LOGINLyra Vale saved Alpha Kael’s life and believed he would one day love her. Instead, he broke their engagement and rejected her in front of the entire pack during the Moon Goddess Ceremony. Banished and heartbroken, Lyra ran into the rogue forest where death waited for her. But fate was not finished with her. When the powerful Lycan King Ares Draven found her, her hidden power began to awaken. Now Lyra carried a secret child and a dangerous destiny. And when the pack that rejected her finally saw her again, she was no longer the weak omega they once despised. She was the woman who could destroy them.
View MoreLyra’s POV
Three years ago, Alpha Kael Stormclaw asked me to marry him, me, an ordinary omega.
The weakest rank in the entire pack, and even now, when I think about that moment, it feels like a dream I was never meant to have.
Everyone was shocked, confused, and some even laughed.
“An omega?” someone whispered loudly.
Kael stood in front of the whole pack. He was calm and composed as he said the words that changed my life.
“I will marry Lyra Vale.”
My knees almost gave out that day because I knew the truth.
I was just an omega who cleaned the pack house and carried water buckets every morning.
Why did he choose me?
The answer was simple. I saved his life.
That night still lives inside my head like it happened yesterday.
It was three years ago.
The howls woke me up. Rogues attacked our border without warning, and the entire pack was fighting.
I should have run when the battle started, just like everyone else did, but then I saw him.
Kael.
He was lying near the trees, and he was injured, bleeding badly. Some of the rogues surrounded him.
“Alpha!” I shouted.
But no one heard me. The rogues were about to attack him again.
I just ran, and I grabbed a broken spear from the ground and screamed like a crazy person.
“Leave him alone!”
The rogues turned toward me, surprised.
Kael used the chance to strike one of them.
The fight was messy, it was fast and terrifying, but somehow… we survived.
Kael was bleeding badly, and his side was torn open.
“Stay awake,” I kept saying while dragging him through the forest.
"Please don’t sleep.”
My arms were shaking, my legs were sore, but I didn’t stop.
Arrows from the rogues flew past us, and one almost hit my shoulder, but still, I kept dragging him.
When we finally reached a safe place, he was barely breathing.
I took off my scarf and pressed it hard against his wound.
“Please don’t die,” I whispered, and my hands were covered in his blood.
“I don’t know what to do if you die.”
He didn’t answer, and so I stayed awake the entire night beside him, holding the scarf and praying to the Moon Goddess.
When morning came, Kael finally opened his eyes, and the first thing he saw was me, dirty, tired, and crying.
He then stared at me for a long time, and he asked quietly,
“Why didn’t you run?”
I remembered laughing weakly.
“Because you’re the Alpha.”
He kept looking at me, like he was seeing me for the first time.
And then a week later, the entire pack gathered in the courtyard, and Kael stood before everyone, and then he shocked them all.
“I will marry Lyra Vale.”
Gasps filled the courtyard, and someone shouted, “But she’s an omega!”
Kael didn’t even look at them; he just said calmly,
“I already decided.”
That was the moment my life changed.
For three years, I believed it meant something, and I believed maybe… maybe Kael cared about me.
Maybe one day he would truly love me, but tonight I realized something painful.
I was wrong.
I sat across from Kael now in the pack office.
The room was cold, too quiet, and Kael stood near the desk, tall and distant.
He didn’t look at me, not even for once, but slid a paper across the table toward me.
“Sign it.”
His voice was calm, too calm, and I blinked in confusion.
“Sign what?”
The paper stopped in front of me, and I slowly looked down, the words hit me like a punch.
“Termination of Engagement Agreement.”
My fingers started shaking, and I looked back at him quickly.
“Kael… what is this?”
He still didn’t look at me, and his jaw tightened slightly.
“Our engagement ends today.”
The words sliced straight through my chest, and for a moment, I thought I had heard wrong.
“Ends??”
My voice came out small. “You mean… postpone?”
“No.” His answer was sharp.
The room suddenly felt hard to breathe in, and I stared at him.
“Why?” I whispered, and silence filled the room, and then my heart started beating faster.
“Did I do something wrong?”
Nothing.
My throat tightened.
“Kael… please say something.”
He spoke, but his voice sounded colder than I had ever heard before.
“This marriage cannot happen anymore.”
My hands clenched slowly on my lap.
“Why?”
Before he answered, the door behind him opened, and the sound made both of us turn.
A woman walked into the room. She moved slowly and confidently, as she belonged here; my heart stopped the moment I saw her face.
She was tall, beautiful, with long black hair and sharp eyes.
Serena Blackwood, the woman Kael loved before she disappeared three years ago.
The woman everyone believed was dead, I felt the air leave my lungs.
She smiled gently, as if we were old friends, but her eyes stayed on Kael as she walked toward him without hesitation.
Then she reached out and held his arm, but Kael didn’t move away. My chest tightened painfully.
Kael finally spoke, and his voice was quiet.
“Serena is back.”
The words shattered something inside me, and then Serena leaned her head slightly toward him; it was like she had always stood there.
