LOGINLyra’s POV
The frost burned down my throat like shattered ice. Soren’s hand stayed pressed over my mouth, forcing every drop of the Mercy Frost into me while my memories cracked and splintered.
“You were nothing but a beautiful lie,” he whispered. His thumb brushed my lower lip with heartbreaking tenderness—the same touch that once traced my skin in the dark and made me feel safe. “A hollow shell, just like this.”
I thrashed against the ropes, but the bindings only cut deeper. Blood trickled down my wrists. Soren didn’t flinch. He simply watched me swallow the poison with exhausted eyes.
“No matter how you plead,” he said softly, voice dropping to that low, melodic tone that used to pull me apart with love and heat, “you’re going to forget every betrayal you made us swallow.”
Tears blurred everything. I looked at them one last time, Caspian standing like a statue of my ruin, Julian watching with cold detachment, and Soren, the boy who once called me his Little Star, forcing the last drops past my lips.
Caspian’s voice rang out, flat and final.
“We, the High Lords of Sterling, sever the bond.”
Three years of love. Three years of whispered promises, shared laughter, and warm nights… burned away in one sentence.
Julian tightened the ropes one final time. “You were never really one of us,” he murmured. “We just forgot for a while.”
Soren pulled his hand away. Ice crystals clung to his palm, mixed with my tears. He stared at them for a moment, then turned his back. They all did. The heavy doors slammed shut behind them, leaving me alone in the silent hall as the frost began to steal my memories.
Three days later, the wilds of the Reach had tried to finish what they started.
Every step sent fresh fire through my cracked ribs and bruised body. The strap marks from the High Hall still burned like brands across my skin.
Outcast.
The word echoed with every painful heartbeat. My name had been stripped from every record. My belongings burned. Everything I had loved… erased.
I stumbled and fell hard onto the frozen ground. Pain flared through my body, but it was nothing compared to the ache in my chest. How had it come to this? How had the men I loved—the ones who once held me like I was their entire world—thrown me away so easily?
A soft, melodic laugh cut through the trees.
I lifted my head.
Genevieve stepped out from the shadows of the ancient pines, flawless in silk and gold, looking like she had come for a pleasant stroll. A group of scarred mercenaries flanked her, eyes hungry.
“Oh, Little Star,” she purred, using the nickname Soren had once whispered to me like a prayer. “You look absolutely tragic.”
The name twisted like a knife in my heart.
“Why?” I rasped, my voice raw. “You already won. I’m gone. Why come after me?”
Genevieve crouched gracefully, her jasmine perfume clashing with the smell of blood and pine. She traced a cut on my cheek with one perfect nail.
“Because loose ends are dangerous,” she said sweetly. “And I want to watch you understand just how completely I’ve taken everything from you.”
I tried to pull away, but my body wouldn’t obey. “They’ll see the truth eventually… Caspian, Julian, Soren—they’ll realize—”
She laughed, bright and cruel. “They don’t want the truth, Lyra. They want the version of you I gave them—the monster who betrayed their love. It’s easier to hate you than admit they were wrong. Easier than admitting their precious Little Star broke their hearts.”
One of the mercenaries kicked me hard in the stomach. I doubled over, gasping. More blows rained down, boots slamming into my ribs, my back, my thighs. I curled into myself, trying to protect what little was left, but the pain blurred everything into noise and fire.
Through it all, Genevieve watched calmly.
“You really thought you were special,” she continued. “An orphan girl who stole the hearts of the High Lords. You had their protection. Their name. Their love.”
Her voice sharpened with real anger. “Everything that should have been mine.”
She leaned closer. “I simply rewrote the story. And they thanked me for it. Caspian held me while I cried about your cruelty. Julian comforted me. Soren called me brave.”
The words cut deeper than the beating.
I thought of Caspian’s rare, warm smiles reserved only for me. Julian reading to me late into the night, his voice soft and intimate. Soren spinning me in the garden at midnight, laughing as he kissed me breathless. All of it gone. All of it poisoned.
