LOGINZANA’S POV
I woke to pain.
I felt cold metal against my skin. There was blood crusted in my hair. My wrists were bound with chains. My body ached with every breath.
I was in a cage. A moving one. It kept rattling over uneven earth. I blinked against the morning sun. There were soldiers outside, laughing.
“She’s awake,” one said, nudging his friend.
I didn’t speak. I stared. I memorized their faces, their uniforms, the smugness in their eyes. I would not forget. Ever.
“Pretty little thing,” one of them said. “it’s a shame we’ll have to kill her.”
“Nah,” the other replied, “Alpha said she’s to be sold. She’s too beautiful to waste. You know the nobles love exotic pets.”
They were talking like I wasn’t there. Like I wasn’t a person. I said nothing. I didn’t cry. Didn’t beg.
I sat in silence and vowed to rip them all apart someday.
When we reached the Alpha’s castle, the sun had already begun to set again. Massive black gates stood in front of us. I was dragged out of the cage like an animal. My limbs were barely working.
They stripped me.
Freezing water was sprayed over me from a hose. I gasped. My body convulsed and my teeth chattered from the cold. My wounds stung.
“Scrub her down,” one said. “we can’t present her like this.”
“Not that it’ll matter. She’ll be in chains either way.”
I didn’t respond. I kept my eyes on them. Let them see I was not broken.
Filthy rags were tossed at me. I slipped them on. The fabric clung to my wet, bruised skin. Then they shoved me down a stone corridor, past doors and cells.
Finally, they threw me into a dark, damp room. Other slaves sat in corners or on the floor. None spoke. They barely looked up. The door slammed shut behind me.
I stood in the silence, dripping, aching, furious.
I was alone. But I wasn’t broken.
Not yet. Not ever.
-
The stone floor was cold under my bare feet. My ribs still ached from the beating. My wrists were raw, rubbed raw by the iron cuffs that had only just been removed before tossing me into that wretched room.
I should’ve been sleeping like the others. But I couldn’t.
My body wouldn’t rest. My mind wouldn’t settle. I wasn’t sure if it was the silence that kept me awake or the ghosts screaming in my head.
Their faces.
Their blood.
The forest on fire.
“Dad” I whispered.
I cried every time I saw the image of him falling to his knees.
I needed air. I needed space. I needed… out.
The moment I noticed the door to the slave quarters slightly open, I didn’t hesitate. I slipped through like a shadow, silent. I made sure that my feet barely making a sound. The halls of the castle were dark but I could use m y wolf eyes to see through.
It was too quiet. It felt like something was waiting.
I walked forward. My senses were alert. I didn’t know where I was going. I just needed anywhere but that room.
Then I saw him.
A man turned the corner ahead. He was tall and broad-shouldered, wearing thick velvet robes that brushed the floor behind him. His silver hair shimmered under the moon light coming in from the windows. I had no idea who he was but he reeked of power.
I froze
His eyes locked on me instantly. He looked like a man who thought he could buy the world and bend it to his pleasure.
“Well, well,” he purred, “what do we have here?”
I stepped back. At the sight of him, my instincts started screaming. I could see the desire in his eyes. He moved closer to me and I took steps back.
“Did you sneak out just to greet me?” he asked, smiling as he raised a hand. “How flattering.”
“Don’t touch me,” I warned,.
He touched me anyway. His fingers touched my cheek as if I belonged to him. As if that wasn’t enough, he pulled me in by my waist and grabbed my ass.
I snapped.
Before I could even think, I lunged and bit his neck…hard.
His scream was instant. The sound was high and sharp and full of outrage.
Blood filled my mouth. He shoved me off with a strength that surprised me, and his hand cracked across my cheek. My head snapped sideways. My vision blurred for a moment.
“You filthy little animal!” he roared.
The guards came running.
I didn’t resist. I didn’t run. I stood my ground, breathing heavily. My lips curled back as I snarled. I still had blood dripping from my mouth.
They swarmed me like dogs, knocking me to the ground, yanking my arms behind me. I could hear the chains rattling as they locked my wrists again. But I kept my head high.
Let them see it.
Let them know I wasn’t broken.
They dragged me through the castle, down endless halls, until the doors stood ahead. The doors were tall. They were carved with snarling wolves and sun symbols. They shoved me inside.
This must be the throne room.
It was grand. Intimidating. But I was past feeling fear.
At least, that’s what I told myself—until I saw him.