Like I was never here, she then finally looked at me and smiled, not kindly, it was more like someone watching a game they already won.
Kael pushed the pen closer to me.
“Sign it, Lyra!” My ears rang.
Three years, three whole years, of laughing together, eating together, and waiting for the day we would marry.
Was all of it just… nothing?
My fingers slowly reached for the pen; they shook so badly I almost dropped it.
I looked up at him one last time.
“Kael…”
My voice cracked.
“Was I ever your choice?”
He didn’t answer, and that silence hurts more than any words.
My chest was empty; maybe the truth was something I was too afraid to admit.
The pen was heavy in my hand.
My fingers trembled and slowly… I moved it toward the paper.
LYRAThe older nursemaid said she was sorry. I did not really hear her.I had already walked past her.My eyes were looking around the orchard but I did not want to believe what my heart was telling me.The little blanket they had been playing with was on the ground under the apple tree.One of their wooden swords was in the grass and it looked like they had just forgotten it.The orchard looked very peaceful like nothing was wrong.My world had just fallen apart.I said "no" quietly.I did not want to believe this was happening.We had thought we were ready for something like this.We had guards we had changed the nursery and we had checked all the servants and every part of the castle.We had told ourselves that Stormclaw was the place.Then Serena had still found a way to get in.Ares got to me before anyoneHe did not ask if I was okay because he could see it in my face.He asked the nursemaids what had happened and his voice was steady. I could tell he was very angry.The younger
The council chamber had never felt smaller.Maps covered the long oak table between us, their edges held down by carved wolf figurines and smooth river stones. Kael was discussing the safest route for reinforcements from the eastern border while Ares listened, occasionally moving one of the markers to reflect a new scouting report. I tried to focus on the conversation, but my thoughts kept drifting back to the boys.I wondered whether they’d finished breakfast or if they’d talked the nursemaids into letting them play in the gardens again. They’d discovered a family of rabbits near the orchard a few days earlier, and ever since then, they’d insisted the rabbits were “their soldiers” protecting the castle.The memory almost made me smile.Almost.Ever since Serena’s last attempt, I hadn’t been able to shake the feeling that danger was still lurking just beyond our reach. We’d increased the guard, searched every corridor, questioned every servant. For days, nothing had happened. Slowly,
SERENAThe first thing I heard was laughter.Not the kind that echoed through royal banquets or victory celebrations.This was lighter. Freer.The laughter of children who had never known a day without being loved.I stopped behind the cover of a flowering hedge and watched them.The twins were chasing each other through the gardens, weaving around marble statues and climbing over low stone benches as though the entire kingdom belonged to them. Their nursemaids followed several paces behind, trying—and failing—to convince them to slow down.One little boy paused to pick a white flower before proudly tucking it behind his brother’s ear.The other burst into laughter.For a heartbeat, I watched.So these were the children who had turned kingdoms upside down.The heirs everyone feared.They looked… ordinary.Small.Innocent.They had Lyra’s silver eyes.Kael’s stubborn chin.Neither of them understood that armies were already killing one another because of the blood running through their
SERENAPatience had always been my greatest weapon.Swords dulled. Armies grew tired. Even the fiercest warriors eventually bled.Patience never did.For four days, I disappeared.No attacks on Stormclaw. No scouts lurking along the borders. No messages delivered by Raven. I gave Lyra exactly what she needed most after weeks of living in fear.A chance to breathe.By now, she’d convinced herself she’d won a small victory. The failed attempt on the nursery had made her tighten security, just as I’d expected. Every corridor leading to her sons was now crawling with guards. Every entrance was watched day and night.She believed she’d outsmarted me.The amusing part was that she’d done exactly what I wanted.“The reports?”Raze entered my tent carrying a leather satchel stuffed with parchment. Dust clung to the hem of his cloak, evidence he’d returned from riding through the night.“They’ve tripled the guards outside the nursery.”I smiled.“And?”“They’ve doubled the watch on the eastern
LYRA'S POVI did not sleep that night. Not for one minute. The conversation with my father kept playing over and over in my head. Each thing he said was worse than the last. I thought about the war, the prophecy, the poison, and the Order of Ash. I thought about how someone might have been trying t
LYRAThere were days I almost thought life was getting back to normal.Not really normal.I knew my life would never be normal.Calmer.More manageable.The war was over.Serena was gone from my kingdom.The twins were healthy. Getting stronger every day.Ares was home.The castle wasn't always fil
KAELThe first thing I noticed was the silence. Not the kind of silence that fills my rooms. Not the silence that falls over Stormclaw at night. The silence inside my own mind. For a time, my thoughts were a mess. There were voices and fragments and memories all mixed up with hallucinations. Dreams
ARESThe moment I found out Serena had come to our home, I got really upset.I did not care that she came to our place, saying she wanted to talk things over.I did not care that Lyra had asked her to come.I definitely did not care about the reasons behind her visit.All I knew was that a woman wh






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.