LOGIN
The first thing Elara learned each morning was how to exist without being noticed.
Not invisible, people still saw her when they needed something done, but forgettable. Easy to overlook. Easier to dismiss.
She moved through the lower level of the pack house with practiced precision, head down, steps quiet but not suspiciously so. The industrial kitchen was already loud, metal trays clattering, voices overlapping, the low hum of refrigeration units filling the gaps between conversation.
No one looked at her when she entered.
That was good.
Elara crossed to the prep counter and began stacking the dented metal trays left from the night before. Some still had colored tags clipped to their edges, gold, silver, white.
None of them was hers.
“Careful, omega.”
The word cut cleanly through the noise.
Elara didn’t flinch. She’d learned not to.
“Yes.”
Mara stood across the counter, leaning back against the polished steel as if she belonged there, which she did. Her uniform was crisp, black fabric fitted neatly to her frame, the pack crest stitched in silver over her chest. Even relaxed, she carried rank like a second skin.
Elara wore grey.
No crest. No name.
“You missed a tray,” Mara said, nudging one forward with the tip of her finger.
Elara reached for it immediately. “I’ll clean it.”
“Of course you will.” Mara’s smile was sharp, practiced. “That’s what you’re for.”
A few of the others nearby laughed, soft, familiar, uninterested.
Elara scrubbed the tray harder than necessary, the cold water biting into the cracks along her knuckles. Her hands were always like this, dry, split, aching.
No one cared.
Behind her, the main doors slid open. A shift in the room followed instantly, voices lowering just slightly, posture straightening without thought.
Warriors.
They moved in groups, their uniforms marked in gold along the sleeves and collar. Some of them were barely older than her, but it didn’t matter. Rank settled early. Strength decided everything.
“Move.”
A shoulder knocked into her as one passed.
The tray slipped in her grip, clattering loudly against the counter.
“I’m sorry,” Elara said quickly, stepping back.
“You’re in the way,” another added without looking at her.
“I’ll move.”
She always did.
Breakfast filled the long tables quickly. Eggs, bacon, biscuits, portions heavy and steaming. Elara stayed at the edges, refilling pitchers, clearing space, moving where she was needed before anyone had to ask twice.
“Hey.”
Her body went still.
She knew that tone.
Slowly, she turned.
Three of them stood near the far end of the table—broad-shouldered, relaxed, already carrying the easy confidence of wolves who had never questioned their place.
“Come here,” one said, tilting his head slightly.
Elara hesitated.
“I said, ' Come here.”
No one intervened. No one even looked up.
She walked over.
Up close, they smelled like heat and iron, alive in a way she had never been. Her wolf stayed silent inside her, distant as ever.
It always was.
“You still haven’t shifted, right?” one of them asked, though his tone said he already knew the answer.
Another snorted, glancing down at his phone. “She’s trending again.”
Elara’s stomach tightened.
The screen turned slightly, just enough for the others to see. Laughter followed.
“Oh, right,” the first one said, mock realization settling in. “You don’t have one.”
More laughter.
“Figures.”
Elara kept her gaze lowered.
Most wolves shifted by twelve.
A few were late.
Fewer still struggled.
But there were always one or two, maybe three, who never did.
Elara was one of them.
Not rare enough to be special.
Just rare enough to be wrong.
“You ever wonder what it would feel like?” one of them went on, stepping closer. “Or is there just… nothing in there?”
A hand brushed her arm.
Light.
Testing.
Elara flinched.
The reaction came too fast to hide.
“See that?” someone laughed. “Barely touched her.”
“Careful,” another added. “She might break.”
Their amusement lingered only a moment before fading. She wasn’t worth holding onto for long.
“Go on,” one of them said, flicking his fingers dismissively. “Be useful.”
Elara didn’t wait.
She turned and moved back toward the kitchen, pulse unsteady, breathing tight but controlled.
No one stopped her.
Not the elders seated near the far wall.
Not the supervisors reviewing schedules on their tablets.
Not even the guards stationed by the doors.
A security camera blinked red in the corner above them all.
It saw everything.
It changed nothing.
By the time the room emptied, the trays were stripped clean.
Elara waited.
That was part of it.
Waiting until everyone else had taken what they wanted. Waiting until the noise faded, until footsteps retreated, until the space felt empty enough that she could exist in it again.
Only then did she move.
A piece of bread remained, hardened at the edges. A shallow smear of oatmeal clung to the bottom of one bowl.
