LOGINCaelrix POV
Seravyn’s voice kept replaying in my head, like she’d finally decided I wasn’t worth another second of her time.
She’d accepted the rejection, dropped the mic, and walked away without even glancing back. I’d wanted her to hurt. I’d wanted her to beg or cry so I could feel justified. Instead she left me standing there feeling like I’d just made the biggest mistake of my life.
Embryk was tearing at me from the inside, restless and pissed off. The bond I thought I’d broken was still there, burning worse than before. Every time I pictured her in that black dress, head high, something twisted in my gut.
Whispers and laughter floated through what was left of the crowd.
“What a shitshow. The new Luna couldn’t even make it through her own wedding without some rejected Omega stealing the spotlight.”
“Caelrix looked lost. Poor guy.”
Thessaly caught up fast, her nails digging into my arm.
“What the hell was that? You just stood there like an idiot! You didn’t defend me, didn’t even say I was your Luna in front of everyone!”
I looked at her and felt… empty. The alliance was supposed to fix everything. Strengthen the pack. Make me feel like I was doing the right thing. Right now it all tasted like ash.
“You’re my Luna now,” I muttered, voice flat. “The wedding’s over.”
She let out a bitter laugh.
“That wasn’t the wedding I wanted. You should’ve shut that bitch down the second she grabbed the microphone. She ruined everything!”
“I don’t want to talk about Seravyn right now, Thessaly.”
Her eyes narrowed.
“I’m disappointed in you,” she hissed, then spun around and stormed back toward the pack house.
I watched her go, but my mind stayed stuck on Seravyn. Embryk growled low, aching. “She was ours. You pushed her away.”
I rubbed my face hard. “We made the choice for the pack. She’s gone.”
Seravyn POV
I turned around and I saw figures stepped out of the shadows. Four at first, then more circling behind me. They were rogues! Their eyes caught the moonlight with that ugly yellow shine.
Before I could back away, one of them slammed into me. I hit the ground hard, groaning as rough hands tore my bag off my shoulder.
“No!” I yelled. “That’s mine, it’s all I have left from my parents!”
One laughed and dumped everything on the dirt, snatching whatever looked worth taking. I tried to get up, but another shoved my face into the ground. Pain exploded behind my eyes.
A man knelt close, grabbing my chin with dirty fingers.
“Pretty little thing,” he murmured, dangling my mother’s necklace in front of my face.
“You want this back?”
I reached for it. He closed his fist and grabbed for my hair. I slapped him hard across the face and pushed myself up.
His eyes burned with anger.
“Got some fight. We like breaking girls like you.”
His face started shifting. He dropped to all fours with a savage howl. The others stepped back, giving him room to lunge.
“Shift!” I begged Naryvex.
She pushed through with me, but he was too fast. His claws slashed across our neck. Pain ripped through us both. I tried to fight, but he grabbed my head and slammed it against a rock.
My wolf collapsed. Everything started going fuzzy. The rogues howled like they’d already won.
“Naryvex…” I whispered, fading fast.
“Leave her alone.”
The voice cut through everything with a commanding tone.
I blinked through the blur and saw him standing at the edge of a tree. He was tall, cloaked in black, hood hiding most of his face. Even the rogues froze, their snarls dying in their throats.
The lead rogue turned toward him, teeth bared.
“This doesn’t concern you, outsider.”
The stranger tilted his head a little, almost like he was amused. He took one slow step forward.
“Everything concerns me tonight,” he said quietly, his voice carrying that strange, ancient weight.
“Especially her.”
He still hadn’t looked directly at me, but I felt his attention anyway. Something weird stirred in my chest, warm, confusing, like my wolf was suddenly paying attention in a way she shouldn’t. Naryvex shifted inside me, not with fear this time, but with a strange flicker of excitement mixed with panic.
The rogues growled but didn’t move closer. The stranger just stood there, calm as hell, like he had all the time in the world.
“Who… who are you?” I managed to whisper, my voice weak.
He didn’t answer. His gaze stayed on the rogues as another faint rune pulsed in the air.
“Walk away now,” he told them, low and steady, “or none of you walk again.”
The tension stretched tight. My heart pounded. That strange pull in my chest grew stronger, making my head spin even more than the pain.
Naryvex’s voice trembled inside me, excited and terrified at the same time.
“Mate?”
