LOGINThe corridor outside the Moon Hall was almost empty when I finally forced myself to leave. My shoes clicked softly against the marble floor; every step echoed like a reminder that I was walking alone now.
The torches burned low along the walls, throwing long stripes of gold and shadow across the floor. I was halfway to the guest wing when a low voice came from the dark corner near the stairwell.
“You shouldn’t cry over scum like him, bunny.”
I stopped.
The word bunny caught me first…soft, teasing, completely unfamiliar. I turned slowly.
He leaned against the stone wall like he belonged there, one boot crossed over the other, the firelight catching on the edge of a black coat. I had never seen him before.
He didn’t wear any crest or color that marked him as part of our pack.
His face was half hidden by shadow, but what I could see made my breath catch. Sharp jaw, dark hair falling carelessly over his forehead, eyes the color of storm clouds…steady, unreadable, dangerous in a quiet way.
I straightened, brushing my hands down the front of my ruined dress. “I’m not crying,” I said.
He smiled a little, still leaning against the wall. “Really? Could’ve fooled me.”
“I don’t even know you,” I muttered. “You shouldn’t be here.”
He shrugged. “Maybe I shouldn’t. But you looked like you needed someone to say it.”
“Say what?”
“That he’s an arse.” His mouth curved into a slow grin. “You're pretty Alpha. The one who tossed you aside like a broken toy.”
The words stung because they were true. I folded my arms over my chest. “You shouldn’t talk about him that way.”
He raised a brow. “Still defending him, bunny?”
“Don’t call me that.”
“Why not? It suits you.”
Something about the lazy warmth in his voice made my pulse jump. “You don’t even know my name.”
He pushed off the wall, walking toward me with easy, unhurried steps. I took a small step back before I realized I was doing it.
He stopped a few feet away, enough that I could see his face clearly now. His features were sharp but not cruel, the kind of handsome that felt a little dangerous…like fire that didn’t know it could burn.
“Then tell me,” he said quietly. “What’s your name, bunny?”
“Sylvara.”
He said it once, testing the sound. “Pretty. But I think I’ll keep bunny.”
I should have been angry. Instead, I found myself almost smiling. “You really don’t listen, do you?”
“Not when I’m right.”
I shook my head and looked away, toward the open archway that led to the courtyard. “Why are you even talking to me?”
“Because you look like the world just ended. And you need a companion”
A laugh escaped me, small and bitter. “It did.”
He didn’t say anything. Just waited.
Maybe it was the way he stood…silent, patient, or maybe I was too tired to keep the words inside anymore. “He was supposed to be my mate,” I whispered. “We grew up together. Since we were six. He was the only one who ever talked to me. The one who truly knew me. My first love.”
The man’s expression softened a little. “And now?”
“Now he’s marrying someone else tomorrow evening.” My voice cracked on the last word. “A Frostmoon princess. He said he had no choice. That it was for the good of the pack.”
“Ah.” He tilted his head. “Politics. The oldest curse of our kind.”
“I would have followed him anywhere,” I said. “Even if I was the unshifted wolf every mocked. Even if the others laughed. I thought love mattered.”
He studied me quietly for a long moment. “It does. He just doesn’t know what the word means.”
Something inside me loosened at that, a thread pulling free. I hadn’t realized how much I needed someone…anyone….to say it wasn’t my fault.
“Thank you,” I said softly feeling a bit light.”
“Do you have a name?” I asked.
He smiled, slow and unreadable. “Names make things complicated. Let’s keep it simple.”
I frowned. “You’re strange.”
“I’ve been called worse. But strange..not really”
For a few heartbeats, neither of us spoke. The wind slipped through the open arch, cool against my face.
“I wish I could leave this place,” I said suddenly. “The pack, the whispers, everything. Just… go somewhere no one knows me.”
“Then why don’t you?”
“Because I have nowhere to go.”
He studied me with those dark, steady eyes. “Everyone has somewhere. They just haven’t found it yet.”
I laughed softly. “You sound like you’ve done a lot of running.”
“Maybe.” He looked away, as if something far away had caught his attention. “Maybe I just know what it’s like to be unwanted.”
That hit too close. I wanted to ask more, but he stepped back, the shadows wrapping around him again.
“Don’t waste your tears on men who don’t see you, bunny,” he said quietly. “Save them for something worth breaking.”
