LOGINOphelia Tyme is an omega in the Silver Fang Pack who has always managed to stay hidden in the shadows all her life. Her quiet world is turned upside down when she attends the Annual Moonlight Ball and discovers her mate. Or rather… her mates. Lucien and Kaelan Valerius -the powerful Alpha twins of the pack. What should have been a blessing quickly turns into chaos as Ophelia faces rejection, betrayal, and the harsh reality of being an omega bound to the most powerful wolves in the pack. With her life changing in ways she never expected, Ophelia must navigate heartbreak, hostility, and new beginnings. Will Ophelia lose herself to the chaos… or will she rise from the dust and become something far greater than anyone ever imagined?
View MoreIt came the way it always did.
Without warning, without permission.
Two figures stood at the edge of a forest I did not recognise, their backs to me, their faces hidden from my view.
The trees surrounding them were tall and ancient. Mist curled around adding to the night's eeriness. I could not see who they were. I could not hear what they were saying. But I felt them, deep in the bones, undeniably.
My feet shuffled slowly toward them, as though possessed.
The ground beneath my feet shifted. The mist thickened and somewhere in the distance, a wolf howled, a long, mournful and achingly familiar sound, like one I had heard before I was born.
Then came the pull. Low and insistent, thrumming from the centre of my chest, like a thread being drawn taut.
One of the figures began to turn, and just as I caught the edge of his face, the vision dissolved.
I opened my eyes to the familiar water stain on my ceiling and lay there a moment, heart thudding against my ribs for reasons I could not explain.
Then I sat up, pushed it to the back of my mind the way you push a stubborn drawer shut, and got on with my morning.
This was the thing about these visions. I had had them as long as I could remember, scattered and strange. Arriving and going as they pleased and in their wake, they left an unease I'd learnt to ignore.
They never made sense. They never came with instructions.
So I never bothered attaching a meaning to them.
I stood from my bed and looked out the window at Ashen Ridge, home to omegas. Home to me.
In the fourteen years I had lived in Silver Fang, it had always been the same. I noticed it less as a child, but as the years passed the 'rankism' became far more glaring. To make it much worse, I was not truly one of them. I was an immigrant, and in Silver Fang, that was its own kind of rank.
My life isn't hell, nor is it perfect. I've learnt how to cope, to keep to myself, hover in the background, and stay out of trouble.
As an Omega, and worse, an immigrant, you'll either learn that the easy way or the hard way. Flexibility is key in Silver Fang, lest you break under the pack's rigidity.
"Hey," a voice called from behind me, and I couldn't help but smile.
I turned toward the door, already knowing who it was.
A dirty-blonde in a black jumpsuit stood in the doorway, grinning at me, all her teeth on display. Perfectly white teeth. Pilar, as always, unfiltered and impossible to ignore.
"I know you got them whitened," I said, stifling a laugh at her mock-offended expression, "so you can close up now."
"Fuck you," she shot back, two middle fingers up in the air. Classic Pilar.
"Did I just hear a curse word, girls?" Mom shouted from downstairs.
Pilar's eyes nearly popped out of their sockets. "No! Serene! You didn't," she hurried to slam the door, clearly panicking.
"Why'd it take you forever to get here?" I asked, eyeing the plastic bag slung over her left shoulder.
"It's a long story." She pushed past me, dragging out the suspense like she always did. The bag rustled loudly in her hand as she walked further into my room.
"What's that?" I gestured toward the bag.
"Well," she said slowly, "I have news."
Her tone alone made my stomach sink.
"Pilar," I said through my teeth, "what did you do?"
"Why assume I did something?"
I gave her a look. "Just tell me, will you?"
She lifted the bag slightly and grimaced. "Your dress."
My eyes narrowed. "What about my dress?"
"It might have had a small accident."
My heart dropped.
"What do you mean an accident?" I snatched the bag from her hands before she could answer and pulled out the familiar pale-blue fabric I had spent the entire week fixing and adjusting, only to see a huge chunk of it missing.
