LOGINChapter 2
POV: Liora
The golden eyes blinked once, twice, then vanished into the darkness. I didn't wait to see what they belonged to. Adrenaline overrode the pain screaming through my shoulder. I scrambled to my feet, my hand clamped over the arrow shaft, and ran. Behind me, I heard snarling, the sound of flesh tearing, more screams from hunters I couldn't see. My pack's howls had gone silent, replaced by an eerie stillness that was somehow worse.
Run. Just run.
My human form was slower than my wolf, but shifting would take energy I didn't have. Blood ran hot down my arm, dripping from my fingertips. Each breath felt like swallowing glass.
The forest grew thicker, darker. I couldn't hear pursuit anymore, but that meant nothing. Whatever killed that hunter could be stalking me right now, silent as death.
A sound reached my ears. Water. Running water. I crashed through a final wall of undergrowth and nearly fell down the embankment. A river stretched before me, wide and fast, the current churning white over rocks. The Blood Moon reflected on its surface, turning it into a ribbon of crimson.
The water would wash away my scent. Both from my pack and from whatever was hunting in these woods. I didn't let myself think. I just jumped.
The cold hit like a physical blow, driving the air from my lungs. The current grabbed me immediately, dragging me under. My feet couldn't find the bottom. The arrow in my shoulder screamed as water rushed over it, but the pain kept me conscious, kept me fighting.
I broke the surface, gasping, and let the river carry me downstream. Away from my pack. Away from the hunters. Away from those golden eyes.
I don't know how long I stayed in the water. Long enough for my fingers to go numb. Long enough for the Blood Moon to sink lower in the sky, its red light fading to the grey of approaching dawn.
When I finally dragged myself onto the rocky shore, I collapsed. My whole body shook, teeth chattering so hard I bit my tongue. The arrow had broken off in the water, leaving just a stub of wood protruding from my shoulder. Blood still seeped from the wound, slower now but steady.
I was going to die out here. No. I gripped a rock, using it to pull myself to sitting. I survived the pack. I survived the hunters. I'm not dying on a riverbank.
But I couldn't go back. My pack thought I was a murderer. Matthias had made sure of that, planting evidence, twisting the truth. Why? What did he gain from Declan's death?
It didn't matter now. I was alone. Packless. The worst fate for a wolf. I looked down at myself. My clothes were in tatters from shifting, barely more than rags. My long silver hair hung past my waist, distinctive and memorable. Anyone looking for me would recognize it immediately.
I needed to disappear. To become someone else. My fingers closed around a sharp stone from the riverbank. I lifted a handful of my wet hair and started sawing.
The strands came away in clumps. I worked methodically, cutting it as short as I could, letting the silver lengths fall into the water to be carried away. When I finished, my head felt strange, light. I touched what remained, barely longer than my fingers.
Next, I tore strips from what was left of my shirt. My hands shook as I wrapped them tight around my chest, flattening it, binding it. The pressure hurt, but it changed my shape. Made me look different.
I caught my reflection in a still pool near the bank. A boy stared back at me. Thin, bruised, with short ragged hair and hollow eyes. Not Liora. Someone else entirely.
"Leo," I whispered to my reflection. The name felt foreign on my tongue. "My name is Leo."
Saying it made it real. Liora was dead, murdered along with her Alpha. Leo was alive. Leo was no one. Leo could disappear.
I forced myself to stand. My legs trembled but held. The arrow stub needed to come out, but I didn't have the strength yet. First, I needed to put more distance between myself and my former territory.
I walked along the river until dawn broke, painting the sky in shades of pink and gold. The Blood Moon was gone, replaced by pale morning light that felt too innocent for what I'd survived.
My shoulder throbbed with each step. Infection would set in soon if I didn't treat it. I needed shelter. Food. Help.
But who would help a rogue wolf?
The exhaustion hit me all at once. My vision blurred. The trees seemed to sway even though there was no wind. I stumbled, caught myself on a trunk, then stumbled again.
I didn't remember falling. One moment I was walking, the next I was on the ground, the earth cool against my cheek. My eyes drifted closed.
Just for a moment. Just to rest.
+++++++
Voices woke me.
"... fresh blood trail."
"Could be a trap."
"Or just another rogue stupid enough to cross our borders."
My eyes snapped open. Morning light filtered through the canopy above me, brighter now. Hours must have passed. I tried to sit up and bit back a scream as pain lanced through my shoulder.
Four wolves surrounded me. No, not wolves. They were in human form but the power radiating from them marked them as warriors. Strong ones. Their eyes held the golden glow that meant their wolves were close to the surface.
I was in another pack's territory.
"He's awake," one of them said. A woman with a scar across her jaw. She crouched down, studying me with cold eyes. "You're on Nightbane land, boy. You have about ten seconds to explain why before we rip your throat out."
Nightbane. The name sent ice through my veins. Every wolf knew about the Nightbane Pack. They were ruthless, brutal, led by an Alpha who supposedly killed rogues for sport. No one crossed their borders and lived.
