LOGINLyra
“Lyra.”
The voice was smooth, a little too smooth, like silk hiding a blade. I blinked the memory away, forcing my spine to straighten as I turned irritated at the fact that he would come looking for me again after I had made it clear that I didn't want to be involved with him.
Alpha Leo of the Veil Pack stood beside me, wearing that same insufferable smirk he always did, the kind that screamed I know more than you think. I didn’t smile. I didn’t curtsy. I didn’t even bother pretending that I didn't hate him.
“Alpha Leo,” I said flatly, my gaze flicking past him. My mind wasn't and wouldn't be on him tonight and not ever.
Killian stood near the center of the ballroom, regal and devastating in dark grey. His shoulders looked stiff beneath the formal cloak draped around them, his mouth set in a frown too subtle for most to notice, but I did. I saw the way he turned his drink in his hand without sipping it. The way he kept glancing at the Luna candidates like he couldn’t decide whether to run or scream.
And I knew why. He still loved me and I had been too blind to see it.
“You look radiant tonight,” Leo offered, inching a little closer. “Your pack must be proud.”
I resisted the urge to roll my eyes. “You mean the pack that watched me embarrass Killian in front of the council? And you already told me that, remember? Or repeating yourself like a broken record is your thing?”
He chuckled, pretending he didn't catch the sarcasm in my words.
“Not everyone sees it as embarrassment. Some call it bravery. Not everyone can say not to an alpha but you did. You followed your heart.”
“Not you though,” I said, finally glancing at him. “You prefer obedient girls, don’t you? The ones who know how to sit still and shut up.”
His eyes twitched. Just barely. But I caught it.
Touché.
Now that I was back here for the second time, I was sharper than before. They had made me so. They had made ke distrust even myself and that was why it was easy to catch those little emotions that on a normal day, I couldn't.
“I came to offer peace,” he said after a beat. “Let’s not make enemies tonight, Lyra. This is a sacred occasion. I was also serious about making you my Luna.”
Sacred. What a joke.
They called it the Luna Choosing Ceremony, as if it were some celestial, romantic rite of passage. But I knew the truth, at least tonight’s truth. It wasn’t about bonds or destiny. It was about power, control, and the sickening lengths people would go to for both.
Like Selene.
My throat tightened as the memory stirred again, not just of that night, but of the version no one knew except me. No one knew that I was here for the second time.
The first time I was here, it was to show Killian that he would never get me.
One year ago
The music had been the same, hauntingly beautiful. The hall glittered with floating candles and smiling liars. I had worn silver, my hair braided with moonstones, and my heart had been full.
Killian had reached for my hand once that night. Just once. But it had been enough.
And then he vanished when I had given him a piece of my mind.
They then told me he had left early, that he felt ill. Selene looked especially smug when she relayed the message.
I didn’t sleep that night. Neither did Killian, though he wouldn’t remember. Because Selene, sweet and cunning Selene, had colluded with Damon and Alpha Leo to lace Killian’s drink with a strong aphrodisiac.
They dressed her in my perfume. Braided her hair like mine. They sent her to his chambers.
And she pretended. Pretended to be me.
I found out days later. Killian never remembered what happened. And Selene? She smiled every time she looked at me, as if daring me to break.
I never did because I thought that Killian had slept with her willingly. They had told me so and I didn't care because Damon was my world.
Now
Leo was still talking, some garbage about diplomacy and alliances, but I didn’t hear most of it. My attention had shifted to Selene, who glided across the room in gold, every strand of hair meticulously curled. She laughed too brightly as she brushed past other candidates, but I saw her real target.
Killian.
He was still watching the crowd, still holding that untouched glass and his cold aura keeping everyone at bay. Selene moved like a predator in heels, her fingers trailing the rim of a new goblet she had plucked from a passing server’s tray.
I narrowed my eyes.
“You seem distracted,” Leo noted, sipping his wine.
“I find this whole event distracting,” I replied without missing a beat.