“Elara and Silas…” I whispered.
Genevieve smiled. “Everyone has a price. Your dear shadows were no different. They don’t miss you, Lyra. Right now they’re probably celebrating their new peace. Without you.”
The last piece of hope inside me shattered.
Genevieve stood and brushed dirt from her skirt. “Time for the final act.”
The mercenaries dragged me toward the Screaming Cliffs. The roar of the Serpent’s Tail river rose up from far below—a thousand-foot drop into churning, icy death.
I fought weakly, but they pinned me down. Genevieve looked down at me with cold satisfaction.
“Goodbye, Little Star.”
She nudged me over the edge with her slipper.
The world spun. Wind howled past as I fell, the jagged rocks below rushing up to meet me. In those final seconds, no random memories flashed.
Only the ones that mattered, the ones that still burned.
Caspian’s strong arms around me the night he first confessed he loved me, his voice rough with emotion.
Julian’s gentle fingers turning pages while he read me poetry, pausing to kiss my temple.
Soren’s warm laugh as he pulled me close under the stars, promising forever with his whole heart.
All of it real. All of it stolen and twisted by lies.
Genevieve’s smiling face at the cliff’s edge.
The men I loved forcing frost down my throat and calling it mercy, the family who sold me out anx the freezing river surged up to swallow me, I screamed with every broken piece of my soul:
“Great Mother! Witness what they did to me! Give me the strength to return!”
The water crashed over me. The cold stole my breath, my pain, and finally my consciousness.
Everything went black.
Lyra's POVThe door clicked shut behind Soren, and I sat in the silence of the east wing room, my heart pounding so loudly I was certain he could still hear it through the walls.I had told him.The words I'd sworn I would never speak aloud, the truth I'd buried so deep I'd almost convinced myself it was just a nightmare—I had handed it to him like a confession, and he had believed me.Or at least, he'd said he believed me.I pressed my palms against my eyes, willing the tears to stop. They wouldn't. They kept coming, hot and relentless, carving tracks down my cheeks like rivers of shame.I was so tired. So impossibly, bone-deep tired.In my first life, I'd spent my final months alone and terrified, watching everyone I loved turn against me one by one. I'd died believing that no one would ever believe me, that my death would be just another tragedy to be swept under the rug, another inconvenient truth buried beneath the pack's carefully constructed lies.And then I'd woken up here. Back
Soren's POVI didn't sleep that night. I lay in my bed, staring at the ceiling, while my wolf paced and snarled and howled at the moon outside my window. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Lyra's face—the way she'd looked at me in the study, her amber eyes bright with unshed tears, her voice cracking as she said, Don't walk away from me.And I had walked away. I had let Genevieve's tears pull me back, let Caspian's command sink into my bones, let duty and obligation chain me to the omega who needed me. The omega who was sweet and kind and everything I was supposed to want.But my wolf didn't want Genevieve. My wolf wanted Lyra. It had always wanted Lyra, from the moment she'd walked into our lives, quiet and self-contained and utterly indifferent to the alphas who circled her like moths around a flame.I had wanted her to need me. I had wanted her to look at me the way Genevieve looked at me, with desperation and dependence and a hunger that matched my own. And when she hadn't, I had
Soren’s POVThe hallway outside Genevieve's door smelled like salt and roses.She'd been crying for an hour. Maybe longer. I'd lost track somewhere between the third time Caspian told her everything would be fine and the fifth time she asked why Lyra hated her. My back ached from leaning against the wall. My wolf paced beneath my skin, restless and snarling, and I couldn't tell anymore whether it wanted to protect Genevieve or hunt Lyra down.Both. Neither. The answer kept shifting."Tell me again," Genevieve said from her nest of blankets. She looked small there, swallowed by silk and down, her golden hair spilling across the pillows like a halo. Her eyes were red-rimmed and swollen, and she clutched Caspian's hand like a lifeline. "Tell me what I did wrong.""You did nothing wrong." Caspian's voice was steady, practiced. The voice of an alpha who'd spent years smoothing over conflicts, mediating disputes, holding his pack together through sheer force of will. "Lyra is going through s
