LOGINLyra Nightbane was born into a world that never intended to let her lead. In the Dominion of Virelune, only male heirs are allowed to claim power. So when her brother rejects his place at Lunar Dominion Academy, the most ruthless training ground for Alpha rulers, Lyra does the unthinkable. She steals his name, She steals his place, She steals his destiny, Disguised as her twin brother, she enters a world of dominant heirs, brutal combat trials, and pack politics that could start wars. All she has to do is survive without anyone discovering the truth. There’s just one problem. Ronan Bloodcrest, her childhood rival and the most dangerous Alpha heir in the academy, knows something is wrong. His wolf doesn’t see an enemy. It sees a mate. And when her scent begins to slip under the rising full moon, another male feels the bond too. Now Lyra is trapped between two powerful heirs, a secret that could disgrace her pack, and a destiny that refuses to stay stolen. Because fate doesn’t care about tradition.And the moon does not choose wrong.
View MoreLyra POV
"Say it again." My father's voice dropped low. That was always the warning. Not the shouting. The quiet.
Kieran stood his ground, though I could see his hands trembling at his sides. Every elder, every warrior, every pack member who had gathered to celebrate my brother's acceptance into Lunar Dominion Academy was watching him now with their mouths open.
"I said no." Kieran's voice cracked on the last letter. "I won't go."
The silence that followed was the loudest thing I had ever heard.
I stood at the edge of the crowd with my fists buried in the fabric of my cloak. I watched my father's jaw tighten. Watched the muscle in his neck jump. Alpha Doran Nightbane was not a man who received the word no for an answer. Certainly not from his son.
"You are refusing a place at Lunar Dominion." My father said it slowly, like he was tasting something rotten. "In front of your pack. In front of your elders. You are standing here and telling me.."
"I'm telling you I won't be used." Kieran's chin lifted. Just barely, but I saw it. "I won't go to that academy so you can build political bridges on my back. I won't become Alpha because it suits your agenda. I…"
The slap cracked through the night air like a gunshot. Kieran's head snapped sideways. He didn't fall. I'll give him that. He just stood there, cheek burning red, and said nothing.
"You are so weak," my father said. He turned his back on Kieran and faced the pack. I watched him do what alphas do when they're humiliated. He made someone else carry it. "His title. His ceremony and all."
The murmuring started immediately. I could hear it rolling through the crowd like a wave.
Disgraced idiot, coward, wasteful and pathetic wolf.
I stood there with the rage building behind my ribs like a fire that had nowhere to go. I thought about every single morning I had been up before dawn running drills alone in the woods. Because training sessions were for the males.
Every sparring match I had won in secret. Every strategy session I had listened to through walls because I was not permitted a seat at the table.
Kieran hadn't wanted any of it. And I had wanted all of it.
The unfairness of that was the kind of thing that could eat a person alive if they let it. I didn't let it. I swallowed it down, turned away from the crowd, and walked back to the house before anyone could see my face.
++++++
He came to my room just after midnight. I heard the knock and I already knew he was the one knocking. I had been sitting on the edge of my bed in the dark, still dressed, too wired to sleep. Turning the night over and over in my mind.
"Lyra." Kieran pushed the door open. His cheek was still swollen. He looked exhausted in a way that went deeper than tired. "Can I come in?"
"You're already in."
He sat on the floor with his back against the wall, the way he used to do when we were children and one of us had a nightmare. For a long time he didn't speak. I didn't push him to do so. I just waited.
"I'm leaving," he said finally. "Before sunrise."
I looked at him. "Where?"
"Does it matter?"
"Kieran."
"Somewhere he can't use me." He pulled his knees up. "I can't be what he wants me to be. I never could. You know that."
I did know that. Kieran was brilliant and gentle and completely wrong for the life our father had designed for him. He felt things too deeply for alpha politics. He would have been destroyed by Lunar Dominion inside a year.
"You could have just told him that," I said quietly.
"I did. That's what tonight was."
"It should have been you," Kieran said.
My chest tightened. "Don't."
"I mean it. You know I mean it." He looked up at me, and there was no pity in his eyes, which was the only reason I kept listening. "You're faster than me. You always have been. You're sharper, you're more disciplined, you actually want it. If you'd been born…"
"But I wasn't." My voice came out harder than I intended. "So it doesn't matter."
He was quiet for a moment.
Then he said, "What if it did?"
I frowned. "What?"
Kieran reached into his jacket and pulled out the acceptance letter. The Lunar Dominion seal caught the moonlight, gold and gleaming. He set it on the floor between us like an offering.
"If you want it so badly," he said, "take it."
I stared at the letter. Then at him. "You're not serious."
"I'm leaving anyway. The spot goes empty either way." His voice was calm and settled. Like he had already made peace with it. "Or it doesn't have to."
The idea landed in my brain. I felt it take root before I could stop it.
"Kieran, that's…"
"Crazy, yes." He almost smiled. "Are you telling me you can't pull it off?"
++++++
I cut my hair in the bathroom with the small silver knife I used for hunting. Each dark length hit the floor and I didn't let myself feel it.
I bound my chest with the long linen strips I had prepared. My hands did not shake. Because I had decided somewhere between his room and mine that I was doing this. And once I decide something, I don't flinch.
The uniform fit almost perfectly.