"I..." My voice came out hoarse. Wrong. I coughed and tried again, pitching it lower. "I didn't know. I'm sorry. I'll leave."
I tried to stand but my legs wouldn't cooperate. The world tilted sideways.
"He's half dead already," another warrior said, a massive man with arms like tree trunks. "Just leave him. He'll be gone by nightfall either way."
"Marcus will want to question him," the scarred woman said. "Check for weapons."
Rough hands patted me down. I had nothing. No weapons, no supplies, nothing but my torn clothes and the arrow stub still buried in my shoulder.
"He's clean. Got an arrow wound though, probably from hunters."
"Hunters don't cross into Nightbane territory." The woman grabbed my chin, forcing me to meet her eyes. Hers were grey, sharp as flint. "Who shot you?"
"I don't know." That was true enough. "I was running. They attacked. I jumped in the river."
"Running from what?"
My mind raced. I couldn't tell them the truth. If word got out about Declan's murder, about Liora, they'd turn me over to my old pack for the bounty. "My pack. They... I challenged myself wrong. I had to run."
It was a common enough story. Young wolves challenging for rank and losing, forced to flee as rogues. Shameful but believable.
The woman studied me for a long moment. I kept my expression neutral, praying she couldn't hear my heart hammering.
"On your feet." She released my chin. "You can explain to the Alpha why we shouldn't kill you for trespassing."
"I can't walk," I said honestly. The world was still spinning.
The massive warrior sighed and hauled me up like I weighed nothing, throwing me over his shoulder. My wounded shoulder pressed against his back and I couldn't stop the whimper that escaped.
"Shut up," he growled.
They carried me through the forest. I tried to pay attention to landmarks, to directions, but pain and exhaustion made everything blur together. All I registered was that the trees here were older, bigger. The territory felt different. Heavier, like the air itself carried weight.
After what felt like hours but was probably only minutes, we emerged into a clearing. A pack settlement spread before us, larger than my old pack's. Dozens of buildings, training grounds, what looked like a central hall made of dark wood and stone.
Wolves stopped to stare as we passed. I kept my eyes down, trying to look small and harmless. Just a rogue who got lost. No one important. No one worth remembering.
They carried me to the largest building and dropped me on the wooden steps. I barely caught myself, my good arm screaming as it took my weight.
"Wait here," the scarred woman ordered.
Footsteps approached from inside. Heavy, measured. The kind of footsteps that came from someone who never hurried because they didn't need to. Everyone else got out of their way.
A wolf emerged from the shadows of the doorway. Tall, broad shouldered, with dark hair and eyes that could cut glass. Power rolled off him in waves, making my wolf whine and try to tuck her tail even though I was in human form.
This wasn't just a warrior. This was someone high ranking. Maybe the Beta. He looked down at me with an expression of cold assessment. His lip curled slightly, showing teeth.
"Found him at the southern border," the scarred woman reported. "Claims he's a rogue on the run from a failed challenge."
The man crouched down, bringing his face level with mine. Up close, I could see scars on his knuckles, a thin line across his throat. A fighter. A killer.
"You're lying," he said simply.
My heart stopped. "I'm not.."
"Your scent is wrong. Too clean for a rogue who's been running. And that wound." He nodded toward my shoulder. "That's a hunter's arrow. Hunters don't attack wolves who run from pack challenges. They attack wolves being hunted by their own pack."
He leaned closer. I could smell leather and pine and something darker underneath. Blood, old and dried.
"So let's try again. What are you really running from, boy?"
I opened my mouth but no words came. If I told the truth, I was dead. If I lied and he caught me, I was dead.
His eyes narrowed. "Marcus!"
Another wolf appeared in the doorway. Older, with silver threading through his dark hair and eyes that missed nothing.
The man standing over me straightened, his voice carrying the snap of absolute authority.
"Take him to the Alpha."
