LOGINLana’s POV
The sting on my neck hadn’t dulled, no matter how many times I pressed my palm against it. It throbbed like a wound that would never heal, a constant reminder of Warren’s cruelty. Every step I took through the halls of the Red Moon Pack house carried that ache with me, like shackles branded into my skin.
I hated him for it. Hated him for taking away even the illusion of choice.
The corridors whispered with judgment. Warriors paused to glance at me, their gazes sharp and suspicious. I could hear the hushed murmurs travel down the hall like poison. Omega. Outsider. Spy.
Their words weren’t spoken aloud, but I didn’t need to hear them to know what they thought of me. The looks were enough.
The woman who had guided me to my quarters returned the next morning with clothes laid neatly across her arms. She didn’t say much—only bowed her head and left me with a wary glance, as though touching me might cost her something.
I dressed in silence, staring at myself in the mirror. The fabric was soft, finer than anything I had ever worn in Dark Silver, but it felt heavy on me, like a costume I had no right to wear. The mark on my neck was visible, an ugly bruise against pale skin. I tilted my head, fingers tracing over it.
Red Moon’s Luna.
That’s what they’d call me now. A title I had never wanted, chained to a man I despised.
The thought made me burn inside.
A knock sounded on my door. Sharp, commanding. My heart clenched. Only one man knocked like that.
“Enter,” I forced myself to say.
Warren stepped inside without hesitation. He didn’t wait for permission, didn’t glance around the room. He filled the space with his presence, the air bending around him as though even the walls knew who he was.
His eyes flicked briefly to my neck, satisfaction glinting there, before returning to my face. “You’ll join me for breakfast,” he said simply.
“I’m not hungry.”
His brow arched. “That wasn’t a request.”
My nails dug into my palms. I wanted to spit at him, scream that he had no right, but the cold authority in his voice made my throat tighten. He would drag me there if I refused. I knew it.
So I followed him.
The dining hall was vast, lined with long tables where warriors sat in perfect discipline. Conversations hushed the moment I walked in at his side. Every eye tracked me, some with open hostility, others with thinly veiled curiosity.
“Sit,” Warren ordered, pulling out a chair beside his own at the head table.
My chest burned with shame as I lowered myself into it, every stare drilling into me. I could almost hear their thoughts. She doesn’t belong here. She’s weak. She’s nothing.
Platters of food were laid out, steam rising from them. My stomach growled in betrayal, but I refused to reach for anything.
“Eat,” Warren commanded again, his tone flat.
“I said I’m not hungry.”
His hand suddenly gripped my wrist under the table, firm enough to make me wince. His voice dropped, just for me. “You’ll eat, Lana. If you starve yourself here, they’ll think you’re too weak to survive as Luna. And weakness is a death sentence in Red Moon.”
The warning in his tone made my skin prickle. He released me slowly, eyes still locked on mine. I forced myself to grab a piece of bread, tearing into it with shaking hands.
Only when I’d swallowed did he lean back, satisfied.
“This pack will test you,” he said loud enough for the others to hear. “They’ll question your loyalty, your strength. But they’ll learn quickly that no one questions me. And you are mine.”
The hall was silent. No one dared speak.
I wanted to scream at him, tell him he couldn’t claim me like some possession. But I sat there, rage twisting inside me, knowing that one wrong word could spark a fire I wasn’t ready to fight.
Later that day, whispers followed me through the training grounds. I kept my head down, pretending not to notice. But one voice cut through the others, sharp and mocking.
“Well, if it isn’t our new Luna,” a warrior drawled, stepping into my path. His smirk was cruel. “Didn’t think an omega could climb so high. Must’ve been a… creative negotiation.”
Laughter rippled through the others. Heat burned in my cheeks, fury clawing up my throat.
“I didn’t choose this,” I snapped.
His eyes gleamed. “Oh, I know. The Alpha never asks. He takes.”