“You used to be softer, Lyra” he said, his voice lower now. “Back when we first met.”
“And you used to be smarter,” I countered. “Back when you knew not to play with fire.”
He chuckled again, but this time, it was tighter. Forced.
He leaned in just a fraction. “There’s no need for hostility. We are both here for the same thing.”
I turned to face him now, fully. “Are we now?”
“To protect what matters,” he said.
And there it was. The veiled message.
I bit down a laugh.
“Funny. I don’t remember asking for your protection.”
His smile faltered. He didn’t reply.
I turned my gaze back to Killian.
Selene had reached him now. Her hand touched his arm, light, familiar. He smiled coldly but politely, said something I couldn’t hear and then she offered the drink. My breath hitched. My wolf stirred.
She held it like a peace offering, her eyes shining too brightly, her lips painted like a poisoned rose.
Killian looked at the glass. Looked at her.
Then slowly, too slowly, he reached for it.
I clenched my fists.
“She’s bold,” Leo said softly, as if sensing where my attention had gone.
“She’s desperate,” I murmured.
He gave me a sideways glance. “Are you jealous?”
“Are you stupid?”
Silence stretched between us like a wire pulled taut.
Killian lifted the drink toward his lips. My heart roared in my chest.
Don’t. Don’t drink that. Don’t let her. Don’t fall for it again.
Not this time.
He took a sip.
Just one.
Selene smiled like a snake who had swallowed the moon. I took a step forward, slow and deliberate, my pulse pounding in my ears.
Whatever game they thought they were playing, it wasn’t over.
Not yet.
It had just started.
LyraThe forest swallowed my cries. Each breath burned, each stride ripped through the undergrowth like a blade through silk. My lungs screamed for mercy, but the bond, our fragile, dying bond, dragged me forward.Killian.It wasn’t just his name echoing inside me. It was his heartbeat, fading. His wolf’s howls pressed against my ribs until my bones ached. The pull was faint at first, a trembling thread of silver, but then it tightened around my soul and I knew… I was close.The night trembled with strange energy. Shadows rippled, the moon bled red through the clouds, and every gust of wind whispered the same thing: Hurry.The scent of burnt herbs and blood hit me first. Then the chanting, low, rhythmic, dark. My skin crawled as the language twisted through the trees like snakes. My magic stirred in answer, wild and hungry.When I broke through the last line of trees, I froze.The clearing was carved into the earth like a wound. Candles formed a circle around a stone altar, runes pulsi
KillianThe scent of iron and burning sage clung to the air, thick enough to choke on. My wrists were already raw where the silver chains dug through skin, heat pulsing against my bones like molten fire. I could hear my heartbeat, erratic, loud, and too close, as Damon and Morwein circled me like vultures.The cabin felt colder than it should have been. The floor beneath my knees was etched with strange markings, spirals of salt and blood and ash that pulsed with a dark, rhythmic glow. I knew what it was before Morwein even began to chant. I had seen it before, in fragments of my other life, that same cursed sigil that once tore my wolf out of me and left me hollow.But this time… this time I wasn’t the same broken man.“Hold still,” Damon murmured from behind me, his voice smooth, almost tender, but wrong, too controlled, too calm. The humanity that used to color his tone was gone. What spoke now was the shadow of the man I once knew, coated in something feral.“Damon,” I croaked, tas
DamonThe floor trembled beneath my feet. The flickering candles scattered around the ritual circle burst one after another, spilling hot wax across the wood and shattering glass vials into glittering shards. Morwein’s voice, once sharp and commanding, faltered into a strangled gasp as the sigils that she had carved into the floor began to split and burn away, their crimson glow devoured by something greater, older, wild and furious.“No!” She shrieked, clutching her book of runes to her chest. “It’s breaking! The channel is collapsing…”I didn’t need her to tell me that. I could feel it. The air that moments ago thrummed with power now screamed with resistance. The circle was bleeding energy, snapping like a wounded beast. My heart raced as I turned to Killian, my Killian, still chained in the center, his skin seared where silver touched flesh, his body twitching as waves of pain rolled through him.His wolf howled inside him, and I could hear it. It wasn’t supposed to be possible, n