She gathered them carefully and sat at the far end of the table.
The first bite caught in her throat.
She swallowed anyway.
Hunger made everything sharper, every movement, every breath, every quiet moment stretched thin.
Across the room, a wall-mounted screen flickered to life.
Names scrolled in clean, organized columns.
Rank updates. Assignments. Rotations.
Warriors marked in gold.
High ranks in white.
Even labor roles had structure.
Elara’s name wasn’t there.
It had never been.
The others had already been assigned years ago.
Different schools.
Different futures.
Elite academies for the strongest. Structured training for the rest.
Elara had stayed behind.
Not assigned.
Not considered.
“No point wasting resources.”
She’d heard it once. Not whispered. Not hidden.
Just… stated.
Like fact.
The stairs to the upper level were quieter.
Fewer people came here. Less reason to.
Elara climbed them slowly, one hand trailing lightly along the wall for balance as a dull ache settled behind her eyes.
Her room sat at the very end of the hall.
Small. Narrow. Forgettable.
She pushed the door open and stepped inside.
Cold greeted her immediately.
It seeped through the thin walls, settling into the space like it belonged there. In the summer, it would be the opposite: heat trapped and suffocating, impossible to escape.
There was no middle here.
Just like there was no place for her.
Elara sat on the edge of the cot, pulling the thin blanket around her shoulders. Her body ached in that quiet, familiar way, like something inside her was always just slightly off.
“You’re faking it.”
The words echoed faintly in her memory.
“Just wants attention.”
Her gaze shifted to the small window set high in the wall.
Beyond it, the training grounds stretched out, wide, open, alive with movement.
Wolves ran there.
Shifted.
Fought.
Belonged.
Her brother was among them.
She could pick him out easily, confident, strong, moving like the world had already made space for him.
He didn’t look toward the building.
Didn’t look toward her.
He never did.
Her mother passed along the edge of the field moments later, speaking with another high-ranking member. Calm. Composed.
Untouched by anything small or inconvenient.
Elara watched for a moment longer.
Then looked away.
A bell rang through the pack house.
Sharp.
Clear.
Not for meals.
Elara stilled.
Another ring followed, longer this time.
A summons.
Voices rose below, carrying upward, curiosity, anticipation, something sharper underneath.
Then a voice, amplified through the internal system:
“All eligible wolves report to the grounds. Warrior selection begins at dusk.”
Movement surged instantly.
Excitement.
Energy.
Purpose.
Elara remained seated.
She wasn’t eligible.
She had never been.
No shift.
No rank.
No future in things like that.
And yet…
Her fingers tightened slightly in the thin blanket.
The sound of movement below grew louder, feet rushing, voices calling out, doors opening.
Something in her chest shifted.
Small.
Unfamiliar.
Not hope.
Not quite.
Elara stood.
No one would call her.
No one would notice if she stayed.
Still—
She moved toward the door.
Because even if she didn’t belong there…
She wanted to see what it looked like.
“I hate it too,” Elara said.Darius did not look at her.His gaze remained fixed on the spread of documents across the desk: summons, petitions, maps, copied precedents, Blackwater filings, Nightfall responses. The papers had been arranged and rearranged so many times that Elara no longer knew whether they were becoming organized or simply exhausted.Outside, snow moved steadily past the study windows.Inside, the fire had begun to sink lower, the heat fading from the room by degrees.Darius stood beside the desk with one hand braced against the edge, his injured shoulder held carefully beneath his sweater. He looked too still. Not calm. Not composed.Still in the way, a locked door stood.Elara stayed beside him.Not in front of him.Not blocking the papers.Just beside him.“I hate that they get to do this,” she said. “I hate that Blackwater can put my name on documents and pretend it means ownership. I hate that Kael can twist a rejection into something that happened to him. I hate
The study became a war room by noon.Not officially.No one said it aloud, and Darius would have probably objected to the word if they had. But the room changed shape around the problem anyway. Maps were pulled from drawers. Legal files appeared in stacks on the desk and the low table near the hearth. Mara claimed the armchair closest to the window and surrounded herself with enough notes to suggest she planned to insult every council tradition in writing personally.Elara sat near the corner of the desk with a cup of tea gone cold between her hands.She had tried reading the summons twice.Both attempts ended in the same place.Blackwater Authority.Council supervisionJurisdictional review.The words were clean and orderly on the page. That made them worse. There was no claw mark in the paper. No raised voice. No hand around her wrist. Just formal language arranging itself into a cageDarius stood near the window, phone pressed to his ear, his injured shoulder held too still beneath
