เข้าสู่ระบบThey sent me into the snow to die a sickly omega with a heat-soaked scent and poison on my skin. I was nothing to my pack but a sacrifice to the monster they feared most. The rogue alpha should have killed me. Instead, he inhaled my scent and went still. “Mine,” he growled and I felt the bond slam into place like a cage I never asked for. I was his fated mate, bound to the most dangerous wolf alive. And my pack’s executioners were already closing in. But when my scent later calls to a second alpha—and a third—the world we know begins to burn. I’m no longer the weak omega they threw away. I’m the nexus of a multi-mate bond that could shatter the pack order forever. The question is: will my mates destroy each other for me… or will we forge a new world from the blood of the old?
ดูเพิ่มเติมSilas’s boot drove into my stomach, and I folded around the pain without a sound. Ten years in this pack had taught me one thing: noise makes it worse.
I hit the training yard dirt on my side, and a puff of dust coated my tongue. Silas stood over me with his sandy hair cropped close to his skull, his small eyes bright with the kind of joy only cruelty could feed. “Get up, Mercer.” He nudged my ribs with his toe. “Or don’t. You’re better down there. Like the worm you are.” Two of his friends laughed behind him. I didn’t bother with their names anymore, they came and went, always circling Silas like moons around a rotting planet. I pushed onto my hands and knees. My stomach screamed where his boot had landed, and my claws punched out without permission, thin black points digging into the packed earth. My eyes burned, and I knew they’d gone wolf-gold. That was all I could manage. No fur. No shift. Just pieces of a monster that never fully came. Silas crouched and grabbed a fistful of my ash-brown hair, yanking my head back until my throat pulled tight. “Show me your wolf, omega. Oh wait, you don’t have one.” “Leave him.” The voice came from the edge of the yard, steady and clean. Archer. I didn’t turn, but I knew that tone like I knew the smell of the medic hut, herbal and sharp. Silas’s grip tightened for a second. Then he shoved my face into the dirt and stood. “Your healer boyfriend’s here, Mercer. We’re done anyway.” Their footsteps faded across the packed earth. I stayed on my knees until the shaking stopped, then I spat blood and dirt and pushed myself upright. --- The medic hut smelled like rosemary and alcohol. Archer sat me on the edge of a narrow cot and tilted my chin up with two warm fingers. His hazel eyes moved over the cut on my lip, the bruise spreading along my jaw, and something in his expression tightened. “This is the third time in two weeks,” he said quietly. No accusation. Just a fact he hated. “I heal fast,” I said. “You don’t heal fast. You just stop noticing the pain.” He pressed a cloth soaked in something cold to my cheek, and I flinched before I could stop myself. His other hand settled on my shoulder, gentle but firm. “Hold still.” I held still. Archer’s hands were always clean, scrubbed pink even though he spent all day in blood and bandages. He moved the cloth down to my split lip, and his thumb brushed my chin, a touch that lasted a second too long. My chest pulled tight. “You shouldn’t have to live like this,” he said, so low I almost missed it. “And where should I live, Archer? The rogue lands?” I let out a dry sound, not quite a laugh. “At least here I get a cot.” Archer’s jaw tensed. He took the cloth away and turned to his supply shelves, rolling bandages with quick, angry movements. “You could fight back. You have claws. You have—” “Claws and eyes,” I cut in. “That’s not a wolf. That’s a bad joke.” He turned back, holding a roll of linen. His voice dropped. “That’s not what I see.” I didn’t know what to say to that, so I looked down at my hands. The claws had retracted, leaving pale crescents at the tips of my fingers. The amber in my eyes had faded too, back to their dull brown. The door banged open. A beta guard filled the frame, his uniform dusty from a fast run. “Mercer. Alpha Draven wants you in the council hall. Now.” Archer stepped forward, placing himself between me and the guard. “He’s injured. Can’t it wait?” “No.” The guard didn’t even glance at Archer. His eyes stayed on me. “Move.” I stood up, and Archer shoved the linen roll into my hand as I passed. “Take this. And Caelum,” his voice cracked on my name, his mouth opening and closing around words that wouldn’t come, “just come back.” I nodded, and I walked out into the early dusk without looking behind me. --- The council hall was colder than the air outside. Stone walls and high windows let in the last grey light of the day, and the cold climbed up through the soles of my worn boots as I stood in the center of the room. Kellan Draven sat in the high-backed chair at the head of the table. Silver-blond hair tied at his nape, glacial blue eyes that fixed on me like I was a problem he was trying to solve. To his left sat Elder Voss, gaunt and silent, pale eyes gleaming with something I couldn’t name. Two other council wolves flanked the table. No one offered me a seat. “You’ve heard about the rogue attacks,” Kellan said. Not a question. I swallowed. “Some. Rumors.” “Five enforcers dead in fourteen days. The rogue’s name is Bastian Crowne. He moves alone, hits our border patrols, and disappears before we can organize a pursuit.” Kellan’s voice was a blade wrapped in silk, precise and calm and utterly without warmth. “Our trackers can’t find his den. He’s gathering other outcasts, and if we don’t stop him, we’re looking at a coordinated assault before the first snow.” I waited. My stomach was a cold knot, but I kept my face blank. Being called here meant I was part of