LOGIN
Today marked another Blood Moon Festival without Giselle being found. She knew the truth now. Either the witches had seen the power she carried in her womb, or the pack leaders had found out that she was the traitor king's daughter. Either way, she was doomed. No one was coming to save her.
She had refused to tell her husband about the figure who appeared last night or about the dark message it brought.
Giselle was the Luna of the Shadow Fang Pack, and she was a witch with power over ice. The Moon Goddess had said that her child would have the Threefold Gift. But such a gift was tied only to royal families. Her father came from an ancient line of werewolves, the wolf-men. Her mother was a witch. But the Lycan blood remained a mystery. She did not know where it had come from, and she did not know how one child could carry the three most powerful bloodlines and survive in a world this cruel.
Centuries ago, the pack leaders worked with an Ancient One to invade the Lycan kingdom and kill every Lycan. The Lycans were stronger, and for that reason they were hunted. During the betrayal, the royal family was killed, and her father the king was among them. The pack leaders called him a traitor for siding with the Lycans. No one knew that he had left behind a daughter who was born of a witch.
That secret had been hers alone, and she had shared it only with her mate, Alaric.
But if she gave birth, everything would be exposed. The witches would see the prophecy the moment her child took its first breath.
Alpha Alaric burst into their chambers, and the door slammed shut behind him. His mate stood by the arched window with one hand resting on the swell of her belly while the other traced slow circles to soothe the life inside her. Her gaze was fixed on the full moon, which would soon turn red.
"Gather your things," Alaric said, and his voice was low and urgent. "You leave now."
Giselle turned sharply, and her breath caught in her throat. "Leave," she said. "Why. What happened."
"They know your secret," he said, and his tone was grim.
"That is not possible," she said. "No one knew."
"There is no time for this," he said as he grabbed a woolen shawl from the bed. He swept her few possessions into it, and he moved quickly.
"No," she said as she rushed to him and grasped his arm. "We leave together. I will not go without you."
Alaric stopped, and his gaze locked with hers. His jaw tightened, and for a moment, his eyes softened. But then his expression became hard again, and he looked like an Alpha giving orders.
"You must go," he said, and his voice was firm and unyielding.
"Not without you," she said, and her voice cracked. "We can still escape if we leave now before they—"
"Giselle."
The single word stopped her. It was not a plea but a command, and his Alpha tone made her freeze in place and made it hard for her to breathe.
"Please," she whispered, and her voice broke as tears filled her eyes.
Alaric reached for her and held her face in his hands. His thumbs wiped the tears from her cheeks. "I will find you," he said. "By the moon, I swear it. But if they find you here, they will not spare you, and they will not spare the child."
Before she could answer, the door crashed open. Young Miriam, her maid, stood there breathless with her eyes wide with fear.
"The ritual has begun," Miriam said. "The pack leaders are gathering by the fire."
Alaric turned his head toward her. "Take this," he said as he pushed the bundled shawl into the maid's arms.
Then he turned back to Giselle. His hands trembled as they held her face, and his touch was gentle while his eyes showed the weight of everything he could not say.
"I will find you," he said again, and his voice was hoarse. "On my soul, I swear it."
He kissed her then, and it was a desperate kiss that she would remember. Giselle sobbed into the kiss and held him because she wanted to stop what was coming.
"Go," Alaric whispered against her lips, and his voice broke. "Please."
Miriam stepped forward and pulled gently at Giselle's arm.
They had barely reached the garden when Giselle doubled over. A sharp cry came from her as pain shot through her belly.
"Luna," Miriam said as she rushed to steady her.
"The child is coming," Giselle said as she clutched her belly and breathed in short, ragged bursts.
"Breathe, my lady," Miriam said, and her voice was tight with fear. "Hold on. We are near the cave." With a firm grip, she half-dragged and half-guided her mistress across the gravel path and into the darkness.
Giselle was in so much pain that she let herself be led down the narrow passage. The smell of damp earth filled her lungs, and the walls were close around her. At the end of the passage, Miriam stopped.
There stood Lydia Voss, her best friend.
Giselle felt a surge of hope. "Lydia," she said, and hope rose inside her despite the pain.
She took a shaky step forward, and then she stopped.
Something was wrong.
Lydia did not move. Her eyes had once been warm with friendship, but now they were distant and cold. She stared at Giselle without warmth or recognition. From the shadows behind Lydia, wolves emerged, and they were silent and watchful while their eyes showed menace.
Giselle felt cold dread in her stomach. "Lydia," she whispered.
The woman she had once called sister tilted her head.
"Please," Giselle said, and her voice trembled. "You do not have to do this. Think of the child."
Lydia's lips parted into a smile, and that smile was bitter and empty.
"If you want to avoid harm or keep the child safe, you will come with us," she said, and her voice was cool as though she were giving an order.