The summons arrived the next morning with no drama at all.That was what made Elara dislike it immediately.No alarms. No rushing footsteps. No wolves bursting through doors with urgent voices. Just a black vehicle moving slowly up the snow-cleared drive shortly after breakfast, its tires whispering over packed ice, its windows dark against the white morning.Elara saw it from the library.She had been pretending to read.That had become a concerning habit.The book lay open in her lap, but her attention had wandered somewhere between the lemon tree in the greenhouse and the way Darius had looked across the table the day before, when he admitted he had not wanted to be alone either.Neither did I.Two words.They had followed her into sleep and waited for her when she woke.Now the vehicle rolled to a stop outside the lodge, and the quiet warmth those words had left behind thinned at the edges.A council crest glinted on the door.Elara sat up slowly.Across the room, Mara stopped mid
Elara woke to the sound of snow sliding off the roof.For several seconds, she had no idea where she was.The room was dim, washed in the pale gray light of early morning. The fire had burned low in the hearth, leaving a faint orange glow beneath ash. Somewhere outside, wind moved through the trees with a soft, steady hush.She blinked.Then remembered.Darius’s room.The couch beneath her.The blanket was pulled up to her chin.Her neck ached faintly, but not as badly as it would have if she had fallen asleep in the chair. That, she decided, counted as a victory.Across the room, Darius was still asleep.That held her still more than anything else.She had seen him tired before. Exhausted, even. She had seen him with one hand braced against a table, eyes shadowed from too many hours spent carrying problems other people handed him.But this was different.Asleep, he looked younger.Not harmless. Never that. Even half-buried beneath blankets with one shoulder bandaged, there was still
Nothing happened.That was the first thing Elara told herself.Nothing dramatic. Nothing reckless. Nothing that would deserve Mara’s eyebrows in the morning, though Mara would probably use them anyway.Darius entered his room first and moved toward the chair near the hearth with the careful stiffness of a man trying to pretend his shoulder did not object to every step. Elara followed more slowly, pausing just inside the door.She had been in his room before, only in passing.Once, when Mara had insisted on delivering reports while Darius was halfway through changing his bandage after an old training injury. Another time, when an urgent message had dragged half the household upstairs during a storm. Never like this.Never because he had asked her to stay.The room was larger than hers, but not ostentatious. Dark wood beams crossed the ceiling. A fire had already been lit, casting low gold light over a wide bed, a desk near the window, and shelves filled with books that looked more used
Darius came back from the western patrol just after dusk, and for once, Elara noticed him before he noticed her.That rarely happened.He entered through the side corridor near the mudroom rather than the main hall, speaking quietly with one of the patrol captains as snow melted from the shoulders of his coat. His hair was wind-tousled, his boots wet, his expression composed as it always was when other wolves were watching.Controlled.Functional.Alpha.Elara had been sitting at the long table near the kitchen with Mara, half-listening to a story about a disastrous council dinner from ten years ago while pretending not to sketch the curve of the windows in the margin of an old receipt.She looked up when the door opened.At first, nothing seemed wrong.Darius nodded to the captain. The captain answered. Someone laughed in the kitchen behind her. A kettle hissed on the stove.Then Darius shifted his weight.Barely.A small adjustment, gone almost as soon as it happened.Elara’s pencil
The lodge was quieter than Nightfall House.Not empty.Quiet in the way deep forests were quiet, alive underneath the stillness.Elara followed Darius through long timber hallways lit by low amber sconces while rain battered the windows overlooking the mountainside. The entire structure carried the
The underground garage smelled faintly of rainwater, concrete, and engine heat. A black SUV waited near the secured gate, surrounded by two Nightfall security vehicles already preparing to depart.Thunder rolled distantly overhead.Elara followed Darius toward the vehicle while wolves moved around
By midnight, the entire compound had shifted from tense to operational.The soft amber atmosphere that usually defined Nightfall House had been replaced by something sharper now, brighter lights, faster movement, security wolves speaking in clipped low voices as information streamed continuously ac
The house grew quieter after midnight.Not truly quiet, Nightfall never managed that anymore, but quieter in the way storms sometimes paused before breaking again.Elara sat at the long kitchen island with both hands wrapped around a mug of tea that had gone cold nearly twenty minutes earlier. Acro







