登入I felt my breath choke in my throat as the huge guy holding me up finally dropped me on the cold tiled floor. My knees buckled under me, but I forced myself to sit upright. Looking weak in a den of wolves was basically begging for a death sentence.
The gold-haired guy leaned forward slightly, a smirk tugging at the corner of his lips like he enjoyed watching me struggle. "Where did you come from, rogue?" I swallowed hard. My throat burned, probably raw from earlier screams. "I do not know how I got here," I whispered. The room fell silent, the kind of silence that made my skin itch. They were waiting. Expecting more. Wolves always wanted more. "My pack was killed," I added faintly. "By who?" Lucas asked, leaning closer like a predator sniffing out a lie. "Vampires," I said. The word scraped out of me. "They killed everyone." The big one, Dereck, snorted. "Convenient story." "It is the truth," I said, louder this time. My voice cracked but I held their eyes, even if every instinct told me to curl up and disappear. "What else?" Lucas asked. "That is all." It was all I would ever say. Even if they skinned me alive. Even if they beat me again. Every time they asked during the long, miserable questioning me, it was all I repeated. "They were killed by vampires." I did not add details. I did not explain corpses burned into ashes. I did not mention the fangs at my throat or the village screaming before midnight swallowed us whole. I did not say anything about the deal they forced on me. I did not say I was the only one left. I said nothing. A figure stepped out of the shadows. I had not even sensed him, and that terrified me more than the wolves glaring holes into my skull. He was tall, thin, wearing the long coat only the Academy teachers used. His eyes glinted like matching ink pools as he scribbled things into a notebook with sharp, aggressive movements. He stared at me like I was something dissected on a table. Then he snapped the book shut. The next thing I knew, Dereck yanked me up again and shoved me forward. The teacher turned and began walking without saying a single word. Wolves followed. I stumbled after them, dragged like cargo. We went deeper into the Academy. The halls grew wider. Cleaner. Decorated with banners and crests of high-ranking bloodlines. The air smelled fresher too. Like a place nobles breathed and the rest of us polluted. Before I could blink, I was shoved through a large carved door. The temperature in the room dropped ten degrees. And I understood why. This was no normal office. This was a place of judgment. A room where fates were rewritten. The Student Council Room. Important personnel stood around like statues, and it made me shrink instantly. Council members, elite heirs, the strongest Lycans in the Academy. Their gazes were sharp and heavy, pressing down on my bones. And then I saw him. Aldric. My breath hitched so violently I nearly choked on it. He sat in the center seat, the highest one. Like a throne. His hair, charcoal black and cut in that messy wolf style, fell to his shoulders. His never eyes were sharp as honed steel, glowing faintly even in the bright room. His jawline was carved like the gods were showing off. And his aura. His aura felt like it was slicing my skin open. Sharp. Cold. Dominant. He was handsome. Too handsome. The kind of handsome that hurt to look at. My heart thundered traitorously. Damn it. Why was I reacting to someone who looked like he would crush me for breathing too loudly? The teacher dropped his hand from my collar. "This is the rogue you insisted on saving," he said dryly. Aldric did not blink. He just stared down at me with the most condescending expression I had ever seen. Like I was mud on his boots. Like I did not deserve to be alive. "If you want him alive so badly," the teacher continued, loud enough for everyone, "then you will take accountability for him. Completely. For the rest of his life." I felt the floor tilt. The rest of his life. People in the room murmured. Some were shocked. Others delighted, probably waiting to see how Aldric would react. Aldric did not answer. He just kept staring. Looking down at me like I was supposed to kneel or faint or drop dead. For a second, I swear I could not breathe. His presence was too much. His aura wrapped around my throat and squeezed. Not physically, but in that way powerful wolves could do, a dominance that sank directly into the bones. My gaze met his for one foolish moment. Bad idea. Horrible idea. His eyes pierced straight into me, cold and heavy, scraping at every secret I tried to bury. My chest tightened. My lungs stalled. I broke my gaze away, looking at the ground instantly. My heart hammered so loudly I was sure everyone heard it. Shame exploded inside me. Fear. Something else I refused to name. But that single act of breaking his gaze… seemed to piss Aldric off. His aura spiked, razor sharp. The room seemed to hold its breath. Wolves shifted uneasily. Someone coughed. The teacher raised a brow. Aldric finally spoke. "Very well." His voice was deeper than I expected. Smooth but carrying a command that made my spine straighten involuntarily. "He stays." That was all he said. He stood up. Tall. Intimidating. His coat fell behind him like a dark wave. Without another glance at me, he walked past, and the entire council room moved with him like he was the sun and they were planets forced to orbit. One by one, everyone left. They talked among themselves, laughing, shifting, whispering. Not one spared me a look. Not one cared. I stood there alone. Small. Bruised. Unwanted. And my heart clenched so tightly it felt like it cracked open. Bit by bit. Painfully. Even after everything, even after surviving death, loneliness still found a way to cut deeper than claws. Aldric did not look back at me once. Not once. The door shut behind them, and silence swallowed me whole. …"Aldric would not have taken kindly to a bloodied, smelly pup.” …"You better pray you make a good first impression. The Alpha heir hates weaklings.” He definitely hates me now.We rose from the flower path slowly. The petals released us with a final soft sigh, their glow fading as we stepped onto the ordinary grass beyond. I looked back at the path, at the crimson and pink blooms that had witnessed so much. They were already closing, their work done, their purpose fulfilled. Aldric stood beside me, her small frame trembling slightly. Seraphiel leaned heavily on Elias, his dark eyes still hazy but clearer than they had been in days. Elias supported him without complaint, his torn wings folded tight against his back. I looked at the three of them. My three. The word felt strange in my mind, but not unwelcome. "Where do we go now?" Aldric asked. I touched the jade pendant around my neck. It was warm, pulsing gently. The map in my mind showed a path leading east, through the green forest, toward mountains that glowed with a soft golden light. "East," I said. "There is a place. A sanctuary. The jade says it is safe." Seraphiel coughed, his breath ra