Giselle stared at her, and she could not believe what she was seeing. This could not be the same woman who had stood beside her at her crowning and who had sworn loyalty under the moon.
Then Miriam stepped forward from Giselle's side, and her voice was sharp.
"How dare you block the Luna's path," Miriam said. "Stand aside, traitor."
Lydia laughed.
"After tonight," she said, and her voice was cold, "she will be no such thing."
Giselle's chest tightened. "Why," she said. "Why are you doing this. We were friends. You—"
"Stop, Giselle," Lydia said. "You are wrong. I was never your friend."
The words shocked Giselle, and she felt them deeply.
Giselle stepped back. "That cannot be," she whispered, and her eyes showed her disbelief. "Tell me this is a lie. Tell me there is still something true between us."
But Lydia's eyes were hard in the moonlight.
"In our world, my dear," Lydia said, "we do not wait for fate to favor us. We take what we want. I was promised to Alaric, and he was mine by every right until you came and made him want you."
Giselle's lips parted, but no sound came out.
"So," Lydia said as she stepped forward, "I found a faster way to get the future I was denied. By giving you to the pack leaders, I have secured my place in the new order. Through you, I will get what I want."
A terrible silence fell between them.
"Now," Lydia said, and her voice dropped to a whisper, "do not make this harder. Come with us, or bleed here where you stand."
Giselle felt unsteady on her feet, and her knees buckled as another contraction seized her. But she clenched her jaw and stood firm as she used the last of her strength.
She had known, and Lydia had known she was the werewolf princess. Now, nothing would hold her back.
Lydia stepped forward.
Giselle moved back, and her heel caught on the uneven stone. "Stay back," she whispered, and her voice trembled.
Lydia's eyes showed cruel delight. "Do not fight this," she said. "It will only hurt more."
Before Giselle could reply, Miriam moved between them, and her small body was stiff with defiance. "You will not touch her," she said, and her voice was cold. "Not while I still breathe."
Lydia's smile changed. "As you wish," she said.
With a flick of her wrist, her nails grew into curved claws that glinted in the low light.
There was no time to react. Lydia struck, and her claws went into Miriam's chest. The impact threw Miriam against the cavern wall with a loud thud, and she fell to the ground without a sound.
"No," Giselle screamed.
Lydia turned to her again, and with a silent signal, she sent the wolves forward.
But inside Giselle, something old and cold woke up. Her power rose up inside her, and with a cry, she threw her arms wide.
A blast of freezing air exploded from her, and that blast was filled with ice shards and frost. The wolves flew back, and they howled as they hit the stone. The ground shook, and frost spread across the cave floor and up the walls.
Dust fell from the ceiling, and the air became cold.
Yet Lydia stood in front of her, and her smile did not change.
From her skirt, she pulled a crystal that pulsed with cold, strange light.
"Do not waste what little strength you have left," Lydia said. "It will be over soon."
The crystal glowed with a white, bright light.
Giselle screamed as the light burned into her mind. The cold inside her was ripped away from her, and she felt as though her very being was being pulled apart. Her body gave out beneath her.
She fell to her knees, and her breath came in shallow gasps.
Her limbs went numb, and the frost that had answered her call now left her.
Darkness appeared at the edges of her vision.
The last thing she saw was Miriam's broken body on the ground, and she saw Lydia's smile, which was triumphant and cruel.
Then everything went silent.
The royal dining chamber was unusually quiet, with only Their Majesties seated at the grand table. The emptiness pressed against the walls like a hushed rebuke.The Queen sat with her hands resting calmly beside her plate, her expression unreadable. Celiste stepped forward to uncover her dish, but Lena stopped her with a single, raised hand."I am quite capable of managing on my own, thank you," she said.The King lifted his gaze, his voice even. "The Varkoness and the Varkon have departed to consult the healer. They seek formal validation of their union.""Validation?" she repeated, arching one brow as the royal tasters approached to perform their duties.Lena observed quietly as the young woman assigned to the King stepped forward. The girl moved with a certain ease, her posture unbefitting one of her station. She smiled as she tasted the King's food, her eyes lingering too long upon him.The Queen's gaze sharpened."What is it that amuses you?" she asked, her voice cool.The taster
The queen turned away, brushing her eyes with the back of her hand."I shall take my leave," Ysara said quietly. The two women rose, their gowns whispering against the stone floor, and departed without another word.Left alone with the king, Lena turned to face him. The cold gleam in her eyes had returned, sharp as steel beneath frost.He had heard everything. Every word exchanged. He knew the names, the grief, the anger. He had come only because he sensed her sorrow, only to be met once more with this frozen facade.She bowed her head in courtesy."I wish to speak with you," he said at last. "Will you sit?""Sit, my king. I shall stand."He inclined his head and seated himself, though uneasily, as if the chair held little comfort for him."I loved Antara," he began, his voice low, heavy with memory. "I saw her before my brother did. We courted in secret for some years, and during that time, she knew nothing of what I was."Lena said nothing. Her silence invited truth."Then she met m
