Mag-log inAlaric’s POV
“Come with me,” I said, already walking ahead. Hazel followed quickly, keeping pace without a word. We walked through the hallways, the sound of our footsteps echoing. She stayed just behind me, quiet. “Why were you late?” I asked, my eyes forward, my tone even. “Um… I was taking care of Aurella,” she said. Her voice was soft, hesitant. “She was insisting on coming to see you, but I thought you’d be asleep, so I didn’t let her yet.” I nodded slowly, processing her words. “Is she warming up to you?” I asked, glancing at her out of the corner of my eye. “Yes… really fast, actually,” Hazel said. “She even let me feed her.” I stopped walking abruptly and turned to look at her. Hazel froze mid-step, watching me carefully. “She let you feed her?” I repeated, my voice low. Hazel nodded slowly. I studied her for a long moment. That was new. Aurella had always been picky and very particular. I had been just as picky when it came to her caregivers. Some were too harsh, some incompetent—like the last one who fed her granola after I specifically said she was allergic to nuts. None of them had lasted three months. The last one only lasted a week. I would never compromise Aurella’s health. If they slipped up even once, they were gone. I started walking again. “You should freshen up and meet me in the throne room,” I said. “The throne room?” I heard her ask. “Yes,” I said simply, not stopping my pace. I returned to my room. The bed was already dressed, my bath prepared. I took my bath quickly, then made my way to the throne room. I sat down. Dominic my Beta would be there soon, bringing Vincent with him. Vincent was going to have to explain everything. After a few minutes, the door opened and Dominic stepped in, Vincent trailing behind him. Dominic gave me a nod and took a seat, while Vincent stopped just short and bowed deeply. My gaze darkened as I fixed him with my stare. “Vincent”,I said, my voice sharp. “I believe you know why I called you here.” He didn’t respond. He just stood there, expression neutral, as if he couldn’t understand the intensity of his actions. I leaned back slightly, letting the silence stretch, letting him squirm under it. “Let me cut to the chase,” I began. “I called you here because I received some foul reports about you.” At that moment, the door opened again, slower this time, and I lifted my gaze to see Hazel peeking in. Her eyes met mine, and I gave a slow nod. She stepped in quietly, hands clasped in front of her. I watched Vincent’s eyes flicker toward her before he refocused on me. “Were you, or were you not, aware of the exploitation of the workers?” Vincent lifted his gaze. “I was not aware,” he said. I smirked, letting my patience wear thin. “Of course you weren’t. You’re in charge of the workforce here, Vincent. And yet, for three months, the slaves were abused, underfed, forced into hard labour, even into… sex work. And you claim you didn’t know? You never once checked in or requested reports? Too busy?” “That’s not it, Alpha,” Vincent replied quickly. “I’m not the only one working there. I have assistants. I had no idea… same as you didn’t notice.” I clenched my teeth, the veins in my hands tightening. “I am the Alpha of this pack. Alpha to millions of people. You’re in charge of a few hundred workers. I trusted you to manage that area. And now, you give me excuses?” Vincent lowered his head. “I didn’t mean it that way, Alpha. I just… I wasn’t aware.” I turned my gaze to Hazel. “Have you seen this man before?” I asked, pointing at Vincent. Hazel’s eyes met his briefly. Vincent’s own widened. She didn’t answer immediately. “Don’t be scared. Answer the question,” I pressed, my voice harder. “Yes,” Hazel said slowly. “I’ve seen him at the shed a few times.” I let the words hang in the air, letting them hit Vincent. “You heard that. There’s no way you could have visited that place and not known what was happening.” Vincent’s jaw clenched. “Alpha, I can explain—” “Shut it,” I cut him off sharply. “I blame myself for being too occupied with other areas, yes. The rogue attack diverted my attention. But that does not excuse your negligence.” “It’s not your fault, Alpha,” Dominic suddenly spoke. “You are only one person. You can’t be everywhere at once. I should have monitored that area as well. I take responsibility.” I nodded slowly at Dominic, acknowledging