Before I could ask his name again, he turned and disappeared down the corridor.
I stood there for a long time, the echo of his voice following me like a heartbeat. I didn’t even realize I was smiling a little through the ache.
The corridor felt emptier after he left.
For a moment, I just stood there, staring at the place where he’d been. The air still held a trace of him… something dark and clean, like smoke and pine. My heart beat faster than it should have.
I told myself it was just from the shock of everything. From the humiliation. From losing everything I thought I had. But deep down, I knew it wasn’t only that.
No one had ever spoken to me like that before, honest, kind. It didn’t make sense, but somehow, that stranger had made the weight on my chest feel lighter, even if just for a few moments.
“Bunny,” I whispered to myself, shaking my head. “What kind of name is that?”
Still, it made me smile a little.
I turned and started walking again, my footsteps soft against the stone floor. The torches hissed in their brackets, throwing trembling light across the walls. Every echo reminded me how alone I was.
By the time I reached my room, most of the hallways were empty. I pushed the door open and slipped inside. The scent of lavender filled the space…one of the maids must have lit the candles earlier, thinking I’d be coming back with Aedric.
That thought made my throat tighten again. I looked around the room, at the white flowers by the window, the folded robe at the end of the bed, the silver hairpins arranged neatly on the dresser. All of it had been prepared for a mated pair.
Now it just looked like a stage for a play that had ended before the first act.
I sat down on the edge of the bed, my hands resting in my lap. For a long time, I just stared at them. The marks where the ceremonial ribbon had been tied were still faintly red on my skin.
I rubbed them absently, wishing the memory could fade as easily.
Outside, I could hear laughter…soft, distant, coming from the main courtyard. Wolves are celebrating the new alliance. Maybe even Aedric himself, smiling beside her. The thought burned worse than anything.
I wanted to scream.
I wanted to cry.
But mostly, I wanted to forget.
Instead, I stood up and walked to the small mirror by the wall. My reflection stared back…pale, tired, eyes swollen from the tears I refused to let fall. The girl looking back at me didn’t look like an omega ready for a bond ceremony. She looked like a ghost wearing someone else’s happiness.
“Tomorrow, I’ll leave,” I said quietly to my reflection. “I’ll find somewhere new. Somewhere I don’t have to see them.”
The words sounded brave, but my chest ached when I said them. I didn’t know where I would go. The world beyond the pack lands was cold, and for someone unshifted, it was dangerous.
Still, the thought of staying here was worse.
I blew out the candles one by one until the room was dim. Only the moonlight through the window stayed, soft and silver on the floor.
When I finally crawled into bed, the sheets were cold against my skin. My body felt heavy, my mind refusing to quiet.
I kept replaying the ceremony in my head…the moment Aedric looked at me and said I cannot.
The look in his eyes hadn’t even been guilt. It was… a pity.
That hurt more than anything.
SYLAVRA POVThree days later, we stood at the heart of the spreading void.The scar in reality had grown to the size of a city, and it was still expanding. In twelve hours, it would reach the last refugees from Stormfang.In twenty-four hours, it would reach the border towns. In seventy-two hours, it would consume the central continent and begin spreading toward the other kingdoms.Unless someone stopped it."There has to be another way," I said for the hundredth time.But I was already walking toward the scar. Already moving closer to the thing that sang in my blood. The void recognized me. It wanted me. And I was finally ready to give it what it wanted.Kaelen followed, his hand gripping mine so hard my bones ached."I should do it," he said. "Not you. Me. The curse—""Won't work on the void," I finished. "The curse is part of this world. The void is before and beyond it. It would consume you and keep spreading."The edge of the scar was visible now. A boundary where reality just...
