LOGINRowan's POV
I left Lyra's room, my feet pounding down the hall towards Commander Rourke's office. Climbing down the stairs, I reach the hallway leading to his office. Stilling myself, I take a minute to calm down. I couldn't let her do this alone. We've taken every step together since we were six. Somehow, some way, I would convince him to let me go. HE HAD TO LET ME GO! Knocking on his door, I hear his gruff voice, "Enter." Entering his office, which was a stark contrast to the gray stone walls of the main building of the stronghold. Not even asking him, I sit down and start pleading. "Commander, I know I wasn't summoned, and this might seem a little uncouth," I say, trying to keep from rubbing my hands on my knees, "but I know about Lyra's mission, and I want to go as her backup. She can do this, I'm sure, but for this not to be a complete suicide mission, don't you think this would work better if we both went?" Taking a breath, I sit back in my chair, waiting for his reaction. Rourke leaned forward, staring at me like he was staring deep down into my soul. Who knows? Maybe he could. Finally breaking the silence, he said with a low tone, "Do you think you could really help seal the deal with this mission and not jeopardize it?" "Yes, Commander!" I stated not even taking a moment to think about it. Glaring down at his desk in intense contemplation, he picks up a comm and sticks it into his ear. Standing up and stepping away to the furthest corner of his office, I heard him talking to what I assume was one of the council members in hushed, but quick tones. I really hope this works, because I was prepared to go either way, even if I didn't know exactly how it would work. After a few minutes, the call was ended, and he walked back over to me, placing one hand on my shoulder. "Whatever happens, the mission comes first and must succeed. You're going, young Rowan, now go pack." Shock hit me like a ton of bricks. I wasn't expecting him, actually, to agree. Shooting up out of my chair, "Yes, Commander! I won't disappoint you." Saluting him, I ran out of the room back up to the floor, Lyra, and I lived on. Out of breath from running up four flights of stairs, I ran over to Lyra's door, pounding on it, not even waiting for her to answer, "Ly......I'm coming!" Running back to my room, I threw it open and began to pack, excitement and nervousness overcoming me because tomorrow, the most important mission of them all begins. Commander Rourke's POV I stared at the ceiling, a crystal tumbler of whiskey clenched in my hand. These children I've raised since they were six, since I rescued them from the carnage at the site of one of the worst massacres of human refugees to date, I'm sending them off to their possible deaths. Years ago, the council called me forward just before the refugees began arriving from all directions in Aurelia. They spoke of the three great packs: The Star Pack, The Arrow Pack, and the Snow Pack, that one day their heirs would lead them to the absolute annihilation of the entire human race. The race began to assemble children from the ages of five to ten, training them to be the most lethal killers they could be. Training was harsh, weapons, physical combat, poison and silver, stealth, and medical made up most of what they learned. I oversaw everything to the finest detail, but amid it all, I always held a special place in my heart for Lyra and Rowan. Sitting up, I take a long, long drink, feeling the burn down my throat. It's been years since I let my anxiety get in the way of my duty. Needing to pull myself together, I go to the window and look outside. Along the silver walls, you can see pinetrees shrouded in darkness as the sun sets, hiding all kinds of unspeakable danger and horror. But alas, the beauty of it all was unmistakable, where if you tried hard enough, you could think there wasn't a war at hand. Taking another drink, I walk back to my desk, looking for the files for Lyra and now Rowan's undercover mission to the Alpha Academy. All the details were there: dorm rooms, contact information, drop sites, class information, background on all three heirs, strengths and weaknesses. Putting them into my briefcase, I locked it and would hand them in tomorrow during the briefing on the thirteen-hour armored-car trip to the academy. Feeling like that's all I could do for the night, I shut the light, then locked my door. Still clutching my whiskey, I walk towards the door at the end of this hallway, where my room is. Opening the door, I set down my tumbler on the nightstand beside my bed. My room, unlike the others, had a pop of color; I couldn't stand the drabness of the gray that seemed to pervade every aspect of Aurelian buildings. They said the color was to encourage conformity for a united Aurelia. Lying on my twin bed, which was almost too small for me, I thought of all the ways this could go wrong. They could be captured, tortured, and killed. Or they could achieve success and hopefully come home. If there were no reprisal from the factions, maybe we could live in peace for the first time in over fifty years. This wasn't the first time we had a conflict, but after the last conflict, with our numbers dwindling and our fertility rates dropping, if something didn't happen soon, we would fade into the fabric of time itself. So anything and everything must be done to save humanity. I pulled the blanket up and closed my eyes, letting sleep consume me.Lyra’s POVThe knock at the door jolted us all back to attention as we listened to the agreed-upon code being tapped out. Taking a deep breath I stood up and strode towards the door clenching a silver dagger in my fist as at this point I’d rather be safe than sorry.My hand hovered for only a second before I opened it.Cold air rushed in first, sharp and cutting through the heat of the cabin.And then Amber stepped inside.She didn’t move further at first.Just stood there for a beat, eyes scanning the room like she was confirming what she was walking into was real.Then her gaze landed on me.Everything in her face shifted.“Lyra.”My name came out like it hurt to say it.Before I could answer, she crossed the space between us and pulled me into her arms.It wasn’t gentle or cautious. It was immediate, tight, and grounding—like she had been holding herself together by force for too long and this was the first thing that let her loosen.I held her back just as tightly.For a moment ne