his loyalty. Then I turned back to Vincent my voice colder than ice. “I am highly disappointed in you. My father trusted you to be his Beta up until his last day. And you, greedy, short-sighted, and foolish, betrayed that trust. If your daughter were among those slaves, would you have let this happen?” Vincent looked away, shame and fear written across his face. “Alpha, I just… I wanted extra money.” “Extra money?” I echoed. “You are paid handsomely. Even if a greedy man earned a billion a month, he wouldn’t be satisfied.” He didn’t answer. “You will be punished for this,” I continued, my voice sharp. “From now on, you’re stripped of your title as former Beta, workforce leader, or anything else. You are now a commoner. You will have no authority over official matters, no access to meetings, no supervision of recruits or borders. For the next two weeks, you will not leave the pack house. You are under strict confinement.” I turned to Dominic. “Prepare an official notice. I’ll stamp it. Make it clear to everyone.” Dominic nodded. “Yes, Alpha.” Finally, I looked at Hazel. “You may leave.” She bowed slightly and walked away. I was pissed the entire day. The anger didn’t leave me, not after dealing with Vincent. So I went to the forest. Hunting always helped. It gave me something to focus on, something to channel the frustration into. I didn’t need to do it, but I did it anyway. It was one of the few things that cleared my head. By the time I returned in the evening, I had caught enough meat. Blood stained my hands, the scent of the forest clinging to me. As I stepped into the compound, a few guards hurried forward, bowing. “Alpha, you didn’t have to” “It doesn’t matter,” I cut in, tossing the meat toward them. “Send it to the kitchen.” “Yes, Alpha,” they said quickly. I walked past them and into the pack house. The dirt, the sweat, the lingering scent of blood—all clung to me. I needed a bath. As I made my way toward my room, irritation crept back in. I already knew what I would find when I stepped inside. One of the maids, most likely. They always found excuses to linger in my room, waiting for me to return, hoping for attention and trying to throw themselves at me. It disgusted me. I was already preparing myself to send whoever it was out without patience. But the moment I stepped in, I stopped. The scent hit me. It wasn’t a random maid. It was Hazel. Alone.Three wolves burst through in the space of one breath, black fur, yellow eyes, Silvermoon scouts. Ella’s men. They shifted mid-leap, landing on two legs with steel in their hands. Alaric moved before Hazel could blink. He was unarmed. Shirtless. Bare feet on frozen floor. Didn’t matter. He caught the first scout by the throat and slammed him into the wall. Wood cracked. The wolf choked, claws scraping uselessly at Alaric’s forearm. “You should’ve stayed in the packhouse,” Alaric growled. His voice wasn’t his own, low, layered with his wolf. “You should’ve remembered who I am.” The second scout lunged. Alaric twisted, using the first man as a shield. The blade meant for his ribs sank into his own scout’s shoulder instead. Blood sprayed across the hearth. Hazel didn’t think. She couldn’t. The dagger Alaric gave her was small, cold, but her hands knew what to do. Her mother had taught her which veins to cut to stop a bleed, and which to cut to end one. She darted forward as the
The cabin was small, half-collapsed, and buried under snow, but it had four walls and a fireplace. For now, it was enough.Alaric kicked the door open with his boot and carried Hazel inside. The air smelled of rot and old wood, but he didn’t set her down until he’d cleared the bench with his arm and wrapped her in every blanket he could find.“Stay awake,” he ordered, his voice rough as he knelt and shoved dry kindling into the hearth. “Hazel. Eyes on me.”She blinked slowly, her head heavy against his shoulder. “I’m awake,” she lied. Her voice was soft, threadbare. The claim had warmed her, but the cold was still in her bones.The first spark caught. Orange light flickered across Alaric’s face, carving shadows into his jaw. He hadn’t shifted back into clothes. He sat shirtless in the snow-melt, muscle coiled, every inch the Alpha who’d just committed treason for her.Hazel stared. Her bond with him pulsed, steady and warm, but underneath it she felt it. His rage. Not at her. At Ella.
