LOGINArthur.” Another voice cut through before the guards could drag her away.
The voice was steady, controlled, but sharp enough to draw his attention from silver and the other guads. A tall silhouette stepped from the end of the den, where he’d been watching quietly. Ronan. It was the warrior who led them from the border.
Arthur’s Beta, his second in command, and the only wolf who has known him longer than any other wolf, and the only one who could ever speak against him and still keep his head attached.
Arthur narrowed his eyes at him. “This doesn’t concern you, Ronan.”
“Everything that goes on or could threaten this pack is my concern,” Ronan replied, moving into the light.
Ronan was a bit shorter compared to Arthur, yet he still stood at over six feet tall. He’s more built, but somehow looks less dangerous compared to the Alpha.
His gaze moved to silver for a split second. She looked worn out, trembling, but was still standing her ground, and then he turned back to Arthur. “This? This is bigger than you refuting to acknowledge that your mate walked right into your territory.”
Ronan tilted his head, unmoved. “She is your mate.”
A disturbing silence settled into the den. Arthur just looked at Ronan the way a wolf looks at another who dares step on its throat.
Ronan didn’t back down. “You have been clear about what you think of a wolf bond. You have called it a weakness, and that you will not be chained down.” His voice dropped deliberately, steady. “But you can not say this is not under consideration. You can not refuse to act while her people burn and are killed. Think of this as having leverage over them.”
Silver watched them quietly through their back and forth, but not until Ronan referred to her as “leverage did it get under her skin. She was nothing to them but a bargaining chip for more power and control. Her face hardened, and her hands formed fists at her sides, with her nails biting into her palms.
“How can you be so cruel, speaking of people’s lives like they are pawns in a game?” she snapped, her eyes going between Arthur and Ma. “Leverage while they fight for their lives, their children, their home, living in a nightmare? Her voice was cracking. “Do you even hear yourself at all?’
Arthur’s eyes moved slowly to her; his expression did not shift once, but something changed in the room. A quick flicker came and left too fast for most to notice. His face tightened as he clenched his jaw. He was not expecting her to talk, let alone cut through him the way that she did, trembling but not remorseful.
Silver rose, her hands trembling. “I also do not think this is about territory. It’s about me.”
Silence stretched heavy across the room.
Arthur’s voice was quiet when he finally spoke. “What are you implying?”
“I have been hearing voices in my head, calling my name and saying I belong to them, and not long after, the attack happened. But it does not make any sense to me. “ Silver said, hoping they did not think she was crazy for saying she heard voices.
Arthur and Ronan shared a knowing look.
“I already gave my answer.” Arthur insisted.
“You gave her humiliation,” Ronan shot back. His fists curled at his sides. “She’s Hollow Moon’s heir. If she walks back empty-handed, she won’t make it through the night. You know what Drogo’s after.”
Silver flinched. “Drogo?” Her voice scraped raw.
Ronan turned, softer now, as if he regretted letting the name slip. “You deserve to know the truth.” He crouched beside her, his storm-grey eyes searching hers. “Drogo Sloan… he wasn’t always this way. He was Hollow Moon once. One of your father’s fiercest warriors. Until he turned to blood magic.”
Her stomach twisted. “That’s not possible. My father—”
“Banished him,” Ronan finished, voice grim. “But exile wasn’t enough. He wants vengeance. And you, Silver, from what you’ve said, seem to be the vengeance he seeks.”
Arthur’s chair scraped the floor as he stood. “Enough, Ronan.”
“No,” Ronan snapped, his voice rising for the first time against his Alpha. “She deserves to understand why her pack is bleeding and why Drogo won’t stop until he has her.”
Arthur’s jaw tightened. For a moment, the steel in his expression cracked, guilt, maybe, or a memory too sharp to bury. But then it was gone, replaced with the cold indifference she’d come to know.
Then he broke the silence at last, his words short, almost as if spat out. “Fine.”
Ronan was not expecting him to concede so easily; he was caught off guard. “Alpha,”
Arthur did not take his eyes off Silver; it was as if he was trying to pin her to the ground with his gaze. “Take a good number of warriors,” he said. “ As much as you think necessary. And Ronan, you will be leading them and handling all of the arrangements.”
Ronan straightened himself out, trying to cover up his initial shock. “Yes, Alpha.”
Arthur went back to take a seat in his chair, his voice dropping on purpose, “ I am not doing this for you, or for your people, this is purely strategy. Your people will live, and I will gain leverage. You make a mistake or cause the death of any of my wolves, and I will not forgive you for it.”
