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Preface
Zara Fen POV In Silvercrest, survival was determined by rank. Those born strong were protected by the pack. Those who proved useful found their mistakes quietly forgiven. And those who possessed true power watched the rules bend around them without question. For the rest of us, the pack made it certain that we understood exactly where we belonged. My father was an Alpha warrior. He commanded patrols, guarded the borders, and fought rogues with unwavering loyalty to Silvercrest. When the Rogue War erupted along our territory, he answered the call without hesitation. Along the line he never returned. The pack honored him for one night. Torches burned along the courtyard walls while the pack elders spoke solemnly of sacrifice and courage. Warriors raised their glasses in tribute and swore his name would never be forgotten within the history of Silvercrest. By the following morning, the pack had already begun to forget. Whatever protection his title once afforded me vanished with him. I was no longer regarded as the daughter of a respected warrior. I was merely what he had left behind. My birth mother departed before dawn. She did not wake me or take me with her nor did she say farewell. No one tried to stop her or demanded an explanation. Wolves sometimes leave when they sense danger. That was the excuse whispered among the pack, even though no one could say what threat she believed was approaching. Afterward, I was taken in by my father’s mate and her daughter, Elara. The pack praised her for her generosity. They spoke admiringly of her kindness and devotion to family duty. Again and again, I was reminded that I should be grateful for the place she had given me in her home. I soon learned that gratitude in Silvercrest was a debt that never truly ended. From the beginning, I understood that fairness was not a privilege extended to wolves like me. Elara was everything the pack admired. She was striking, confident, and naturally suited to the strength Silvercrest celebrated. I existed quietly beside her. When something went wrong, the blame arrived swiftly at my door. When something went right, my presence was forgotten just as easily. By the time I was old enough to understand the customs of the pack, another word had already begun to follow me wherever I went. Curse. I had no reflection. Whenever I stood before a mirror, nothing appeared. Not my face. Not my eyes. Not even the faint outline of a shadow where I should have been. Polished glass reflected the empty room behind me. The same thing goes for water, they remain smooth and undisturbed. Silver surfaces returned nothing but absence also. The elders insisted it was rare but harmless. The priests watched me with a different expression but said nothing. My stepmother quietly removed mirrors from the house and warned visitors never to mention the matter aloud. Fear settled into the walls of that home long before anyone explained the reason for it. Elara, however, had learned to smile whenever it happened. The first time a priest truly noticed, he pulled my stepmother aside and spoke in a hushed voice. I was not meant to hear him, but I did. “Some wolves are not recognized by the moon,” he murmured. “Zara case is something we have never seen before and it's raising concern among the pack.” After that day, the watchful glances became more frequent with looks of anticipation. As though everyone expected something about me to eventually prove dangerous. Silvercrest hosted more mating ceremonies than any other pack in the region. Wolves traveled from distant territories in the hope that the Moon Goddess would finally reveal their fated partner. The pack called it generosity. They claimed Silvercrest offered opportunities where others would not. For me, it felt like standing before a silent crowd waiting to witness a failure. Three months ago, I stood beneath the moon for the first time. The priests chanted their ancient rites while the courtyard filled with anticipation. Around me, bonds ignited one after another. Wolves gasped as the invisible pull of fate snapped into place. Hands reached across the crowd the moment mates recognized one another. I felt nothing. The moonlight rested briefly upon my skin. Then it passed me by. The silence that followed was heavier than ridicule would have been. No one spoke the word curse aloud, yet I could feel it moving through the crowd like a quiet rumor carried in the wind. Later that night, the Council summoned my stepmother for a private discussion. “She will be granted one final ceremony,” they decided. “If fate does not choose her again, she will be declared unfit for union.” Unfit. The word carried consequences that required no explanation. Wolves declared unfit rarely remained in Silvercrest. They were not protected or matched. Their names gradually disappeared from pack memory until it seemed as though they had never belonged at all. Tonight was my final chance. Silvercrest was preparing for a grand ceremony. High ranking Alphas were arriving from distant territories. Alliances would be strengthened and the pack wished to present perfection to the many outsiders who would be watching. Elara would be honored during the ceremony. Before we left the house, my stepmother stopped me at the door. “Do not embarrass us tonight, she said coldly. If nothing happens for you again, the Council will act immediately.” Elara stood beside her, radiant and composed, already certain of the future awaiting her. At that moment, the truth burned down my throat like vinegar. This ceremony was never meant to save me, it was meant to decide my fate. When I stepped into the cold night air, the moon rising slowly above Silvercrest’s towering walls, a single thought echoed through my mind. By the end of the ceremony, Silvercrest would either claim me or cast me aside. There would be no third outcome.Chapter Forty-ThreeAlpha Lir POVAcross the marble floor, Silas’s smirk doesn't falter, but the golden glow of his eyes narrows into sharp, predatory slits. He doesn't let go of Zara’s hand. If anything, his fingers tighten around hers, pulling her slightly back behind the line of his shoulder."The Sovereign Blood Law was written before your grandfathers crawled out of the tundra, Lir," Silas says, his voice a cool, dismissive drawl. "It’s a dusty piece of parchment meant for a time when wolves still fought with stone. It doesn't erase a multi-million-currency default.""It does when the default is explicitly tied to the territory's royal lineage," I say, stepping onto the first riser of the stage.The fourteen High Guard enforcers instantly look at me, their visors turning in unison. I don't look back at them. I keep my focus entirely on Zara. She is staring at me, her lower lip parted, the gold-and-silver light of the Shattered Mirror washing over her face. She looks terrified, fu
