Masuk
Ashton's POV
The air in the northern woods tasted like metal and old frost. My hand pressed against my ribs as I tried to breathe, but my heart was beating fast and loud in my chest. The forest felt wrong tonight. "Damn."
Being out here wasn't a choice. No smart wolf would walk near the border when the sky looked torn open like a wound. But back at the packhouse in Noctaryn, my little sister El was burning up with a fever that normal medicine couldn’t fix.
She was getting worse, and the only thing that could help her was the silver-veined moon herb. That herb only grew deep in the damp part of the pine forest.
Above the trees, the moon hung low and red. It cast a dark red light over everything, and the clouds hung low.
“Found you.” I pulled the herbs out and tucked them into the inside pocket of my tunic. “Hold on a little longer, El.”
The herb was believed to cure almost all disease. Mama had used it once when I was sick with a deadly fever and I was cured in a few days.
Before I could turn back to the path, the sky opened up and cold rain started falling, blurred everything in front of me.
“Great,” I muttered, brushing wet hair out of my eyes. “Of course it starts raining now.”
I ran under the thickest pine I could find and pressed my back against the rough bark. My body was shivering, and since I was an omega, it was impossible to shift into my wolf form to warm myself up.
Then I heard a rustle. My head snapped toward the bushes on my left. That sound wasn’t rain. It was too careful, too deliberate. A cold shiver ran down my spine as I stared into the dark.
Suddenly, three figures stepped out from the brush. They didn’t move like normal wolves. Their bodies were too big and twisted, and they smelled like rot and old blood. When the red moonlight hit their faces, my breath caught in my throat.
Their fangs and claws gleamed, and their eyes were black. No white, no color... just empty darkness.
Crescent wolves.
“Look what we have here,” the one in the middle growled. His voice sounded like stones grinding together.
I took a step back, and my heel sank into the mud. I wasn’t getting out of this alive. My fingers gripped my wet shirt so tightly, my knuckles turned white.
“He smells like a moon wolf,” the one on the left hissed, showing his sharp teeth.
The moment they realized what I was... an easy target from the kingdom they hated, their eyes changed. They didn’t just want to hunt me. They wanted to destroy me.
The lead Crescent wolf lunged forward.
I screamed and threw my arms up to protect my face. I was sure this was the end. But the attack never landed.
A flash of golden light cut through the rain. A roar shook the ground, and a massive figure slammed into the Crescent wolf in mid-air near the rocks.
The blazing gold light under his skin identified him instantly.
Sun wolf from the Aurion pack.
They were sworn enemies of our pack for centuries. We were not even permitted to breathe the same air as the sun wolves.
"Fuck. This night is about to get even messier," I said under my breath.
He was still in his human form, shirtless even though the rain was freezing. The heat from his body turned the rain to steam before it touched him. His face was hidden behind a dark warrior’s mask, so I could only see his eyes.
I moved backward even more but his focus was not on me. It was... On them.
He moved fast and with deadly precision.
With one brutal twist, he grabbed the first Crescent wolf by the jaw and tore its head off. Blood sprayed onto the wet ground and steamed from the heat coming off his body. The other two rushed him, but he didn’t flinch. His hand caught one by the throat, and his fingers burned through flesh like it was butter... Tearing the beast apart.
Something was wrong with him, though. Muscles twitched, and his movements were wild and out of control. The red moon was driving him into a frenzy, making his sun wolf instincts take over.
He crushed the last wolf’s skull against the rock, and then the forest went silent again.
It was impossible to defeat a crescent wolf... let alone three of them, because they were the most dangerous creatures on the continent. People said their souls had been taken by the Black Moon God, and now they were nothing but mindless killing machines.
Slowly, the masked warrior turned toward me. I slid down the tree trunk, ready to run or fight, but when his eyes met mine, the rage in them changed. The burning gold in his irises flickered, like something inside him was fighting to stay calm.
He didn’t attack. Instead, a wave of heat rolled off me, strong and overwhelming. My wolf, the one that had been quiet for twenty four years, stirred inside me.
"What the hell..." I whispered as I connected to this stranger. My wolf felt warm and safe for the first time.
With a low groan, he turned and ran toward a dark cave in the rocky ridge nearby. I didn’t think. An invisible thread pulled me forward, and I ran after him.
Inside the cave, the air was dry but hot. The stranger was on his knees, holding his masked face with both hands. He growled low in his throat, and his whole body shook.
The red moon was making him lose control. He was burning up and needed something to calm him down, something to bring him back.
The wolf inside me woke up fully. A soft blue light rippled under my skin, and a calm, cool energy flowed out of me. I didn’t know I could do this, but I understood what it meant right away. I could help him. I could pull him back from the edge.
He sensed the change in the air and lifted his head. Before I could blink, he was in front of me.