A large blackened burn mark spread across the side. I stared at it in disbelief.
"You burned my dress?" I said, for some reason not really angry.
Pilar raised both hands defensively. "It wasn't on purpose!"
"Well, I guess the Moon Goddess doesn't want me going to the ball then," I muttered, disappointed, though inside I felt the opposite.
I groaned and dropped onto the edge of my bed.
"Well that solves that," I said after a moment.
"What do you mean?"
"I mean I can't go to the ball now," I replied, trying very hard not to sound relieved. "Problem solved."
For a moment, Pilar just stared at me. Then she sighed dramatically.
"Oh please."
"What?"
"You really thought I would ruin your dress and leave it at that?"
Her hand disappeared into the plastic bag again and she pulled something else out.
The room suddenly filled with the deep shimmer of red.
I blinked.
The dress she held up caught the light from my window, the fabric glittering faintly as if dusted with tiny sparks of fire. It was nothing like the modest blue dress I had planned to wear.
It was bold.
The neckline dipped far lower than anything I'd ever worn before, and the fabric hugged every curve as it fell in sleek, flowing lines.
My mouth slowly opened. "Pilar."
She grinned proudly. "Surprise."
It was beautiful. Terrifyingly so.
"I can't wear that," I said quickly.
"Why not?"
"Because I will look ridiculous!"
"You'll look amazing," she corrected.
"No. I'll look like I'm trying too hard."
"You will look like someone who deserves to be noticed for once."
I hesitated. That last part landed somewhere deep in my chest.
"Pilar," I started again, but she was already pushing the dress into my arms.
"Nope," she said firmly. "You're wearing it."
"I don't even know where you got this."
"That," she replied smugly, "is not important."
I glanced down at the fabric again, running my fingers across it. It was soft. Expensive. Definitely far beyond anything I could ever afford.
"You're unbelievable," I muttered.
"Yet here I am, improving your fashion life."
Before I could protest again, she practically shoved me toward the mirror. "Go. Change."
A few minutes later, I stepped out of the small corner of the room I used to dress.
Pilar turned and immediately let out a long whistle.
"See?" she said. "What did I tell you?"
I glanced nervously at my reflection. The girl staring back at me barely looked like the quiet omega who usually blended into the background.
The red dress clung just enough to highlight my shape, the shimmering fabric catching the light whenever I moved.
I felt different. Unfamiliar. Like I was in a body that wasn't mine.
"Are you sure this isn't too much?" I asked.
Pilar walked over and adjusted the strap slightly on my shoulder.
"Ophelia," she said softly, meeting my eyes in the mirror, "you spend your entire life trying not to be seen."
Her voice grew firmer. "Tonight, just once, let them look."
Something about the way she said it made it impossible to argue. So instead, I took a breath.
"Fine."
Her grin returned instantly. "That's my girl."
Pilar dressed up in a sultry white dress her aunt got for her. We did our makeup and hair and headed downstairs together almost two hours later.
Mother was waiting near the door. Her eyes widened slightly when she saw me.
"Oh," she murmured.
For a second, I panicked. "Too much?"
But instead she smiled gently. "You look beautiful, my love."
She stepped closer, placing a hand briefly against my cheek. "The Moon Goddess watches over all her children," she said softly. "But tonight, may she watch over you especially."
I nodded, unsure what to say.
The night wrapped around me like a soft cloak as we stepped outside. In the distance, the Silver Fang territory glowed faintly with lantern light, music drifting through the trees like a beckoning hand.
The Annual Moonlight Ball. My first.
Pilar bumped my shoulder lightly as we started walking.
"Nervous?" she asked.
"Very."
She grinned widely. "Good."
I groaned. "That's not comforting."
I didn't know it then, but the two figures from my vision were going to turn my life upside down.