Hazel stood at the edge of the packhouse gates. No pack. No cloak. No weapon. Just the thin clothes she’d worn yesterday and a small satchel with a waterskin and a piece of bread. The guards hadn’t stopped her. Orders were orders. Exile at dawn.The air bit her lungs. It was colder than it had been in weeks, and the wind cut through her like knives. She pulled the thin fabric of her shirt tighter around herself and stepped past the iron gates.Behind her, the packhouse doors stayed shut. Alaric hadn’t come. She hadn’t expected him to.He can’t, she told herself. If he follows me, he loses everything. But that didn’t make the ache in her chest any less sharp.The path down the mountain was steep and treacherous with ice. Hazel moved carefully, one foot in front of the other. The bond inside her screamed with every step that took her further from Alaric. It felt like her ribs were being pulled apart, like someone had hooked her heart and was dragging it backward.She didn’
The moon was high when the council doors opened. Moon light spilled across the stone floor of the great hall. It made the wolves’ shadows stretch against the wall.Hazel stood in the center of the circle. Alone.No seat. No shield. No Alaric beside her. Pack law was clear , during a trial, the accused stood unprotected. The Alpha could speak for her, but he could not stand with her. It was meant to prevent bias. Right now, it felt like abandonment.The seven council elders sat in a semicircle above her, their robes dark, their faces half-hidden in shadow. Ella sat at the center, on the seat that had once belonged to Alaric’s father. She hadn’t been offered it. She’d taken it. No one had stopped her.Alaric stood to the right of the circle, tall and still as stone. His hands were clasped behind his back, but Hazel could see the tension in his shoulders, the way his jaw was locked tight. He wasn’t allowed to interfere unless she was directly sentenced. Until then, he could only wat
The silence felt like a death threat to Hazel.Ella stood there, scroll in hand, radiating quiet triumph. She’d played this perfectly. Public. Legal. Irreversible. If Alaric marked Hazel now, he’d be admitting the bond existed before the council approved it. That was grounds for a vote of no confidence. If he didn’t,Hazel would be exiled before sunset.Hazel swallowed hard. Her throat was dry, her palms slick. Claimed or exiled. Two words. One cage.She wouldn’t beg. She wouldn’t run. But gods, she wanted to look away.Alaric descended another step. The temperature in the courtyard seemed to drop ten degrees. His scent rolled over her like a wave, making her knees weak. The mate bond pulled at her chest, sharp and aching, as if it wanted to drag her to him and be done with it.“Ella,” he said, and his voice was low enough that only those in the front heard. “You know as well as I do that a mate bond cannot be forced.”Ella’s smile didn’t waver. “And you know as well as
The gates of the pack had not opened for an outsider in a long time. Not since the night the victims of the old rules were rescued .So when the iron bars groaned upward at dawn, every wolf in the courtyard froze. Even the guards. Even the wind.Ella stepped through first.She hadn’t changed. Still tall. Still composed. Still wearing white like she owned the snow. Her dark hair was braided with silver cords , the mark of a pack envoy, not a rogue. The scent of pine clung to her cloak, sharp and deliberate. She wasn’t here to visit. She was here to claim after being exiled.Behind her, two council elders from our pack followed, their expressions grave. One carried the ceremonial scroll bound in blue leather. Pack law. Nothing good came wrapped in blue leather.Hazel felt it before she saw it. Then she felt a pull. The mate bond. Alaric was already moving.He appeared on the stone steps above the courtyard, shirtless, hair still damp from training, a sword strapped to his b
Hazel’s POV“HE’S OUT.”The paper shakes in my hand .“Fen,” Kael says. “Tormund’s brother. Beta of High Pine before Syra took it. He escaped. Two hours ago. Killed three guards with his bare hands.”The forty three are sleeping. Spread across the pack house, the infirmary, the new barracks we buil
Hazel’s POVThere’s no cheering when we ride back into Stone Jaw. The forty three kids don’t make noise. Not yet. They’re watching. Waiting to see if the cage door slams again. “Thirty six,” Cleric says under his breath as we pass the gate. “We came back with thirty six.”“Thirty three from Black
Hazel’s POVBlack Fang Pack doesn’t have gates. It has walls. Spiked. Black. Bone hung from every post. “Charming,” Kael mutters beside me. “Raze likes messages,” Borin said before we left. He didn’t come with us, Winter Tooth needed its Alpha. But he sent six warriors. “His favorite message is
Chapter 22: Winter ToothHazel’s POVWinter Tooth Pack smells like snow and blood.Even in summer. The gates are iron, not wood. Spiked. The guards don’t cross spears ,they level crossbows. “State your business,” one shouts. His eyes flick to Alaric, to Kael, to Cleric. Then to me. “No omegas pas







