ANMELDENChapter 3: The Iron Cage
“You talk like a Queen, but you bleed like a lamb. Let me show you how wolves really fight.” I didn’t sleep after that. The image of the golden-eyed wolf lingered behind my eyelids. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw the crumbling pack house. I heard my mother’s screams. And then, the cold voice of the Alpha of Silvermoon, offering me a hand stained with ash. By dawn, I was hollow. I pulled on my grey uniform, ignoring the bloodshot eyes in the cracked mirror. The first bell rang, dragging me back to the nightmare of normalcy. I moved on autopilot. Breakfast was a blur of scornful whispers. Classes were a fog of chalk dust and hushed laughter. Selene kicked my shins under the table during lunch. I didn’t flinch. My mind was elsewhere. The catacombs. The moon bleeds red. Come alone. I was so consumed by the thought that I missed the turn. Instead of heading to my afternoon history lecture, I took the wrong corridor—a narrow, winding stairwell that led to the Academy’s old gymnasium. The air here was thick with sweat, metal, and the metallic tang of old blood. It was where the Alphas trained. Where pure-bloods learned to tear each other apart. I realized my mistake too late. The heavy iron doors behind me slammed shut with a thunderous boom. I spun around, panic flaring. A massive figure stood blocking the exit, his silhouette etched against the dim, dust-choked light. Ronan Stone. He was built like a mountain carved from granite. Broad shoulders, thick neck, fists like sledgehammers. His hair was dark and shaggy, his jaw covered in a coarse shadow of stubble. Where Kael was polished cruelty and Zephyr was icy calculation, Ronan was raw, unfiltered violence. He didn’t wear a uniform. He wore a tight black tank top that strained across his chest, his thick arms covered in a lattice of scars. He stepped into the light, and his storm-grey eyes locked onto me. "You're lost, maid." I backed up, my spine hitting a cold metal bench. "I—I'm sorry. I took a wrong turn. I'll leave—" "No, you won't." He stalked toward me, his footsteps heavy and deliberate. He stopped inches away, towering over me. The heat radiating from his body was overwhelming. He smelled of iron, leather, and rain. "I heard what happened in the library," he said, his voice low and gravelly. "I heard you threw Kael across a room." My throat tightened. "It was an accident. I don't—" "You don't know what you are." Ronan tilted his head, his grey eyes scanning my face like he was reading a battlefield map. "That's the problem. You're a bomb with a loose fuse, walking around a room full of matches." He reached out. I flinched. But he didn't grab my chin like Kael. He took my wrist—rough, calloused fingers wrapping around my bone—and lifted my arm. My sleeve fell back, revealing the faded purple bruises from yesterday. Ronan’s jaw tightened. "Who did this?" "Selene," I whispered. "It doesn't—" "It does matter." He released my wrist, but he didn't step back. Instead, he grabbed a heavy leather punching bag hanging from the ceiling, ripping it off its hook with a single, brutal yank. He threw it onto the mat at my feet. "Hit it." I stared at him. "What?" "If you're going to survive this academy," Ronan growled, crossing his massive arms, "you need to learn how to hurt. Not defend. Hurt. You threw Kael because your wolf panicked. That's instinct. That's not skill. If I cornered you right now, you'd crumple like paper." I felt a spark of defiance ignite in my chest. The same spark I had felt when I stared into Kael's eyes. "You don't know that." Ronan's lips curled into something that wasn't quite a smile. It was a warning. "Prove it." I looked at the punching bag. Then at him. My hands trembled, but I stepped forward. I raised my fist, remembering the way Ronan had shown the fighters in the courtyard—pivot your hips, drive through the shoulder, let your bones follow the momentum. I swung. My knuckles connected with the leather. A sharp crack. Pain exploded up my arm, but the bag swung violently, leaving a faint dent in the heavy surface. I gasped, clutching my hand. It was red and raw. Ronan didn't laugh. He didn't mock. He just watched me with those unreadable storm-grey eyes. "You have a good swing," he said quietly. "But you pull your punches. You're afraid of your own power." "I'm not afraid." "Yes, you are." He stepped forward, closing the gap between us until my back hit the cold metal bench again. He placed one heavy hand on the wall beside my head, caging me in. His body was a wall of heat and iron. "You're afraid that if you let go, you'll become the monster they all say you are," he murmured, his gaze dropping to my lips. "But let me tell you a secret, little maid." He leaned down, his breath hot against my ear. "The monsters are the ones who made you feel invisible. The monsters are the ones who bruise your skin." His voice dropped to a husky, dangerous whisper. "You are not the monster, Mira. You are the thing the monsters should be afraid of." I couldn't breathe. My heart was hammering against my ribs. His chest was inches from mine. The heat between us was thick, suffocating, and crackling with unspoken tension. "Now," he said, pulling back just enough to lock his storm-grey eyes with mine. "Hit it again. And this time, don't pull back." I swallowed hard. I didn't look away. My hands shook, but I raised them, one trembling fist at a time. I remembered my mother's face in the fire. I remembered Kael's mocking smirk. I remembered the golden wolf's words: You are the revolution. I closed my eyes. And I swung. The bag split open. Sand and dust exploded across the gymnasium floor, raining down like ash. Ronan didn't step back. He watched me, his chest heaving, his pupils dilating. A low growl rumbled in his throat—not a threat. A response. "There she is," he whispered. Before I could speak, the gymnasium doors slammed open. Kael stood in the doorway, flanked by two guards. His obsidian eyes locked onto Ronan's proximity to me, and his face twisted into something cold and murderous. "Get your hands off her, Stone. Or I'll remove them." Ronan didn't even look