LOGINWARNING : Sensitive content ahead (non-gory).
Another nightmare. Another feeling of the pain, sharp and suffocating, as if she were still there. She had woken up from the nightmare she couldn't seem to escape, her eyes dark, too dark. They were the kind of eyes that swallowed light instead of showing it. She hadn't cried in years, her expression still and perfectly composed. There were no emotions, nothing. No gasping, no trembling, only the rise and fall of her chest. Morvienne simply stared at the night sky, empty, awake and detached, her long, dark chestnut-brown hair spilled across the blanket beneath her. She looked ethereal with her pale skin, calm, too calm for someone who had just relieved hell. Slowly, she sat up and inhaled, welcoming the smell of the forest and enjoying the cool breeze that comforted her. It had been ten years, ten years since that night. Ten years since she ran from the ruins of her home, barefoot, trembling, and covered in the blood of her parents. But still as she fled, she didn't look back. Not once. Even at eleven, she knew that hesitation meant death. Her mind was sharp, calculating, and even then it screamed one thing to her : Survive. The forest became her new home, her teacher. She learned to move quietly, learned to observe, learned to listen, really listen to every creak of branches, every flutter of wings, and even to the silent sound of the wind. Hunger had driven her to set traps, to study the movement of animals, to hunt. The first time she had killed with her little hands, her hands had shaken, but by the fifth time, they didn't. There were nights she thought she would die from cold, from hunger, from the pain of being alone, but she didn't. She refused to die just like that. Her parents had taught her many things, how to sense a presence in the dark, how to mask her scent if enemies were near, and she had thought those were just lessons for play, but now, looking back and remembering everything she had been taught, she lived by them. Every small lesson became a weapon. As she grew, so did her strength. And something else. It began with small things, strange warmth in her palms when she was angry, some strange energy when she concentrated too long, how the wind would shift with her moods, how flames would die down at her will. So many things, including her scent. She could change it when she wanted to. Sometimes sharp and dominant, other times soft and submissive or a mix. She learned to control it, to suppress the Alpha in her when it drew attention, and that was when she realized what her parents had always known. They had told her she was not just one thing. She was an Almega. A rare blend of Alpha and Omega. Her power was different, unpredictable, and she was even more enhanced than any werewolf. If anyone ever found her they would want to use it or destroy her for it but right now, they couldn't even try even if they wanted to. But for her plan to work, she would need to hide who she really is. And so... She hid. She trained. And she became her own teacher, her own weapon. She would sneak in and out of packs, studying their fighting techniques until she mastered them. As an heir to the Seran Pack before they were wiped out, she had already been taught the basics, although she still needed more training. Morvienne had no one to train her, but she had the pain and a mind that learned too quickly. Years passed and her small hands grew strong. The child who was once scared and trembling, no longer flinched at unexpected sounds. She no longer feared the dark, but instead, the dark feared her, and now... She was ready. Ten years. Ten long years. Now, she will make them pay. Slowly, she sat up and brushed a strand of hair from her face, her expression unreadable and calm. She looked down at herself and brushed her fingers slowly across her worn dress, her thoughts running wild. Then, she tore the dress. She moved on to splitting it at the shoulder and side seams, destroying it just enough to look desperate and weak. After that, she dragged the edges against the ground to smear them with dirt and dead leaves, making it look as though she had been dragged and beaten. The dress was already quite messy, something she had planned beforehand. All she had to do now was spice things up a little bit to make it more... Believable. Satisfied with the outcome, she picked up a blade she had kept beside her and drew it across her upper arm, not too deep, but just enough for blood to bead and run. Next, she cut along her shoulder where the fabric hung loose and hissed quietly at the pain, although that didn't stop her as she proceeded to make another cut down her side, careful to angle it so it looked like claw marks. She knew she