LOGINCeleste had barely stepped out into the cool corridor when the pack bell rang . The sound cut through the night like a blade.
Not the frantic, uneven toll of danger. Not the urgent call that sent warriors running toward the gates. This one was slower and formal.
Celeste stopped where she was, the echo of the bell vibrating through the stone walls. For a moment she thought her heart might stop entirely. Her chest still felt tight from the conversation she had just walked away from, and the sound of that bell made a terrible thought settle in her mind.
A soft knock sounded behind her before the door opened. Her mother stood there, framed by the warm light of their small cottage. Maera Ashveil rarely looked frightened, but tonight the color had drained from her face.
“Celeste,” Maera whispered.
“They’re calling everyone,” Maera added, quietly.
Celeste nodded slowly. If the council had agreed, if Thorne had already made his choice, then the pack deserved to hear it. The future Alpha’s Luna. Only that it wasn’t her anymore.
Neither of them spoke as they walked toward the common ground. The night air was cold, carrying the scent of pine and distant smoke from the torches already burning ahead. The deeper they moved into the clearing, the louder the voices became.
The entire pack was gathering.
Torches blazed in tall iron stands around the open clearing, casting flickering light across dozens of familiar faces. Warriors stood in loose lines near the platform where pack announcements were always made. Elders in long cloaks gathered behind it, their quiet conversations hushed as more wolves arrived.
Celeste’s chest tightened.
These were people she had grown up with.
People she had healed.
Children she had patched up after falls from trees. Warriors whose wounds she had cleaned after border fights. Mothers who had brought sick babies to her door in the middle of the night.
And tonight they were all here to watch her future disappear.
Celeste slipped quietly toward the back of the crowd, lowering her gaze so no one would notice her too closely. Her mother remained beside her, a steady presence that Celeste clung to more than she wanted to admit.
Then Thorne stepped forward. And beside him,
Lysara.
Gasps rippled through the pack. It was quiet at first. Then the whispers started.
Celeste felt every pair of eyes searching the crowd. Looking for her – Warriors who knew her. Women who had once congratulated her on her future. Children who still called her “future Luna” without thinking.
Celeste kept her head down, Please, she thought silently. Just let this end quickly.
Thorne raised his hand for silence.
“I formally dissolved the betrothal arrangement with Celeste Ashveil, daughter of Maera Ashveil, healer of Silvermere.
The words struck like a physical blow.
“The arrangement is ended by my will and the full agreement of the council. She is released from all claims.” he continued.
The words echoed across the clearing. Murmurs spread instantly.
“What?”
“I heard rumors…”
“The healer’s daughter?”
“She was never strong enough,” someone muttered not far from Celeste.
Another voice answered.
“I heard the Blackridge daughter is ruthless. That’s the kind of Luna we need.”
Celeste’s hands trembled slightly.
Each whisper felt like a small stone being thrown at her chest.
Thorne’s voice carried again.
“The council has approved the new alliance.”
He reached for Lysara’s hand.
“And I will soon take Lysara Blackridge as my Luna.”
Applause broke out. Not everyone clapped. But enough did.
Celeste felt something cold settle deep inside her chest. She was already forgotten. Already replaced. Already erased.
The announcement ended quickly after that. The elders stepped forward, while the crowd began to shift, and slowly the wolves of Silvermere started leaving the clearing in groups, their conversations buzzing softly under the night sky.
But Celeste didn’t move.
She remained exactly where she was.
Watching the platform. Watching Thorne and Lysara speaking with the council. Watching the future she had once imagined for herself being handed to someone else.
“Celeste.”
Her mother’s voice was gentle.
Celeste blinked slowly, realizing the clearing was nearly empty now.
Maera reached for her hand.
“Come home,” she said softly.
Celeste didn’t argue. She let her mother guide her back through the quiet paths of the village, past cottages glowing with warm firelight, past familiar doors and windows that suddenly felt distant and strange.
Their cottage door closed behind them with a soft click.
Maera lit the fire.
She moved quietly around the small kitchen, heating water, preparing tea the way she always did when Celeste had been hurt as a child. The simple routine should have been comforting. But Celeste barely noticed.
Her mother eventually pressed a warm cup into her hands and rested both palms gently on her shoulders.
“I’m sorry,” Maera whispered.
Celeste nodded.
Later, when the cottage was dark, Celeste sat alone in the darkness of her room. She stared at the ceiling for a long time, her mind replaying everything from that night over and over again.Thorne’s calm voice. Lysara’s satisfied smile. The applause.
Her chest tightened.
For a moment the tears finally came. Sliding silently down the sides of her face into her hair. She wiped them away after a while and sat up slowly.
Then she led down, her hand slid beneath the bed.
Her fingers closed around something cold.
Metal.
She pulled it out slowly.
A silver mask gleamed in the faint firelight.
Moonfall.
A gathering where wolves wore masks and identities vanished. A place where strangers met in the dark. A place where dangerous things happen.
