LOGINI claim her.”
The words didn’t just echo across the ceremonial grounds—they struck, heavy and undeniable, like a verdict no one had the power to challenge. For a moment, no one moved. No one breathed. Lyra stood frozen where she was, her heart hammering violently against her chest as Alpha Darius’ declaration wrapped around her like chains she couldn’t see… but could definitely feel. “What…?” she whispered, barely able to form the word. Across from her, Kael’s expression darkened instantly, his entire body going rigid with anger. The calm, untouchable Alpha from moments ago was gone—replaced by something far more volatile. “No,” Kael said sharply, stepping forward. “You don’t get to walk into my territory and take what’s mine.” Darius didn’t even look at him. His gaze remained fixed on Lyra, intense and unyielding, as if the rest of the world had ceased to exist. “Yours?” Darius repeated, his tone calm, almost bored. “That’s an interesting claim… considering you just rejected her.” A ripple of uneasy murmurs spread through the crowd. Lyra felt them all—their eyes, their judgment, their curiosity. But none of it compared to the suffocating weight of the two Alphas standing on either side of her. Kael’s fists clenched tightly at his sides. “That doesn’t give you the right to claim her.” Darius finally turned his head slightly, just enough to acknowledge him. “It gives me every right,” he said coldly. “Unless, of course, you’d like to challenge me for her.” Silence fell again. Heavy. Dangerous. Everyone knew what that meant. A challenge between Alphas wasn’t just a fight—it was a battle that could end in death. Lyra’s breath caught as her eyes flickered to Kael. For a split second, hope ignited inside her. Fight for me. Just this once… choose me. But Kael didn’t move. Didn’t speak. Didn’t accept. And just like that, the last fragile piece of her hope shattered completely. Darius let out a quiet, almost amused breath. “That’s what I thought.” Lyra’s chest tightened painfully. So that was it. She wasn’t worth fighting for. Not to the man who was supposed to be her mate. Darius stepped closer to her then, his presence overwhelming as he closed the distance between them. The air around him felt different—heavier, charged with something darker, more dangerous than anything she had ever experienced. “You’re leaving with me,” he said, his voice low and firm. Lyra flinched slightly, instinctively taking a small step back. “I… I don’t even know you.” It was the truth. Everything about this felt unreal. One moment she was being rejected, stripped of her future—and the next, she was being claimed by the most feared Alpha in the region. Darius’ eyes softened for the briefest moment, though the intensity in them didn’t fade. “You don’t need to,” he replied. Before she could protest, his hand closed gently—but firmly—around her wrist. The contact sent a strange jolt through her body, sharp and unfamiliar. Not pain. Not comfort. Something else. Something she couldn’t name. “Wait—” she started, panic rising. “I can’t just leave! This is my pack, my home—” “Was,” Darius corrected smoothly. The single word hit harder than Kael’s rejection. Lyra’s throat tightened as she looked around desperately. No one stepped forward. No one defended her. Not even the people she had grown up with. To them, she was already gone. Forgotten. Discarded. Her gaze slowly drifted back to Kael. He was watching her now, his expression unreadable. No regret. No apology. Just distance. Cold, unshakable distance. And that hurt more than anything else. “Please…” she whispered, though she wasn’t even sure what she was asking for anymore. Kael said nothing. Darius didn’t wait any longer. With a firm tug, he guided her forward. Lyra stumbled slightly but didn’t resist again. What was the point? There was nothing left for her here. Each step away from the ceremonial ground felt heavier than the last, like she was walking away from everything she had ever known. Because she was. As they reached the edge of the crowd, Lyra could still feel the stares burning into her back. Pity. Curiosity. Judgment. But above all— Shock. No one had expected this. No one had expected Alpha Darius to appear… or to take her. As they approached a sleek black vehicle waiting just beyond the gates, Lyra finally found her voice again. “Why?” she asked, her tone weak but desperate. “Why me?” Darius paused. For a moment, he didn’t answer. Then he turned slightly, his dark eyes meeting hers with an intensity that made her breath catch. “Because,” he said quietly, “You’re not as ordinary as you think.” Lyra’s heart skipped. Before she could question him further, he opened the car door and gestured for her to get in. She hesitated. Just for a second. Then, with one last glance back at the only life she had ever known— Lyra stepped inside. The door shut with a soft, final click. And as the car began to move— She realized something that sent a chill down her spine. She hadn’t just been taken by the enemy. She had just stepped into a life she didn’t understand… With a man who clearly knew more about her than he was willing to say. And that— Was far more dangerous than anything she was leaving behind.The world didn’t end.It changed.The silence that followed the battle was different from before.Not heavy.Not broken.Peaceful.The territory slowly came back to life.Warriors moved again—not in fear, not in urgency, but in rebuilding. The scars of battle remained, carved into the land and into memory, but they no longer defined everything.For the first time—There was no pressure in the air.No unseen force waiting to strike.No imbalance threatening to break the world apart.---Lyra stood at the edge of the territory, looking out across the horizon.The wind moved gently now, brushing against her skin like something familiar.Something… normal.---But she knew better.Nothing about her was normal anymore.---“You always come here.”Darius.---She didn’t turn immediately.“I like the quiet.”He stepped beside her, his presence steady, grounding as always.“It’s different now,” he said.“Yes.”A pause.Then—“But not in a bad way.”---Darius studied her carefully.He had don
