LOGINChapter 5: Search In The Storm
ROWAN’S POV I woke to the scent of pine smoke still clinging to my sheets and the hollow throb where the bond used to live. Sunlight knifed through the curtains, too bright, too cheerful for the way my skin crawled. My stomach growled, sharp, demanding, but the tray should have been here twenty minutes ago. Anya’s tray. Eggs over easy, bacon crisp, black coffee steaming. She knew the order by heart, had for two years, ever since the crash turned her into the pack’s favorite punching bag. Cassandra stirred beside me, her blonde hair spilling across my pillow like spilled champagne. She stretched, the silk nightgown riding high on her thighs, and flashed that lazy, satisfied smile that usually made my blood run south. Today it grated like sand in a wound. “I’m so hungry,” she purred, fingers tracing lazy circles on my chest, nails grazing just hard enough to sting. “Tell the little maid to hurry.” I shoved her hand off and swung my legs over the edge of the bed. The clock glared 7:48, red digits mocking me. Anya never ran late. Not once. My wolf, Baron, paced behind my ribs, restless, claws scraping bone. Where is our mate? The thought slithered in before I could crush it. I pictured her hesitating at the door last night, tears still wet on her cheeks after I shredded the bond. My fists clenched, knuckles whitening against the sheets. Was she still sulking? Was she testing me? The idea of her defiance sparked irritation, then something darker, worry I had no right to feel. Cassandra rolled onto her stomach, propping her chin on folded arms, breasts spilling against the silk. “She’s probably crying in the pantry over your little birthday gift.” Then it hit me. It was her 20th birthday yesterday and I had rejected her on her birthday. What the hell did you do, Rowan? A fist pounded on the door, three sharp knocks that rattled the hinges like gunshots. My pulse spiked, Baron surging. Finally! I strode across the room, my bare feet slapping the cold marble, muscles coiled to unleash hell. “Come in,” I barked, already tasting the lecture I’d unload, make her scrub every inch of the kitchen until her hands bled for wasting my time, for making me wait, for making me care. The door creaked open. It wasn’t Anya. Mrs. Harrow, the head housekeeper, shuffled in, apron twisted in her gnarled hands like a lifeline. Her face was the color of spoiled milk, eyes wide and glassy, lips trembling. She never came upstairs. Not for spilled coffee, not for broken china, not for anything short of war. My stomach dropped through the floorboards. “Alpha,” she rasped, voice cracking like dry leaves underfoot. “There’s… there’s a problem.” I crossed the room in two strides, looming over her, heat rolling off me in waves. “What is it, Mrs. Harrow?” Cassandra sat up, sheet clutched to her chest, watching with bored curiosity, one brow cocked like this was a play. Mrs. Harrow’s gaze flicked to her, then back to me, fear pooling deeper. “It’s Anya, sir. She didn’t come down for morning duties. We sent Lila to check her room—” “What about her room?” My voice came out guttural, Baron bleeding through, fangs itching behind my teeth. Mrs. Harrow swallowed hard, throat bobbing. “The windows were smashed, there is. glass shattered everywhere, Alpha. There were traces of blood on the floor, it looks fresh. Her bed’s torn apart like a fight happened in there. She’s gone. Just… gone.” The words hit like a sledgehammer to the sternum. My vision tunneled, edges going black. Blood on the floor. Gone. I shoved past the old woman, shoulder clipping the doorframe, wood splintering. Cassandra’s voice chased me, “Rowan, wait!” high and shrill, but I didn’t stop. The bond scar in my chest burned, a live wire under my skin, screaming her name. I took the stairs three at a time, servants scattering like startled birds, tray clattering. The servant’s quarters reeked of iron and fear, thick enough to choke on. Anya’s door hung open, splintered wood jutting like broken teeth. I stepped inside and the world tilted sideways. The cot was shredded, stuffing spilled like guts across the floorboards. Glass glittered across the rug, catching the morning light in cruel, mocking sparkles. A smear of crimson streaked the windowsill, already drying to rust, thick and accusing. Her scent lingered, faint, terrified, mixed with something feral, rogue, wrong. My knees buckled. I dropped, fingers brushing the blood. Still warm. Still hers. Baron roared, claws ripping free, shredding the mattress further in a blind frenzy. Guards burst in behind me, breath ragged, eyes wide. “Alpha?” “Send out search parties,” I snarled, rising, voice shredded. “Every inch of this territory must be turned upside