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IVARA
The white silk of my wedding dress felt like a shroud, cinched so tight I could barely draw enough oxygen to say 'I do' I stood at the altar of the Lunar Cathedral, my palms slick against the stems of white lillies that somehow smelled suspiciously like a funeral. Standing in front of me, Lucian, the golden boy Alpha with a smile as straight as his moral compass, he looked at me like I was a rare steak he couldn't wait to consume. This wasn't about love. It was an acquisition. My pack was drowning in debt and a plague that turned our strongest warriors into wheezing shadows and I was the payment. A white wolf who's also a blood healer. Quite the fancy catch. "You look breathtaking, Ivara," Lucian whispered, his hand reaching for mine. I didn't smile back. "It's the corset, Lucian. I'm literally not breathing at all," My eyes scanned the crowd, searching for one person. "Where's my father?" "He's out in his study," Lucian replies, "he sends his apology, but promised to be here for the evening ball." "Typical of him." He can't even look me in the eye on the day of my wedding. The priest began the rites, his voice sounded like a monotonous drone that competed with the frantic drumming of my heart. I wasn't just marrying a man, I was sealing a deal. The Lunar pack had promised the rogues a tribute to keep them from our borders, a deal my father had said was handled. But he lied. Because just as the priest was about to finish the final words of the traditional ancient rites, the stained glass windows vaporized. A shockwave of raw, unfiltered power ripped through the cathedral, slamming the heavy oak doors off their hinges with the force of a thousand men. The scream that tore from the guests was cut short by a silence so heavy it felt like lead in my lungs. Thump. Thump. I stood there frozen in horror as rogue wolves circled around us, overpowering the guards. But that wasn't what made me grow cold, my eyes widened in horror as the wolves cleared a path for a man. He wasn't wearing a suit, he wore a heavy tactical leather, a coat stained with the grit of the outlands, and an aura that made every Alpha in the room instinctively drop their gaze. My heart didn't just skip, it stopped. I knew that silhouette, I knew the way he carried his shoulders- like he was perpetually bracing for a war he'd already won. The way the rogues parted for him, the way they all bowed in respect as he strode in....it couldn't be...he couldn't be... He couldn't be the Alpha of the rogues. A dead man can't be the Alpha of one of the most feared rogue packs to ever exist. "Silas." The name fell from my lips, a ghost of a memory from ten years ago. The man who had married my mother in a frantic whispered ceremony while my father bailed on us, the same man who vanished into the night, leaving nothing but a cold bed and a hole in my heart. Ten years had only sharpened him, trading his youth for a rugged, lethal handsomeness that made my throat tight. His hair was a dark, unruly mess, a stark contrast to those piercing blue eyes that still held the power to strip me bare. The jagged scar cutting through his right eyebrow only added to his dangerous edge. My gaze dipped to the firm set of his lips before tracing down, he was broader now, a masterpiece of solid muscle and a raw heat that made my skin itch. I can't be doing this, seriously? We are under attack and I'm here gawking at a crush I couldn't get rid of? A wicked grin tugged on his lips as he stood in the center of the Hall. "A wedding? And I wasn't invited?" "You bastard rogue!" Lucian yelled as he stepped in front of me, ten guards circling around us to protect us from the rogues who were snarling at us ready to attack. "The ceremony is over," Silas said, his voice didn't just fill the room, it commanded the very air we were breathing. It was deeper than I remembered, a tectonic rumble that vibrated in my very narrow. "The lunar pack defaulted on their debt. I've come to collect the interest." "This is a sacred Union, Rogue, leave now, or-" Before Lucian could finish, Silas with lightening speed towards us. Just as he reached forward, the hall tightened into a fist of fury- rogues and wolfen brutes collided with the pack's guards, a tangle of teeth, claws and steel. I watched in horror as guests screamed and scattered, some were cut down as claws raked through silk and bone. I staggered back, the lilies in my hand clenched so hard my knuckles paled. I gasped as Lucian shattered the nearest guard that was shielding Lucian and I away from him, with a swift movement before Lucian could launch an attack on him, he flung Lucian aside like a rag and grabbed my arm before I could run away. A cruel, amused smile curbed his lips as he tightened his grip on me. From the side of my eye, a guard was about to launch a surprise on him. A scream tore from my throat when he flung the guard aside with his free hand without breaking eye contact with me. "Go to sleep, little one," he murmured. "This will be over quickly. Soon, you'll be where you rightfully belong. With me, by my side. As my mate." I tried to answer, to shove him back, but just as those words rolled off his lips, it felt like I was being hypnotized, slowly, the color leeched from the world and my vision went hazy, the last thing I saw was Lucian trying to run towards me before I blacked out. But Silas's words remained deeply engraved in my head even as I was slowly losing consciousness. What did he mean mate? There was no way in the world my step father could ever be my mate. Because I already had one. And it wasn't Lucian. Or Silas either.The silence that followed did not feel empty.It felt expectant.Like the world itself had been holding its breath, waiting for something to shift—and now that it had, nothing would ever return to what it was before.Ivara stood still, her pulse finally slowing, but the echo of those words refused to leave her.You were a weapon.Not a mistake.Not an accident.Designed.Made.Every instinct in her screamed to reject it, to tear it apart and deny it until nothing remained—but something deeper, something older than her fear, had already accepted it.That was what unsettled her the most.Not the truth.But how familiar it felt.“You’re too quiet,” Kael said.His voice cut through her thoughts, low and controlled, but she heard the tension beneath it.Good.He should be tense.He should be worried.Because she was done being the only one in the dark.“You knew,” she said.It wasn’t a question.Kael didn’t answer immediately.That was answer enough.Something sharp twisted in her chest, b