A hand shook my shoulder. I tried to ignore it thinking it was just my mind but it continued insistently. Then I realized someone was actually touching me.I jerked awake, my heart hammering. The room was dark, as the fire in the hearth had burnt out. A figure loomed over me, silhouetted against the dim glow of a single lit candle."You have to get up."I blinked, trying to focus. "Gertha, is that you?""Forgive me, my lady, but the Council... The Council requests your presence."I sat up, rubbing my eyes. "What time is it?""Dawn is still an hour or two away."I stared at her. "The sun has not even risen.""I know." Her voice was flat, unapologetic. "They want you there before the court gathers."I groaned and swung my legs over the side of the bed. The floor was eerily cold and a shiver escaped my lips at the unexpected change in temperature. "They could not have waited until a reasonable hour?"Gertha was already moving toward the wardrobe. "We have just a few minutes, my lady. No
"That's enough for today."My fingers tightened around the sword more. "I can keep going.""I know you can." He stepped closer. "But you don't need to prove anything right now."I looked at him. "What makes you think I want to prove something?"He did not answer.He reached out and took the sword from my hand, not holding my gaze. He looked at the blade in his hands, then at me."Same time tomorrow," he said.I nodded.He hesitated. I saw it – a small pause, like he was deciding whether to say something or not."Lucian didn't mean what he said," he finally said. "That night in the corridor. Whatever he told you – he did not mean it."I looked at him. "How do you know?""Because I know him." He said it like it cost him something. "He says things he does not mean when he's afraid.""What is he afraid of?"His jaw tightened. His eyes flickered away from mine."Same time," he said again. Then he turned and walked toward the racks of wooden swords, his back to me.I watched him go. The bond
The sword was heavier than I expected and its grip was worn smooth from use. I turned it over in my hand, testing the weight.I had never held one like this before; most definitely not with intention.I swung it. The motion was clumsy and unbalanced. The blade cut through the air with no precision, no purpose. I tried again, better this time but still wrong.I did not know why I was doing this. This was not in my schedule for the day, if I had one.I had been walking through the halls, restless, trying to outrun the silence in my room. But my feet had carried me past the gates, past the racks of wooden swords, past the straw dummies that had been stabbed and slashed a thousand times before.Luckily, the training yard was empty when I arrived.Maybe I wanted to feel capable. Maybe I wanted to feel like I could fight back against something. The Council. The fear that had been pressing on my chest since I arrived.I swung again repeatedly, and although my arm ached, I did not stop."You'r
He had not told anyone he was coming. He had not even told himself he would return. But the girl had lodged herself firmly in his mind, and he could not shake her loose and that unsettled him.The sage studied him with eyes that held no judgment. She had seen worse men than him sit in that chair. She had also seen better ones leave and never come back."You came back," she said. It was not a question."I did." He answered regardless.She leaned back, her fingers pattering softly against the wood of the table. "The spell is finished. The blood has spoken.""What does it say to us?"She did not answer immediately. She let the silence abide, let him feel the weight of what he was about to hear. Then she said, "She carries something that has not walked this earth in centuries. Something shifters do not behold often enough to be fully understood and it is buried."Obelix's hands curled on his knees. "Buried where?""In her blood. In her bones. In parts of her being and soul." She tilted he
The morning came too quickly.I stood in the grand hall of the palace, dressed in the pale blue gown Gertha had laid out for me. The fabric was soft, the sleeves long, the hem brushing the floor.My hair had been pinned with care, a few loose strands left to soften the severity. I kept my hands cla
It was dark and the moon was high in the sky when Kaelan returned. Silver Fang was asleep.He had been at the northern border since midday, inspecting the watchtowers and listening to reports of rogues testing the perimeter. Nothing had happened, nothing ever happened, however, his father insisted o
Pilar's shop came into view. I stepped inside.A beautiful blonde woman was trying on a blue dress that matched her eyes. Pilar adjusted the hem, her back to me. A few other customers browsed the racks. Two workers moved between them, helping.Before I could say anything, a short woman with a pinch
***THIRD POV*** The door shut behind her with a quiet click. Kaelan did not move. Silence filled the room, thick and suffocating, as though the space itself was holding its breath. The two alpha brothers had numerous thoughts running through their minds. Thoughts so heavy they tainted the air be
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