The herbs from the healer's hut were the hardest part. I knew exactly which ones masked a wolf's natural scent. I had read every page of Maren's herb books twice out of boredom and been called strange for it. Now I crushed the leaves between my palms and worked them into my skin and hair until I could barely smell myself.
I looked in the mirror before I left. Kieran Nightbane looked back. I picked up his bag and walked out the door.
+++++++
The transport was cold and loud and full of wolves who didn't look at each other. I kept my head down, my jaw set, my heartbeat as controlled as I could manage. I ran drills in my mind the entire journey. Focused on breathing. On the plan. On the future waiting on the other side of this risk.
When the transport stopped and the doors opened, the morning air hit me first. Sharp and clean and electric with something that felt like possibility.
I stepped onto the academy grounds. And then I stopped. Because a growl rolled through the air, low and dangerous, and every nerve in my body went rigid.
He was standing at the gates. Watching me with dark eyes that didn't blink. The kind of eyes that had seen through people before and found them guilty.
Ronan Bloodcrest. I had heard the name. Everyone had. The academy's top-ranked student. The Alpha heir that other Alpha heirs feared.
He wasn't moving.
He was just staring straight at me. The growl that came from him was not the sound of a wolf greeting a packmate. It was the sound of a wolf who knew something was wrong.
My grip tightened on the strap of the bag. I kept my face still. I kept my chin up. But deep in my chest, my heart was hammering against my ribs like it was trying to escape.
POV: LyraThe room Petra had arranged was small and quiet and on the fourth floor of the residence building, high enough that the city sounds were distant and the window looked out over rooftops rather than streets.I sat on the edge of the bed for a long time before I opened it. The envelope was in my hands. I had carried it from the restaurant in my coat pocket with the particular careful quality of someone transporting something that mattered more than its physical weight suggested. I had said goodnight to the table without making it into a moment. Ronan had looked at my face and understood without asking and squeezed my hand once and let me go.He knew. I had told him, quietly, on the walk from the restaurant. He had listened and then said, take the time you need. I had said, I know. He had said, I will be here when you come back. I had said, I know that too.Now I was alone in a small room on the fourth floor with the envelope in my hands and the city quiet outside the window an
POV: LyraPetra had arranged a private room at the back of a restaurant two streets from the council building.Not formal, That was the first thing I noticed when I walked through the door. No council insignia, no long table designed for proceedings, no chairs arranged to communicate hierarchy. Just a round table large enough for all of us, candles in the centre, the particular warm light of a room that had been set up by someone who understood that what we needed tonight was not a debriefing.It was a table. Ronan came in beside me and his hand found the small of my back briefly as we moved through the door, a small ordinary gesture that I felt in the specific way you feel things when you have stopped bracing for them.We sat. Ronan beside me. Kieran across from me, beside Calla, who had come from the council building in the same car and had spent the drive looking out the window with the expression of someone taking stock of a day that had contained more than most years. Cassian was
POV: LyraThe three hours after the hearing were the strangest of the whole eight months. Not the most difficult. Not the most frightening. The strangest, because there was nothing to do in them. Every action that could be taken had been taken. Every argument had been made, every document filed, every testimony given. The thing that had been in motion for twenty years and in my particular hands for eight months was now in the hands of five council members in a deliberation room, and I was sitting in a corridor outside Petra Solan's office drinking cold tea and waiting.Waiting has never been my strongest discipline. Cassian sat beside me for the first hour with his notebook and a pen, working through something, and his presence was useful in the specific way his presence was always useful, grounding and uncomplicated. He did not try to fill the silence with reassurance. He just sat there being methodical about whatever he was working on and let the corridor be what it was.Dorian was
POV: LyraI dressed carefully, Not because appearance was the point. Because it was the last morning before and I wanted to be deliberate about it. I had spent eight months being deliberate about every morning, every layer, every careful preparation of the person I was going to be when I walked through a door. This morning I was deliberate about being myself. My clothes. My name. My face without anything laid over it.Ronan was in the corridor when I came out. He looked at me once, completely, the way he looked at things that mattered. He did not say anything. He offered his arm and I took it and we walked down to the cars together in the early morning quiet.++++++The council chamber in the central pack authority building was the largest formal room I had ever been in. I had seen it described in the pack council procedural documents that Dorian had assembled. I had looked at diagrams of the layout, the panel bench at the front, the petitioner's table, the gallery seating, the second
POV: LyraThe filing came through at eight in the morning. Petra Solan's office sent the notification simultaneously to every party with formal standing in the hearing. I read it on my phone standing in the corridor outside the study room with Ronan beside me and Cassian coming through the door at
POV: LyraDorian explained the plan on Monday evening. We were all in the study room. Ronan at the end of the table, Cassian beside him with his notebook open and his pen ready, Sable in the chair by the window that had become her chair over the past weeks, and me across from Dorian, who had the do
POV: LyraDorian told me at breakfast, He sat down across from me with his tray and his usual morning expression, which was the expression of someone who had already been awake and working for two hours and was now choosing the right moment to deliver something he had been sitting with since last n
POV: DorianI had started the trace the morning after Draven's warning. Not because I was asked to. Nobody had asked me to. But Draven had said there was a player in the situation that none of us had identified, and unidentified players in situations with this many moving parts were the specific ki






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