LOGINChapter 3
POV: Liora
They dragged me through corridors that smelled of pine and smoke and power. My feet scraped against polished wood floors as Marcus and another warrior hauled me deeper into the building. Every wolf we passed stopped to stare, their eyes tracking me like I was prey.
Maybe I was.
The hallway opened into a massive room. High ceilings, dark wooden beams, windows that let in streams of morning light. At the far end, a chair sat on a raised platform. Not a throne, exactly, but close enough.
And in that chair sat death itself.
Alpha Kael.
I'd heard stories about him. Every wolf had. The Alpha who united three warring packs through blood and brutality. The leader who killed challengers with his bare hands. The man whose territory no one dared cross because those who did were never seen again.
He was younger than I expected. Maybe thirty, with dark hair that fell past his shoulders and a face that looked carved from stone. Scars marked him everywhere I could see. A thick one across his jaw. Another through his left eyebrow. His hands, resting on the arms of his chair, were covered in the evidence of violence.
But it was his eyes that made my breath catch. Ice blue, cold and calculating, the kind of eyes that saw through lies and weakness. They fixed on me the moment I entered, and I felt naked under that gaze despite my disguise.
"This is the trespasser?" His voice was deep, quiet. Somehow that made it more terrifying than if he'd shouted.
"Yes, Alpha." Marcus shoved me forward. I stumbled, barely catching myself before I fell at Kael's feet. "Found at the southern border. Hunter's arrow in his shoulder, fresh wounds. Claims to be a rogue."
"Claims." Kael leaned forward slightly. "You doubt him, Marcus?"
"His story doesn't fit. Too clean, too convenient. And his scent..." Marcus paused. "Something's off about it."
My heart hammered against my ribs. I'd washed in the river, rolled in dirt and leaves trying to mask my scent. Had I missed something? Could they smell my old pack on me? Could they smell the lie?
"Look at me, boy."
I had no choice. I raised my head and met Alpha Kael's eyes. The impact of his stare was physical, like being punched. My wolf whimpered and tried to submit, to bare her throat, to acknowledge the superior predator. I fought her down, keeping my expression as blank as possible.
Kael studied me in silence. Seconds stretched into eternity. I could feel his power pressing against me, testing me, searching for cracks in my armor.
"What's your name?" he asked finally.
"Leo." The word came out steady. A small victory.
"Leo what?"
I hadn't thought that far. Panic flickered through me but I crushed it down. "Just Leo. I don't use my pack name anymore."
"Because?"
"I don't have a pack anymore."
Kael's lips curved slightly. Not a smile. Something colder. "Why did you cross into Nightbane territory, Leo?"
"I didn't know it was your territory," I said. Truth and lies are woven together. "I jumped in the river to escape hunters. The current carried me. When I crawled out, I was too weak to keep going. I'm sorry for trespassing. I'll leave if you let me."
"If I let you." Kael stood, and I realized how tall he was. Well over six feet, broad shouldered and built like he was made for war. He descended the steps slowly, each footfall deliberate. "You think I'm going to just let you walk out of here?"
"I'm hoping." My voice came out smaller than I intended.
He circled me like a wolf circling prey. I forced myself to stand still, not to flinch, even though every instinct screamed at me to run.
"You're young," Kael observed. "What, eighteen? Nineteen?"
"Twenty." Close enough to the truth. I was twenty-two, but starvation and blood loss had probably made me look younger.
"Twenty years old, traveling alone, wounded by hunters, no pack to protect you." He completed his circle and stopped directly in front of me. "That's a death sentence. You know that, don't you?"
I said nothing.
"Look at him," Kael addressed the room. At least a dozen wolves had gathered, filling the space, their eyes hungry. "Weak. Half starved. Can barely stand. And yet he crossed into Nightbane territory and lived long enough to be brought before me." He tilted his head. "That takes either courage or stupidity. Which is it, Leo?"
"Desperation," I said honestly.
Something flickered in Kael's eyes. Not sympathy. Recognition, maybe. "What pack did you come from?"
My mouth went dry. "Does it matter?"
"Answer the question."
I couldn't tell him the truth. If he knew I was from the Silver Creek Pack, if he knew about Declan's murder, he'd either kill me himself or send me back for the bounty. Either way, I was dead.
"I was packless," I lied. "Born rogue. Was trying to join a pack but the Alpha said I wasn't strong enough. When I challenged him to prove myself, he..." I gestured vaguely at my wounds. "He gave me a choice. Run or die."
Kael's expression didn't change, but I could feel his attention sharpen. "You challenged an Alpha at twenty years old?"
"I was desperate," I repeated.
"Stupid, then." Kael turned away, walking back toward his chair. For a moment, I thought he was done with me. That he'd order me executed and be finished with it.
But he stopped halfway up the steps.
"I don't allow rogues in my territory," he said without turning around. "They're unstable. Dangerous. Can't be trusted. Every rogue I've caught in the last five years has either been a spy or a criminal running from justice."
My throat closed. He knew. Somehow, he knew.
"But." The word hung in the air. Kael turned to face me again. "You interest me, Leo. You've got fire in you, even dying on your feet. That arrow wound should have killed you. The river should have drowned you. My warriors should have torn you apart. Yet here you stand."
