LOGINThe moment Elaine stepped into the building, she knew she was exactly where she was meant to be. The high stone ceilings, polished floors, and watchful eyes of strangers felt welcoming rather than intimidating. Places like this were built for people who carried themselves with certainty. Elaine had never lacked that.
She was the better twin, and everyone knew it. Where Elena faded into corners, Elaine naturally stood at the center of every room she entered. Attention followed her without effort, settling on her as though it had always belonged there. She had long since stopped pretending not to enjoy it.
Students glanced her way as she moved through the hall, their curiosity obvious even when manners tried to hide it. Some recognized her name from the prophecy, while others simply stared because beauty often made people careless. Elaine met each look with calm ease, giving nothing away. Admiration was easiest to manage when expected.
Yet beneath her confidence, one thought refused to leave her alone. Since the night of the prophecy, the Moon Priestess’s words had returned again and again without invitation. You have something that belongs to your sister. Elaine had laughed then, but the memory no longer felt amusing.
“Hey, peasant.”
The voice came from a girl leaning beside the staircase, flanked by two others who looked too eager to be cruel on their own. Elaine turned slowly, more annoyed than offended. The girl’s smirk widened, clearly pleased to have her attention. Lycoria, it seemed, was full of people who mistook boldness for importance.
“Elaine,” she said, smiling in a way that never reached her eyes. “What?”
The girl blinked, thrown off balance by the calm reply. For a second, she looked less clever than she had a moment ago. Elaine took one measured step closer. The smile on her lips remained perfectly in place.
“My name is Elaine,” she said softly. “Don’t forget it.”
She walked away before the girl could answer. Whispers followed her almost at once, but none loud enough to matter. By the time she reached the training grounds, several heads had already turned in her direction again. Elaine lifted her chin and went to where her group was waiting.
“I’m Kael,” he said, his lips curving into an easy smile. “Before I’m a prince, I’m a student here just like the rest of you, so if you need guidance, come to me.” His voice carried warmth that settled the nerves running through the group. Even so, something restless moved beneath his calm expression.
His wolf had been unsettled since morning. It paced beneath his skin, alert and impatient for reasons he could not name. Something close enough disturbed its usual silence. Kael ignored it the way he ignored many inconvenient things.
“We’ll be starting with basic techniques today,” he continued. He stepped toward the nearest training dummy and picked up a practice sword. “I’ll reduce the pressure on your first day, but I won’t tolerate laziness.”
He placed one foot forward and moved in a single clean motion. The blade struck the dummy with a sharp crack, sending it crashing to the ground. Several students gasped while others stared openly. Kael glanced back at them with a playful smile.
“I’m impressive, I know,” he said, drawing laughter from the nervous students. Then his expression sharpened. “But if you train seriously, you’ll get there too. Everyone, grab a sword and take your stance.”
The group scattered toward the weapon rack. Steel clinked, boots shifted, and uncertain hands tightened around unfamiliar grips. Kael moved between them, correcting posture and grip. For first years, they were better than expected.
This batch had promise. Some were clumsy, some overconfident, and some frightened, but talent showed itself quickly. One student, however, drew his attention more than the others. Even when he looked away, his eyes seemed to return to her.
Golden blonde hair caught the sunlight each time she moved. Her strikes were not the strongest, but they were clean, elegant, and growing sharper with every attempt. She moved like someone determined to belong.
Elaine Hayes.
He knew the name before arriving. Half the academy had spoken of the twin chosen by prophecy, and most spoke only of the beautiful one. Watching her now, Kael understood why attention followed her so easily.
“Your Highness?”
A student’s voice pulled him back. Kael turned, peeling his gaze away from Elaine without changing expression. “Yes?” he asked, as though his focus had never drifted.
By the time drills ended, several students had dropped to the grass in exhaustion. Elaine took a cloth from an attendant and sat gracefully on the ground, drawing breath in measured pulls. Sweat clung lightly to her skin, but even tiredness seemed to flatter her. Kael looked over the group with approval.
“You did well,” he said. “For a first day, many of you handled yourselves naturally.” Pride sat easily in his voice, and relief spread through the students.