could endure the pain and wanted to make the most out of it. When she was done, she reached behind her for the finishing touch, turned the blade and nicked the skin along her back, making it long enough to sting and bleed. She wanted it to look like she had been attacked from behind and forced to run. Blood trickled slowly from each cut she made on her body, her expression still blank. She watched for a moment to make sure it looked right, then pressed her hand against each cut to spread the blood unevenly. It had to look messy. It had to look real. And when she was finally finished, she exhaled softly and she sat there, her dress ruined and bloody as she set the knife aside and let herself bleed. She had studied enough wounds to know how pain should look. How trembling hands should move, and how fear should breathe. After a few seconds, she lifted her head and stood up. Her hair was clung to her skin, streaked with dirt and blood, and blood ran down her arm, dripping from her elbow, but she didn't care or look at it. Instead, her hand rose to her neck, fingers brushing lightly against her scent gland. She tilted her head to one side, pressing her fingers on her scent gland as she breathed in slowly and closed her eyes. Then, she started to change it. Her scent. The energy around shifted as she focused, a small cold smile playing on her lips. She had the mix of Black Orchid and Vanilla scent, which complimented her Almega nature. But now, she pushed the Black Orchid scent deep down, letting her sweet Vanilla scent hide it, just like how she had hidden that night. As she felt it change, light, sweet, and harmless, she tilted her head again, rolling her neck slightly as if checking how it felt. "Mmm..." She finally let out as she opened her eyes, her dark eyes glowing golden before going back to normal as the sweetness of vanilla, clung to the air, soft and inviting. Straightening, Morvienne rolled her shoulders back and stood in silence for a moment, listening to the wind and the quietness of the river nearby. Then... she moved. Her bare feet brushed over leaves and roots as she looked every bit the broken, lost omega she wanted to be, fragile and pitiful. She could already scent them from where she was. The Varyn borders. Wolves. Patrols. Guards stationed close enough to hear. It was perfect. As she drew closer to the border, her heart rate slowed and then quickened. She let out a shaky breath and slumped her shoulders, her lips trembling as she rubbed some of the dried blood across her cheek, making herself look even more pitiful. "Help...!" she tried once, soft, breathless and desperate like the sound of someone who was barely holding on. Then louder, she screamed, raw and breaking. "HELP!! PLEASE!""You just made all this up!" She screamed, her voice cracking. She stepped toward him, her eyes wide and frantic. "You're lying! You're just saying this to make me feel guilty, to twist the knife! You're a liar, Kael! A liar!"Kael didn't even flinch. The walls he had spent years building around his heart slammed shut with a deafening finality. He didn't try to convince her. He didn't offer proof. He didn't even look at her with the love that had defined the last few months. His expression was a mask of cold, dead stone."Leave my pack. Right now," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. "I don't want to ever see your face again." He paused, a flicker of something dark crossing his eyes. "You are lucky I fell for you. If I hadn't, you would have been without your head before you could even blink."He turned his back on her, his shoulders rigid, and began to walk toward the door. Panic surged through Morvienne. The thought of him walking away, of this being the end, was terrifying. "It
Morvienne took a shuddering breath, her chest heaving as she fought to keep her composure. She reached up and aggressively wiped the tears from her cheeks with the back of her hand. She felt her heart hammering against her ribs, but she forced it to slow down as she hardened her mind, pulling a cold, thick wall around her emotions, shutting out the sight of his broken expression. She had to be the monster he now believed she was. "Because," she answered, her voice hollow and sharp, "I had to."A sudden, jagged laugh escaped her lips—a sound devoid of any real joy. She sniffed, her eyes narrowing as she looked at him. "Do you know what your family took from me?" she asked, laughing again, the sound bordering on manic. "Everything," she answered in a whisper, her expression filled with pain. "They took everything from me."She stepped closer, her voice rising, filled with a decade of stored-up agony. "My parents, my friends, my pack, everything... gone. Dead. All of them slaughtered.