The air didn’t move.It obeyed.Lyra stood at the center of it all—calm, steady, and terrifyingly composed.The power around her wasn’t loud anymore.It didn’t surge.It didn’t rage.It listened.Kael watched her carefully.Not with arrogance.Not with control.But with something new.Recognition.“You’ve changed the game,” he said slowly.Lyra didn’t respond immediately.Because she didn’t need to.The shift was obvious.Undeniable.“You wanted control,” she said finally, her voice quiet but layered with something deeper. “But control was never the answer.”Kael’s gaze hardened slightly.“And balance is?”“Yes.”A pause.Then—“Balance doesn’t make you stronger,” Kael replied.“It makes you limited.”Lyra took a step forward.The ground adjusted beneath her feet.The energy around them stilled further.“No,” she said.“It makes me in control.”---Kael exhaled slowly.Then—He smiled.Not amused.Not mocking.Resolved.---“Then let’s see how long that control lasts.”---The air shi
Silence didn’t return.It consumed everything.The explosion of energy faded—But something remained.Heavy.Still.Unnatural.Darius couldn’t breathe.Not because of the force—But because of what he felt.Or rather—What he didn’t feel.---“Lyra…”Her name left his lips slowly.Carefully.Like saying it too loud might break whatever fragile reality remained.---The battlefield had changed.The ground was no longer cracked from destruction—It was smooth.Flattened.As if the world itself had been rewritten in that space.---Kael stood a few steps away.Silent.Watching.For the first time—Not in control.Not completely.---“Do you feel that?” one of his distant warriors whispered.Kael didn’t answer.Because he did.And it wasn’t what he expected.---At the center—She stood.---Lyra.---But not the same.---Her body was still.Perfectly still.Her head slightly lowered.Her arms relaxed at her sides.---And yet—Everything around her moved.---The air bent.The light dim
The ground split open—And the world shifted with it.---The energy that rose this time was different.Not wild.Not chaotic.It was… controlled.Heavy.Ancient.And far more dangerous.---Lyra stepped back instinctively, her power reacting before her thoughts could catch up.“What did you do?” she demanded.Kael didn’t move.Didn’t react.“I told you,” he said calmly. “I stopped trying to control it.”The darkness behind him deepened.Something began to take shape—not fully visible, not fully formed, but present enough to feel.And it felt wrong.---Lyra’s chest tightened.Because this—This wasn’t like the creature before.That had rage.That had pain.This…This felt empty.---“It doesn’t have a will,” she whispered.Kael’s gaze flicked to her.“Exactly.”Her breath caught.“No…”---“It doesn’t fight you,” Kael continued.“It doesn’t resist.”A pause.Then—“It becomes what you make it.”---The realization hit like a blow.This wasn’t something to defeat.This was something t
The night felt heavier here.Darker.Like even the air didn’t trust itself to move.Lyra stepped across the boundary line slowly.Alone.No warriors.No backup.No second chances.Every step she took felt deliberate—like the ground itself was aware of what she was doing.What she was risking.---She could feel it.Kael’s territory.It wasn’t just land.It was controlled.Structured.Watching.Waiting.---“You came.”His voice echoed before she saw him.Calm.Expected.Certain.Lyra didn’t stop walking.“I told you I would.”---Kael stepped out from the shadows ahead.No army.No guards.Just him.And somehow—That made it more dangerous.---“You shouldn’t have come alone,” he said.Lyra’s gaze didn’t waver.“That’s the only way you wanted it.”A faint smile touched his lips.“You’re learning.”---Silence stretched between them.Heavy.Charged.Unstable.---“You hurt one of his warriors just to bring me here,” Lyra said.Not accusing.Not emotional.Just stating truth.Kael tilte
The attack came at dawn.Not loud.Not chaotic.Precise.Lyra felt it before the first alarm sounded.A sharp pull in her chest.Not pain.Not fear.A signal.Her eyes snapped open.“He’s here.”---Outside, the territory hadn’t yet reacted.No shouting.No running.No visible threat.And that—That was wrong.---Darius entered her room almost instantly.“What did you feel?”Lyra was already standing.“He’s not attacking the territory.”A pause.Then—“He’s targeting something specific.”Darius’ expression hardened.“What?”Lyra didn’t answer immediately.Because she already knew.And she didn’t want to say it.---A scream cut through the air.Sharp.Sudden.Close.Both of them turned instantly.“That’s the inner compound,” Darius said.They moved at the same time.Fast.Focused.Ready.---By the time they reached the center—It was already over.Not a battle.Not a fight.A message.---One of Darius’ strongest warriors was on the ground.Alive.But barely.Pinned in place by some
Silence.Not the kind that followed peace.The kind that followed destruction.The white light faded slowly, like the world itself was struggling to return. Shapes blurred back into existence—broken ground, shattered structures, scattered bodies frozen in the aftermath.No one moved.No one spoke.
The connection shattered—And chaos took its place.The creature roared, its fury erupting like a storm unleashed. The ground split violently beneath its weight as it surged forward, no longer watching, no longer waiting.Now—It was destroying.“Move!” Darius shouted.Lyra barely reacted in time a
The air shifted.Not gradually.Not subtly.Violently.Lyra felt it before anything else—the sharp distortion of energy ripping through the atmosphere like something had just torn open the balance of the battlefield.Her body tensed instantly.“He’s here.”Darius didn’t question it.“Positions!” he
The battlefield didn’t move.It waited.No one attacked.No one spoke.Because something irreversible had just happened.Lyra stood at the center of it all—no longer trembling, no longer overwhelmed. The energy that once raged uncontrollably inside her now moved with quiet precision, like a second