“You’re human.”
Elena’s breath hitched at once. Her mind scrambled for an excuse, but panic scattered every thought before she could hold onto one. “I... err...” was all she managed.
“Rowan, do you make it a habit to terrify newcomers on their first day?”
A playful voice carried across the training ground, light enough to cut through the tension. Elena turned and saw the crown prince jogging toward them, sunlight catching against his dark hair. Several students straightened the moment they noticed him.
Kael stopped beside them, wearing a warm, easy smile. “Don’t mind my friend,” he said, glancing at Rowan. “He enjoys looking intimidating far more than necessary.”
“I do not,” Rowan replied flatly.
Kael ignored him completely. He turned back to Elena and extended a hand toward her. “I’m Kael,” he said. “Welcome to Lycoria.”
Elena stared at the hand in front of her, frozen where she stood. This was nothing like the distant boy she had collided with in the corridor earlier. That version of him had seemed lost inside his own thoughts, while this one stood bright and effortless before an audience.
She had expected to go unnoticed here. Instead, the two most influential people she had seen since arriving now stood directly in front of her. One had uncovered her secret, and the other was so far above her station that speaking to him should have been impossible.
“Elena, are you alright?”
Her sister’s voice broke through the panic crowding Elena’s mind. She turned and found Elaine approaching with graceful confidence, golden hair catching the sunlight. “Y-yes,” Elena managed, though her pulse still refused to settle.
Elaine smiled before looking at Kael. “My sister is a little shy, Your Highness,” she said smoothly. Without hesitation, she placed her hand into the one Elena had failed to take. The surrounding students watched with interest.
“I’m not harassing anybody, Kael,” Rowan said, arms folding across his chest. “I was asking a question.”
But Kael barely heard him. His gaze had settled on Elaine’s blue eyes, clear and bright beneath the afternoon light. Something sharp jolted through him, sudden enough to steal the next breath from his lungs.
Beneath his calm expression, his wolf surged awake.
This was her.
His mate.
Elaine ran until she was alone and her legs finally gave out beneath her.She sank to the ground among the flowers, staring blankly at them as though they might offer her something to hold on to.Her head felt empty, yet somehow too full at the same time, and her hands had curled into fists without her even noticing.The rims of her eyes burned red, but she refused to let the tears fall.She had gone looking for her mate because she needed somewhere to put all the thoughts choking her.She had wanted to speak to Kael, to tell him what had been happening and hear him tell her she wasn’t losing her mind.Instead, she had found him standing with Seraphine, keeping another girl’s secret while refusing to trust her with the truth.The thought made her chest tighten until it hurt.Elaine tipped her head back and stared at the sky.For a few seconds, all she could hear was the rustling of leaves overhead and the pounding of her own heartbeat.Then Phoebe’s voice crept back into her mind.Giv
Elaine wandered through the academy gardens without any real destination in mind. For what felt like the first time in her life, the world continued moving around her without waiting. Classes resumed, students laughed amongst themselves, and life carried on as though nothing had changed.Yet everything had changed.Phoebe's words refused to leave her mind.You're starting to lose your shine.You'll only shine again once you give it back.The more she turned those words over in her head, the less sense they made. She had never stolen anything from Elena. She had shared everything she had with her since they were children. Clothes, books, food... even the little bits of affection their mother rarely showed.At least...That was how she remembered it.A sigh escaped her lips as she rubbed her temples. Ever since meeting Phoebe, she had begun questioning memories she had never thought twice about. It was an unsettling feeling, as though someone had quietly replaced pieces of her past witho
“Rowan, I just heard the craziest thing.”Kael stepped into the room, only to stop midway.Rowan was sitting on the edge of his bed, his eyes narrowed and his lips pressed into a thin line.Kael had seen that expression before.It was the look Rowan wore whenever he had stumbled onto something he wasn't supposed to know.“What is it?” Kael asked.Rowan looked up almost immediately.“Nothing.” He answered a little too quickly. “What did you hear?”Kael raised a brow.“Oh? You have that strange look.”“It's nothing, really. Forget it.” Rowan waved him off. “You were saying something?”Kael studied him for another second before deciding not to push it.“You know that pill you were asking about?”Rowan gave a small nod.“Hm.”“Where did you get it from?”Rowan frowned.“Why do you want to know?”“It could land you in serious trouble.”For a brief moment, Rowan considered lying. Then he shrugged.“I found it in the trash. Two juniors were acting suspicious, so I got curious.”“Their names?