at him. He kept his eyes locked on mine. "Your move, little maid." The air thickened with violence. Two Apex Alphas, ready to tear each other apart over a girl they called nothing. And in the middle of it, covered in dust and sweat, my bleeding knuckles still raised, I realized the terrifying truth: They weren't fighting over a trophy. They were fighting over a storm. And I was just beginning to learn how to roar. END OF CHAPTER 3Chapter 10: The Serpent in Silk “You have your mother’s eyes, little wolf. But you don’t have her spine. Not yet.” The academy didn't sleep that night. Word spread like wildfire. The Alpha of Silvermoon had been found stumbling through the eastern gates, his chest wrapped in bloody bandages, his face pale as death. He refused to speak to anyone—not the medics, not the council envoys. He simply locked himself in his private quarters and didn't emerge. The rumors were vicious. Some said he had been attacked by a rogue pack. Others whispered that he had fallen into a trap set by the Drakon bloodline. But no one—no one—guessed the truth. That a seventeen-year-old maid had nearly torn him apart. I stayed in my attic room, staring at the cracked mirror. The silver wound on my
Chapter 9: The Court of Predators“You walked into the light covered in his blood, Mira. And now, you owe us the truth.”The library doors opened, and I stepped out.The first thing I felt was the cold. The academy’s marble floors were freezing against my bare feet—I hadn’t even realized I had lost my shoes in the catacombs. The second thing I felt was the weight of a hundred eyes drilling into my back.I walked through the corridors in a daze, my bleeding palm wrapped in a torn strip of my own uniform. The blue torchlight from the catacombs still flickered behind my eyelids. The Alpha’s terrified face, the King’s ancient voice, the surge of silver fur across my skin—it all blurred together like a fever dream.I didn’t make it to my room.The main hall was a cathedral of black marble and crimson banners, the heart of the academy. Chandeliers of crystal and wrought iron hung from the vaulted ceiling, casting warm, golden light across the polished floor. Students milled about, their voi
Chapter 8: The Mercy of Wolves“Mercy is not weakness, Mira. It is the sharpest blade of all—because only the strong can afford to sheathe it.”My claws sank into his chest.The Alpha of Silvermoon gasped, his back slamming against the cracked bone pillar. His eyes—cold, dead, calculating—were now wide with terror. A thin line of blood trickled from the corner of his mouth, staining his pristine white collar.I held him there, pinned against the ancient stone, my silver-furred claws buried in his expensive suit. My wolf was screaming in my head, demanding I tear him apart. Demanding I rip out his throat and watch the light fade from his treacherous eyes.He killed my mother. He burned my home. He bruised my skin for five years.My claws trembled. A guttural growl rumbled from my chest, vibrating through the cavern."Please," he wheezed, his voice cracking. "Please, Mira. I—I can give you information. I can tell you who else is on the Council. I can—""You can beg," I snarled. "That's
Chapter 7: The Wolf and the Leash“You were never my father. You were my jailer. And jailers don’t get to walk away.”The footsteps grew louder.Thump. Thump. Thump.Each echo bounced off the bone pillars, reverberating through the cavern like a death knell. The blue torches flickered violently, casting frantic shadows across the King’s face. His golden eyes burned with a cold, ancient fury, but he didn’t move. He stood like a statue carved from moonlight, watching me with an expression that was equal parts sorrow and anticipation.“He’s here,” I whispered, my voice barely audible over the pounding of my heart.“Yes,” the King said calmly. “And you have a choice, Mira. You can hide behind me, and I will tear him apart. Or you can stand on your own two feet and show him exactly what you’ve become.”I looked down at my bleeding palm. The silver dagger was still clutched in my fingers, the blade slick with my own blood. The runes along the hilt pulsed softly, humming with a warmth that s
Chapter 6: The Bone Cathedral“Power doesn’t come from the blood you inherit, Mira. It comes from the pain you survive.”The staircase swallowed me whole.The moment my foot touched the first stone step, the library doors above me groaned shut. The golden spine snapped back into place, sealing me in darkness so absolute that I couldn’t see my own hands. The air turned cold—damp, earthy, carrying the metallic tang of ancient blood and rusted iron.I felt my way down, one trembling hand against the rough stone wall. The steps were uneven, worn smooth by centuries of footsteps. Whose footsteps? I wondered. Kings? Murderers? Ghosts?The descent felt like an eternity. The deeper I went, the colder the air became. My breath fogged in front of my face. The silence was so profound that I could hear the faint thump-thump-thump of my own heartbeat echoing off the walls.Then, the darkness broke.Faint, flickering light bled from below. Torches—ancient, burning with blue flames—lined a long, nar
Chapter 5: The Architect of Shadows“You think your mother was a victim, Mira. She wasn’t. She was a chess player who lost because she trusted the wrong pawn.”Sleep was a luxury I no longer possessed.After the shattered glass, the burning kiss, and the golden-eyed wolf’s silent promise, my attic room felt less like a sanctuary and more like a tomb. I spent the hours between midnight and dawn staring at the cracked mirror, tracing the splintered lines with my finger. The reflection stared back—hollow eyes, bruised knuckles, a mouth still swollen from Kael Drakon’s devastating kiss.I should have felt disgust. I should have felt rage. Instead, I felt a terrifying, electric thrill pulsing under my skin. Dangerous, he had called me. And for the first time in five years, I believed him.At midnight, I slipped out of my room.The academy hallways were ghostly, bathed in the sickly amber glow of emergency lanterns. The stone floors gleamed like frozen rivers, and my footsteps echoed like d