Zeth’s POVThe throne of Aurion was not made of stone. It was made of sun. Gold light poured through the glass roof above me and hit the floor in long, clean lines. It caught on the armor of my guards and turned them to fire. It warmed the wine in my cup until it smelled like summer. I was drinking when the doors slammed open.“Report,” I said, without looking up.“My King,” one of my captains said. “The Moon King is at the gate. Under flag of truce. He asks to come in.”My cup stopped halfway to my mouth. I set it down. “Shift,” I said. “All of you. Now.” The sound of twenty wolves hitting the floor filled the hall. Claws on gold, and their growls low in their throats. My guards formed a wall between me and the doors. “Bring him in,” I said. “One man. Unarmed. If he so much as breathes wrong, kill him.”The doors opened again and Xander walked in alone, his guards remained outside.Snow was on his boots. His cloak was torn at the shoulder. He looked like he hadn’t slept in weeks
Xander’s POV Today the sky over Noctaryn was gray and low, like the gods were pressing down on us. The wind moved through the field of stones and carried the smell of smoke, iron, and wet earth. Forty-seven cloaks. Folded. Laid out in a line. At the front, the largest one. Deep blue with silver trim. Lord Mirelle’s. He had taught me how to hold a sword when I was ten. He had told me to never turn my back on an enemy, and to never turn my back on my people. Yesterday he had done both and died with a Crescent wolf claw wound in his chest. I stood at the head of the line. Ashton was beside me. His hand was in mine, small and cold. He hadn’t slept. I could see it in the bruises under his eyes. But he stood straight. For me. For them. Behind us, the whole of Noctaryn had come. Servants, guards, mothers, children. Hundreds of them. No one spoke, no one cried out loud, but you could hear it. The moaning in their hearts. The priest raised his hands. “We send them to the stars
Ashton’s POVThe scratch came again. It was light and deliberate. Like fingernails on wood. My heart slammed into my ribs so hard I thought I’d choke on it. The sword was already in my hands. The same bloody sword from the hallway. The blood was dry now, flaking off onto my palms. Fear was so much it made my hands tremble. But I was so tired of being afraid. So tired of sitting on the floor and waiting to die. I moved slowly toward the door. Every step echoed. My fingers found the bar. I lifted it and I pulled the door open in one fast motion, sword raised, ready to strike. Nothing. The corridor was dark, cold and it smelled like blood. I stepped out of the room. My legs were shaking. The High Tower was silent except for the sounds far below. The war had moved, or it had ended. I didn’t know which was worse. I didn’t close the door behind me, I just walked. The floors were covered in blood and bodies. Royal guards. Crescent Wolves. Torn apart and left where they fell.
Brenda’s POVThe citadel was falling and it was perfect. Screams carried down the halls like music. Steel rang against steel. Somewhere far below, Xander was roaring and tearing things apart, and every second he was distracted was a second I was free. No one was watching me. No one was watching the Consort. That was the problem. For weeks I’d watched him get fatter, softer, more beloved, while I was left in the council room to sign papers and smile like a good little advisor. The raid gave me what months of poison and whispers couldn’t. Chaos. I moved through the servant passages with my head down and a guard’s cloak over my shoulders. Blood on the floor, but not mine. A dead body in the corner, but not one I knew. The forged key was heavy in my palm. Iron, filed down in secret three nights ago by a smith who owed me coin and didn’t ask questions. It fit the lock to Ashton’s bathing room. Of course it did. I slipped inside and shut the door behind me. The smell hit me fi
Ashton’s POVI turned back one last time to see Xander. He was already shifting. Already moving. Blood on his face and rage in his shoulders and he didn’t look at me again. "Take the Consort to the guarded tower," he’d said, and his voice was iron. "Now. Ten men. No one gets past you. No one."Then he turned back to the gate and that was it. Two guards took my arms before I could argue. "My lord, we have to move," the captain said. I let them pull me because my legs felt like water, and because the last thing Xander needed was me fighting him in front of his men. The snow was still falling. The courtyard was on fire, screaming and the smell of blood so thick I could taste it. I kept my eyes on Xander as they dragged me toward the corridor that led to the High Tower. Midnight fur, massive, tearing through Crescent Wolves like they were made of paper, and still they kept coming. “Don’t look,” one of the guards muttered. I didn’t listen. We hit the doors and slammed th
Xander’s POVThe alarm hit me mid-sentence. “The law is clear...” I was saying to the Council, and then the sound rolled through the stone and cut me off. The border has been breached.The room went silent for half a breath. Then every man in that room moved. Chairs scraped. Swords were drawn. Brenda’s face went white. Merrick was already at the door. And all I could think was: Ashton.I didn’t say goodbye. I didn’t give orders. I ran. Down the hall, through the corridor, armor half-strapped to my body. Guards fell in behind me but I outpaced them. The courtyard was chaos. Fire burst from different directions. Snow. Screaming. The eastern gate was shaking on its hinges. I could hear them on the other side. Crescent Wolves in dozens. “Form ranks!” I roared. “Archers to the wall! Melee to the gate!” But I wasn’t looking at the gate. I was looking for him. A captain grabbed my arm. “Your Majesty, the Consort... we lost him in the chaos...” Lost him. Something cold a







