登入ELARA
Alistair Roux. The Alpha Prince. My childhood best friend. Alistair represented everything I loathed. To me, he was the villain of my story, my life. “We had a promise, Roux,” my lips finally moved. “You said you were never going to step foot in Ashveil pack again.” Alistair cocked his head slightly, “Aren’t you asking for ridiculously too much? If I leave Ashveil pack, who would rule it?” I gritted my teeth. “That’s none of my business. We had a promise and you broke your part.” “Well, I figured you would have forgotten all about it. We were kids, promises were unavoidable,” he shrugged. Anger pulsed in my chest, running through my veins, every single part of my body. Yet, he didn’t look away. The time he spent outside had wonderfully helped him get his shit together, I see. “What did I tell you?” My voice lowered with dangerous intensity, “If you ever stepped foot in front of me, I’ll kill you.” My fingers moved faster than my lips. I pressed the end of my pen once and went for his neck. “Elara!” Alistair’s hand grabbed my wrist seconds before I could stab the pen in his neck. “Were you truly aiming for my neck?” His eyes narrowed. “I told you, Roux, I don’t play with promises,” I replied. “Stop it,” Alexander walked towards us, hitting our hands apart. “Are you guys kids? You are Alpha Prince, you are the beta’s daughter—“ “Former beta,” I cut him off. “Dead beta.” “That doesn’t matter to me, dead or alive. Your father’s legacy lives on. If you don’t at least regard that, remember you are a prefect at this school. What are you teaching the younger ones who are looking up to you, Elara?” My eyes moved around the class. The students were all staring at us, shock evident on their faces.A few of the junior students from the Academy stood at the window and I just realized how bad our short but intense argument had become. “Be grateful, Roux,” I picked my pen from the floor and walked to my seat, shoving my things into my bag. I walked towards the door, but then I halted, turning back. “My present, Miss Claire,” I stretched my hand. “Well…” she stared between both of us. “I don’t know how to do this—“ “He doesn’t need it,” I glanced at Alistair, “afterall, he is the alpha Prince and things like this don’t matter to him...right?” I grabbed the gift from the locker and walked out of class. “Hey, we are meant to share that gift—“ “Alistair!” Alex cut him off. “What?!” Kris followed after me. “I tried to tell you—“ “But you didn’t, Kris. You didn’t,” I cut her off. “You didn’t let me finish. Besides, I mentioned it last week, and you told me it was totally impossible for him to return.” I halted, turning to look at her. “Alistair has been here since last week?” “No.” My eyes narrowed. “Tell me the truth, Kris.” “No,” she said firmly. “I heard Alex talking about it in the library. He came back yesterday.” “He was never supposed to return, but he did and still appeared at school, is he trying to get on my nerves?” “If you know he’s trying to get on your nerves, why must you give in?” Kris asked. “Because that’s my goal. It doesn’t matter where Alistair is, the moment I set my eyes on him, I’m going to kill him,” I gritted my teeth, walking away. “Where are you going?” Kris asked from behind me. “The training room,” I shot. Practice made perfect, not just imagination. If Alistair lived in my imaginations, then he’d be dead by now. Up there, I knew a thousand unrealistic ways to kill him without anyone finding his body. I threw my bag on the floor, kept my glasses carefully before grabbing a sword from the wall. I had barely trained for ten minutes when the door to the training room opened. I didn’t care to turn, instead, I stretched my sword at him the moment he was three steps away from me. “One more move, Roux, and I will cut off your head,” I warned. “You are so aggressive,” he clicked his tongue. “I don’t remember you being this way.” “I don’t remember you at all,” I replied. “It seems so. You keep calling me Roux instead of my name. Have you forgotten it?” “Yes, I forgot. Care to remind me? It might be an opportunity for me to cut off your tongue?” My fingers tightened against the sword. Alistair’s eyes moved between me and the sword, before he took a step closer. I stepped backwards. “What are you doing?” I raised my brows. “Kill me,” he stepped closer again, “if that’s what it would take to appease you.” “Are you truly here to appease me?” I asked. His lips curved into a slight smirk. “No. I was just testing to see if you would truly kill me.” Anger flashed through my eyes as I stepped forward and pushed the sword into his chest. He didn’t move, his hands simply fisted beside him, a twisted expression on his face. Blood escaped from his chest, soiling the perfect black and white uniform. His hand moved and he held the sword tightly as blood escaped from his hand. A chuckle escaped from his lips. “Y…you are furious, Elara,” he muttered. “I told you, don’t mess with me,” I pulled the sword out of him, dropping it on the floor. “You should be grateful I didn't push it enough to stab your heart,” I walked towards the door. “That’s your mistake, sweetheart,” he said, making me halt. “I didn’t say if you could stab me, I said if you could kill me. You should have pushed it deep enough.” My hands fisted by my sides. “Next time, Roux. That’ll be your death day.” I swore, walking out of the training room.ALISTAIRCall me stupid for agreeing to Elara's terms and conditions even when I knew how dangerous what we were getting into was. Whoever was behind the rogues wouldn’t take it easy the moment they found out we were investigating them. I knew that, yet I was letting Elara join the game. There was only one thing I could hope for, that she would never find whatever she thinks she might have to find. Or that we find it before her every single time.As I walked out of the cafeteria, Alex rushed after me, grabbing my arm. “What is going on?”We hadn’t had a discussion about whatever he must have heard that day while Elsie and I talked and I hadn’t asked. In me, I don’t think there was any more energy left to use to protect the truth.“She wants to investigate the rogues with me,” I shrugged.“But you can’t let her do that. It’s dangerous. What if she becomes a target because of you?” his brows notched up. “First, she patched you up in that forest, followed you to Silver Crest, and is now