down. Find Anya and bring her back here alive.” I commanded, my voice echoing off the stone wall. Cassandra appeared in the doorway, arms crossed, lips curled in a sneer. “She probably ran off with a rogue just to get your attention. Just forget her Rowan.” I whirled on her, vision red, Baron surging so hard my bones creaked. “Does this look like a stunt of a runaway to you, Cass?” I grabbed her wrist, fingers iron, twisting until she gasped. “Answer me!” Her eyes widened, innocent as a doe, but I smelled the lie. “Rowan, you’re hurting me.” I released her like she burned, my skin crawling. The memory of last night slammed into me, her hushed phone call when I came out of the bathroom, voice low and lethal; “Make sure it happens exactly as we planned. No mistakes.” Ice flooded my veins, freezing the rage into something colder, sharper. “Put the entire pack house on lock down,” I ordered the guards, voice lethal quiet. “No one leaves. Especially not her.” I jabbed a finger at Cassandra. She flinched, but her chin lifted, defiant. I stormed out into the rain-slick courtyard, mud sucking at my boots, sky weeping like it knew. Trackers shifted mid-stride, wolves fanning into the forest, muzzles low. I followed the strongest scent trail, Anya’s fear sharp as broken glass, cutting my lungs with every breath. It led north, toward the cliffs, wind howling her name back at me. The storm had washed most traces away, but I found it, snagged on blackthorn, a scrap of gray fabric, her maid’s dress, soaked through with blood, torn like claws had ripped it from her body. I pressed it to my face, inhaling her scent mixed with terror and rain, pine and copper and her. My knees buckled, mud soaking my jeans. “Anya!” My roar echoed off the rocks, swallowed by the wind, raw and broken. Below, the river churned white and furious, hungry. Rogue prints circled the cliff edge, deep, deliberate, mocking. They’d dragged her here. Pushed her. Or worse. My vision blurred, tears or rain, I didn’t know. I clutched the fabric until my knuckles split, blood mixing with hers. Cassandra’s voice echoed in my skull; “Make sure it happens.” Baron snarled, fangs bared to the storm. If she orchestrated this, if she touched one hair on Anya’s head, I’d gut her myself. And maybe I’d gut myself too for letting it happen under my nose.Chapter 176: Full Circle ANYA’S POVA YEAR LATER… I rested my hands on my rounded belly and smiled as the baby kicked strongly beneath my palms. One year had passed since Damien’s return, and our lives had bloomed into something richer than I ever dared imagine. Late afternoon sunlight filtered through the nursery windows while I sat in the wide rocking chair. Elias knelt beside me, pressing his ear to my stomach with complete concentration. His face lit up every time the baby moved.“She kicked again,” he announced proudly. “I think she likes my stories. Did you hear that, little sister? I will teach you how to shift and how to make sparks dance like Mommy does.” Damien leaned against the doorframe watching us, arms crossed over his chest and a soft expression on his face. He crossed the room in a few strides and crouched beside our son. “You are going to be the best big brother, Elias. She will be lucky to have you.”I threaded my fingers through Damien’s hair as he rested his ha
Chapter 175: Roots and Renewal DAMIEN’S POVThree weeks had passed since I returned, and the rhythm of our days had settled into something I never thought I’d have again, beautiful, steady, and real. The pack had welcomed me back as Alpha without hesitation. The ironclaw pack ran smoother under my hand once more, trade agreements flowed cleaner, border reports grew quieter, and a sense of stability wrapped around our territory like a warm cloak.I ended the meeting session with the elders and walked toward the terrace where Anya waited with Gavin and Iris. Sweat cooled on my skin, but energy still thrummed through me. Gavin handed me a cup of cool water while Iris adjusted her shawl.“Crescent Moon Pack reached out this morning,” Gavin said as we clasped arms. “They are willing to trade with us. They said they will stick with the twenty percent offer you gave them.”I took a long drink and nodded. “I knew they were going to give in. They made such a good choice by doing that.” I tur