SYLVARA POVWe weren't fast enough.The castle was falling apart around us, stone and magic crumbling like ancient parchment exposed to flame.Corridors that had stood for centuries collapsed into rubble. Walls that had been reinforced with blood magic began to unmake themselves. The void was everywhere, reaching through cracks in reality, trying to pull us back into its consuming emptiness.I could feel it through the bond with Kaelen. It wanted us both. Wanted to study us. Wanted to understand how a Lycan and a hybrid vampire could create a bond that didn't break in the void's presence. Wanted to know what made us different."Keep running!" Kaelen shouted, pulling me forward through a collapsing archway.But I slowed.Because I heard something. My father's voice, screaming.Not in pain. In rage. In a fury that had burned for ten thousand years, finally finding its release. The void had consumed him. And he was fighting it with everything he had, with centuries of magic and power and
KAELEN POVMalachai's death hit me harder than I expected.Not because I loved him. Not because I grieved for the man who'd raised me and then thrown me away. But because it meant the void could kill. Could reach into the essence of a being and tear them apart. Could unmake someone so completely that not even a body remained just an empty shell falling from a height, consciousness erased before it even hit the ground.I screamed. Aedric or whatever he was now just killed our father.The sound came from somewhere deeper than my chest, deeper than my bones. It came from the very curse that lived inside me, the thing that had been waiting for a real enemy all along. It came from the part of me that was still human enough to understand loss, even the loss of someone who'd deserved to die.The creature wearing Aedric's face was surprised I could see it in the way its expression faltered. It had expected grief. Or rage. Or despair. It hadn't expected me to transform my anguish into pure, we
SYLVARA POVKaelen changed.Not into a wolf. Into something beyond that. Something that existed in the space between human and beast, between light and dark, between creation and void.His body expanded, muscles reforming under skin that glowed with internal fire. The curse marks spread across his entire body like living tattoos, and his eyes… his eyes became pools of infinite darkness with stars burning inside them.When he moved, the very air bent around him.Malachai barely had time to raise his blade before Kaelen's transformed hand crushed it like it was made of paper. The sword shattered, fragments scattering across the floor like broken dreams.My father… because I could finally admit that Malvoryn was my father, that I was his daughter, that I carried his blood even though I wanted to reject everything about it… appeared in the doorway with his entourage of ancient vampires … they had gotten here faster than I expected. His expression was unreadable, assessing. He didn't move
KAELEN POVThe blade stopped inches from my chest.Not because Malachai hesitated. But because Sylvara had intercepted it with her bare hands, and the force of her power meeting his was enough to send both of them flying backward across the throne room. The shockwave from their collision was so powerful that it shattered windows throughout the palace and sent cracks spider-webbing across the marble floor.She crashed into a pillar, and every nerve in my body screamed to go to her. She must have ran away through to get here so fast.But I couldn't move.The curse was burning me from the inside out, consuming my cells from within. Malachai had done something some old magic, something from before my time, something he'd been holding in reserve for exactly this moment and it was eating away at my ability to shift back into human form.My bones felt like they were melting. My muscles were tearing and reforming over and over again, caught in a cycle of destruction that was slowly consuming
SYLVARA POVKaelen was fighting his father.I could feel it through the bond the clash of wills, the surge of power, the moment when something fundamental shifted inside him. The curse was rising like a tide, filling him, consuming him.But he wasn't thinking about saving me anymore. He was thinking about survival of his pack. About proving that he was more than what Malachai had tried to make him. About becoming a weapon that could never be wielded again. And it was tearing him apart from the inside out.The containment chamber walls began to crack around me, hairline fractures spreading across the black stone like spiderwebs. With each crack came a seeping of purple light from beneath the surface, as if the very foundation of the vampire kingdom was rotting from within. The runes that had been pulsing with crimson light began to flicker erratically, unable to maintain their pattern.The magic was becoming unstable, corrupted by the presence of something that didn't belong in this wo
Sylvara POVI could feel Kaelen’s presence behind me like a wall, solid and unyielding. Every nerve in my body was still thrumming from the forest, from the shift, from the raw power that had surged through me. And now, with the elders’ whispers fading into tense silence, I realized the magnitude
Sylvara POVThe silence pressed down on me so hard it felt heavier than any blow I’d taken.I stood there, chest heaving, hands shaking, my skin still buzzing from the shift. The air smelled of fear, sweat, and something older… something that clung to me like smoke. I looked down at my hands, half
Sylvara POV I didn’t sleep much that night.Every time I drifted off, my body jerked awake again, nerves buzzing under my skin. My bruises ached when I tried to shift, and my mind wouldn’t stay quiet. The fight replayed over and over. The moment I almost gave up. The strange heat that had risen in
I woke up slowly, my body heavy, my mind foggy.The bed beside me was empty.For a moment, I just lay there, staring at the ceiling, listening to the quiet of my chambers. The sheets were still warm, scented with him, and that alone made my chest tighten. Kaelen was gone. No warning. No goodbye. Ju







