INICIAR SESIÓNElara had no wolf. So on her 18th birthday, Alpha Kade rejected her before the entire pack and claimed a powerful Luna instead. Broken and bondless, she’s thrown as tribute to the mad Lycan King — a beast who kills his brides before dawn. A death sentence. But when King Darius inhales her scent, his wolf doesn’t rip her throat out. It kneels. “Blessed…” he growls. “Mine.” Elara’s blood is the only cure for the curse rotting his bloodline. To save his kingdom, he must claim her. To survive his claim, she must awaken a blessing that could destroy them both. Now Kade wants her back. Too late. Rejected as a Luna, she will rise as the Lycan Queen. And the war for her is just beginning.
Ver másThe moment Alpha Kade’s eyes met mine across the pack circle, I knew.
I was wrong. Dead wrong to think eighteen years of loyalty, of stitched wounds and midnight patrols, would matter more than the wolf I didn’t have. “Elara of Silverfang,” Kade’s voice boomed, cold as the mountain stone beneath my bare feet. “The Moon Goddess made a mistake.” The crowd of three hundred pack members went silent. Even the wind held its breath. “You are wolf-less. Empty.” He stepped closer, and the bond I’d cherished since we were children went ice-cold in my chest. “I, Alpha Kade of Silverfang, reject you, Elara, as my mate.” Pain isn’t a strong enough word. It was a blade of frozen fire, carving out my ribs, shredding the fragile thread that tied my soul to his. I gasped, knees hitting stone. The pack’s scent—pine, blood, disgust—choked me. His Luna, Mira, smirked from his side. Her wolf, a sleek silver beauty, yipped in triumph. “Finally,” she whispered, loud enough for everyone. “Our Alpha deserves a real she-wolf. Not a defective.” Laughter. My father, Beta Thomas, looked away. My whole life, reduced to a punchline. I should have run. Should have hidden. But my mother’s voice echoed: *Lunas don’t bow, Elara. Even broken ones.* So I stood. Legs shaking, heart in pieces, but I stood. “I, Elara of Silverfang,” my voice cracked but didn’t break, “accept your rejection, Alpha Kade.” The final severing hit like a physical blow. I tasted copper. The world tilted. Kade didn’t even flinch. He turned his back on me. On eighteen years. “Exile her by dawn. The pack has no use for a wolf-less burden.” Exile. Death sentence. A wolf-less woman wouldn’t last two nights in the Forbidden Territories. My feet moved before my brain did. Away from the circle. Away from the jeers. Into the forest, where the trees were the only ones not staring at the shame carved into my skin. I didn’t stop running until my lungs burned and Kade’s scent was gone. Only then did I collapse against a black-barked tree, sobbing. Not graceful tears. Ugly, soul-deep heaves that left me empty. “Is this your idea of a welcome, little wolf?” The voice came from the shadows. Deep. Velvet over steel. It wasn’t a question. I scrambled up, pressing against the tree. He stepped into the moonlight, and my breath stopped for a whole new reason. He was… impossible. Tall enough that I had to crane my neck, with shoulders broad enough to block out the moon. Hair black as the void between stars, and eyes—Goddess help me—eyes like molten silver. They glowed, literally glowed, with a power that made Kade’s Alpha aura feel like a candle next to a forest fire. He wore no pack colors. Just black, tactical, like he’d walked off a battlefield. A scar cut through his left brow, but it only made him look more dangerous. More… regal. And he was looking at me like I was a puzzle he’d just solved. “You’re trespassing,” I said, hating how small my voice sounded. “This is Silverfang territory.” His mouth curved. Not a smile. A promise. “No, Elara. You’re trespassing.” He took a step, and the air grew heavy, charged. “You crossed into the Forbidden Territories three minutes ago. My territory.” My blood ran cold. The Forbidden Territories belonged to no one. Except… the stories. The whispers of a king with no pack, no mercy, and a curse that killed every woman he touched. The Lycan King. “You’re him,” I breathed. “Darius.” He said his name like a verdict. He closed the distance between us until I could feel heat rolling off him, scenting the air with frost and pine and something wilder. Something that called to the empty place Kade had carved out of me. He reached out, and I flinched. I expected cruelty. I’d just had a lifetime’s worth. But his fingers, calloused and huge, just brushed a tear off my cheek. The touch seared. Not with pain. With… awareness. Every nerve ending I had lit up. “You’re not wolf-less,” he murmured, silver eyes scanning me, seeing too much. “You’re dormant. Caged.” His thumb swept under my eye again, catching another tear. “And he was a fool to throw away a gift he couldn’t understand.” His gaze dropped to my lips, and the air vanished from my lungs. This was insane. I’d been rejected ten minutes ago. I should be running, not… leaning. But my traitorous body swayed toward him, toward the heat, toward the first person who’d looked at me like I was something other than broken. “Why do you care?” I whispered. “Your curse—” “My curse