Elena sat at her desk, staring blankly at the board. The words being written by Professor Clauss seemed to blur together no matter how hard she tried to focus. Her mind felt sluggish and her eyelids heavy, as though she hadn't slept at all."Miss Hayes, would you mind telling us the difference between the Red Moon Festival and the Black Moon Festival?"The question barely registered.Around her, several students turned their heads."Miss Hayes?" Clauss repeated, raising a brow.Before Elena could react, another voice answered."The Red Moon is a period where wolves are weakened and the Moon Goddess reveals a prophecy. It is also the night a Saintess is chosen." Elaine rested her chin against her hand. "The Black Moon strengthens primal urges. It is known as the Night of a Thousand Bloods.""Thank you, Miss Hayes."A few students chuckled."I was actually calling on your sister."Elena blinked.Only then did she realize the entire class was looking at her.A faint flush crept onto
Elena looked up at the approaching figure and immediately froze.“Your Highness?”She quickly wiped at her face, hoping he hadn't noticed the tears.Unfortunately, he had.Kael stopped in front of her and studied her for a moment before speaking.“I've noticed something.”Elena frowned.“You cry a lot.”A look of disbelief crossed her face.“I do not.”Kael simply raised a brow.The gesture made Elena look away.Without another word, he held out a hand.For a few seconds she stared at it before reluctantly accepting. Kael pulled her to her feet and immediately let go, creating enough distance that she wouldn't feel trapped.“I'll walk you back to your dorm.”“You don't have to.”“I know.”The answer caught her off guard.Neither of them spoke again as they began walking through the hallway. The silence wasn't uncomfortable, but it wasn't particularly pleasant either.Eventually, Kael broke it.“Elaine is hurting too.”The temperature around Elena seemed to drop.She stopped walking.“
Elaine walked out of the academy with her fists clenched at her sides. Elena's words refused to leave her alone, repeating over and over inside her head no matter how hard she tried to ignore them.What she doesn't see is the rotten person beneath that fake smile.Was that really how Elena saw her?The thought hurt more than she wanted to admit. She had spent years looking out for her sister, helping her whenever she could and shielding her from things she didn't need to face. Yet when Elena looked at her, all she saw was someone cruel.Elaine kept running until the academy disappeared behind her. The forest swallowed the sounds of students and training grounds, replacing them with rustling leaves and birdsong. Only when her legs finally gave out did she stop, dropping onto the grass and staring up at the canopy above.The branches swayed gently in the afternoon breeze while streaks of sunlight filtered through the leaves. For a few moments she simply lay there, allowing the tea
“Your Highness... my hand.”Elaine’s soft reminder broke through the sudden stillness between them. Kael glanced down and realized he was still holding her hand far longer than courtesy allowed. “Ah, sorry,” he said, releasing it at once, though his calm came a second too late. Beneath the surface,
“Along with growing stronger on your own, you’ll need to learn how to work as a team,” the teacher’s voice rang across the courtyard. “The goddess blessed us with strength to protect the weak and prevent needless loss. You will learn to cover the weaknesses of others, just as they may one day cover
The carriage slowed as it approached the gates of Lycoria Academy, and Elena’s chest tightened before they even stopped. The walls rose high and cold, carved from dark stone that seemed to swallow the light. Students moved beyond the entrance in small groups, their voices low and familiar. Elena st
Elena Hayes knew she did not belong in that hall long before anyone said it. The way people looked at her made it obvious, their eyes sliding past her like she was not worth noticing. Even standing next to her own sister felt wrong, like she was in a place that was never meant for her.The two girls







