MasukI woke at six thirty after another sleepless night. The mark on my neck alternated between burning heat and a dull ache, the mate bond pulling me toward Darius’s quarters down the hall. I ignored it. At six fifty, I threw on jeans and a sweater, refusing to try and impress someone who had already decided I wasn't good enough.
The pack house dining room was mostly empty. Darius sat at a corner table, alone, reading a tablet. Even at seven AM, he looked perfectly put together in tactical gear. "You are late," he said without looking up as I sat down. "It is six fifty-eight." "Early is on time. On time it is late." He finally looked at me, his eyes lingering on my messy hair. "Sit." I grabbed my coffee. "Do you always wake up this charming?" His jaw tightened. "I need to go over ground rules. One hour together every morning. Breakfast and conversation. Nothing physical. No expectations beyond civil interaction." "Okay," I said, surprised by his bluntness. "But I have rules too. You treat me like a person, not an obligation. No humiliating me in public. And no lying. I’d rather deal with honesty than fake politeness." Darius studied me. "I can do that." "Can you? Yesterday you ignored me until you needed to order me around." "I was trying to give you space," he admitted, the words sounding forced. "I am not good at this. Caring about how people feel." "Then learn," I said gently. "The silent treatment isn't space. It’s cruel." We ate in silence. Everything about him was mechanical and precise. "Why did you become Beta?" I asked. "I was raised for it. My father was the previous Beta. It was expected." "Did you want to?" "Want was irrelevant. The pack needed a strong Beta." The matter-of-fact , his tone made me sad. He had locked his feelings away ten years ago when Maya died. "That sounds lonely," I whispered. "It is practical," he countered. "Why do you bake?" "Because people are happy when they eat something good," I said, bristling when he asked if I had "bigger ambitions." "My bakery isn't small. I built it from nothing at eighteen. I control it. No one can tell me I’m not good enough for it." The barb hit home. Darius’s expression tightened. "I handled the marking poorly," he said finally. "I have spent ten years making sure I do not care about anyone. It keeps them safe and makes me functional. Then you appear, and suddenly I am supposed to feel things I cut out of myself a decade ago." It was the most vulnerable he had ever been. "No one is asking you to suddenly care," I said. "But we could start with basic respect." "I can show respect." His mouth twitched in something almost like a smile. "You do not let anything slide, do you?" "Why should I?" The next week fell into an uncomfortable routine of stiff morning conversations. I felt trapped; my bakery sat empty, and I couldn't leave pack territory without permission. On the eighth day, everything changed. I was in the library when Sienna appeared. Her expression was predatory. "We need to talk," she said, moving closer. "You are destroying him. Darius was disciplined before you showed up. Now he’s making mistakes. You’re an omega who got lucky with a mark, but eventually, he’ll see you for what you are—a mistake." The words echoed my deepest fears. I stayed seated, trying to look calm, but my heart raced. "Get away from her." Darius stood in the doorway, his rage barely leashed. He walked forward, forcing Sienna to step back. Sienna spun around. "Beta Darius. I was just..." "You were threatening my mate." The possessive weight of those words sent heat through my chest. "Let me be clear, Sienna. Lila is under Alpha Marcus's protection. She is also under mine. If you threaten her again, "If you threaten her again," Darius growled, "I will have you assigned to border patrol until you remember how to behave." Sienna turned pale and fled. "You didn't have to do that," I said once we were alone. "I was handling it." "She called you weak. I will not allow anyone to treat you that way." "Why do you care? You don't want this bond." "I do not know," he admitted. "But when I felt your fear through the bond, I wanted to tear her apart." "That’s just the bond talking." "Maybe. But the feeling was real." He studied me. "I am trying, Lila. To see you as more than an obligation." "Then tell me about Maya," I challenged. "Tell me why you can't let yourself feel." His body went rigid. "No. That is the past. It does not matter." "It matters because it’s why we’re stuck." I stepped closer. "Give me something, Darius." For a second, the armor cracked. I saw old grief and pain in his eyes. Then he stepped back, the mask slamming shut. "I need to get to training. Same time tomorrow." He left before I could respond. I stood alone, touching the mark on my neck. We weren't working. And I was terrified that by the time he figured out how to let me in, it would be too late for both of us.The council meeting took three days to organize.Two billion people could not all attend physically. But through the omega network. Through Shard light communication. Through Ven thought connection. Through human technology. Every voice was present.Unity stood before them all.And told them everything.The Eldest. Four billion years old. Watching since Lila. Offering knowledge beyond imagination.Silence followed. The kind of silence that happens when everything changes.Then chaos erupted."It is a trap—""Four billion years old? That is impossible—""We should accept immediately. Think of what we could learn—""We cannot trust beings we have never met—""They watched Lila. They know our entire history. They already know us—""Knowing us and being trustworthy are different things—"Unity let them argue. For hours. Until the voices exhausted themselves.Then she asked one question."What would Lila do?"Silence."Lila was an omega. Invisible. Powerless. Given a mark she did not ask f