kills lovers,” he cut in, voice rough now. His hand slid to my jaw, tilting my face up. His grip was pure Dominant—controlled, inescapable, and it sent a shock straight to my core. “It’s never reacted to pain before. Only desire.” His eyes dropped to my mouth again, and this time he didn’t hide it. Hunger, raw and ancient, flickered in that silver fire. “But you, little wolf,” he growled, leaning down until his breath stirred my hair, “you make it sing.” My heart slammed against my ribs. Kade had rejected me. This man, this king, looked at me like I was the only thing in the world. His mouth was a breath from mine. I should stop him. I should— Howls erupted from the direction of Silverfang. Kade’s pack. Hunting me already. Darius went still. Then he smiled, and it was the most terrifying, thrilling thing I’d ever seen. “Choose, Elara.” His thumb pressed against my racing pulse. “Run, and die in these woods. Or stay…” His lips brushed my ear, his voice a dark vow. “…and be mine. I’ll make them all kneel for what they did to you.” His mouth hovered over mine, waiting. Claiming. And Goddess help me, I wanted to say yes.It started with the wolves.Three days after Aria’s first lesson, the Citadel’s scout wolves stopped reporting in. All of them. At once.“That doesn’t happen,” Kade said, staring at the empty map on the war table. “Not even when the Council was at its worst. Wolves don’t just… vanish.”Darius slammed his fist on the table. “Unless something took them.”Aria was asleep in my arms, but even in sleep her gold eyes moved restlessly under her lids. Like she was dreaming. Or like she was seeing something we couldn’t.The Moonstone on the pedestal beside us had been cold and dark since the warning. Until now.It pulsed once. Faint. Like a distant heartbeat.Lyra, who’d been studying the old archives nonstop since the battle, looked up from her books with pale face. “I found something. In Lyra’s records. The erased Moonblood Queen.”We all turned to her.“The darkness,” Lyra said, voice shaking. “It has a name. The Void. It’s older than Lycans. Older than the Moon. The old texts call it the H
They came at dawn.Not the Fae. Not the Vampires. Not the Witches alone.All of them.The horizon was a wall of color and magic and malice. Black Vampire banners with red moons. Green Fae banners that shimmered like leaves in wind. Purple Witch banners marked with silver runes. And in the center, the Arcane Council’s silver sigil. Magister Thorne hadn’t been lying about them mobilizing.I stood on the Citadel walls with Darius, Kade, and Elias at my back. Aria was safe in the deep vaults with Roric and the healers. Elias had fought me on it for 10 minutes until I looked at him and said: “The shield protects the blade. You can’t do that if you’re dead.”He’d hated it. But he’d agreed.“They’re bluffing,” Kade said, but his voice wasn’t sure. “They can’t really attack. Not all at once. Not without starting a war that burns every realm.”“They will if they think the risk is worth it,” Darius said grimly. “Moonblood is worth it to them.”Below us, 5,000 Lycans stood in formation. Our en
We started training at sunrise.No time to waste. Not after the Moonstone’s warning and that vision of darkness. Not after Aria threw a 400-year-old Magister across a room like he weighed nothing.The training grounds were a mess from the battle, so we used the inner courtyard. Stone walls on all sides, healers on standby, and Roric watching from a cot because he refused to miss this even with a broken spine.Aria was in the center, sitting on a blanket with her tiny hands on her knees. She was 3 weeks old now, but she looked bigger somehow. Stronger. Her gold eyes tracked everything with that unsettling focus that made my skin crawl.Elias stood to her left as the shield. Kade stood to her right as the “what not to do” example. Darius and I stood in front of her.“We’re not teaching her to fight,” I said firmly, looking at all of them. “We’re teaching her to control. Moonblood reacts to emotion. So step one is learning to feel without losing control.”Darius nodded and knelt in front
The moment Alpha Kade’s eyes met mine across the pack circle, I knew. I was wrong. Dead wrong to think eighteen years of loyalty, of stitched wounds and midnight patrols, would matter more than the wolf I didn’t have. “Elara of Silverfang,” Kade’s voice boomed, cold as the mountain stone beneath my bare feet. “The Moon Goddess made a mistake.” The crowd of three hundred pack members went silent. Even the wind held its breath. “You are wolf-less. Empty.” He stepped closer, and the bond I’d cherished since we were children went ice-cold in my chest. “I, Alpha Kade of Silverfang, reject you, Elara, as my mate.” Pain isn’t a strong enough word. It was a blade of frozen fire, carving out my ribs, shredding the fragile thread that tied my soul to his. I gasped, knees hitting stone. The pack’s scent—pine, blood, disgust—choked me. His Luna, Mira, smirked from his side. Her wolf, a sleek silver beauty, yipped in triumph. “Finally,” she whispered, loud enough for everyone. “Our Alpha de






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