“Send the royal tribute to him. And see to it that his pups are well tended,” the King said quietly.Varkon bowed low. “Yes, Your Majesty.”He turned to depart but hesitated at the threshold. The King’s gaze, sharp and unwavering, raised on him.“I have seen that look before, Cedric,” the King said at length. “I know well the signs of a troubled conscience. Something weighs upon you.”Cedric took a breath, then stepped forward with measured resolve. “Your Majesty, I have something to report.”---The chamber grew cold with silence after Cedric had finished the last detail. The King did not utter a word for a long moment, his expression unreadable.Finally, he spoke, voice low and steady. “And you aided her, did you not?”“I did escort Lady Ravena to her bedchamber, but I knew nothing of what followed. I did not know she would… take a life,” Cedric answered solemnly.The King gave a slow nod, his face still grave. “Very well. Thank you, Cedric. You may go.”Cedric bowed deeply and turn
They reached the queen’s chamber, and the king threw open the door with such force that it groaned upon its hinges.Within, upon the queen’s bed, lay Lady Ravena, unclothed, entangled with Lord Grantham. They were locked in a shameless embrace, their lips meeting in a manner most indecent for the sacred space they defiled.Startled by the sudden intrusion, they broke apart at once, the air thick with the weight of their disgrace. Ravena clutched the blanket to her chest in haste, her eyes darting to the figure holding her on the bed. It was not Cedric.“You vile swine,” she cried, shoving Lord Grantham aside. “How dare you touch me!”Lady Valaria stepped forward, her voice sharp with righteous contempt. “Lady Ravena, I had not thought you would stoop so low as to sully the queen’s bed with your base desires.”The color drained from Ravena’s face.“What?” she whispered, her mind reeling. This was not how it was meant to be. It should have been the queen in that bed, not her.And what i
Laughter and low murmurs drifted through the grand hall as nobles gathered near the throne, exchanging favors and whispering counsel on matters of the realm. Others took to the dance floor, moving gracefully with their spouses to the gentle strains of a lute and viol consort playing a stately pavane—a slow, dignified dance favored in noble courts.“Your Majesty, Lord Grantham and his wife, Lady Vera, the Count and Countess of the Northern Region,” a page announced.The couple approached with practiced bows. “Long live Your Majesty,” they intoned, then turned their respectful gaze to the Luna Queen. “Your Grace.”“Welcome, Lord Grantham. May you find your service in court both honorable and fulfilling,” Magdalena replied with quiet authority.They bowed once more and withdrew.“Your Majesty, here is Alpha Ethanasius of the Crimson Moon Pack,” another voice reported.Ethanasius bowed deeply. “Your Majesty, Your Grace.”“How fare you, Ethan?” Lena’s voice broke through the polite formali
On the morning of the coronation, before the guests had begun to arrive, the palace stirred with quiet urgency. Banners were raised, garlands strung, and every surface polished to a brilliant gleam. Madame Celeste moved through the corridors like a specter of order, ensuring every detail shone with perfection.Varkoness Milicent had long since departed her quarters, eager to assist her cherished friend, the soon-to-be Luna Queen, in her final preparations.In a distant wing of the palace, the Varkon stirred from slumber, his eyes peeling open at the sound of an insistent knock. With a heavy sigh, he crossed the chamber and drew open the door.There stood Luna Ravena."Oh, my lion," she purred, her eyes roaming appreciatively over his bare chest, his muscles taut with the remnants of sleep. He was unarguably striking, and she did not attempt to hide her admiration.She wet her lips slowly, deliberately.He stiffened at once, his jaw clenched. "Why are you here, Ravena?""May I not visi
The next morning, Lena's eyes opened. Pain moved through her body. She tried to move, but her limbs felt heavy. Every part of her ached. Her muscles were stiff from the torment of the night before. She felt numb and empty.The cold stone beneath her reminded her that she was not safe and she was no
Lena's legs buckled as the guards dragged her forward. The rough stone beneath her feet scraped her skin raw, and the soldiers' grips were cruel as their hands bruised her arms while they hauled her through the threshold of the great hall and into the bitter night.The air outside was sharp, and it
"Lena, flee."Her mother's voice was desperate and broken. Lena heard the pain in it through the smoke."No, Mother," Lena said, and her voice trembled. "I will not leave you. I will take you with me." Her hands shook as she reached for the woman who had given her life."You must," her mother gaspe
The guards held Lena firmly before the heavy oak door. The head slave emerged, and her face showed no emotion."The bath awaits," she said.Without warning, one of the guards spun Lena around, and he handled her without care. The sound of metal rang through the corridor as they knelt to unlock the