LyraThe forest no longer felt like a forest.It felt alive. It was restless, angry and aware.Each step I took sent whispers skittering through the leaves, as though the very ground remembered my footsteps from another life. Every gust of wind hissed my name. The deeper I went, the colder it became, until even my breath came out as pale ribbons of mist.Killian’s presence pulsed faintly at first, a tremor, a flicker at the edge of consciousness, but it was enough to set my veins alight. Every heartbeat thudded to his rhythm, out of sync but trying to align. I followed it because there was nothing else left to follow.Moonveil moved inside me like a prowling shadow, impatient.You feel him, she whispered, her voice half-snarl, half-song. Do not falter now.“I’m not,” I panted, though my legs burned. “Just… show me the path.”You already know it.And she was right. My feet found it instinctively, a narrow, overgrown trail winding toward the part of the woods no one dared to enter. The
Even pain remembers the one who caused it.Killian The silence of the cabin presses in on me, thick and strange. It smells like smoke and pine and the faint tang of iron. I can still taste it on my tongue, the echo of silver. My wrists ache from invisible bruises, though Damon hasn’t chained me yet. Not this time. Not yet.But it feels so real as if it has just happened. I just can't come to terms with the fact that they, Damon and Selene, won in another life.I close my eyes and reach inward.“Are you there?” I whisper in my mind.For a moment, there’s only static, then a low growl, rough and ancient.“Barely,” my wolf answers. His voice sounds like it’s coming through broken glass. “You are weak, Killian. Too weak. The silver laced in the air… it’s seeping into you.”I breathe through the dizziness. “But you’re still here.”A pause. Then, softly, “for now. But I can feel the magic around us, it’s draining me. The witch’s doing. You need to fight it before it seals us apart again.
KillianWhen Damon left the room, I didn’t move for a long time. I listened to the echo of his footsteps fading down the hall, then let out a shaky breath.Oh, gods. I couldn't believe that I had lived through this once and died in Damon's hands. What had I been thinking? After he took Lyra from me in this life, I should have known. I should have known that he wasn't the brother I grew up with. He was twisted and he thought love was taking all that I valued from my life.“Muscle and mind,” I whispered to myself. “No. Not this time. I wouldn't allow it.”I pressed a hand against my chest, over the faint thrum of the bond that refused to die. It was weak, almost ghostly, but still there. I focused on it, closing my eyes.Lyra…The name alone carried weight.I pushed past the dizziness, the throbbing behind my eyes, and reached deeper. The space between us felt like wading through fog and ice. I could feel her heartbeat faintly, her fear, her confusion.Lyra, I called again, silently. Ca
LyraSleep never came easily anymore. Not with Damon loose in the world again. Not with the whispers of war curling like smoke through my thoughts.The night pressed heavy around the pack house, thick with silence. The kind of silence that came before storms. I sat at the window of Killian’s chambe
KillianDawn broke like a promise and a threat: grey light spilling over the courtyard, the torches guttering down to red embers as the pack gathered. I stood on the dais, the stones cold under my boots. The assembled wolves filled the square, a ripple of fur and muscle, faces taut with fear, anger
KillianThe pack was restless.I could hear it in the whispers slithering through the corridors, feel it in the tension hanging heavy in the air like a storm waiting to break. They thought Damon’s escape was a crack in my rule, that it meant the Ether Pack was vulnerable. They thought wrong. I wou
DamonThe night was alive with drunken shouts, the clash of dice, the metallic ring of blades meeting in drunken sparring matches. Leo’s camp never slept, it just shifted moods, from violence to revelry and back again.I sat at the edge of it all, a solitary shadow at Leo’s war table. The tent was