Silver swallowed and then forced herself to look up at him, matching his intense gaze. “ I did not expect your pity, and I do not want your forgiveness. I need your word to save my people, and you have given it,” she said, her voice surprisingly steady.
Ronan’s hand brushed her arm, steadying her. “Then you won’t face it alone,” he promised. His devotion wrapped around her like a vow, too fierce, too sudden, and yet, for the first time since the slaughter, she didn’t feel like she was falling apart.
Arthur’s gaze flicked to where Ronan touched her. His expression darkened, but he said nothing.
Silver’s thoughts tangled like briars, her father fading, her pack in ruins, Arthur’s rejection slicing at her heart, and Ronan’s sudden closeness tugging at her in ways she didn’t know how to feel.
Silver did not realize she was shaking until the tremor reached her teeth.The forest had gone too still, the silence felt curated, like the trees themselves had been instructed not to interrupt.She forced her spine straight.“If resistance stops being my instinct,” she said carefully, “what exactly do you think replaces it?”Drogo regarded her the way scholars regard rare texts. “Clarity,” he replied.A hollow laugh almost escaped her, but it died before it reached her throat.“This is not clarity.”“No?” His voice remained even. “When you are not fighting me, your tho
Silver did not feel the journey end.Her consciousness slammed back into place like something dropped from a height too great to measure. Sensation flooded her all at once. Cold air scraped her lungs. Her knees buckled under unfamiliar ground. Her fingers curled into damp soil before she even realized she had fallen.Breath tore through her chest in sharp, uneven pulls.She did not remember walking here.Did not remember leaving Arthur’s warmth. Did not remember the corridors, the night air, the forest, the boundary of the pack, or crossing whatever invisible line separated safety from this place.But she knew immediately where she was.The knowing lived in her bones before
Arthur had sensed her before he saw her.Not by sound. The pack moved constantly around him, boots on stone, low voices, distant howls threading through dusk like living breath. None of that was unusual. None of it mattered.It was the shift beneath his ribs that made him turn.Silver stood at the edge of the clearing, still as if she had walked there and forgotten how to move again.For a moment he did nothing. He simply watched her.Her posture was upright, but something inside it had collapsed. Her shoulders held tension that did not belong to physical exhaustion. Her gaze found him, but it carried distance, like she had traveled through something unseen and arrived with pieces of herself still trailing behind.
Silver woke to stillness, wrapped in warmth and breath and the slow rhythm of another heartbeat close enough to feel.She didn’t move at first.Her mind surfaced gradually, like rising through deep water, the faint warmth against her back. The solid weight of an arm resting loosely across her waist. The quiet rise and fall of the chest behind her.Arthur.Memory settled gently into place.His room, the moonlight, and the quiet conversation. The kiss that had not felt like surrender but something steadier. Her breathing slowed.Carefully, slowly, Silver turned her head.Arthur slept beside her, his face was softened by sleep, tens
Silver did not remember leaving the room.One moment, she was sitting on the edge of the bed, lungs still struggling to find rhythm after Drogo’s voice slipped away. The next, she was moving through corridors she had barely memorized, guided less by thought and more by instinct.Her body knew where to go.Arthur.The word alone quieted something restless beneath her ribs.The halls of his home were alive with low movement. Wolves passing. Voices murmuring. The subtle pulse of pack life flowing around her like a river she stood inside but did not fully belong to yet.His scent reached her before she saw him. Pine, iron, something warm and grounded beneath it all.
Silver had learned to recognize silence in many forms.There was the peaceful kind, and then there was the wrong kind of silence, the kind that felt watched.It began as a faint pressure behind her temples, a subtle awareness, like standing too close to a cliff’s edge without seeing it.Silver paused midway through brushing her hair.The room Arthur had given her was warm, large, carefully prepared, fresh linens, a carved wooden chest at the foot of the bed, a window overlooking the forest line where pale afternoon light filtered through tall pines.She blinked slowly, the sensation faded. She exhaled and set the brush down.The adjustment to new territory, new emotional ter
The corridors of the Alpha quarters had grown smaller, everywhere she went, she felt the weight of eyes on her, watching, cataloguing, judging. Even the stone walls seemed to hum with scrutiny, as though they remembered every step and whispered thought.
Arthur did not ask her if she wanted to train, he told her.It started at dawn.Silver was halfway through dressing when the knock came, sharp. It wasn’t a request but
Silver realized she was no longer free when she tried to open the door.It was subtle at first.She reached for the handle, fingers brushing cool metal, expecting it to turn
Silver woke up twice.The first time, she opened her eyes and saw the familiar stone ceiling of the Alpha quarters. The second time, she realized she did not feel like she was inside her body.







