Mag-log inThe war column emerged from the Whispering Caves as night claimed the ridge. Torches flared against the darkness, illuminating weary faces and bloodstained armor. The cost of victory had been steep. Twelve men lost, more wounded. Yet they had broken the splinter force and secured the lower pass. For now.
Kael rode at the head once more, jaw set against the persistent throb in his side. The slash was shallow but deep enough to bleed through the makeshift binding. Pain was familiar. Control over it was everything. He refused to let it show. Behind him, Riven rode in silence for the first time since their capture. The rogue Alpha's forearm had been crudely wrapped, but blood still seeped through the cloth. His silver-streaked hair hung damp with sweat and cave dust. He moved with the same defiant grace, yet Kael felt the weight of his gaze like a constant pressure. Every glance over his shoulder confirmed it. Storm-gray eyes tracking him. Unreadable. Intense. They made camp in a sheltered hollow protected by high rocks. Tents rose quickly. Fires crackled. Healers moved among the wounded with herbs and needles. Kael's pavilion went up at the center, larger and more fortified than the rest. Guards took positions. General Thorne approached with reports, but Kael waved him off. "Later. See to the men first." Inside the pavilion, the brazier burned low and warm. Furs covered the floor. The single large cot stood against one wall. Maps still lay scattered on the table. Kael removed his cloak and outer armor with careful movements, wincing as the fabric pulled at his wound. He sat on the edge of the cot and began unbuckling the leather straps at his side. The tent flap opened. Riven entered under guard, then the guards withdrew at Kael's sharp nod. The rogue stood just inside, taking in the space with that same assessing stare. His eyes landed on Kael's partially bared torso and the bloodied bandage. "You look like hell, Draven," Riven said, voice rough but quieter than usual. "Sit still before you make it worse." Kael's gaze narrowed. "I do not need your concern." "Concern?" Riven gave a short laugh as he crossed the space. "Call it self-preservation. If you bleed out, I lose my only shield against your men. Move over." Before Kael could protest, Riven dropped to one knee in front of him. The proximity hit instantly. Riven's scent, wild pine mixed with blood and smoke, filled the air. His hands, callused and steady, reached for the bandage. Kael caught his wrist on instinct. Their eyes locked. Inches apart. The same charged silence from the caves returned, heavier now in the quiet tent. "Do not touch me," Kael warned, but his grip lacked force. It lingered. Riven did not pull away. Instead, he turned his hand slowly until his palm pressed against Kael's. Strength against strength. No submission. Just heat. "Then do it yourself and stop being stubborn. Or let the healer in. Your choice, King." Kael released him with a low growl. He allowed Riven to peel back the bloodied cloth. Cool air met hot skin. Riven's fingers brushed the edge of the wound as he examined it. The touch was clinical, yet it sent sparks racing across Kael's nerves. Every point of contact felt deliberate. Intentional. Riven's breath ghosted warm over his ribs. "It needs cleaning and stitching," Riven muttered. "Lucky for you, I have done worse on myself in worse places." He rose, fetched a basin of water and clean cloths from the supplies without asking permission. When he returned, he knelt again, closer this time. Their knees brushed. Riven dampened a cloth and began to clean the slash with careful strokes. Each pass of fabric brought fresh awareness. Kael's muscles tensed under the touch. Not from pain. From the unbearable closeness of another Alpha who refused to yield even an inch. "You fought well in the caves," Kael said after a long silence. The words came out grudging. "For a man without a pack." Riven's mouth curved slightly. "High praise from the great King Draven. Careful. Someone might think you are growing soft." "I am stating fact." Kael's voice dropped lower. "You saved my life." Riven paused, cloth hovering above the wound. Their gazes met again. Firelight played across Riven's sharp features, highlighting the bruise on his jaw and the new cut on his lip. "Do not read too much into it. I protect my investments." The air thickened. Kael could see the rapid beat of Riven's pulse at the base of his throat. He could smell the faint shift in Riven's scent, something darker threading through the pine and lightning. Awareness. The same pull Kael felt echoing in his own chest. Riven finished cleaning and threaded a needle with surprising steadiness. "This will sting." He worked in focused silence, stitching the wound with precise, efficient movements. Kael did not flinch. He watched Riven's face instead. The concentration in those storm-gray eyes. The way his brow furrowed slightly. The stray strand of silver-streaked hair that fell across his forehead. An inexplicable urge rose in Kael to brush it back. He clenched his fist against his thigh instead. When the last stitch was tied, Riven sat