Three months after the Great Link, communication arrived.Not a signal. Not a transmission.A presence.It appeared in Unity's mind directly. Bypassing all technology. All defenses."You are remarkable," the presence said. Not in words. In pure meaning. Pure thought.Unity did not scream. She had Ven in her. She was used to thought communication."Who are you?" she asked silently."We have watched your galaxy for a very long time. We saw species rise and fall. Fight and destroy. We had given up hope that any would ever achieve what you achieved today.""What did we achieve?""Two billion minds. Freely unified. No coercion. No manipulation. Pure voluntary connection. Do you understand how rare that is?""Rare enough for you to reveal yourselves apparently.""Yes." Something like amusement in the presence. "We call ourselves the Eldest. We are—old. Older than your sun. We have watched countless civilizations. Most destroy themselves. Some achieve space travel. Very few achieve genuine m
The hardest part was not the science.It was convincing people."You want me to link my mind with two billion strangers?" a wolf in the northern settlement demanded. "To let them inside my head? No.""Not inside your head. Connected to you. Like a pack bond. But larger.""Pack bonds are with wolves I know. People I trust. Not with every being on this planet."It was the same argument everywhere. Different species. Different cultures. Different fears.But the same resistance."We are not asking you to surrender your identity," Unity explained at rally after rally. "We are asking you to share your consciousness temporarily. For one hour. Long enough to push back the Void Walkers.""One hour of having two billion minds in my head—""One hour of being part of something bigger than yourself. One hour of true unity. Then it is over. And reality survives.""And if it does not work?""Then we die together. But at least we tried."Year one passed. Fifty percent of the population agreed.Not en
The storm arrived six months later.Not ships. Not disease. Not rebellion.Something else entirely."We are picking up anomalies," the chief science officer reported. A Shard-wolf hybrid named Prism. "Spatial distortions. Reality fluctuations. Things that should not exist.""Show me," Unity said.The data was terrifying.Holes in space. Small at first. Barely noticeable. But growing."What causes them?" Kael asked."We do not know. The Ven have never seen anything like it. The Shard have legends about them. They call them Void Walkers.""Legends? What kind of legends?"Prism hesitated. "The kind you hope stay legends. The Shard say the Void Walkers are beings from outside our dimension. They do not exist in normal space. They pass through it. And wherever they pass—""What?""Reality breaks. Space collapses. Everything they touch—stops existing."Silence fell over the council room."You are saying they erase reality?" Unity asked."Locally. Yes. Small pockets at first. But the holes g
Eight hundred years after landing on Sanctuary, history tried to repeat itself.Not through disease. Not through invasion.Through deliberate erasure."Someone is rewriting our records," Unity announced at the emergency council. She was two hundred and fifty now. Multi-species. Ancient. But sharp."Rewriting how?" her advisor Kael asked."Selectively deleting historical archives. Changing dates. Altering names. Removing entire events from official records." Unity pulled up evidence. "The omega rights movement. The Battle of Sanctuary. The Memory Plague. All being quietly erased from public history.""Who would do this?""Someone who wants to control what future generations believe. Who wants to shape identity by controlling memory."The investigation took months.They found the source buried deep in Sanctuary's digital infrastructure. A hidden program. Sophisticated. Patient. Operating for decades without detection.And behind the program—a group.They called themselves the Architects
Seven hundred years after landing on Sanctuary, something unprecedented happened.The Ven began to change."We are evolving," Keeper Zen told Blaze. Zen was ancient now. Thousands of years old. But suddenly different."Evolving how?""Through exposure to you. To wolves. To humans. To Shard. To conflict and struggle and passion. We are becoming—more.""More what?""More like you. We are developing emotions. Aggression. Competition. Desire. Things we never had before."Blaze was shocked. "Is that good or bad?""We do not know. For millions of years, we were peaceful. Static. Unchanging. Then you arrived. And in seven hundred years, you have changed us more than the previous million years combined.""What does that mean?""It means we are converging. All our species. Becoming something new. Something hybrid. Not human. Not wolf. Not Ven. Not Shard. But all of them. Combined."Blaze saw the evidence everywhere.Young Ven developing pack bonds. Learning to howl.Young wolves developing cry







