LOGINRavena's POV
That evening, I changed into my night clothes, the kind that wouldn’t snag if I had to fight. My inner wolf, Lisa, was restless and impatient. She had not spoken all evening, but now her voice came like a low growl in my thoughts.
“Are you seriously dressing like that to see the king? You look like you are going to war.”
“Maybe I am going to war.”
Upon arriving at the Solstice Crown Pack, I headed straight to the throne room. When I got close to the door, two guards immediately blocked my path, crossing their spears in front of me.
“I need an audience with the king,” I announced calmly. “It is important.”
One of the guards shook his head without hesitation. “The king has already given orders not to grant you an audience, Lady Ravena.”
“What?”
“You are not to be allowed in.”
“Then I’ll wait inside until he changes his mind.”
“You will not,” he replied. His tone was polite, but his grip on the spear tightened.
“Step aside.”
“Do not make this hard,” the shorter guard warned. “This is the king's order.”
I acted impulsively and charged ahead. But the shorter guard quickly pushed me hard enough that my back slammed against the wall. Despite the sharp pain in my shoulder, I grabbed his wrist before he could pull away, twisting until his spear fell to the ground with a loud clang.
“Let him go!” the tall guard barked.
From down the hallway, a third voice shouted. “Rebellion. She is defying the king’s orders.”
“Rebellion? For asking to speak to my king?”
“Let him go,” the tall one ordered.
“Open the door. One minute, that’s all I need.”
“The king said no.”
“Then he can say it to my face.”
Just then, a deep voice broke through the noise. “What is going on here?”
The entire hallway went still, and even my wolf stopped pacing. I released the guard’s wrist and turned towards the sound.
It was Evander Darius, the God of War.
The guards straightened at once, their heads bowed.
“General,” the tall guard said quickly. “We apologize, but Lady Ravena tried to force her way into the king’s chambers against his orders.”
Evander’s gaze found me, sliding over my face like he was mapping every detail. Cold prickled along my spine, but I didn’t look away.
The last time I had seen him, I was barely more than a girl. Even then, he had a commanding presence that drew attention without saying a word. More than ten years had passed, but he still radiated the same overwhelming power.
“Is that true, Lady Ravena?”
“Yes,” I said without hesitation. “And I would do it again.”
The tall guard looked at me like I had lost my mind. “She attacked us, my lord. She grabbed…”
“I touched him because he pushed me first,” I snapped. “I came to see the king. I will not be turned away like some stranger at the gates.”
“You ignored a royal order.”
“I ignored an insult,” I corrected him. “The king knows me. He would hear me if you let me through.”
“Do you think the king’s orders are made to be bent for you?”
His words were sharp, but I did not back down. “I think the king should hear the truth before others twist it.”
The tall guard spoke again, this time with more hesitation. “My lord, she refused to step back when commanded. It is not my place to question her rank, but the king was clear.”
Evander turned his head slightly towards them. “Clear to you, maybe. Not to me.”
“But my…’’
“Enough!” he interrupted, turning back to me. “Lady Ravena, you came here dressed for a fight and you picked one. How do you expect me to believe that you did nothing wrong?”
“I am not asking you to believe anything. I just want you to step aside.”
Evander studied me for another long moment. “Why do you need to see the king so badly?”
“I have something important to tell him. It cannot wait. It is mine to say, not yours to stop.”
His gaze remained fixed as he turned slightly towards the guards. "Open the doors. Let her through.”
The taller one stepped forward, blocking my path again. “My lord, the king gave a clear order.”
“I said open the doors.”
They still hesitated. I saw fear and duty war on their faces. I also saw pride. They were ready to take the blame if they blocked me. It almost made me respect them.
Evander took a sudden step closer, his face hard. “Do not make me repeat myself again. Let her through.”
This time they obeyed. Spears were raised and the iron bolts were drawn back with a dull scrape. The heavy doors slowly swung open and I walked in gracefully with Evander closely behind me.
Inside, the light was warm and golden. A map table stood near the windows, covered in markers and lines. Tall shelves lined the walls. Fire crackled in the grate, and the scent of cedar and old paper wrapped around me.
King Alaric Darius was by the windows with a cup in his hand. He turned as the doors closed, and when his eyes landed on me, he did not look angry. His expression softened, just a little, the way a father might soften when he sees an old photo of a child who has grown.
“Ravena,” he called out, and my name sounded like a memory.
I bowed. “Your Majesty.”
He gestured towards a chair, but I remained standing. Placing his cup on the table, he stepped closer, studying my face as if counting years.
“You used to chase my hounds through the orchards,” he said, a slight smile forming on his lips. “You always stole the red apples and left the green ones. You hated the sour ones.”
I felt a lump in my throat. “You let me hide in the saddle house when I accidentally broke my mother’s vase. You told her a stray cat did it.”
He laughed warmly. “You were quite a handful with those braids and scraped knees. Your father would glare at me when I looked the other way. He said I spoiled you.”
“He spoiled me. He taught me to ride before dawn. He taught me to stand up straight, even when the wind tried to knock me down.”
The king’s eyes turned distant. He placed his hand on the map table, fingers spread out on the edges like he needed to hold the world still. “Your father was a tough man. A good man. He always gave me the truth when I wanted comfort. I miss him.”
I took a painful breath. The silence in the room changed. The past faded away like water, and the present returned, cold and sharp.
The king exhaled and looked at me again. “I know why you are here, but I gave an order. It has already gone out. I cannot pull it back.”
I shook my head. “I am not here to ask you to take it back.”
He frowned. “Then why are you here?”
“I want your permission to divorce Lucien.”