Celeste ran her thumb over the edge of the mask. A slow smile spread across her face.
“One night of being no one”.
She lifted the mask and held it against her face.
“Tomorrow,” she whispered.
And somewhere far beyond the borders of Silvermere, another Alpha was already on his way to moonfall.
The private dining chamber in Kaelan’s quarters felt unusually vast tonight, the heavy oak table stretching out under the warm glow of multiple lanterns. Two places had been set with meticulous care. Fine silver plates, crystal goblets filled with deep red wine from the southern vineyards, and platters of roasted meats, fresh herbs, and warm bread that filled the air with rich, savory scents. The maid had bowed low as she finished arranging everything, her eyes carefully averted from the Alpha’s face.Kaelan sat at the head of the table, one elbow resting on the polished wood, his fingers drumming a slow, restless rhythm against the wood. The chair directly across from him remained empty. He had asked her for dinner.She had said yes.
The garden smelled of earth and lilys, a small rebellion against the dark stone that dominated Ravencrest. Celeste sat cross-legged on the soft flower bed, the cool grass and petals brushing against her bare ankles. Seraphine sat opposite her, their knees almost touching, the late afternoon sunlight filtering through the winter roses and casting dappled silver patterns across their faces.Seraphine’s sharp amber eyes were calm, focused. “We try again. This time, we control it. Don’t let the vision pull you under. Clone it. Make people feel it, but not overwhelming. You guide the power, Celeste. It doesn’t guide you.”Celeste nodded, though her hands trembled slightly in her lap. The silver strands in her hair had crept higher s
The moon hung high over Asheville, casting its silver light across the valley like a goddess watching over her children. Liera stood on the balcony of her private chambers, the cool night breeze tugging at her dark hair and the edges of her silk robe. Below, the training grounds lay quiet, the wooden posts and practice dummies standing like silent sentinels. She could almost see the spot where it had happened. Where her life had tilted on its axis in the space of a single heartbeat.Ryke.The name echoed in her mind like a forbidden prayer. She hadn’t stopped thinking about him since the Ravencrest delegation had left three days ago. The memory of his broad shoulders, the way his muscles had flexed under moonlight as they sparred, the sudden, electric snap of the mate bond between them. It haunted her waking hours and invaded her dreams.She pressed a hand to her chest, feeling the faint, persistent warmth of the bond. It was still there, a golden thread stretching across the miles be
The news spread through the packhouse like wildfire.“The Alpha has returned.”Seraphine heard it from a passing servant while she was reviewing old scrolls in the archives. Her heart gave a single, sharp lurch. Not for Kaelan, but for what his return meant. The alliance with Asheville was secured. The political game had shifted. And her reason for staying in Ravencrest was rapidly dissolving.She didn’t hesitate.She left the scrolls scattered on the table and ran.Her feet carried her through the familiar corridors, her short hair whipping against her cheeks. Her mind was fixed on one person.
The ride back from Asheville felt endless.Kaelan urged his stallion harder than necessary, the powerful beast eating up the miles through neutral territory with steady, thunderous strides. Ryke and the small contingent rode behind him, trying to keep up, but Kaelan barely registered their presence. His mind was fixed on one thing only.Celeste.He had to get to her as fast as possible. The bond in his chest had been pulling at him the entire journey. A warm, golden, and insistent tug. Every league closer to Ravencrest made it stronger, like a living thread tugging him home. He had felt her distress during that strange moment on the road. The sharp pain like needles in his heart, the distant echo of her scream. Something had happened while he was gone. He needed to see
The training grounds of Asheville were quiet under the moonlight, a vast open space ringed by wooden posts and practice dummies. Ryke moved through the forms with precision, his sword cutting clean arcs through the cool night air. Sweat glistened on his bare chest. He had stripped down to loose training pants hours ago, preferring the freedom of movement over the weight of his usual armor.The journey to Asheville had been successful, but Ryke’s mind was restless. Kaelan had secured the alliance, yet the Alpha’s thoughts remained fixed on Ravencrest. On her. Celeste. The bond between them had grown stronger with every passing day, and Ryke could see the conflict in his leader’s eyes. Duty and desire. The old ways versus whatever new path the Moon Goddess seemed to be carving.Ryke swung the blade in a wide overhead
The days after the midnight meeting in the northern tower passed in a strange, heavy quiet.Celeste moved through Ravencrest like a shadow caught between two worlds. She no longer spent all her time locked
The days blurred into a dangerous rhythm.Every morning, a fresh tray of food appeared outside her door, always her favorites, things her mother must have mentioned. Every evening, Kaelan found a reason to
Seraphine Vael sat like she had won half the battle before it began.She watched Celeste approach the stone fountain with sharp, assessing eyes, not cruel, but unnervingly perceptive. The late aftern
Ravencrest was built from dark stone.That was the first thing she noticed as they came through the mountain pass, not the size of it, though it was enormous, not the iron gates that groaned open as they approached but the colour. Everything was dark. The walls, the towers, the road beneath the ho