back on his heels. Their faces remained close. Too close. The tent felt smaller, the brazier hotter. Kael's hand lifted of its own accord and gripped Riven's shoulder. Not hard. Not gentle. Just enough to feel the solid muscle beneath the tunic. "You are bleeding too," Kael said, voice rough. His thumb brushed the edge of the bandage on Riven's forearm. Riven's breath hitched. He did not move away. "It is nothing." "It is not nothing." Kael's grip tightened fractionally. The contact sent heat coiling low in his belly. Pride and desire twisted tighter. He wanted to pull Riven closer. He wanted to push him away. The conflict burned. For one suspended moment, their foreheads nearly touched. Breaths mingled. Kael's gaze dropped to Riven's mouth, then back to his eyes. The almost-kiss from the previous night hovered between them like a ghost. Closer now. More dangerous. A voice outside the tent shattered the moment. "My King." General Thorne's tone carried urgency. "The scouts have returned. One of the border lords has arrived. Lord Vesper. He brings news of the main Shadow Pact force and... he wishes to speak with the rogue as well." Kael's jaw clenched. He released Riven and stood, ignoring the fresh pull of stitches. Riven rose too, stepping back, but the space between them still hummed. "Send him in," Kael ordered. Lord Vesper entered moments later, tall and polished, with the sleek confidence of a court Alpha. His eyes swept the pavilion, lingering a second too long on Riven. A slow smile curved his lips. "Riven Ash," Vesper said smoothly. "It has been years. You look... well, for an exile. I see the king has you on a short leash." Riven's expression hardened, but he said nothing. Kael felt a sharp twist in his chest. Jealousy. Hot and sudden. The way Vesper looked at Riven, familiar and possessive, ignited something primal. Kael stepped between them, voice cold steel. "Speak your news, Vesper. The rogue is under my protection. Not your conversation." Vesper raised a brow but delivered his report. The main Pact force was massing faster than expected. Alliances shifting in the Marches. Yet Kael barely heard the details. His focus stayed locked on Riven, on the way the other Alpha's shoulders remained squared in defiance, on the fresh awareness that Lord Vesper's presence had stirred. When Vesper finally left, the tent fell quiet again. Riven crossed his arms, watching Kael with that sharp, knowing gaze. "Protective now, are we?" Riven murmured. "Careful, Draven. Someone might think you care." Kael turned to face him fully. The distance between them felt charged once more. "I protect what is mine to use. Nothing more." Riven took one step closer. Then another. Until they stood chest to chest again. "Liar," he whispered, the word brushing warm against Kael's lips. The pull surged stronger than ever. Kael's hand rose, hovering near Riven's jaw. Riven's eyes darkened with the same conflict. Pride. Desire. The slow unraveling of control. Outside, the camp fires crackled and distant howls rose. Inside, two Alphas stood on the edge of something irreversible. Neither moved. But the fall had already begun.The weeks after Riven’s departure stretched into an endless gray haze inside the walls of Draven Keep. Kael moved through his days like a ghost of the king he had once been. He held council meetings that lasted until the torches burned low, reviewed scout reports with meticulous care, and trained with his warriors until his muscles screamed for mercy. Duty had always been his anchor. Now it was his cage. Every order he gave, every strategy he approved, felt hollow without the sharp, defiant voice that had once challenged him at every turn.Riven was gone.The note he had left behind had been burned, but the words remained branded in Kael’s memory. The quiet resolve in Riven’s storm-gray eyes as he walked into the night haunted him in the quiet hours before dawn. The rogue Alpha had chosen freedom over the halfway existence Kael had offered. Pride had won for both of them. Yet the victory tasted like ash.Kael stood on the highest battlements one evening, the cold wind cutting through
The forest beyond the Ashen Ridge was older than any map in Draven Keep’s archives. Ancient pines twisted toward a clouded sky, their needles whispering secrets Riven no longer cared to hear. He had been moving for three days with little rest, circling back twice to confuse Varak’s trackers. Each step pulled at the half-healed gash along his ribs, but pain was an old companion. It kept him sharp.What haunted him more than the wound was the absence of Kael’s scent.He crouched beside a lightning-split oak, fingers tracing the rough bark as if it could anchor him. The memory of the King’s hands, calloused, certain, almost reverent, rose unbidden. The way Kael had pinned him against the pavilion wall, growling low in his throat while their bodies moved in brutal harmony. The way those same hands had later pressed bandages to his side with a gentleness that had cracked something deep inside Riven’s chest.You chose doubt, Riven thought bitterly. I chose survival.Yet every night when he
