LOGINOphilia's POV
Without hesitation, I shoved Sydney out of my way with everything I had left in me. She hit the ground hard, a startled cry ripping from her throat, her composure shattering for the first time all night. She scrambled up fast, whipping around to face the beast looming in front of her. "Get her." Chase didn't stop. He advanced slow, deliberate, a low growl rolling from somewhere deep in his chest — the kind of sound that promised he wasn't in a hurry, that he intended to play with me first, chew on me like a bone before he finally decided I'd suffered enough. Literally. I kept backing away, my legs shaking beneath me. Then, from behind, a second sound rose — one I recognized instantly, and my stomach dropped straight through the floor. My breath came in short, panicked bursts. My cheek still burned where the Luna Mother had slapped me — twice, in a single night — and now I stood trapped, an Alpha in wolf form ahead of me and another closing in from behind, jaws already half-bared. How much worse could this night possibly get? "Please, let me go." My voice cracked wide open, fear soaking every word as I turned to face the Luna Mother one last time. She only rose from the floor and laughed, brushing dust from her sleeve like I hadn't just knocked her flat. "You should have thought of that before laying your filthy fingers on my skin." She turned to her sons, and something twisted across her face — grief dressed up as pure, practiced wickedness. "Finish her, boys..." Her voice trailed behind her as she swept toward the door, unhurried, elegant, like she was leaving a dinner party instead of ordering an execution. A laugh burst out of me before I could stop it, sharp and disbelieving. "They can't kill me, Sydney." I threw the words at her like a blade. She paused at the threshold and turned just enough to catch my eye. "You'll wish you were dead once they're finished with you." What did that mean? Before I could chase the thought, the growls behind me thickened, deepened, until I swore I could feel them vibrating straight through my bones. A fat Omega, standing alone between two Alphas. I had never felt so small, so disposable, in my entire life. Then something surged through my blood — hot, sudden, electric. Something I had never felt before and had no name for. I didn't think. I moved. I bolted straight for Chase, whose back was turned toward the entrance Sydney was heading for, and dropped low, sliding beneath him between his legs before he even registered what was happening. By the time he spun around, snarling, I was already three strides toward the door, my lungs screaming, my legs burning. I collided with Sydney on my way past, shoulder-first, sending her stumbling straight into him — just enough to tangle them together, just enough to buy myself one precious second I didn't deserve. "Somebody help me!" I screamed, the words tearing raw out of my throat, past caring who saw me now, who judged me, who whispered about it later. The door slammed shut behind me and I ran for the gathering grounds — the very same clearing where they'd humiliated me only hours before. Behind me, the howling began. One voice first, low and mournful, then a second, then a dozen more, rising and layering until the whole night seemed to shake with it. I turned once, just once, and my heart stopped cold. Over fifty wolves poured out into the open behind me, closing the gap fast, hunting me down like I'd stolen something sacred from every single one of them. My pulse slammed against my ribs as I tore through the underbrush, branches clawing at my arms, my face, drawing thin lines of blood I didn't have time to feel. And somewhere beneath the terror, a colder thought surfaced, refusing to be buried — the way Chase had moved back there. Too clean. Too controlled. Almost *rehearsed*, like he'd known exactly which way I'd run before I did. I shoved the thought down hard. I couldn't afford it. Not now. Maybe not ever. I threw myself behind a wide sycamore, hands shaking so badly I could barely grip the bark, and clawed sap free to smear across every inch of exposed skin, masking my scent as best I could, praying it would be enough. Minutes crawled past like hours. The howls faded, one by one, until there was nothing left but my own ragged breathing and the wind moving through the leaves. I peeled myself away from the tree, legs trembling, and crept back into the woods, moving as quietly as I knew how. I glanced over my shoulder one last time, checking the dark for movement, for eyes, for anything at all— I didn't see the branch until it was already too late. Pain exploded across my skull, white and blinding, and my vision fractured into static. My knees buckled beneath me and the ground rushed up sideways. Through the blur, something moved. A black wolf, a single streak of white cutting through its fur, stepped out of the shadows and lowered its head to look at me. A smirk — impossible, unmistakable — curled across a face that shouldn't have been able to smile at all. Chase. The last thing I registered before the darkness swallowed me whole was