Chapter Forty-TwoAlpha Silas POV"What is the meaning of this, Alpha Silas?" the elder demands, his gavel trembling in his hand. "This is a court of trade evaluation, not a low-town auction. You cannot halt a Council security execution with a stack of ledger sheets.""I can when those ledger sheets contain the records to your mortgages," I say, stepping fully into the spotlight, shielding Zara from the glare of the gallery. I drop my hands into my pockets, my posture loose, arrogant, and completely unbothered by the fourteen weapons pointed at my chest.I tilt my head back, looking past the stage toward the VIP box where Lady Victoria is still clinging to the velvet railing like a drowning woman."For the last two years," I continue, my voice smooth, carrying effortlessly to the highest rows of the gallery, "the Silvercrest pack has quietly defaulted on winter grain bonds. Your high-altitude farms have been failing since the great freeze of '24. To hide the deficit from the High Coun
Chapter Forty-OneZara Fen POVThe doors to the Oakhaven Exhibition Hall split the world in two.A blinding wall of white light and the deafening, collective roar of the Northern aristocracy hits me like a physical wave. The scent of heavy perfumes, expensive furs, and the suffocating pressure of a hundred high-ranking Alpha auras fills the massive, vaulted pavilion. Every single seat in the velvet gallery is full. The High Council sits on their elevated dais, looking down like judges awaiting an execution.But I am not the one who is going to die today."Keep your chin up, sweetheart," Silas murmurs from my left. He walks half a step behind me, his shoulder brushing mine, a towering, "Let them see every single millimeter of the gold they couldn't afford."I don't look at him. I keep my eyes locked straight ahead, my heels clicking a slow, rhythmic cadence against the polished white marble path.The gold silk of my gown pools and ripples around my ankles like liquid amber, with the he
Chapter FortySilas POVThe heavy glass doors of the gallery swing shut behind Zara, cutting off the bitter howl of the courtyard wind. I step into the warmth of the room, my suit jacket unbuttoned, my alpha aura still coiled tight from three hours of listening to Northern lawyers argue over trade margins.Then, I smell him.The sharp, unmistakable scent of crushed pine and silver frost is practically dripping off the walls. It coats the air, heavy and desperate, suffocating the clean scent of the gallery. But more importantly, it’s clinging to her.Zara stands in the center of the room, her cheeks flushed a deep, violent crimson from the cold. Her breathing is jagged, her chest rising and falling beneath the golden silk armor of her gown. She looks like she just fought her way out of a collapse.My inner wolf slams against my ribs, a savage, territorial roar tearing through my veins. The impulse to hunt down the scent, to find Lir in the dark and tear his throat out until his blood s
Chapter Thirty-NineZara Fen POVThe stone courtyard of the Oakhaven gallery is freezing, but the biting mountain air feels like a mercy against my skin. I lean heavily against the frost-laced stone balustrade, my knuckles white as I stare out into the dark tundra beyond the hotel walls. Every breath I take leaves my lips in a frantic, white plume that immediately vanishes into the midnight sky.The council chambers are locked down until morning while the lawyers pore over Lir's decree, but the suffocating weight of that room followed me out here.Lir blocked the Joyce contract. He protected my trunk. He stood in front of the most powerful wolves in the North and gambled his own throne just to buy forty-eight hours.Why?My mind is a chaotic web of silver thread and old blood. Five years ago, he threw me away to save my life. That’s what he said in the alcove. He thought he was playing the long game, hiding me in plain sight by pretending I was nothing to him. But a savior doesn't lea
Chapter Thirty-EightAlpha Lir POVI sit at the high mahogany table, the High Alpha's signed decree heavy in my breast pocket, but the paper feels like a lead weight pressing into my ribs. The grand council chamber is a blur of noise. Around me, the elders are droning on about trade routes, asset redistribution, and the immediate necessity of finalizing the Joyce treasury contract.I don't hear a single word of it.All I can hear is the frantic, ragged rhythm of Zara’s breathing from ten minutes ago. All I can feel is the phantom sting of her silver needle pressing into the soft flesh beneath my jaw.I raise my thumb, tracing the small, dried speck of blood on my neck. She didn't just threaten me. She looked me dead in the eye, clad in the gold of the South, and told me the woman who loved me was dead.Lies.My wolf claws violently at the inside of my chest, the restless, snarling beast that wants to tear this entire council table in half. He knows what I know. When I trapped her agai
Chapter Thirty-ThreeAlpha Lir POVThe heavy oak door of the penthouse clicks shut, sealing Zara safely inside the opulent suite. For a long moment, I stand in the quiet, carpeted corridor, my forehead pressed against the polished wood. My heart is a jagged rhythm against my ribs.I can still smell
Chapter Thirty-TwoAlpha Lir POVThe silver tip of the shearing blade gleams in the firelight, hovering a mere three inches from my heart.Five years ago, she wouldn't have dared to raise her eyes to mine, let alone point a weapon at my chest. But the woman standing before me now isn't the fragile,
Chapter Thirty-One Zara Fen POV The sickening click of the electronic lock resetting echoes through the silent penthouse like a gunshot. Elara stands in the entryway, shedding her dark silk cloak with a slow, calculated grace that makes my stomach turn. Beneath it, she wears a pristine, silver-t
Chapter Thirty Alpha Lir POV The silk tie feels like a noose around my throat. I tear it off, throwing it onto the mahogany desk of my private study, but the suffocating pressure in my chest doesn't ease. I don't turn on the lights. The only illumination in the room is the cold, silver glow of t







