MasukI walked through the crowd and the crowd parted. For the first time since I was five, I wasn’t invincible. I heard the whispers start behind me as I moved. Heard my name. Heard his. Heard the word traitor the way I’d been hearing it my whole life, like a sound they made without even thinking anymore. Automatic, reflexive, a habit of cruelty so old it had stopped feeling cruel to them.
I walked to the small room at the back of the east quarters where I’d slept on the same thin mattress for thirteen years. I sat down on the edge of the mattress and pressed my hands flat against my knees and I breathed.
The bond was broken. I could feel where it had been. A raw ache in the center of my chest, the ghost of something that had existed for approximately six minutes before it was destroyed.
Six minutes.
That was all I got.
I sat with that for a long moment.
Then I reached under the mattress and I pulled out the only thing I owned that actually mattered. A small, cracked photograph. My father, young, laughing, standing in sunlight with his hand on someone’s shoulder. He looked nothing like a traitor in that photograph. He looked like someone who loved being alive.
They killed him anyway.
I put the photograph in my pocket.
Then I stood up.
And I started packing.
I was gone before midnight.
No announcement. No goodbye. No one to say goodbye to.
I crossed the Ironmoor border at eleven forty-seven and I felt the pack bond snap. Quieter than the mate bond, less violent, but final in a way that made my lungs expand like they hadn’t been able to fully open in years.
Free.
I kept walking.
The woods were dark and cold and indifferent, which suited me perfectly. I had nowhere to go. I had no money, no contacts, no plan beyond out. But I had survived thirteen years on nothing, I could survive whatever came next.
I walked until my legs ached.
I walked until the trees thinned and the ground changed and I realized I had reached the edge of the neutral territory. The strip of unclaimed land between Ironmoor and whatever came next.
That was when I collapsed.
I laughed.
Loud and manic.
I wanted to claw out my heart from my chest and dump it on the floor for the wolves to find. Maybe i’d have a little burial ceremony for it with a headstone that says “Here lies the heart of Sera Voss loved by no one and loved noone”
Caden Walsh probably assumed he had destroyed me, and maybe he had.
I felt like I was going crazy.
I hit the ground on my knees and I put my hands in the cold dirt. I tried to regulate my heart beat and calm down a bit.
But the roaring in my ears wouldn’t stop.
I heard footsteps.
Quiet. Measured. Deliberate.
Someone else was here, and they felt Dangerous.
The footsteps didn’t hurry.
That was the first thing I noticed.
Whatever was moving through these trees wasn’t afraid of what it might find. It wasn’t cautious. It wasn’t checking the shadows before it stepped into them. It moved the way things move when they have never once in their life needed to be careful, because nothing in the world has ever given them a reason to be.
I was still on my knees in the dirt.
I thought about getting up. I thought about it seriously, for approximately two seconds, and then I decided that if something was going to kill me tonight, it was going to have to find me exactly like this. Hands in the cold earth. Chest still cracked open. Eyes probably red in a way I would deny to my grave.
I was done performing dignity for things that hadn’t earned the show.
The footsteps stopped.
I didn’t look up immediately. I counted my breaths instead. One. Two.
Then I looked up.
The gathering was nothing like I had imagined.It was bigger, louder, and more alive than anything I had imagined.Torches were everywhere, not just lining the paths but hanging from structures built specifically for tonight, turning the whole grounds into something golden and breathing.Tables stretched further than I could see in every direction, loaded with food that smelled like something between a feast and a fantasy. Music from everywhere and nowhere simultaneously, drums underneath everything like a second heartbeat that my wolf felt before my ears registered it.And the people, there were hundreds.Wolves I had passed in corridors looked completely differen
I woke to voices.Low, urgent voices.The sound of people discussing problems before sunrise.My wolf stirred immediately.Full moon.Through the archway connecting my rooms to Kael’s, I could hear him giving orders.I got out of bed.Crossed the room.And stopped at the entrance.Four guards stood before him.Kael stood at the center of the sitting r
I had my own room.Technically.It was connected to his through a sitting room that had no door. Just an archway. Wide, open, and completely useless as a barrier between his space and mine.I had pointed this out.He had looked at the archway.Looked at me."Yes," he had said.Like that was an answer.---It was day one of the new arrangement, and I had convinced myself it was fine; it was only temporary.&n
I woke up and knew immediately something was wrong.There was a specific feeling that made the hairs on my body stand attention. It was this instinct that had kept me alive for years in a pack that would have preferred otherwise.Something is wrong.I sat up.And saw it.On my pillow.Right next to where my head had been.A folded piece of paper.I stared at it.Someone had been in this room while I slept.Had stood next to my bed.Had placed something close enough to my face that I could have turned in my sleep and touched it.And walked back out.I can get to you anywhere.That was the message before the message.I picked it up with steady hands.Opened it.---The handwriting was the same jagged angry strokes.You were warned traitor's daughter. You did not listen. The blood your father spilled does not wash out. It runs through your veins the same as it ran through his. Every day you remain in this palace you put everyone in it at risk. We are not asking again. Leave. Leave now. O
I stood outside his study and gave myself exactly three seconds to be a normal person before I knocked.Three.Two.One.I knocked."Come in."I pushed the door open and walked in like I owned the place.I did not own the place.But I needed all the confidence I could muster.---The study felt exactly like him.Dark, imposing, and unnecessarily large. Maps on the walls from centuries ago that didn't match the modern world anymore.Kael was behind the desk.He didn't look up when I came in."You're late," he said.I looked at the clock on the wall."I'm thirty seconds late," I said."Yes.""That's not late. That's arriving."He looked up.I smiled at him.He did not smile back. He looked at me like my mere presence was disturbing the air around him."Sit," he said.I sat.He slid a stack of documents across the desk so large it should have had its own chair."Correspondence," he said. "Sort by territory. Urgent pile on the left, administrative on the right. Anything referencing the el
I left the library before anyone could find me there.The corridors were still quiet. That particular dark that happens before the palace starts waking up and the staff start moving,I walked fast.My mind was faster.Aldric Voss. Alpha of Ironmoor.My father's name. In a book about the Alpha King. In a list I didn't understand. Written in darker ink than everything around it like someone had come back to that page specifically to add it.Why?What did my father have to do with any of this.What had he known.What had he been involved in that was worth killing him for and branding his daughter omega and apparently still active enough thirteen years later that someone was slipping notes under doors in the middle of the night.I needed more.More books, more records and more of whatever was hidden in those blank pages.But I couldn't keep sneaking into that library at odd hours without someone eventually noticing. Without it getting back to Kael. Without him asking questions I wasn't re
Dren set the folder on my desk and left.Smart man.I was by the window, looking over my territory. The territory below was dark and quiet. Three thousand years and it still looked the same at night It was vast, black and completely mine.I turned around and opened the folder.Sera Voss. Eighteen y
I read it twice.Then I looked up and down the empty corridor.No one.I looked back at the note.My first thought was Kael.Because who else knew I was here?But then I thought about the man I’d just had lunch with. The flat voice. The silver eyes. The complete absence of anything indirect about h
I woke up to someone folding my clothes.An actual person. Standing three feet from the bed, moving quietly and efficiently, refolding the same worn shirt I had packed in the dark last night like it was something worth treating carefully.I sat up so fast I nearly fell off the bed.The woman looked
“Ironmoor,” he said.“Yes.”“You left voluntarily.”“Yes.”His eyes moved over me again in that same clinical way. I was starting to understand that this was just how he looked at things. Like everything in front of him was a variable he was calculating, a problem he was deciding whether to bother