Seravyn's POV"I love him, Lirvae," I confessed, my voice dropping into a gentle, emotional whisper as the tears threatened to return to my eyes. I looked across at her, my hands shaking slightly around the mug. "I really do. And it terrifies me cause I didn't think I could ever feel this way about anyone again, not after—”I broke it and took a deep breath.“Not after everything Caelrix put me through... Not after the way he crushed my spirit and made me feel like I was just an object to be owned,” I added. “I perfectly understand you, Seravyn,” Lirvae chimed in.“Zoriven makes me feel safe. He treats me like I have value, like my voice actually matters. It’s like he took all the broken, shattered pieces of my life and helped me put them back together without asking for anything in return,” I whispered.Lirvae’s expression softened completely, the teasing light in her eyes giving way to a deep warmth I had never felt before.She leaned forward, placing her mug on the side table, an
Thessaly’s POVThe heavy oak doors of Caelrix’s chambers slammed shut behind me, the sound echoing down the stone corridor like a gunshot. I practically marched down the hallway, my heels clicking sharply against the floor even to my own ears as my fists clenched so tight my knuckles were completely white.I had never felt this angry.How could he be so incredibly useless? He had two hundred fresh, heavy raiders at his disposal, the baddest, most ruthless group this Pack had seen since I actually took notice of him, and he just rolled over cause Zoriven waved a few northern banners in his face? It's so fucking embarrassing. Caelrix talks a massive game about being this unhinged, unstoppable force of nature, but the second things get a little complicated, he folds up like a cheap lawn chair. He's so pathetic.But beneath the rage, there was a sharper, uglier pain clawing at my chest. It was a feeling I wouldn't dare mention in public. Caelrix hadn't just failed to crush the Sun F
Seravyn's POV It started as a low, deep rumble from the space around us where the exhausted, blood-stained Pack soldiers were standing guard. I just about looked up as Exovyn stepped forward, his shoulder now wrapped in a bloody bandage, but he lifted his sword and struck it against his iron shield.Repeated it and yelled, "Stay!” He hit his sword against his shield again, raising it to the air before yelling, “Stay!”“What nonsense is this?” I heard elder Eldrin say, but his voice quickly got muffled out as another warrior joined in, slamming his axe handle against the stone wall. "Stay!” He yelled too.Within seconds, the rhythm caught on like wildfire. The Pack soldiers, the healers, the servants who had crawled out of the remains of the buildings all joined the chant. The entire courtyard was suddenly vibrating with a massive, single heartbeat of iron and voices."Stay!”“Stay!”“Stay!"The word roared through the valley, completely drowning out the angry muttering of the eld
Seravyn’s POVThe world stood completely still around me, but inside my head, everything was crashing down.Zoriven was on his knees in the mud. The Alpha of the Sun Flower Pack, a man who commanded an entire army with a single tilt of his chin, was kneeling at my feet like a common beggar. His large hands were wrapped around the hem of my dirty, blood stained dress, completely unbothered by the wet earth soaking through his trousers.His words felt less like a question and more like a hit to my chest. My breath hung in my throat, coming out in short, ragged gasps as my mind scrambled to make sense of the sheer weight of what he had just dropped on me. It was way too heavy, way too deep, and unsettling everything in me. Just an hour ago, I was ready to throw hands with him for lying to my face on how we met. I was convinced he was just another high-ranking wolf using me as a chess piece in some grand political game. But now? He's offering me a crown while his whole Pack is literal
Seravyn's POV And for the next two hours, the compound was a blur of painfully slow recovery. The smoke slowly thinned, leaving the black, empty remains of the cottages standing against the gloomy morning sky. Warriors moved through the mud, picking up discarded weapons, while the Pack healers cared for the wounded towards the main hall. The effects of the adrenaline were fading fast, leaving a cold, hollow, tired feeling in my bones.I was standing near the shattered fountain, my hands covered in dried mud and blood, my body aching with a deep, painful fatigue. Zoriven stood roughly twenty feet away, refusing to let the healers touch his split cheek until the final casualty logs were delivered. Kaelen was beside him, leaning heavily against a stone pillar, his nose broken but his expression stiff.Then, the heavy oak doors of the main hall opened with a slow, ominous groan, pulling me up to my feet at once.A group of six elderly men and women stepped out into the open. They wor
Seravyn’s POVThe tip of Caelrix’s bloody sword remained leveled at my chest, not flinching an inch with his eyes aimed directly at me.Barely ten paces away, he stood like a monument of rage, the rising smoke from the burning cottages wrapping around his iron hard frame like a dark shield. His golden eyes were wide, glittering and matched with a blood soaked crazy smile that made my skin crawl. Behind him, the wall of about two hundred fresh Moon Stone attackers stood shoulder-to-shoulder, their heavy shields locked together, entirely sealing off the courtyard's exit. There was no way out now, no path through the trees. The trap hadn't just closed in on us, it had buried us in."Step away from her, Duskrael," Caelrix boomed through the space, his voice cutting through the heavy silence of the ruined courtyard with a bone chilling confidence. He shifted his grip on the base of his sword, his muscles tensing beneath his armor till it pulsed up and down."It's over, Zoriven. Look ar
Seravyn POVI stayed on my knees, tears still sliding down my cheeks. “I apologize…”Caelrix didn’t even look back. He just walked out with Thessaly tucked against his side like she belonged there. The door shut with a soft click that felt louder than any slap.Naryvex’s voice came gently in my he
Seravyn POV“What is this girl doing here? Her intense stare unsettled me more than anything else.“Why don’t you just ask her? She’s the one who stole our mate’s affection,” Naryvex, my wolf, said. I quickly pushed her out of my mind. I really didn’t want her claiming that Thessaly had actually w
Seravyn POVIt felt like the final chapter of my life had already been written.I still couldn’t understand why Caelrix would betray me like this. He had made me a promise. How could he change so drastically? What was he thinking, allowing the woman responsible for my parents’ death to become his
Seravyn POV“Why, Caelrix?” I whispered, hoping he would be honest with me. “You can’t just reject me without any explanation,” I added.“I already told you the reason. Omega, you need to face reality and accept it. I can’t and won’t be with someone as weak as you,” he said. I had meant those word