The forest beyond the Ashen Ridge was older than any map in Draven Keep’s archives. Ancient pines twisted toward a clouded sky, their needles whispering secrets Riven no longer cared to hear. He had been moving for three days with little rest, circling back twice to confuse Varak’s trackers. Each step pulled at the half-healed gash along his ribs, but pain was an old companion. It kept him sharp.What haunted him more than the wound was the absence of Kael’s scent.He crouched beside a lightning-split oak, fingers tracing the rough bark as if it could anchor him. The memory of the King’s hands, calloused, certain, almost reverent, rose unbidden. The way Kael had pinned him against the pavilion wall, growling low in his throat while their bodies moved in brutal harmony. The way those same hands had later pressed bandages to his side with a gentleness that had cracked something deep inside Riven’s chest.You chose doubt, Riven thought bitterly. I chose survival.Yet every night when he
The moon hung low over Draven Keep, casting silver light across the stone walls. Kael stood on the battlements, unable to sleep. The cold wind bit through his cloak, but it did nothing to cool the storm inside him. Every moment since Riven’s confession replayed in his mind. The raw honesty. The pain in those storm-gray eyes. The way their bodies had come together in desperate need only nights ago.He had pushed Riven away. Again.Below, in the east wing, a shadow moved near the outer wall. Kael’s instincts sharpened. He descended the stairs quickly and made his way toward Riven’s chambers. The guards were gone. The door stood slightly ajar.Inside, the room was empty. Riven’s small pack was missing. A single note lay on the table, written in a strong, familiar hand.I will not stay and break beside you. Thank you for the fire, even if it burned us both. Do not follow me. R.Kael’s chest tightened painfully. He crumpled the note in his fist and ran. The corridors blurred as he raced to
Two more days passed in Draven Keep under a blanket of heavy silence. Kael spent his waking hours in the war room and on the training grounds, pushing his body and his men to prepare for Varak’s inevitable return. He avoided the east wing completely. The memory of Riven’s body pressed against his, the heat of their night together, and the raw pain in those storm-gray eyes haunted him constantly. Yet he could not bring himself to bridge the growing distance.Riven remained in his chambers. The guards reported that he ate little and spoke even less. He spent most of his time by the window, staring out at the mountains as if measuring the path to freedom. The healers visited daily, but Riven’s physical wounds were healing faster than the deeper ones.On the evening of the seventh day, Kael finally broke. He dismissed the guards and entered Riven’s chambers without announcement. Riven stood by the window again, a small pack resting at his feet. He did not turn immediately.“You are leavin
The great hall of Draven Keep felt colder than the mountain winds outside. Kael sat upon his throne, surrounded by his most trusted lords and generals. Maps of the border regions lay spread before them. Reports of Varak’s regrouping forces filled the air with tension. Yet Kael’s mind was not fully on the war. It kept drifting to the east wing, to the man he had ordered kept under watch.Riven.Three days had passed since their night together. Three days of deliberate distance. Kael had thrown himself into strategy meetings and border preparations, using duty as a shield against the fire that still burned in his veins. But every night, the memory of Riven’s body pressed against his, the taste of him, the broken sounds he had made, haunted Kael’s sleep.General Thorne cleared his throat. “My King, the rogue’s knowledge of Varak’s tactics remains valuable. Yet the pack lords grow restless. They question why he is still kept so close to the royal quarters.”Kael’s fingers tightened on the
The victory fires had burned low across the camp, leaving only glowing embers and the occasional crackle of wood. Most of the soldiers had collapsed into exhausted sleep, their bodies aching from the brutal fighting at the Rift Pass. But inside Kael’s private pavilion, sleep was the last thing on ei
The morning after their confrontation, Kael summoned Riven to the war room. The long table was covered with maps and reports. General Thorne and two senior lords stood at the far end, their expressions uneasy. Kael stood at the head, arms braced on the table, his face carved from stone.Riven enter
The days following their return to Draven Keep passed in a cold, suffocating silence. Kael threw himself into ruling. He held long councils, reviewed reports from the borders, strengthened the defenses of the Keep, and met with pack lords who still whispered about the rogue Alpha living under the K
The victory fires burned low across the camp. Cheers had faded into exhausted murmurs and the occasional burst of drunken laughter. Most men had collapsed into sleep, bodies aching from the long battle. Kael stood outside his pavilion for a long time, staring at the flickering flames, before he fin