Lyra’s POVThe hallway stretched before me, dimly lit by the gas lamps flickering in their iron sconces. My footsteps echoed on the marble floor—too loud, too fast. I forced myself to slow down, to stop running, and running implied fear. Implied weakness. Implied that Genevieve had won this round.She had, though. She always did.I pressed my palm flat against the cold stone wall and let myself breathe. In the quiet of the corridor, with no one watching, I allowed the mask to slip. My shoulders sagged. My chin dropped. The trembling I'd suppressed in the study came roaring back, starting in my fingers and spreading until my whole body shook with it.Don't drink the tea.Why had I said that? Stupid, reckless, dangerous. I might as well have painted a target on my back. In my past life, Genevieve's poisoned tea had nearly killed me—would have killed me, if Soren hadn't noticed the strange color of my lips and forced the antidote down my throat. He'd held me while I seized, his dark sapph
Lyra’s PovThe moment shattered. I watched it happen—the shift in their attention, the familiar pull toward Genevieve's trembling form in the doorway. Watched Caspian's hand drop from my chin. Watched Silas's calculating gaze redirect toward the new variable in the room. Watched Soren's body angle away from me, toward her.Of course.The fragile thing that had been building between us—that raw, desperate almost-confession—crumbled to dust. I felt the walls slam back into place around my heart, harder and stronger than before. I'd been a fool to think anything had changed. I'd been a fool almost to tell them the truth."Genevieve." Caspian's voice had regained its Alpha timber, though something still strained beneath it. "This isn't a good time."But he was already moving toward her. They all were, pulled by some invisible tether I'd spent two lifetimes watching them follow."I know, I know." Genevieve pressed her fingers to her lips, a tear slipping down her porcelain cheek with theatr
Lyra's POVThe air felt too thick to breathe. “Don’t call me that,” I whispered, but the words came out weaker than I intended. In my past life, Little Star had been Soren’s private endearment, whispered against my skin in the dark, murmured when he thought I was asleep. Hearing it now felt like a blade between my ribs. Soren’s dark sapphire eyes flickered with something sharp. He had noticed my reaction. Of course, he had. He noticed everything. “Lyra.” Caspian’s voice cut through the tension, pulling my attention back to him. He hadn’t moved from behind the desk, but his presence filled the room like a gathering storm. “You are not a prisoner. But you are not leaving.” “That sounds exactly like a prisoner,” I said. His golden eyes flashed. “Then perhaps you should stop acting like one and tell us what is actually happening.” I almost laughed. Almost. The sound died in my throat, strangled by the bitter irony. Tell them what was happening? That I remembered a future where they
Lyra’s POVThe High Hall smelled of rust, old blood, and cold stone. Every breath I took scraped against my throat like broken glass. Three pairs of sapphire eyes watched me from across the long oak table—eyes that had once traced my face with love, whispered promises against my skin, and made me
Lyra’s POVGenevieve’s mask had cracked.She stood there in my room, expecting me to flinch, to cry, to give her the satisfaction she craved. But I simply leaned back against the headboard, met her eyes with calm curiosity, and asked the one question she wasn’t prepared for.“Why?”The word hung in
Lyra’s POVI was ten when the world lost its color.Alpha Julian was the man who became my father after he found me shivering in the Whispering Woods. I was five, but he didn’t see a stray orphan. He saw a daughter. He gave me a name, a home, and fierce, protective love that felt like armor against
Lyra’s POVI woke up gasping, lungs burning as if I were still falling. My hands flew to my chest, my ribs, my throat, searching for broken bones, wire cuts, bruises. There was nothing. Only smooth, warm skin and the soft press of linen sheets.I scrambled out of bed and stumbled to the mirror. The