The words sliced through me, and the laughter grew louder. My hands trembled, not from fear this time, but from the urge to strike him.
“Is there a problem here?”
Warren’s voice silenced the grounds. He strode forward, his presence slicing through the tension like a blade. The warrior stiffened but didn’t back down completely.
“She doesn’t belong here,” the man dared to say.
In one fluid motion, Warren had him by the throat, lifting him off his feet. The warrior choked, claws scrabbling uselessly against Warren’s iron grip.
“You dare question me?” Warren’s voice was deadly calm.
“N—No, Alpha,” the man gasped.
Warren dropped him like trash, and he crumpled to the ground, clutching his throat. “Let this be the last time any of you question her place. She is mine. And through me, she holds authority here.”
He turned his head slightly, his gaze sliding to me. “Anyone who disrespects her disrespects me.”
The warriors bowed instantly, murmuring obedience. The air was thick with fear.
I stood frozen, my heart hammering. He’d defended me… but not for me. For his claim. For his dominance.
As Warren walked away, leaving chaos in his wake, I followed in silence. My thoughts were a storm.
I hated him. I hated the way he controlled every breath I took, every step I made. But when he’d defended me, a twisted flicker of something else had sparked in my chest. Something dangerous.
And I hated myself most of all for feeling it.
That night, I sat alone in my quarters, staring at the faint moonlight spilling through the window. My hand found its way to my neck again, tracing the mark that burned with every heartbeat.
I whispered into the darkness, my voice trembling with both fury and desperation.
“I’ll get my revenge, Callen. I’ll make you bleed for what you did to me. But Warren…”
My chest tightened, my voice dropping to a bitter whisper.
“You will pay too. No matter how strong you think you are. No matter how deep this bond burns. One day, I’ll break free of you.”
But even as I swore it, a shiver crawled down my spine, because part of me wasn’t sure if I wanted freedom—or if the fire he lit inside me would consume me before I ever got the chance.
Warren’s POVThe path narrowed as we climbed, stone giving way to packed earth and old roots that broke the surface like knuckles. I remembered this region only in fragments—a bend in the land, a familiar slope—but not enough to anchor it to a name or a pack. That unsettled me more than I liked to admit.Dark Silver’s territory should have been burned into my memory.Instead, it felt like a blank space where something vital had been ripped out.Rowan walked ahead of me, unhurried as always, staff tapping lightly against the ground. He had insisted on leading, claiming the terrain shifted more than maps ever admitted. I didn’t argue. My focus was already split.“This seer,” I said after a while, breaking the silence, “how accurate is he?”Rowan glanced back. “Accurate enough to still be alive.”“That doesn’t answer the question.”&l
Lana’s POVMoonbathing, I learned quickly, was less mystical ritual and more deliberate stillness.The clearing sat just beyond the houses, a gentle slope of pale grass surrounded by low stone markers that hummed faintly with old magic. Nothing dramatic happened when we arrived. No chanting. No sudden surges of power. Just the moon above us, full and steady, washing everything in silver light that felt oddly intimate, as though it were paying attention.Mara dropped onto the grass first with a satisfied sigh. “I forgot how much I missed this,” she said, stretching her arms over her head. “Actual rest without someone asking me to justify my existence.”Kael sat a little more carefully, folding his long legs and leaning back on his hands. “You say that like it happens often.”“It happens constantly,” Mara replied. “You just aren’t around for most of it.”I lo
Warren’s POVDistance was easier when the road demanded attention.I focused on the terrain, the shift of earth beneath my boots, the way the trees thinned and thickened as I moved farther from home. The farther I got, the quieter everything became—no pack chatter, no overlapping scents, no Lana watching me like she was waiting for something I didn’t know how to give.Traveling alone used to feel natural.Now it felt deliberate.My wolf stirred beneath my skin, restless and alert, not agitated but watchful in a way that reminded me of old instincts resurfacing. Leadership instincts. Protection. The kind that didn’t ask permission before settling into your bones.Alpha.The word still felt heavy, even after everything began to make sense again.I stopped at a clearing just before dusk, the sky bruised with the promise of night. The elder I was meeting had chosen the location deliberately—neutral ground, far from territory lines, where power couldn’t lean too heavily on place.Smart.I