He sat on the throne like he’d been born into it. His long arms rested on the arm rest of the throne. His armor sparkled under the moonlight.. His hair was dark, cut short, and his eyes were a burning gold that seemed to see everything. One leg rested lazily over the other, but there was nothing lazy about him.
Power radiated off him in waves. He didn’t even have to try. His aura was thick and suffocating. His presence made the guards straighten, and the other nobles hush. Even the air bent around him.
I knew immediately.
Alpha Lucius.
I’d heard of him—everyone had. He was ruthless. Feared. He’d risen to power young, spilled blood like it was water, and carved his empire into the bones of anyone who dared defy him.
Now, I stood before him. Dragged like a beast. Shackled. Wild.
I snarled. I kept my eyes locked on him as the guards forced me to my knees.
“She bit Lord Marric,” one of the guards said. “Nearly tore a chunk from his neck.”
Lucius didn’t flinch. He simply studied me with cold eyes.
“So this is the rogue girl we caught in the raid,” he said, more to himself than to anyone else.
“I’m not a girl,” I spat. “And I’m not yours.”
The people in the room whispered. They must be council members. I could feel the authority radiating from them as well. One of the guards hit me hard in the back, but I didn’t flinch.
Lucius tilted his head, like I was some feral thing he was deciding whether to kill or cage.
“Wild little beast,” he murmured, rising from his throne with slowsteps. “You look better suited for the execution block than anything else.”
My jaw tightened. I wasn’t scared of death. They had already killed my family. What more did I have to live for? He stepped closer.
“So proud,” he said. “So broken. And yet still snarling.”
Then his voice sharpened like a blade.
“Kill her. Now.” He ordered.
I froze. Everything went still.
The guards moved. But someone else stepped forward.
“Alpha,” a calm voice said. A tall man with a scar down his left cheek and silver-blue eyes stepped forward. He must be the Beta. I could tell from his aura. He whispered something into Lucius’s ear.
Lucius’s eyes narrowed. “You’re certain?”
“Completely,” the man replied.
Lucius smiled slowly. I could see the cruelty in his eeys.
“Very well.”
I blinked. “What… what are you talking about?”
The man turned to me, assessing me like one might a wild animal before deciding how best to break it.
“A different punishment,” he said. “We’ll send you to the academy.”
“What academy?” I asked.
The Beta smiled. “Prescot Academy. The finest institute for our kind. It’s filled with shifters. Magic-wielders. Beasts in need of taming.”
Even though I was a rogue, I knew Prescot Acedemy. Who didn’t? it was the most popular academy in the continent. It was prestigious and meant for the elite alone. Why they hell did they want to send me there>
I blinked. “What does that have to do with—”
Lucius cut me off,. “If my sons can break her, it will be a fine show of our strength. Let her be their little… challenge.”
My heart dropped. “Break me?”
“Enough,” Lucius barked. “Take her out of my sight.”
The guards grabbed me and pulled me out.
I fought the guards as they dragged me away. “You’re making a mistake! I’m not yours to train, to break! You’ll regret this!”
“Silence her,” Lucius ordered.
A gag was shoved between my teeth.
Again, I was nothing but a beast.
We were outside within minutes. They chained me tighter this time, as if afraid I’d grow wings and fly away. A thick cloak was thrown over my shoulders, but it didn’t stop the cold from sinking into my bones.
The guards pushed me into the back of a black iron carriage, the same kind they used to transport criminals.
I turned to one of them, feeling the blood drying on my lip. “Where are you taking me?”
“Prescot Academy,” he said with a grin. “A place where pretty little monsters like you get broken in.”
I went still.
Prescot.
The academy wasn’t just prestigious—it was elite. The best of the best. Royals. Alphas. Heirs. Creatures with names carved into legends attended there.
I wasn’t supposed to see that place, let alone walk its halls.
“What am I doing there?” I whispered. “Why would they send me there?”
The guard just smirked and slammed the door shut.
We rode for hours. I stared out the barred window.
The trees passed in shadows, and eventually, I caught sight of the smoke. It was still rising in the distance. It was still thick. Still black.
That was my home. Or what was left of it.
I didn’t cry. I couldn’t.
There was nothing left of me to soften. Only rage.
Let them think they’d broken me.
Let them try.
Let their precious sons come.
I would burn their academy to the ground before I bowed.