something, and in Silver Hollow, nothing was always safer than something. “Why am I here?” I asked. Kellan leaned back in his chair. “We have a special assignment. One that requires an omega’s biology.” My skin went tight across my shoulders. “What kind of assignment?” “You’ll report to the medic tent at dawn,” he said, like I hadn’t spoken at all. “You’ll be prepared for the mission there.” “Prepared how?” The knot in my stomach pulled harder, cold and sharp. “What mission?” Kellan’s eyes didn’t blink. “You’ll be told when you need to know.” I felt the words like a door slamming shut. The council members watched me, and Voss’s thin mouth curved into something that wasn’t a smile. “That’s all,” Kellan said. “You can go.” I didn’t move for a long moment. The cold from the stone had seeped into my bones, and my legs felt heavy as I turned and walked out. The guard closed the heavy door behind me with a sound like a lock clicking into place. --- My dorm room was a narrow box with a cot, a washstand, and a single window that looked out onto the dark yard. I stood in the doorway for a long time, letting the silence settle, trying to unclench the muscles in my back. Then I saw it. On my pillow, a single white wolf hair. Too long. Too pale. It glowed faintly, the way moonlight glows through thin clouds. I crossed the room on legs that didn’t feel like mine. My hand reached out before my brain could catch up, and my fingers closed around the hair. Warmth flooded up my arm and into my chest, spreading like honey poured slow. The hair dissolved into light between my fingers, and in that light I felt something else, a pressure behind my ribs that wasn’t pain. A word came. Not through my ears. Through my blood. Soon.The scout was barely alive. His blood froze to the snow as he gasped, "They're here. The Frostmarch is here."Maren caught him before he hit the ground. Her scarred face was tight, and her hands were already pressing a cloth to the wound in his side. The scout was young, one of Sera's new recruits, and his eyes were wild with pain and terror."Fifty wolves," the scout choked out. "Northern edge of the territory. They didn't attack. They just stood there. Watching. Pale wolves. Pale eyes. No sound. No movement. Just watching."Kellan was already moving. "Sera, deploy the enforcers to the northern border. Defensive positions only. No one engages without my order. Maren, get the Gray Reach fighters into position. I want them flanking the tree line."Sera nodded once and was gone, her auburn braid swinging. Maren helped the scout toward the medic tent, and Archer fell into step beside them, his medical bag already open.Bastian stood at the window of the war room, staring north. His gold
Wren's eyes went white. Her voice dropped to a register that wasn't her own. "I see snow. Endless snow. And a wolf made of ice."Elara's quarters were small and warm, cluttered with herbs and old books and the soft glow of too many candles. Wren sat on a stool in the center of the room with her hands resting on her round belly. Maelis stood behind her, one ancient hand on the girl's shoulder. Elara knelt in front of her, and her dark eyes were sharp with attention.I stood near the door with my alphas behind me. Bastian's hand was on my hip. Kellan was still as stone. Archer's warmth pressed against my other side. None of us spoke. The vision had started without warning, and Wren's voice was not her own."They're crossing the mountains," Wren said, and the words came out flat and hollow. "Hundreds. Pale as ghosts. Their alpha leads them. His wolf is made of ice. No fur. No flesh. Just ice and shadow." Her white eyes flickered. "The battlefield is red. So much blood. The white wolf is
The rescued omegas sat in the front row. Wren, the girl who fought beside Bastian, stared at Corvus with eyes that held seventeen years of pain.The council hall was silent. Corvus stood in the center of the room with his gnarled hands folded and his ancient head bowed. He didn't look at the omegas he had imprisoned. He didn't look at Wren, whose belly was round with a pup conceived in a cage. He didn't look at me."The council has voted," Kellan said, and his voice was cold formality. "The majority favors execution for crimes against the pack, including unlawful imprisonment, forced bonding, and the systematic abuse of omegas over three decades."Maren stepped forward with a blade in her hand. Her scarred face was grim. "Do you have anything to say before sentence is carried out?"Corvus raised his head. His gold eyes, the same shade as mine, were empty. "No. I did what I did. I would do it again, if I thought it would save us from the Frostmarch. I was wrong. It doesn't matter.""It
"The pack is called the Frostmarch," Corvus said. "And they've killed more Moon-Wolves than every other pack combined."The war room was packed. Maren and Sera stood at the head of the table. Maelis sat with her ancient hands folded. Elara was beside her, and Halden Crowe stood at her shoulder. Orin guarded the door. Rook leaned against the wall with his arms crossed. Even Wren was there, her belly round and her gold eyes fierce.Corvus sat at the far end of the table with his wrists unbound. Not because he was trusted. Because he was dying, and everyone in the room knew it. His alpha presence flickered like a candle in a draft."The Frostmarch is older than any pack in the known territories," Corvus said, and his grinding-stone voice was steady despite his failing body. "They live beyond the northern mountains, in a fortress carved into a glacier. Isolationist for centuries. No trade. No negotiation. No prisoners. When they identify a Moon-Wolf, they exterminate the omega and every w
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