LOGINThe years didn’t pass gently. They carved me into something new.
I learned quickly that the world outside pack borders was unforgiving. There were no rules. No protection. Every day demanded something from me, endurance, instinct, dominance. And survival demanded strength.So I became stronger.The weakness that once defined me didn’t vanish overnight. It eroded slowly, like stone worn down by relentless tide. My hesitation. My need to be seen. My desire to belong. All of it faded until I could barely recognize the girl I used to be.I stopped trusting people. I stopped needing them too.Even silence changed. It was no longer empty, it was aware.Because the voice in my head never left, sometimes it guided me, sometimes it warned me.And sometimes… it simply watched, as though waiting for me to become fully what I was meant to be.“You are not what you were,” it would whisper.And I believed it.Not because I wanted to, but because everything I survived proved it true.I trained relentlessly without limits. No pack structure. No elders correcting my form. No Alpha dictating my strength. Just me, my wolf, and the wild.My wolf changed too.She grew sharper, more dominant, more present. At first, she resisted me. Then she aligned with me. Eventually… she became an extension of my will. Not something I battled anymore, but something I commanded.There were rare moments, fleeting, almost dangerous in their softness, when I wondered what would have happened if he hadn’t rejected me.If I had been enough. If things had been different.But those thoughts never lasted long, because memory is cruel that way. It always returned with precision.His eyes, cold, final and disgusted, as if I had been a mistake he regretted breathing life into. The rejection wasn’t just spoken, it was branded into me.And just like that, any lingering softness disappeared.Good. I didn’t need it. I didn’t need him.
Time stopped being something I survived and became something I used. Over time, I realized I wasn’t alone anymore.Others found me or maybe… I found them.Rogues, outcast, and broken wolves who had been discarded the same way I had been. Some carried scars on their bodies. Others carried them in silence. They came cautiously at first, watching me like I might vanish or betray them.But I did neither. They stayed, not because I demanded it.But because something in them recognized something in me. Strength and control. Something unspoken but undeniable.“You should lead us,” one of them said once.A tall wolf named Darian.
His voice didn’t tremble. He wasn’t begging. He was certain.I remember the way I looked at him like he had lost his mind.Lead?Me?But when I turned my gaze to the others, I didn’t see doubt.I saw belief, not blind faith. Earned trust.They stood behind me, not as followers waiting for commands, but as survivors choosing direction.Maybe… this was never about becoming someone else’s Luna.Maybe it was about becoming something no one had prepared me for.“We don’t need a pack,” I said slowly, my voice steady in a way it had never been before.“We need something stronger.” Silence followed. Then understanding.We didn’t follow old laws. We didn’t bow to Alphas who ruled through fear and inherited dominance.We didn’t believe strength meant crushing those beneath you. We built something else entirely.Something shaped by survival, not tradition.Something formed from rejection, not privilege.We built structures without chains. Loyalty without fear. Power without ownership.And under my command… We grew.At first, it was small whispers in the wild, rumors carried through fractured territories. A group of rogues organizing instead of scattering. A leader who didn’t bend or break. A force that didn’t ask permission to exist.Then the rumors became something strong to ignore. A new force was rising. One that didn’t kneel. One that didn’t submit. One led by a woman no one could control.My name began to shift in the stories.Not Lyra Vale. Not the rejected Luna of Ironclaw.But something else entirely, something people said carefully.Something they said when the firelight was low and wolves checked their surroundings twice. Feared, respected and faraway. In the pack that once rejected me, they started hearing the stories too.At first, they dismissed them, then they questioned them.Then they listened, but they didn’t know the truth yet. Not really.They thought they had discarded a weak Luna. They didn’t understand what rejection had done, they didn’t understand what it created.And soon… They would.Because when the truth finally reached them, when it stopped being rumor and became reality, they would realize something irreversible.The girl they threw away… Was not lost.She was reborn, and she was coming back.Not for forgiveness.Not for closure.But for everything they thought they had taken from her.Nobody spoke for several seconds after Asher’s revelation. The chamber felt smaller than before, colder somehow. The journal remained open on the desk, the faded signature still visible at the bottom of the page. A dead man’s name or at least a man who was supposed to be dead.Lyra stared at it, trying to make sense of everything they had uncovered. The warning. The second writer. The altered records. Every answer seemed to create three new questions.For years, she had believed the Guardians were protectors. Now she wasn’t even sure they knew their own history.“The records were changed,” Ronan said quietly.“If this signature is authentic, then someone deliberately rewrote Guardian history.”“And erased him,” Selina added.Asher nodded grimly. “Not just him. There are probably others.”The thought settled heavily over the group. How many names had been removed? How many truths had disappeared? More importantly, who had the authority to make entire people vanish from history?Kael s