The night did not breathe the same way twice.Ivara noticed it the moment she stepped beyond the cracked stone arch that marked the invisible threshold between territories. The air here was heavier, thicker with something ancient and watchful. It pressed against her skin like a warning, like the land itself was aware of her trespass and was deciding whether to reject her or consume her whole.She did not slow down.Behind her, Kael walked in silence, his presence steady but dangerous. He had not spoken since they crossed into the outer edges of the Rogue Realm, and that alone told her how serious this was. Kael was not a man who held his tongue unless the situation demanded it.Or unless he didn’t trust himself to speak.“Say it,” Ivara muttered without turning. “Whatever is going on in that head of yours.”A pause.Then, “You’re walking into something you don’t understand.”She gave a quiet, humorless laugh. “That has been my entire life.”“That’s not the same thing.”Now she stopped
Chapter 22The moment their blood touched the fractured ground, the world didn’t just react—it recognized them.Power surged upward like a living force, violent and immediate, slamming into Arden’s chest so hard it knocked the breath out of her lungs. The symbols carved into the pillars erupted into blinding light, no longer flickering but blazing, as if something ancient had just been awakened after centuries of silence.The creature recoiled.Not fully.Not retreating.But resisting.A sound tore from it—deep, layered, wrong. It wasn’t a scream. It was something older, something that vibrated through bone and marrow, something that made every instinct inside Arden twist violently.Silas didn’t let go of her.His blood was still dripping from his palm, mixing with hers on the ground, and where the two met, the stone itself began to change.Lines spread outward.Not cracks.Markings.Precise.Intentional.Arden’s vision blurred as the patterns formed, her mind struggling to keep up wi
Chapter 21The crack in the earth did not stop growing.It tore wider with a sound that didn’t belong to this world, something deeper than stone breaking, something that echoed like a scream dragged through time itself. The hollow trembled violently, pillars shaking as glowing symbols flickered in and out like they were fighting to stay alive.Arden couldn’t breathe properly.Not because of fear.Because something was pulling at her.From the inside.From the mark.Her knees nearly buckled again, but this time she forced herself to stay upright, fingers digging into her palms hard enough to hurt. Pain grounded her. Barely.The darkness below shifted.It wasn’t empty.It wasn’t just energy.It was aware.And it was reaching.A low, distorted sound crawled out of the fracture, like a voice trying to form through something that had forgotten how to speak.The crowd broke.Rogues who feared nothing began stepping back, then faster, then turning completely as instinct overpowered pride. So
Chapter 20The sky over the Rogue Realm never stayed the same for long.It shifted like a living thing restless, watching, waiting. One moment it burned in streaks of crimson, the next it sank into a deep violet haze that swallowed light whole. Tonight, it churned like a storm that hadn’t decided whether to break or to consume.Arden felt it before she saw anything.That pressure again.Not fear.Not exactly.Something deeper.Something ancient.She stood at the edge of the obsidian cliff overlooking the fractured lands below, her fingers curled slightly at her sides as the wind dragged through her hair. The mark at the base of her neck burned faintly, pulsing in slow rhythm with something she couldn’t name.Or maybe she could.She just didn’t want to.Behind her, she heard the quiet crunch of boots against black gravel.She didn’t turn.“You’re avoiding me.”Silas’ voice.Low. Controlled. Too calm.Arden exhaled slowly. “I’m thinking.”“That usually involves running.”A small, sharp
Chapter NineteenIVARAThe moment I stepped into the apartment, I knew something had shifted.Not in the room.In him.Silas was by the window, his back turned, shoulders tense beneath the dark fabric of his shirt. The city lights bled through the glass, painting him in fragments of gold and shadow, but it did nothing to soften the weight in the air.It pressed.Heavy.Unspoken.“You found something,” I said, closing the door behind me.He didn’t turn.“That depends,” he replied, voice low. “Did you?”I exhaled slowly, dropping my bag onto the table. “Ruan knows more than he’s letting on.”That got his attention.Silas turned, sharp and immediate, his eyes locking onto mine with a flicker of something dark.“How much?”“Enough to be dangerous.”A pause.Then—quietly—“Did he touch you?”I stilled.There it was.Not strategy.Not war.Something far more volatile.I crossed my arms, leaning slightly against the table. “That’s what you’re asking?”“It’s the only question that matters righ
IVARA "You said you'd be taking me to Lucian and my father!" I hissed, my voice echoing off the damp, narrow walls of the dark passage. I dug my heels into the cold stone, my chest heaving with a mixture of betrayal and raw panic. I felt like a fool to believe him, to expect anything resembling ho
IVARA"You said you'd be taking me to Lucian and my father!" I hissed, my voice echoing off the damp, narrow walls of the dark passage. I dug my heels into the cold stone, my chest heaving with a mixture of betrayal and raw panic. I felt like a fool to believe him, to expect anything resembling ho
IVARA The air left my lungs in a cold rush, I slowly sank back into the bed. My father...he wouldn't... He was desperate but to sell me to humans? To be harvested? Was the wedding really a sham? "You're lying," I growled, my nails digging into my palms as tears threatened to blur my vision. "My f
IVARA TWO YEARS AGO "Ivara, I need you at the palace immediately.. You're wasting time!" My father barked, grating on my last nerve. He's literally in my room, and he's shouting like he's miles away. "I'm coming, father!" I groaned, shoving one last hairpin into my mess of a bun. "Could you hur