Lana’s POVI found Warren near the stables, already half-packed and tightening the straps on his travel bag like he was afraid standing still might give something away. His movements were precise, efficient—too efficient. The kind of focus people used when they didn’t want to think.“Warren,” I said, slowing my steps as I approached.He didn’t look up right away. “I’m heading out.”My chest sank anyway. “Out where?”“One of the elders sent word,” he replied. “They want to speak to me privately. About Callen.”That name landed between us like a dropped blade.“How long will you be gone?” I asked.“Not long.” He finally turned toward me, his expression carefully neutral. “A few days, at most.”I nodded, even though that wasn’t what I wanted to hear. “You didn’t tell me you were leaving.”“I didn’t think it was necessary.”There it was again. That cool distance, that invisible wall I kept running into no matter how carefully I approached.“Is everything okay?” I asked quietly.His gaze
Lana’s POVI found Warren near the training grounds just before dusk, standing at the edge of the clearing with his sleeves rolled up and his posture locked tight, like he was bracing for something that never came. The air around him felt colder than the rest of the park, sharper, almost clipped.For a moment, I just watched him.He wasn’t doing anything—no sparring, no pacing—but his presence filled the space in a way that made it hard to breathe. Alpha energy, my wolf whispered, faint but insistent. It was strange how obvious it felt now, like my instincts had been quietly catching up to something everyone else already knew.I cleared my throat.“Warren?”He turned slowly. His eyes flicked over me, paused for half a second too long, then shifted away again.“What is it?” he asked.That was it. No warmth. No edge either. Just distance.“I just wanted to talk,” I said. “You’ve been… different.”His jaw tightened. “I’ve been busy.”“With me,” I added softly.Silence stretched betwee
Lana’s POVThe forest air was crisp as I stepped beyond the lodge’s gates, the moonlight painting the path in silver and black. For the first time since we returned, I felt an urge to wander alone—not out of defiance, but out of necessity. The pack had its routines, and I had mine. I needed to feel the earth beneath my paws, to breathe without the weight of Warren’s presence pressing against every thought.The park surrounding the lodge was vast, a mix of dense woods, open meadows, and winding streams. The scent of pine, damp earth, and wildflowers mingled, pulling at memories I didn’t yet fully remember. Wolves lounged in the distance, shifting between forms, their eyes glimmering in the moonlight. I gave a nod to Mara, who was near the lodge entrance, checking on a small group of scouts. She returned it with a brief smile, then disappeared into the shadows herself.I let the forest swallow me, my senses alert. Each sound—the crack of a twig, the rustle of leaves—reminded me th
Lana’s POVThe watch bell hadn’t finished its first ring when I heard shouting from the yard.Grayson burst into the hall, half-dressed, raincoat thrown over his shoulders. “Rider from the north gate,” he said. “Alive, barely.”I was already moving.The scout lay on the stones, pale and shaking, a
Lana’s POVThe bell over the north gate rang once—short, sharp, wrong.Not the call for patrol change. Not alarm. Something in between.I was halfway down the stair before the guards finished opening the door
Lana’s POVThe council room smelled of ink and damp parchment.Maps covered the table; cups of untouched tea cooled beside them.Warren stood at the head, the strip of charcoal in his hand tapping the edge of the northern pass. “The Remnant isn’t an army,” he said. “Not yet. They’re scattered cells
Warren’s POVKael found me before midnight.The fires were dying down, the yard half-empty. Only a few guards still moved along the walls.He didn’t salute. “Couldn’t sleep.”“Most can’t, their first night back.”He studied the ground. “Red Moon feels smaller.”“It’s the same size. You just outgrew