For a long moment, nobody moved.The warning remained open on the desk between them, its words seeming to grow heavier with every passing second.If Kael ever learns what she really is, he will be forced to kill her.Lyra stared at the sentence until the letters blurred.She had spent years searching for answers about her mother. Years wondering why she disappeared, why so many records had been erased, and why every trail seemed to end in silence.Now she finally had a message from her, and she wished she didn’t. Because of all the things her mother could have written, this was the last thing Lyra expected.A warning about Kael.Slowly, she lifted her eyes.Kael stood on the opposite side of the desk, his attention fixed on the journal. His expression was calm, but she knew him well enough to see the tension beneath it.A part of her wanted him to dismiss the warning immediately. To call it nonsense and move on. Instead, he was taking it seriously.“You don’t believe that,” she said q
For several long moments, nobody spoke.The hidden chamber felt smaller than before, the silence pressing down on everyone as Lyra stared at the journal lying open on the desk.Her mother’s handwriting, this was no mistake.She had spent years trying to hold on to memories that grew fainter with time, but some things were impossible to forget. The way certain letters curved. The way her mother connected words together. The slight tilt of every sentence.The writing inside the journal belonged to her. And somehow, that frightened Lyra more than the attack on the Guardian settlement.Because this wasn’t a rumor, it wasn’t an old legend. It was proof. Proof that her mother had been involved in something far bigger than she had ever imagined.“We need to read it,” Kael said.Asher immediately shook his head.“No.”The response came so quickly that everyone looked at him.Kael frowned.“No?”“We don’t know what we’re looking at,” Asher replied. “We don’t know why this chamber was hidden. W
The morning after the attack felt unusually heavy.Ironclaw was awake, but the territory lacked its usual rhythm. Warriors moved through the training grounds, patrols rotated along the walls, and servants carried out their duties, yet an uneasiness lingered beneath every interaction. News of the attack on the Guardian location had spread quickly, and no one could ignore the growing sense that the Crown was moving faster than before.Lyra found Kael in the council chamber shortly after sunrise. Reports covered the large map table in front of him, but his attention was fixed on a single document. It was the authorization log recovered from the sealed-level system beneath Ironclaw.“You’ve been staring at that since dawn, haven’t you?” Lyra asked.Kael glanced up briefly. “Earlier than dawn.”She sighed. “That’s not exactly reassuring.”A faint smile touched his face before disappearing. Whatever answers they were chasing, neither of them liked where the trail was leading.The doors ope
The atmosphere inside Ironclaw changed overnight.No announcement had been made. No official statement had been issued. Yet somehow, tension spread through the territory faster than wildfire.Maybe it was because the people closest to the mystery could no longer look at Lyra the same way.Or maybe it was because every new discovery seemed to point back to her.Lyra felt it the moment she stepped into the council hall the following morning.For weeks, she had helped investigate secrets hidden beneath Ironclaw. She had searched for answers alongside everyone else. Now she was beginning to realize those answers might lead directly to her. The thought sat heavily in her chest.She found Kael standing near the large map table. Several reports were spread before him, but judging by the untouched papers, his attention wasn’t on them.“You didn’t sleep.”His eyes lifted. “Neither did you.”For a moment, neither spoke. Then Lyra leaned against the table. “They think I’m hiding something.”Kael
Sleep never came.Lyra spent most of the night staring at the ceiling, replaying the stranger’s final words over and over again.Don’t trust the Guardian.The warning should have been simple. Instead, it complicated everything.Every time she closed her eyes, she saw the stranger reaching for her wrist. She saw the urgency in his expression. More importantly, she remembered where he had been looking before he lost consciousness.Someone standing behind her, someone inside Ironclaw, someone she knew. The thought refused to leave her alone. By sunrise, she was exhausted.The territory was already awake when she stepped outside. Warriors moved through the training grounds, servants carried supplies between buildings, and patrols rotated along the walls. From a distance, Ironclaw appeared unchanged.Yet beneath the routine, tension lingered. The attack on the stranger had shaken everyone. An enemy attacking inside the territory itself was dangerous enough. An enemy who seemed to know exac
Kael Draven did not believe in regret.Regret was weakness and weakness had no place in Ironclaw.Yet, for the past three years. It was the only thing that followed him.The training grounds echoed with the clash of bodies hitting the ground, the scent of sweat and dominance thick in the air. Wolves
The forest beyond Ironclaw territory was not meant for survival. It was meant for death.The moment I crossed the border, I felt it.Not just in the air, but in my bones.Everything changed. The warmth I had grown used to vanished, replaced by something colder and heavier. It pressed against my ski
I don’t remember how I made it back to my room. I don’t remember who saw me or who laughed or who turned away like I didn’t exist.All I remember… is the pain.It didn’t fade, I didn't get a chance to breathe.The pain stayed with me, burning, tearing and suffocating me.The bond was gone, and in i
The night of the Moon Ceremony was supposed to be the beginning of my life.Instead… it became the night everything ended.The entire Ironclaw Pack gathered beneath the open sky, the full moon glowing bright and merciless above us. I stood at the edge of the crowd, just as I always did. Invisible