that smirk. Patient. Satisfied. Like he'd known exactly where I would end up all along, and had simply been waiting for me to arrive. Then there was nothing.Ophilia's POV Light hit me like a blade the moment my eyes opened, white and searing, and I slammed them shut again with a gasp. I tried once more, slower this time, blinking through the sting as I dragged myself upright on a bed I didn't recognize. "What happened?" My own voice sounded foreign, cracked, as I pressed a hand to my throbbing skull. Before the thought could settle, a figure materialized at the edge of the bed — a woman with long white hair and a black cloak that seemed to drink in what little light the room had. I hadn't heard a door. I hadn't heard footsteps. She was simply there, as though she'd stepped out of the shadows themselves. In her hands sat a small wooden bowl, herbs crushed to a fine paste inside it. She tipped in a pink liquid, and the mixture bled from green to a deep, glimmering blue, flecks of something like stardust swirling across the surface. "Who... who are you?" I stammered, scrambling backward until my spine hit the headboard. Her face was a
Ophilia's POVWithout hesitation, I shoved Sydney out of my way with everything I had left in me. She hit the ground hard, a startled cry ripping from her throat, her composure shattering for the first time all night.She scrambled up fast, whipping around to face the beast looming in front of her. "Get her."Chase didn't stop. He advanced slow, deliberate, a low growl rolling from somewhere deep in his chest — the kind of sound that promised he wasn't in a hurry, that he intended to play with me first, chew on me like a bone before he finally decided I'd suffered enough. Literally.I kept backing away, my legs shaking beneath me. Then, from behind, a second sound rose — one I recognized instantly, and my stomach dropped straight through the floor.My breath came in short, panicked bursts. My cheek still burned where the Luna Mother had slapped me — twice, in a single night — and now I stood trapped, an Alpha in wolf form ahead of me and another closing in from behind, jaws already ha
Ophilia's POV Crimson. What did she mean by that? The word wouldn't stop echoing in my head, looping over and over as Chase's fingers dug into my arm and dragged me toward the door. This wasn't right. It wasn't fair. I had done nothing wrong. Nothing but sit back while they destroyed my entire life, piece by piece, year after year. They had wanted to humiliate me in front of everyone tonight, and I had only given them a taste of their own medicine. I had been quiet for far too long. It was time I opened my mouth. "It's not fair." The words tore out of me, louder than I meant them to be. Fear rose up fast, threatening to swallow me whole. I had never spoken up for myself before — not once, and certainly never to the Luna Mother herself. But I forced my spine straight and buried the fear beneath something that looked, at least on the surface, like pride. Sydney turned to face me slowly, and the temperature in the room seemed to drop with her. "What did you say?" Her voice was q
Ophilia's POVThe bright blue moonlight above the gathering began to dim, like something unseen had reached up and smothered it.No one moved. No one breathed. The world had frozen.Embarrassed, I turned to the Luna Mother, and found her glowing — like this was the happiest day of her life.The disgrace was too much to bear.Then, without warning, a surge of pain tore through me, ripping a scream from my throat before I could stop it."Somebody — help—"The gathering, frozen only seconds ago, blurred and rushed past my vision all at once. I heard stilettos clicking toward me across the raised platform, each step landing like a verdict."You know what to do, Ophilia." Sydney's grin split wide across her face, hungry for it.The pain yanked me to my knees. I felt my bones splinter, one by one, like something inside me was being unmade from the marrow out. Sweat poured down my face in sheets, and for one terrifying second I couldn't tell if the sound tearing out of me was a scream or a s
Ophilia's POV I stood at the edge of the gathering, tray balanced against my hip, serving drinks to wolves who wouldn't look at me twice unless it was to laugh. What else was the most hated maidservant in the Makasi Moon Pack supposed to do on a night like this? "Welcome, all of you, to the wolf ceremony." The Luna Mother's voice rang out over the crowd of nearly four hundred wolves, warm and commanding in a way mine had never once been allowed to be. "Would you like a drink, sir?" I asked, offering a glass to a broad-shouldered man near the front. "Uhm, yeah..." He took it, eyes dragging over me slow and deliberate. "But I'd rather have it from an actual wolf." A grin spread across his face the moment the words landed, and I felt every eye around us swing toward me like I was the punchline he'd been building to. "Is she even a wolf?" a woman called out, loud enough to carry. "Looks more like she ate the last three wolves who tried to tell her no." Laughter rippled through the