Chapter 110: The Sigil BurnsThe arena held its breath.Thousands of people, and not one of them made a sound. The tournament, the scores, the house rivalries — all of it had evaporated the moment I'd spoken Lucius's name with that voice that didn't feel entirely mine and yet was more mine than anything I'd ever said before. They could all feel it, even the ones who had no idea what they were feeling — the particular atmospheric shift that happens when something ancient wakes up in a room full of people who didn't know it was sleeping.Lucius rose from his chair slowly. Unhurried. The sigil beneath his hand pulsed once more as he lifted it, dark and deliberate, and then it spread — not visibly to most eyes, but I felt it moving beneath the arena floor like ink bleeding through wet paper, threading itself through the enchanted stonework in patterns that had been laid there long before today.He had built this into the arena itself. Into the structure of the tournament. Months of prepar
ZANA’S POVThe individual magical assessment was the stage I had thought most about.Each competitor came forward in turn and demonstrated their primary magical ability before the three judges, who scored on control, power, and integration — meaning how naturally the magic moved with the person rather than against them. Most students performed confidently, the kind of practiced, polished displays that came from years of formal training and regular encouragement.When my name was called, the noise in the arena dropped noticeably. Not to silence — there were too many people for that — but to something lower, more attentive. Waiting.I walked to the center of the arena floor alone.I stood there for a moment in the space where the crowd's attention pressed in from every direction, and I felt my wolf rise inside me — not aggressively, not with the desperate urgency of someone trying to prove something, but simply present, simply ready, the way she'd been trained to be since before I could
ZANA’S POVThe arena was unrecognizable.I had stood in this space dozens of times over the past weeks — for training, for preliminary rounds, for the maze event that had nearly swallowed me whole — and none of those times had prepared me for what it looked like now. Every seat was filled. Every tier, every platform, every available space packed with bodies — students in house colors, academy staff in formal grey, court nobles in expensive dark fabric, personal guards stationed at intervals around the outer ring like decorative reminders of who held the real power here.The noise was enormous. A living, breathing wall of sound that pressed against my wolf instincts the moment I walked through the competitor's entrance with the rest of House Varen. My wolf didn't like crowds at the best of times. Today she tolerated it with grim, focused discipline, ears flat, attention sharp.Jessie walked beside me, close enough that our arms brushed. She hadn't said much since we'd assembled outside
The morning events went well.Better than well, actually. The individual combat assessment was the kind of challenge I'd spent my whole life accidentally preparing for — fast, unpredictable, requiring improvisation rather than rehearsed technique. I moved through it cleanly, efficiently, without thinking too hard about anything except the immediate problem in front of me. My Lunae mark was warm against my ankle throughout, not painful, just present — like a hand resting against my back.The magical endurance challenge was harder. It tested sustained magical output over thirty minutes of consecutive casting, and my magic, never exactly obedient, wanted to surge rather than sustain. I spent the first ten minutes fighting my own power before I remembered what Rhea had taught me in the greenhouse — redirect, don't contain — and shifted my approach entirely. After that, it was easier. Not easy. Easier.House Varen posted the highest combined score of the morning session. Cael looked at me
Chapter 108: The Morning of the FinalsI woke up to Jessie banging on my door.Not knocking. Banging, with both fists, the particular frantic energy she reserved for emergencies and situations she found unbearably exciting, which to Jessie were often the same thing."Zana. Zana. Get up. You need to see what's happening outside."I was on my feet before I was fully awake, wolf instincts pulling me upright before my mind had caught up, heart already racing. I crossed the room and pulled the door open to find Jessie standing in the corridor in her pajamas, eyes enormous, hair still half-braided from the night before."What happened?" I said immediately."Nothing bad," she said quickly, reading my expression. "Nothing bad, I promise. Just — come look."I followed her to the window at the end of the dormitory corridor, and when I looked out, I understood immediately why she'd come running.The academy grounds had been transformed overnight.The tournament arena, already impressive in its u
ZANA’S POVLucius walked in with two of his advisors, and the room responded to him the way rooms always did — a ripple of awareness moving through every wolf present, something instinctive and deep, the particular deference that an Alpha of his power commanded without asking for it. Students straightened. Conversations halted. Even the professors at the head table seemed to adjust themselves slightly.I kept eating. My wolf growled low inside me, every instinct sharpening to a point.He didn't look at me immediately. He moved through the room at a measured pace, pausing to exchange pleasantries with a cluster of noble students near the front, speaking briefly with two professors who had risen to greet him. Easy, unhurried, completely comfortable in a space that belonged to someone else.Then his eyes found mine across the room.He smiled. Warm, paternal, the smile of a man utterly confident in his own position. He inclined his head slightly, the barest acknowledgment, like I was some