POV: KaelThe voice rolled through the Heart Chamber with such overwhelming force that the mountain itself seemed to recoil from its presence. Ancient pillars groaned beneath the crushing pressure, while rivers of silver light flowing through the cavern darkened around their edges, as though even the blessing of the Moon Goddess struggled against the power awakening beneath the shattered seal.Every instinct within me erupted at once.My wolf threw itself against the walls of my mind with a fury I had never experienced before. Every hair along my arms stood on end, while the bond connecting me to Liora blazed hotter than it ever had, urging us closer together as though our combined strength offered the only protection against whatever had spoken from the darkness.Ardyn's grip tightened around his sword.For the first time since meeting the legendary king, I saw genuine concern shadow his expression.His calm had vanished.His confidence remained, yet something far older than fear res
POV: LioraThe journey through the buried city ended at the edge of a cliff that overlooked the deepest place beneath the First Kingdom, and the sight waiting beyond stole every remaining breath from my lungs.The Heart Chamber spread beneath us like the center of another world. Its ceiling disappeared into darkness, while rivers of silver light flowed through enormous cracks in the stone like veins carrying life through the mountain. Countless pillars circled the vast chamber, each carved with ancient wolves kneeling before the Moon Goddess. Suspended high above the center floated an enormous crystal unlike anything I had ever imagined. The Moonstone glowed with breathtaking beauty, its surface shifting between silver, blue, and white as streams of pure energy spiraled around it like living stars.Beneath that magnificent light stood another throne.Unlike the throne we had discovered above, this one radiated an entirely different presence. Black stone rose from the earth in twisted
POV: KaelThe world seemed to lose its balance the moment the ancient warrior removed his helm.Every story I had heard as a child suddenly became real.Every legend whispered around winter fires.Every tale dismissed by scholars who believed time had buried the truth forever.They all stood before us in flesh and blood.Ardyn.The first king.The warrior who forged peace among rival packs.The Alpha whose name had survived thousands of years after his kingdom vanished from history.For several heartbeats, silence ruled the ruined city beneath the mountain.Even the distant tremors seemed to pause as though the mountain itself recognized its first ruler.The silver-haired king studied us with calm, unreadable eyes. Time had carved wisdom into every line of his face, while countless battles had left their mark across the scars visible above his armor. Blood stained the edges of his silver breastplate, and several deep cracks ran across the ancient metal, revealing fresh wounds that sho
POV: LioraMatthias’s voice lingered through the corridor long after the words faded, wrapping around the ancient passage like smoke drifting through ruins.A cold feeling settled deep within my chest.Every instinct I possessed reacted immediately.Danger, hatred and violence.The bond connecting me to Kael tightened as his wolf responded to the same threat. Power moved through him like a gathering storm, controlled yet fierce enough to tear apart mountains if given a reason.The corridor stretched endlessly ahead of us.Silver flames burned along the walls, illuminating carvings older than any kingdom still standing. Images covered every surface. Ancient battles. Moon-blessed rulers. Great cities that once dominated the continent. Massive beasts bowing before crowned wolves.History surrounded us.History and warnings.The deeper we walked, the more the mountain seemed alive.The stone pulsed faintly beneath our feet.A steady rhythm.Almost like a heartbeat.I tightened my grip on
POV: KaelThe silence that followed the ancient command carried a weight heavier than any battlefield I had ever crossed.Every warrior inside the Hall of Kings stood motionless as the glowing passage stretched open before us. Silver fire burned along the walls of the newly revealed corridor, casting shifting shadows across stone carved by hands that had turned to dust thousands of years ago. The path seemed alive somehow, breathing with ancient power that resonated through the mountain itself.The chosen heirs must walk alone.Those words still echoed through the chamber.Nobody argued with the decree.Nobody attempted to challenge it.Every wolf present had witnessed enough during the past few days to understand one truth.Ancient magic followed rules older than kingdoms.Rules that cared little for mortal opinions.Thomas broke the silence first.His expression carried the same mixture of concern and irritation he often displayed whenever destiny complicated his life."I feel deepl
POV: LioraThe chamber fell into a silence so profound that even the distant tremors shaking the mountain seemed muted for several heartbeats.Every face in the Hall of Kings was turned toward me.Warriors.Ancient rulers.Allies who had fought beside me through battles, betrayals, and impossible odds.Their expressions ranged from disbelief to concern, yet the emotion that unsettled me most was the pity I glimpsed in several eyes.Pity.As though they suddenly understood a burden I had yet to fully grasp myself.The Blade of Ardyn remained warm within my hands. Silver fire danced across its surface, casting shifting patterns along the stone floor. Each pulse of light seemed connected to the mark behind my shoulder, creating a rhythm that echoed through my entire body.The fragment lives inside you.Seraphine’s words continued reverberating through my mind.Every memory from the past few months suddenly appeared different.The strange visions.The bond awakening faster than anyone exp
POV: LioraThe fortress did not sleep that night.By the time the warning spread through Nightbane, every corridor beneath the mountain had become alive with movement. Warriors crossed the lower halls carrying weapons and supplies while runners moved between watch posts with hurried messages clench
POV: LioraThe mountain did not sleep.Even in darkness, the ancient city breathed around us.I could hear it in the distant crack of steel against steel far below the lower terraces, in the echo of hurried footsteps through stone corridors older than most kingdoms, in the low chanting of priests s
POV: KaelThe moment we stepped fully into the circle, the world stopped pretending this was still a battlefield.The sound collapsed inward.Not vanished, but pulled tight, as if everything beyond the edge of the forming seal had been forced into silence. I could still see movement at the edges of
POV: LioraI woke to the scent of cedar smoke and crushed wolfsbane.For a moment I did not know where I was.Pain drifted through me first, dull and heavy, before memory returned in jagged fragments. The courtyard. Matthias. Bram’s betrayal. The arrow. Kael’s arms around me. His voice breaking in