The flowers still glowed softly around us, their petals brushing against our skin like gentle fingers. The warmth from earlier had not fully faded, leaving a languid contentment in my limbs. I lay in the center of the moss, Aldric curled against my chest, Seraphiel's head on my stomach, Elias tucked under my arm. His wings were draped over all of us, a blanket of silver and light.For a long moment, none of us spoke. The silence was comfortable, filled with the soft rustle of petals and the distant sound of wind through the trees.But then I asked a question that had been burning through my chest, it's been one thing after the other after loosening my seal and I needed to know."Why?"Aldric stirred against my chest. "Why what?""Why did you seal me?" My voice was quiet, but it cut through the warmth. "I need to understand. I need to hear it from both of you."Seraphiel's hand found mine. His grip was weak but steady. "Jade...""Tell me."The silence stretched. Aldric sat up slowly, h
The flowers had not finished with us. We barely had time to talk things over before their slow, relentless pulse filled the air once more with thick waves of honeyed perfume, pulling us back from the hazy afterglow into a fresh tide of drunken desire. My body stirred again, heavy with warmth, my cock already twitching back to life against Aldric’s thigh. The sweet intoxication clouded my thoughts, making every touch feel amplified, every breath a shared indulgence in sin. Aldric lay beside me, her strong body glistening with sweat and pollen. Her gold eyes met mine, dark with renewed need. I rolled toward her, capturing her mouth in a deep, unhurried kiss. Our tongues moved lazily, tasting the lingering sweetness of what we had shared. My hand slid down her side, over the curve of her hip, then between her thighs. She was still slick from before, her folds hot and drenched. I groaned into her mouth as my fingers parted her wetness, stroking slowly through the abundant arousal that co
The flowers continued their slow, relentless pulse around us, each bloom releasing another wave of that thick, honeyed perfume. It wrapped around my thoughts like warm syrup, making everything feel distant and immediate all at once. My limbs felt heavy yet light, my skin buzzing with a drunken heat that spread from my chest down through my belly and into my groin. I was aware of every breath, every brush of fabric or petal against me, but my mind floated in a golden haze. Sinful, yes. But so very wanted. Aldric’s hands pressed me back onto the soft moss, her strength tempered by the same dreamy slowness that gripped us all. Her gold eyes were half-lidded, glowing with that wolfish hunger softened by the flowers’ influence. “Jade,” she murmured, her voice low and rough like distant thunder wrapped in velvet. She leaned in, capturing my lips again. This kiss was deeper, unhurried. Her tongue traced mine with deliberate care, tasting of wild honey and the faint metallic edge of the figh
After journeying together for so long, the green forest gave way to something unexpected. A path opened before us, winding between ancient trees whose branches arched overhead like a cathedral ceiling. The ground was carpeted with flowers, thousands of them, their petals shifting through shades of deep crimson and soft pink. They glowed faintly in the dim light, pulsing like a slow heartbeat. I stopped at the edge of the path. Seraphiel's weight was heavy in my arms, his breath warm against my neck. Aldric stood beside me, her hand resting on my arm. Elias limped behind us, his torn wings folded tight against his back. "What is this place?" I asked. Elias stepped forward. His one good eye narrowed. "I do not know. I have never seen flowers like these. They are not native to any territory I know." The flowers swayed, though there was no wind. Their petals released a soft perfume, sweet and intoxicating, that curled around us like silk. "We should go around," Aldric said. Her voice
Running outside the medicine garden, we had crossed the border to the west.. or so I thought. But the Mo did not let their prey escape so easily. They had been waiting for us. They emerged from the shadows between the trees. Dark elves, their black eyes cold, their blades already drawn. Vampires, their red eyes hungry, their fangs bared. Fae, small and deadly, their wings humming with power. They had surrounded us while we sat in the green forest, while we breathed, while we thought we were safe. I stood, pulling Aldric and Seraphiel behind me. The frost in my core stirred, but it was weak. The beast within me was sleeping again, exhausted from the explosion of power at the cliff. I had nothing left. Nothing but my body and my will. "Jade," Aldric whispered. "There are too many." "I know." Seraphiel coughed, blood speckling his lips. He could not run. He could barely stand. The seed in his chest was frozen but still there, a weight that dragged him toward death with eve
The world changed the moment we crossed over.It was a sharp transition, no longer the threatening claws of the darkness of wolves or screaming howls that permeated that academy airs. It was softer than that, more unsettling and eerie. One step I was standing beneath familiar stars, the next the a
The world tilted sideways after the spar. That punch to my face knocked out my brains for a huge second.I knew something was wrong the moment my legs stopped listening to me. The training ring blurred at the edges, the sounds of snarls and shouts dulling into a a string of hum, it almost felt as t
I woke to warmth. For a few slow seconds, I thought I was dreaming. My body felt heavy, cocooned, held in a way that made my breathing even out before I realized why. The scent hit me next. Dark. Familiar. Steel and night and something unmistakably alive. It was Aldric. I stiffened. I was p
Going back to the hostel felt longer than it should have.The corridors were quiet, lights dimming low, my mind in a state of unrest, every step echoing too loudly, every shadow felt heavier than it had any right to be. By the time I reached my room, exhaustion had clung to me like a second skin, y







