relief pulled at his features. "I will never understand you.""Join the club," I laughed softly.For the first time since I’d opened my eyes, the faint corner of his mouth twitched upward. It wasn't a full smile, but it was a victory nonetheless."Aha!" I pointed a finger at him accusingly. "You almost smiled. I saw it."He instantly schooled his features back into a stony glare. "I hav
Selena's POVMy eyelids felt heavy as I slowly forced them open, staring up at the intricately carved wooden ceiling of the palace healer’s chambers. The sharp, clean scent of crushed herbs and medicinal salves hung thick in the air. Every time I tried to shift, a dull, throbbing ache flared beneath the crisp white bandages tightly wrapped around my shoulder, a physical reminder that the chaos of the previous afternoon hadn't been an absurd dream.Fragments of the training incident replayed relentlessly behind my eyes. The sudden, erratic trajectory of the wooden practice blade. The sickening thud as it collided with my collarbone. The ground rushing up to meet me. And then... the absolute madness that followed.I had never seen him like that. Not even close. That wasn't the composed, calculating prince the court whispered about in hushed tones. It wasn't the quiet boy who spent hours hiding away in the dusty corners of the palace library, nor was it the fiercely sarcastic companion I
Artemis's POVThe temperature in the arena plummeted so fast that my breath hitched, turning to white mist in the air. One moment I was casually watching the training rotation, and the next, the bright midday sun was choked out as the entire valley plunged into pitch-black darkness.Terrified gasps and shouting erupted from every corner of the gallery.Down below, the shadows were exploding outward from Lucian in a violent, terrifying, and utterly uncontrolled storm of dark mass. It was exactly like the training accident that had occurred weeks ago, but this was exponentially worse. The darkness didn't just pool around his feet; it raged."Lucian!" His name tore from my throat before I could stop it, but the sound was swallowed by the roaring wind generated by his power.Chaos descended upon the training grounds. The darkness swallowed the stone floor and the sand pits like a living, predatory ocean. Experienced warriors stumbled backward in panic, their nocturnal vision useless again
Lucian's POVThe training arena was an assault on the senses, filled with a chaotic symphony that I usually had no trouble tuning out. Dozens of young Lycan warriors occupied the massive stone grounds, their bodies moving in blurred, predatory sequences as they sparred in tightly monitored groups. The air was thick with the scent of kicked-up dust, sweat, and iron. Steel clashed against steel with deafening cracks, punctuated by the booming commands of instructors and the heavy thuds of bodies hitting the dirt. Normally, this display of raw power was routine to me, a familiar backdrop to my daily responsibilities.Today, however, my focus refused to lock onto the training drills. Instead, my gaze kept drifting toward the western boundary of the courtyard.Towards her, over and over.Selena stood near the edge of the chalk lines, paired with a massive trainee who towered over her. Unlike every other highborn heir present, she possessed no wolf. She had no Lycan blood running through
Cassian's POVMy father had lied.The realization wasn’t exactly a grand epiphany. I’d known Alpha Darius long enough to recognize the subtle shift in his posture, the calculated shadow in his eyes whenever he was withholding information. But lately, a darker, more suffocating suspicion had taken root: I was beginning to think he’d been lying to me my entire life.I stared at the heavy parchment spread across my desk. It had arrived that morning, sealed with the crisp, unmistakable wax crest of my home pack. On the surface, the contents were aggressively ordinary. Father wrote of shifting pack borders, tedious political maneuvers, trade agreements, and training quotas — the usual bureaucratic nonsense he loved pretending was the center of the universe.Yet, it was what he didn't write that made the skin on the back of my neck prickle.Once again, there was no mention of my mother.I leaned back in my chair, frustration simmering like a low-grade fever beneath my skin. For years, I ha
Alara’s POVI couldn’t stay in my room.The silence of my own chambers had become a physical weight, pressing against my chest until every breath felt like a struggle.
Xavier’s POVThe house had gone quiet, but it was a deceptive, suffocating kind of silence. It wasn't the gentle, breathing peace that settled over the estate when Alara read to the twins, or the soft hush that followed Artemis’s
Alara’s POVI woke up to warmth.Not the dull, lonely warmth of blankets that had gone cold hours ago — but the steady, living heat of another body curled around mine, a solid chest at my back, an arm firm and unyielding around my waist, the slow rise and fall of breath against my hair.For one bli
Alara’s POVWe had barely begun to breathe again.The revelation of Artemis — of what she was, of what the moon had quietly claimed through her — still sat heavy in my chest, an







