LOGINAylin Lunaris was never meant to survive. Betrayed by her family and offered to the feared Lycan Kingdom as a sacrifice, the human girl expects only one thing when she arrives at the mountain fortress of Lupercal: death. Every clan has been forced to send a daughter, and everyone knows humans are nothing more than tools in the eyes of the wolves. But Aylin is different. When a rare power hidden within her awakens, she catches the attention of Prince Lucien—the future Lycan King and the most dangerous wolf in the kingdom. As Lucien struggles to control a brutal transformation that threatens to consume his humanity, Aylin becomes the one person capable of calming the beast within him. Yet the closer she gets to the prince, the more questions arise. Why is a mere human able to do what no one else can, Survive? Why does an ancient power buried beneath the kingdom seem to recognize her? And why does fate keep pulling her toward a king she should fear and hate? As enemies gather, secrets unravel, and a forbidden bond grows stronger, Aylin discovers a truth that shatters everything she thought she knew about herself. Because she isn't just a human girl. And she is not who she believes she is. In a world ruled by wolves, blood, and destiny, Aylin must uncover the truth of her origins before it destroys both her and the king she was never supposed to love.
View More"You look exquisite, Aylin."
"I look like a dead woman walking," I said, tracing the thick frost on the windowpane. "Save the compliments, Vivienne. We both know they mean nothing." Vivienne set her porcelain teacup down with agonizing slowness. "Must you be dramatic this early?" "Must you pretend this is a normal Tuesday?" I faced my stepmother squarely. "You're sending me straight to my death. The least you can do is be honest about it." For ten years, I had watched Vivienne dismantle everything my father built with that same calm, practical expression. She wasn't overtly cruel; she was worse. She was efficient. Drusilla rustled into the parlor, her heavy silk skirts brushing the floorboards. "You're acting like you're the only girl going. Every noble house is sending someone to the pack. It's a legal obligation, Aylin. Get over yourself." "Every other house drew lots fairly," I said, my fingernails digging into my palms. "You didn't even put your daughters' names in the jar. You just handed the lawyers mine." Drusilla smirked. "Father's will was reinterpreted by the legal team. These things happen when the vaults are empty." "Drusilla," Vivienne’s voice cut her daughter off, quiet and final. From the window seat, Nyx sipped her berry juice, thoroughly entertained. "Look at it this way. If you survive the wolves, you come back a legend. If you don't... at least the family name dies with something interesting attached to it instead of boring bankruptcy court documents." "Nyx," Vivienne warned, sharper this time. I looked at the three of them, draped in expensive fabrics in a room heavily scented with funeral like white lilies. "My father loved this house, and he loved you. This is how you repay his memory, by discarding his only daughter." Vivienne approached me, her leather heels clicking against the hardwood. She adjusted the lace at my collar with quick, efficient fingers, handling me like a merchant inspecting merchandise. "Your father," she whispered, her face inches from mine, "Spent his last years talking to a dead woman in empty hallways and writing random numbers on the library walls. He left us with massive debt, a broken reputation, and you. At least you can be useful to this family for once." Three heavy iron knocks rattled the front door. "The carriage is here," Drusilla clapped. "Pick up your bag, Aylin," Vivienne said, turning her back on me. I grabbed my single traveling bag and walked out into the biting cold. Vivienne had insisted on a thin silk dress, appearances mattered, even at the end. In the cobblestone courtyard, a black carriage waited, hitched to two unnaturally still dark horses. On the balcony above, Nyx and Drusilla waved white handkerchiefs, laughing as if bidding farewell to a guest at a pleasant garden party. The carriage moved. For two grueling hours, we climbed the steep road to Lupercal. The ordinary world faded, replaced by jagged rock, towering pines, and freezing wind. Leaning my head back, I thought of my father, Alaric Lunaris. The villagers called him mad after my mother died, locked away with his charts and books. But I knew he was just looking for the only thing that made sense to him anymore. "Don’t be the candle, Aylin,"he used to tell me when the winter storms shook the windows. "The candle fears the wind and burns down to nothing. Be the