Chapter 174: Light After Darkness ANYA’S POVI could not stop touching Damien. My fingers traced the line of his jaw, the familiar scar above his eyebrow, the strong shoulders I had missed for five long years. He sat propped against the pillows in our bed while sunlight streamed through the windows and warmed the room. Elias played on the rug nearby with his wooden figures, occasionally glancing up to make sure his father had not disappeared again. The mansion buzzed with activity downstairs. Messengers had carried the news to every corner of our territory, and visitors from allied packs already gathered in the courtyard, stunned by the miracle. Damien caught my hand and pressed it to his chest. His heartbeat thrummed steady and real beneath my palm. “I am here, Anya. I am not going anywhere.”Tears blurred my vision again. I leaned in and kissed him softly at first, then deeper as relief and joy crashed over me. He tasted like home. When we pulled apart, I rested my forehead agai
Chapter 173: Return From The Void DAMIEN’S POVDarkness wrapped around me like thick chains that never loosened. I existed in an endless void with no beginning and no end. Time lost all meaning there. I drifted in a liminal space between life and death, aware yet trapped, unable to cross into the afterlife or return to the world I left behind. My body felt absent, but my mind remained sharp with regret and longing. I had begged the higher powers many times to let me go back to Anya and our child. They always refused. This was the price I paid for my borrowed time, they said. So I waited in silence, exhausted and shabby, suspended in nothing.A shift came without warning. Soft light pierced the darkness, gentle at first then brighter. A presence filled the void, warm and ancient. The Moon Goddess appeared before me, her form shimmering like moonlight on water. Other spirits gathered with her, their voices blending into one clear decision.“It is time,” she said. “Your son has called
Chapter 172: Whispers From the Storm ANYA’S POV The nights were the worst. Not because the darkness came, but because it always brought him back to me, whole, laughing, and alive, only for dawn to rip him away again. Five years. Five endless years since I had held Damien’s body in my arms and felt his warmth bleed into nothing. I still woke up reaching for the empty side of our bed, fingers curling around cold sheets that smelled faintly of cedar and storm, even though I had washed them a thousand times.Tonight the emptiness clawed deeper than usual. I stood at the window of the Alpha’s chambers, staring out at the rain-lashed gardens, both wedding bands heavy on my finger like anchors trying to drag me under. The pack thrived. Trade routes gleamed with new wealth. Borders held firm. Children laughed in the training yards. But none of it touched the hollow place where my mate had been torn out of me. A small voice drifted down the hall. Elias. I found him on the rug in his room,
Chapter 171: Ashes and GoodbyeANYA’S POVI stood frozen in the doorway of the preparation chamber that morning. Damien lay on the raised stone platform, dressed in his ceremonial black robes trimmed with silver. His face looked peaceful, as if he might open his eyes any second and smile at me. The healers had cleaned the blood away and closed his wounds, but nothing could bring back the warmth I remembered in his skin. My legs buckled. Gavin caught me before I hit the floor.“Easy, Lady Anya,” he said quietly. He kept his arm around my waist until I found my balance again. I walked closer on my own. My hand hovered above Damien’s cheek. When I finally touched him, the coldness shot through my fingers and straight into my heart. This was not my husband. This was an empty shell. I pulled my hand back as fresh tears stung my eyes. I had expected him to wake up. Even now, part of me waited for his chest to rise, for his voice to say my name and tell me it was all over. Nothing happened
Chapter 18: Midnight Raid ROWAN’S POV I hadn’t slept in days. The moment I learned Anya hadn’t killed my parents—or hers—something inside me snapped loose and never settled back. Every sunrise since then felt like an accusation. Every nightfall felt like another reminder that she was missing bec
Chapter 21: Who Am I? ANYA’S POV The celebration felt too grand for someone like me. Gold lanterns hung from the vaulted ceiling of the Ironclaw great hall, each flame imprisoned in glass etched with crescent symbols. The walls shimmered with banners bearing Damien’s crest—black wolf, silver moo
Chapter 20: Love or Hate DAMIEN’S POVA voice tugged at the edge of my consciousness—soft, frantic, trembling. “Damien… please. Open your eyes, Damien—wake up.” The sound drifted through the dark fog swallowing me whole, brushing over me like warm fingers against frozen skin. Another whisper fol
Chapter 17: Walls Closing in ANYA’S POV The knock on my door came before sunrise—three sharp taps that carried the weight of judgment. I already knew what it meant; the pack council had summoned me. I dragged myself from bed, still sore, still tired, still pretending that the thing I went throug