The stillness that followed her confession was heavy, thick enough to choke on. For several long minutes, neither of them moved or uttered a word. Kael just stood there, staring at her, his chest barely moving. He couldn't understand. He didn't want to understand as the scent she had been hiding, the real, raw scent of her true nature, filled the room, clashing with the lie she had lived for so long. Then, a short, sharp laugh broke the stillness. The sound of someone who had just heard a joke that wasn't funny. He shook his head slightly, a small, disbelief-filled smile twitching on his lips."Do you know what?" he said, his voice sounding tired and strained. "I'm just going to leave now. We'll talk later. When you've decided to stop playing around."He turned his back to her, his shoulders tense, and walked toward the door, every step feeling like he was trying to physically walk away from a nightmare. He reached out, his hand gripping the door handle, and pulled it open. With a
Meanwhile, back in the mansion, Morvienne sat on the edge of her bed, the silence of the room pressing in on her. She remained perfectly still, her ears pricked for the sound of footsteps in the hallway as she waited for him. She expected Kael to burst through the door, demanding answers and grilling her until her facade cracked or maybe just come in and want to talk, but she expected him. "There is no way he wouldn't be a little suspicious," she thought, her mind racing. "But... How was I caught?" she wondered, brow furrowing. "I had been careful, silent. How?" The realization that he had been standing right there, waiting for her, left a bitter taste of uncertainty in her mouth. "Had he finally connected the dots? But he seemed shocked when he saw it was me.""What if he connects the dots?""I wouldn't be surprised. Kael is not to be underestimated.""What do I care? He'll find out soon anyway." Still, the thought that he might already know she was the one behind everything ma
Morvienne didn't linger afterward. Once their discussion was over, she turned and left, vanishing back into the oppressive silence of the woods, her mind already shifting gears from the cold strategist back to the fragile, naive girl the pack and Kael believed her to be. The moment she entered the pack through the secret path, her hood was pulled back before she could even blink. The cool night air hit her face, and she froze. Her eyes widened, her breath hitching in her throat as she looked up.Kael was standing directly in front of her. His expression wasn't one of anger, but of profound, jarring confusion. He looked at her as if she were a stranger, his eyes searching hers."What— it's you?" he breathed, confused. "Morvienne? What— what are you doing here? Why are you using this path in the middle of the night?" For a split second, irritation flashed through her at being caught, but she quickly hid it and slumped her shoulders, her gaze dropping to the forest floor, and her expr
Dinner was a sterile affair. The dining room, which was usually a place of warmth and shared laughter, felt cavernous and cold. The only sounds were the rhythmic clinking of silverware against porcelain, nothing else. Kael watched Morvienne across the table. She was eating, but it seemed mechanical. She was also not sitting close to him like before. Trying to bridge the growing chasm between them, he cleared his throat and attempted a light topic. "How's dinner? Enjoying it?" He looked at her, hoping for a flicker of excitement, a small smile, anything. But she didn't look up from her plate. She chewed slowly and swallowed. "Mm."Kael's smile faltered. "Just... mm? Are you not enjoying it? I can tell them to make something else.""No, no," she quickly said and looked up then, finally meeting his eyes for a brief second before glancing back down. "I am enjoying it." Kael nodded. "That's good," he murmured as the conversation died there. He tried once or twice more to bring up smal
Sevrin stood frozen for some minutes, eyes wide, and shock plastered across his face. His hands rose slowly to his neck, trembling, as he realized he was so close to death. Blood gushed out in thick, dark streams, soaking his clothes and dripping down his chest. He tried to speak, his mouth openin
The silence that followed right after was something unexplainable. There were no words to say, the feelings were also something he didn't understand, and they stayed like that for a moment, breathing the same air. Her eyes were still fixed on his and he held her gaze for a second longer than he me
"Come in," a deep voice answered from inside when a knock sounded on the door.The maid turned her head and looked at Morvienne first, her eyes warning her to remember to behave. Only when she was satisfied did she clear her throat and reach for the handle of the door."You can go in," she said to
Throughout the day, Morvienne was locked up in the room, pacing around as she tried to think of a way to escape. She had tried the door several times, tugging, pushing, but to no avail. Nothing was working, absolutely nothing!She had moved toward the window, peering out, but the view offered no es