moon. The moon watches the darkness without fading." The carriage jerked to a sudden stop. Outside, the Palace of Lupercal loomed a monstrous structure of black stone bursting from the fractured mountain. Blue fire flickered in iron cages, illuminating hundreds of shivering girls lined up in the courtyard. The door flew open. "Out! Now!" a guard barked, grabbing my wrist. "Let go of me," I snapped, breaking free into the freezing slush to take my place in line. As I stepped into the crowd, the air pressure shifted. I didn't hear or see it, but I felt it in my bones. Something deep inside that dark palace had turned its heavy, suffocating attention directly onto me, locking around my chest like an iron band.LUCIEN'S POVI took the stone steps three at a time.I told myself it was a routine check. A king confirming his asset was secured. That was all.I told myself that the entire way up the eastern spire, and I didn't believe a single word of it, I threw the oak doors open.The room was still destroyed. Shattered glass, broken chairs, ripped curtains across the floor. The smell of smoke and rogue blood still clung to the stone. And Aylin was standing by the cold fireplace with her back to me, completely still.When the door hit the wall, she spun around.My chest did something I did not have a name for.She was white as bone, shaking. Her hands curled into fists at her sides. She looked like she hadn't slept, like she had been standing in that exact spot holding herself together by pure force of will since the moment everything ended. Tairn my wolf surged forward inside me, practically vibrating with relief at the sight of her.I pushed him back hard. He ignored me completely."Why?" sh
LUCIEN'S POV"The girl needs to be put down, Lucien! Immediately!" Lord Robert slammed his palm flat against the table.I sat at the head of the council room and said nothing. My bones still ached from the shift, but my mind was somewhere else entirely. It kept pulling back to her. To the way she had looked in that vault, standing in the dark with my madness pressing in on her from every direction, and she hadn't moved. She hadn't run.I forced my eyes back to the room."The law of the head kingdom doesn't change just because you survived, boy," Elder Vance said, leaning forward with that ugly twist on his face he always wore when he thought he had leverage over me. "The Anchor is a tool. She was brought here to take the resonance of your shift and die. Her heart was supposed to give out . That is how we keep the secret.""She didn't die," I said, flat and final."And that is exactly why she is a threat!" Robert's voice cracked with panic. "She knows the truth now, she knows that
It is the Matron. Her severe, dark robes are immaculate, her hair pinned into a flawless, rigid bun. She carries her silver staff, her face a pale, unreadable mask as she steps over the rubble. She does not look at the dead rogue near the wardrobe. She does not look at Mira’s body. Her eyes are fixed entirely on Lucien."Your Majesty," the Matron says, her voice echoing through the quiet room. She bows her head in a calculated show of reverence. "The transition is complete. The true blood has stabilized, and the head kingdom remains unbroken. The lower courts are already sweeping the remaining rogues from the perimeter."Lucien does not move. He stands tall, the massive, terrifying shadows of his Lycan form still lingering around his broad shoulders. His metallic gray eyes remain fixed on the Matron, cold and unyielding."The defenses were breached," Lucien says, his voice a low, gravelly rumble that makes the iron light fixtures vibrate. "The outer walls were bypassed.""A security
The heavy thud against the wood repeats, louder this time, followed by splintering timber. Mira draws her legs tight, pressing her spine against my headboard. "Aylin," she whispers, her lips trembling. "They’re inside, They’re right outside." "Shh," I hiss, scrambling toward the hearth and gripping the iron poker until my palms ache. "Stay in the shadows." The oak panels explode. A massive, grey-furred shoulder slams through, ripping the iron bolt from the wall. A rogue forces his way in, his breath smelling of copper and wet mud. His eyes are bloodshot, wide with unhinged energy. "Look what we have here," the creature rumbles. "The prize human. The one they kept hidden." I step before Mira, raising the iron rod. "Get back." The rogue lets out a rattling laugh. "You think metal scares a wolf, girl? He snarles. He lunges, I swing, but he catches the metal, throwing it across the floor. He steps over the debris, raising claws. "Aylin, run!" Mira screams. She throws herself aga






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