The king’s mouth dropped open, then closed. Shock flashed across his face, clear and clean, before he mastered it.
“You want a divorce?” he repeated, as if tasting the words.
“Yes, your majesty.”
“Ravena,” he said slowly, “your pack no longer exists. The Moonveil lands were dissolved after the war. The name is gone. If you divorce, where will you go? Who will claim you? You will have no home, no rights within any territory. You will be on your own.”
“I know.”
“Then why ask for a fate like that?”
“Because my king, I am the daughter of a general. I cannot live with a husband who breaks vows and mocks the bond. I cannot share a bed with a man who brings another woman into my home, then calls it honour. I would rather have the cold and my name than enjoy comfort and live a falsehood.”
The king’s jaw tightened as he looked at Evander, then back at me. “You are not weak, I can see that. But strength alone cannot put food on the table. Pride cannot protect a door at night.”
“Then I will starve on my own terms. I will guard my own door. I kept a pack fed during harsh winters and kept a house safe when wounded men returned. If I must walk away, I will still stand.”
He took a step closer, the golden light highlighting the faint gray in his hair. “You love him still,” he said, and it was not a question.
“I loved what I thought he was. I loved a promise. But that promise is now broken.”
The king’s expression hardened. “Lucien is my blood ally. He is an Alpha. This decision will make enemies. People will talk.”
I held his stare. “Then let them talk. I am done being quiet.”
“Are you sure this is what you want, Ravena?”
Ravena's POV The King's banquet went on for hours, the way royal meals do, course after course, and it was past midday before Evander and I were free to call for our carriage and go home.We were on the steps when Orren found us again.I was beginning to dread the sight of that man. He had the same paper roll in his hand and the same look on his face. He drew Evander aside by the elbow and spoke low, and I
Ravena's POV His eyes had closed on the words, and for a moment I thought he had gone to sleep right there on the long seat with his head tipped against the post of the bed."They were yours," he had said. "I wanted them to like me." And then nothing, just the slow heavy breathing of a man the drink had finally caught up with.I knelt in front of him a while longer with the cloth gone cold in my hand, looki
Ravena's POV By the time the moon was high, I had a cup in my hand that someone kept filling when I wasn't looking.I don't drink much as a rule. But this was my wedding, and my own people were here, and every time I set the cup down some laughing cousin of Evander's or some old Alpha with a red face would lift his own and call out a blessing on the new Luna, and there was no setting it down after that. You drink to a blessing.
Lady Vivienne's POVThe evening called for a new dress.The morning had been for the binding, the silver cord, the vows before the King. The evening was for the kingdom to come and look at what my son had married, and to eat at his table, and to carry the story of it home. So the bride and groom went away to change, and the servants ran fresh candles down every hallway, and I stood in my own room while my maid pinned the deep wine silk at my shoulder and tried to make myself look like a woman who was glad.
Ravena's POV The road bent one more time, and the noise of the crowd changed.I felt it before I understood it. The marching feet ahead of my carriage slowed. The horses shortened their steps. Somewhere up at the front of the column a voice called an order, and the whole long line of us drew down from a steady roll into a walk.I pulled the curtain back a little bit and looked out.Another procession had come up to the crossing where the two pack roads met. I saw the banner first. It wasn't ours. It was the dark banner of the Blackstone Pack, lifted high on a pole, and behind it rode a column of men in their own dress armour, and behind them came a bridal carriage hung with red cloth.My hand was steady on the curtain as I waited for the old sick pull in my stomach that his name used to bring. But it didn't come.A horse moved up the line on the other side. I heard the creak of a saddle, and then I heard his voice."Your Highness." Lucien. Smooth and confident, the voice he used when
Ravena's POV "We did, my friend." Mira's voice, sweet and shaking with laughter at the same time, right next to my ear. "We did. Forgive us.""We couldn't let you know," Rhea said. "Master Thornwell said you wouldn't enjoy the surprise as much if you knew.""Master Thornwell," I said, lifting my face from whichever shoulder I had buried it in. "How could you?"He stood with his hands still folded in front of him, his beard a little greyer than it had been the last time I had seen him, his eyes a little softer. He looked at me the way a teacher looked at a student he hadn't seen in years and was pretending wasn't the same girl who had spilled ink on his desk on her first day."You will ruin the paint on your face, child.""I don't care.""The maids will care, child.""Master Thornwell.""Don't Master Thornwell me. Wipe your eyes. You are getting married, not buried."Mira let out a sharp bark of a laugh. Rhea was already pulling a small cloth out of her sleeve and dabbing under my eye
Ravena's POVBefore I could answer, the flap of the tent was pushed open.Evander stepped in with his usual unreadable face, arms crossed like he owned the air we breathed. His broad frame filled the space as if the tent had suddenly shrunk just to make room for his presence. His eyes scanned the s
Ravena's POV“I swear you are the most foolish woman I have ever met,” Evander suddenly muttered, snapping me out of my thoughts. “You could really be facing punishment for this, Ravena. Demotion. Fines. Even flogging with a silver whip if he commands it.”I let out a deep breath and forced myself
Ravena's POVAt that moment, the sound of my own heartbeat filled my ears. His light brown eyes made me uneasy, and I hated how I suddenly gasped.He looked so different from the boy I had heard about in my father’s stories. A beard now adorned his chin, his hair tied back at the nape of his neck,
Ravena's POVEvander blinked slowly, and then without a word, he turned away. He poured something from a small kettle into a metal cup and held it out to me. “Drink this.”I hesitated, staring at the steam that curled above it. “What is it?”“It’s tea,” he replied flatly. “For your nerves. You are