He descended the steps again, faster this time, until he was close enough that I could see the flecks of silver in his blue eyes.
"So I'm going to give you a choice," Kael said. "The same choice you claim your old Alpha gave you. Fight or run."
"I can barely walk," I said. "How am I supposed to fight?"
"Not my problem." Kael's smile was sharp as broken glass. "If you run, my wolves will hunt you down within an hour and your death will be slow. If you fight and lose, I'll make it quick. But if you survive..." He paused. "If you survive, you earn the right to stay. As the lowest member of this pack, with no rank, no privilege, and no protection beyond what you can take for yourself."
It wasn't mercy. It was a death sentence wrapped in different words. But it was also a chance, however slim.
"How long do I have to survive?" I asked.
"Until I say stop."
"And you're the one I fight?"
"Yes."
I looked at Alpha Kael, at the scars covering his body, at the casual way he held himself that spoke of absolute confidence. He'd killed more wolves than I could imagine. He was stronger, faster, trained since birth to dominate and destroy.
I was wounded, starving, exhausted, and pretending to be someone I wasn't.
I was going to die here. But maybe, if I was very lucky and very fast, I could land one hit before he killed me. One moment of defiance before the end. That was more than I'd have if I ran.
"I'll fight," I said.
Kael's smile widened. "Good."
The wolves around us moved back, forming a circle. Someone pushed me toward the center. My legs shook with each step, the arrow stub in my shoulder screaming. I tried to settle into a fighting stance but my body wouldn't cooperate properly.
Kael shrugged off his jacket and rolled his shoulders. He didn't look worried. Didn't look like he was preparing for a fight. Just looked bored.
"Rules are simple," he said, circling the edge of the ring. "You stay in the circle. You don't shift unless I do. You survive as long as you can. Understood?"
"Understood."
"Begin."
He moved.
One second he was across the ring, the next his fist was driving toward my face. I barely got my arms up in time. The impact rattled my teeth and sent me staggering backward. Pain exploded through my wounded shoulder.
I didn't have time to recover. Kael was already coming again, a whirlwind of controlled violence. I ducked under a punch, twisted away from a kick. My body moved on instinct, remembering years of training even though my muscles screamed in protest.
But it wasn't enough. His leg swept mine out from under me. I hit the floor hard, gasping as the air rushed from my lungs. Rolled sideways just as his boot came down where my head had been.
"Get up," Kael ordered.
I struggled to my feet, swaying. Blood ran down my arm from where the arrow wound had reopened. The bindings around my chest felt too tight, making it hard to breathe.
Kael attacked again. This time I saw the opening, a fraction of a second where his weight shifted wrong. I lunged forward, aiming for his ribs.
He caught my wrist mid strike and twisted. The crack echoed through the room. My wrist, broken. The pain was white hot, blinding. I screamed before I could stop myself.
"Weak," Kael said. Still not breathing hard. Still barely trying. "You'll need to do better than that."
He released me and I cradled my broken wrist against my chest. Two injuries now. Shoulder and wrist. I couldn't feel my fingers anymore.
"I said get up."
I tried. My legs wouldn't hold me. The room spun, tilting sideways.
Kael crouched down beside me. "You're done. Admit defeat and I'll end it quickly."
I spat blood at his feet. "No."
His eyes narrowed. "No?"
"Not done." I forced myself to my knees, then to my feet. Took a shaking breath and raised my good hand. "Not... done yet."
For the first time, something that might have been respect flickered across Kael's face. "Stubborn. Stupid, but stubborn."
He stood, towering over me. "Last chance, boy. Yield."
I lunged at him instead.
It was clumsy, desperate, the attack of someone with nothing left to lose. Kael sidestepped easily. His hand shot out, fingers wrapping around my throat, lifting me off my feet.
"Brave," he said softly. "Foolish, but brave."
The edges of my vision darkened. I couldn't breathe. Couldn't think. My legs kicked uselessly in the air.
"You fought well for someone half dead," Kael continued. His voice seemed to come from very far away. "Better than most. But it's over now."
He pulled back his other fist.
I saw it coming. Couldn't do anything about it. Could only watch as his knuckles drove toward my face.
The impact was a supernova of pain.
Then nothing.
My vision faded to black, and the last thing I heard before the darkness swallowed me was Alpha Kael's voice, quiet and considering.
"Interesting."
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:KaelThe decision I had made the night before did not feel like a victory.It felt like stepping onto ground I knew was already cracking beneath my feet.By morning, the weight of it had settled fully into place. There was no retreat from it now, no quiet way to undo what had already begun. I h
Chapter 5POV: KaelSomething was wrong with me. I stood at my office window, watching the training yard below where Leo sparred with Marcus. Three days had passed since I'd assigned the rogue to my personal guard, and in those three days, I'd found myself watching him far too often.It was for sec
Chapter 4POV: LioraCold water hit my face like a slap. I jolted awake, gasping, my body screaming in protest. Everything hurts. My shoulder, my wrist, my jaw where Kael's fist had connected. The world spun in nauseating circles."Wakey, wakey, little rogue."Laughter echoed around me. I blinked w
Chapter 2POV: LioraThe 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