ELARAKris and Alex stared at me from their table, their eyes narrowed tightly, probably wondering why I hadn’t come to sit with them at our usual lunch table.My eyes peeled away from them as the cafeteria door opened. I had thought it was Alistair, but it was Elsie. Whispers shot across the room almost immediately.“She’s so pretty.”“Did you see her and Alistair under the staircase earlier? She was so gorgeous with him.”“I feel like they are the perfect match. Besides, she’s an alpha princess. It brings a connection with both packs.”My nose almost flared from their comments. Elsie was pretty no doubt but what made them think she and Alistair were the perfect match just because they stood beside each other. I stood beside Alistair so many times and—Elara, what are you thinking!I forced my eyes away from Elsie back to the seat opposite me, I froze.Alistair sat there, his head lazily on his palm as he stared squarely at me.I blinked. “When…did you get here?”“I wonder,” he said
ALISTAIRI’d been counting the days since the woods. Five. Five days and Elara still hadn’t said a word to me. Not like we met since that day, I really didn’t think I could bring myself to say something reasonable either. Not after what Elsie had said the other day.What do I do with this kind of silence between us?“She’s been weird,” Jaren said without looking up from his notes. Just then, Elara walked into class, the usual edge she carried into every room missing this time around. “Define weird,” my voice came out quieter than I'd wanted it to be.“She has been quiet. Didn’t you notice?” I had noticed. I just hadn't decided what to do with that.“Do you plan on letting her know? About the rogues and stuff?” he finally looked up at me.A sigh left my lips. “I don’t know about that. But one thing I’m sure of is the fact that I'm going to protect her whether she likes it or not. Even if she hated me.”“Elara is not the kind of girl you can bend like that.”“Who said anything about
ELARAI didn’t decide to come here. My feet just took me. By the time I noticed where I was walking, the gates of the cemetery were already in front of me.My chest tightened, my hands rolled into tight fists beside me. It had been so long. So…so long, Father.~~~My hands moved over the tiled top of the grave, wiping it clean. Harris Vance, 43 years of age. A bittersweet feeling rose in my throat as I sag down on the floor, my legs crossed over each other.“What exactly am I doing here?” I whispered.The wind seemed to respond to my words as a slight breeze blew past me, shaking the trees a little. Maybe he was here. Maybe he could hear me.“Did you know this would happen? Did you know I would end up here?” I muttered. My chest tightened as this time, there was no breeze any longer.“Say something, Dad. I’m so torn,” the words left my trembling lips with a strain. “Everything I feared is slowly coming to pass. It’s worse even now. If the rogues truly were after Alistiar, then…then
ALISTAIRKai was dead silent in the back of my mind, exhausted from the sheer force of will it had taken to not rip out Elara’s throat when she forcibly pulled the stick out of our leg. Her scent had been the only thing keeping my mind at bay, making me force Kai into submission. But Kai had also listened. Knowing him, it took the whole of his power to keep himself still. Father walked back towards us, his eyes staring now at the bodies of the rogue wolves—two of them. I had barely been able to fight off one with the stump in my leg and the other had suddenly attacked, breaking off the same leg. Killing them off had been an easier punishment but then, Kai wasn’t in the right state of mind to dare keep a rogue alive, knowing how dangerous it would be for us.“They passed through the borders,” A frown knitted my father's brows near each other as he folded his arms. “The negotiation barely ended and nothing changed.”“It hasn’t been put into action yet—”“You must take me for a fool, A
ELARAMy heart pounded against my chest as I closed the gap between us, staring at Alistair’s wolf’s broken leg. This would need more than tying up.I dropped his clothes on the floor, raising my hand to touch his leg when a snarl left his lips. My body jerked backwards before I could stop it, my butt hitting the ground.He was warning me not to touch him. What the heck?“I have to do something, your leg is broken. First, let me remove the wood…”A deep vibrating growl rumbled in his chest, a feral warning not to come closer. What exactly was wrong with him? If the broken bone healed without any intervention, he might get crippled for life.I forced myself to move closer and without wasting a second, I pulled the wood from its leg. I should never have done that.A half growl left his throat, his fangs baring open as he lunged towards me. One second, I was pulling the wood, the other second, Alistair’s wolf was closing in around my throat.My back grazed against the harsh bark of a tr
ALISTAIRThe trainer hit the ground before he saw it coming.That was the problem with people who had been fighting the same way for years, they became predictable. Every move telegraphed three seconds before it arrived.I straightened, rolling my shoulder once.“Again?” I asked.This was no traini
ELARA“Luna Maya sent this cake to you,” I muttered, running the knife down the cake. I moved the big chunk onto my plate before picking up a fork.“She did? This cake?” Mom raised her brow.“Hmm,” I nodded twice as I let the cake melt on my tongue. Okay, fine. I admit I didn’t want to be close wit
ALISTAIR“You know you could have stepped down, right?” Elara smirked as she flipped open her book. “An Alpha Prince like you, you surely have a lot of things to do.”“You are a final year senior, you also have a lot to do,” I replied, placing my hands behind me. “So why don’t you just use the door
ELARA I pulled off my headphones, staring at the number of people that filled the training center of the pack house. Everyone seemed to be serious about the training. In the past, you’d never count up to fifty people. “Elara!” Kris’s voice sounded from the crowd and I pivoted, recognizing her im