Amber’s POVThe penthouse had started to feel like a prison.A beautiful prison, admittedly. Most wolves in Star Pack would have considered staying here an honor. The rooms were larger than some family homes. The windows overlooked half the territory. Fresh flowers appeared every morning, meals arrived before I could ask for them, and servants seemed determined to make sure I never lacked for anything.Except freedom.That part seemed negotiable.I sat curled into one corner of the couch with a book resting open in my lap, staring at the same page I had been pretending to read for nearly an hour. Every few minutes my eyes drifted toward the windows overlooking the territory below.Somewhere out there were answers nobody would give me.Every day that passed without news felt heavier than the one before.The academy was gone. Lucian was dead. Richard was tightening his grip on the pack. And Lyra…I squeezed my eyes shut.No.I refused to think like that.Lyra was alive.She had to be.T
Lyra’s POVThe cabin was small, but it was dry and hidden.At that point, dry and hidden felt dangerously close to luxury.There was a narrow kitchen, a worn table, a hearth full of old ash, a cot near the wall, and a second room barely big enough to hold another mattress. Someone had already left supplies inside. Folded clothes sat on the table in rough stacks. Towels. Soap. A comb. Tooth powder. A chipped basin. A few blankets. A lantern with enough oil to burn through the night.Clean clothes.Soap.A real roof.I stared at it all like an idiot.After four days in the wilderness, those little things felt so painfully normal that I didn’t know what to do with them. My throat tightened in a way that made me angry because it was absurd. I could stand in front of armed wolves without crying, but apparently soap was where I lost my mind.Mara brushed past me and grabbed a towel from the stack. She didn’t look at me, but her voice softened just enough for only me to hear.“Don’t you dare
Lyra’s POV“Well,” the young man said coldly, his bow still trained on us, “this is either the stupidest invasion I’ve ever seen, or somebody better start explaining why two Alpha heirs are carrying a dying human across my border.”The woods stayed silent after that, except for Rowan’s breathing.That was the sound I couldn’t stop hearing. Not the creak of bows drawn tight around us. Not the shift of boots in the pine needles. Not the low growl rumbling from one of the Star Pack wolves half-hidden behind a tree.Rowan.Each breath scraped out of him like his body had to drag it up from somewhere too deep. Kael held him carefully, but there was no making Rowan look anything other than broken. His head rested against Kael’s shoulder, his skin pale beneath the dirt and fever, one hand hanging limp near Kael’s arm. Mara stood close enough to touch him, her backpack still slung over one shoulder, her fingers flexing like she wanted to check his pulse again but knew one wrong move might mak
Lyra’s POV Four days had gone by with Mara, Rowan, Cassian, and Kael following me through the wilderness toward Star Pack, all of us chasing the same fragile hope. Amber. That name had become the only thing keeping me moving. We were dirty, injured, hungry, and I was pretty sure we were all partially dehydrated at this point. My mouth felt like sand, my muscles ached with every step, and every breath tasted like pine, dirt, and exhaustion. I was also pretty sure I heard Kael and Cassian grumbling more than once that if we were all wolves, this would’ve gone by much quicker. Sadly, I agreed with them. Not that I would ever admit it out loud. We followed the river as much as we could, using the water to cover our tracks whenever the ground allowed it. It slowed us down, but it also kept us just one step ahead of literally everyone tracking us. Aurelia’s soldiers. Wolves loyal to the Snow Pack. Whoever else had decided we were worth hunting through half the damn territory.
Amber’s POVWe both moved without looking rushed. Miri returned to the towels. I sat at the vanity and lifted my hair away from the mark, exposing it in the mirror just as Richard walked in. He wore black, because of course he did. Mourning suited men who liked people watching them suffer. His dark hair was tied back, his jaw clean-shaven, his Star Pack ring gleaming on his hand. He looked powerful. He looked calm. He looked like a man who had never once considered the possibility that the woman he locked away might be thinking. “Amber,” he said. His voice made my stomach turn. I lowered my eyes because survival was sometimes uglier than defiance. “Alpha.” His gaze went straight to the mark on my neck. Satisfaction softened his mouth. “You look better.” “I rested.” “You needed it.” I almost told h
Lyra’s POV “What is diplomacy?” Professor Judith asked us as if we should already know all the answers on the Friday of the first week of school. I'd personally missed two of those days, one being that I got the shit kicked out of me, while the other was because we disposed of two bodies down t
Lyra’s POV The mist swirled around us as we kept driving toward Aurelia in our armored car. Mama and Papa sat on either side of me, each one holding one of my hands. The wind was blowing harder and harder, as if a tornado were approaching, causing the armored car to struggle to stay on the road. T
Commander Rourke’s POV It'd been five days now since I dropped Rowan and Lyra off at the Academy. Five days since I had to suck up my pride and let the pupils I had raised into the wolves' den. There was no way I could protect them now; I could only hope the training I instilled in them could keep
Kael’s POV Cassian and I had missed the first two official days of school because we had to run errands for Alpha Leon, as if we were his pups. It was annoying as fuck, but at least we didn't have to worry about being counted absent.Of course, the first day back at school would include fucking t







