Partager

Chapter 2

last update Date de publication: 2026-07-02 23:38:28

​The heavy mahogany doors of the packhouse library creaked open, groaning under the weight of centuries of dust. Seraphina slipped inside, carrying a basket of faded linens she was supposed to be delivering to the washhouse. She knew she was taking a risk by detouring here, but the phantom warmth on her left wrist from that morning’s dream still burned in her thoughts.

​She needed answers. She needed to know what a silver crescent mark meant, or if there had ever been another wolfless wolf who had seen a starlight-haired woman in their sleep.

​But the peace of the silent library was instantly shattered by the sound of hurried, heavy footsteps echoing from the grand hallway outside.

​"Did you hear?" a breathless voice whispered loudly just outside the cracked library door. It was Mindy, one of the main packhouse omegas. "The scouts just returned from the northern border. The royal caravan has changed its route."

​"What do you mean changed its route?" another voice replied—Cynthia’s personal maid, Tricia. "The Blood Moon Ceremony is supposed to be held at the neutral capital grounds. They aren't supposed to pass through our territory for another two weeks."

​"They aren't just passing through," Mindy gasped, her voice trembling with a mixture of awe and absolute terror. "He is coming here. To the Silver Crescent. The High Alpha King himself is personally overseeing the census for our sector before the ceremony begins."

​Seraphina froze behind a towering bookshelf, her fingers tightening around the wicker handle of her basket.

​Kaelor Draven Ashthorne.

​The name alone was enough to make the temperature in the room drop. He was the ruler of the Crimson Dominion, the supreme monarch of the Seven Moon Kingdoms. The stories told about him around the pack fires weren't fairy tales; they were warnings. They called him the King Who Never Bows. A lethal, unyielding tyrant who had ascended the obsidian throne at the age of eighteen after slaughtering his own treasonous elders. It was whispered that his Lycan bloodline was so pure, so close to the primordial gods, that his wolf stood twice the size of a standard Alpha. He didn't just rule; he dominated. And he had a reputation for executing traitors, rogues, and political dissidents without a shred of mercy.

​"Why is he coming here?" Tricia asked, her voice pitched high with rising panic. "Alpha Garrick is going to lose his mind. The packhouse isn't fully prepared for the royal court!"

​"They say he’s hunting," Mindy whispered, her voice dropping lower. "There have been reports of rogue hunters using illegal silver-tipped traps along our borders. You know how the King feels about humans trespassing into the Seven Kingdoms. If he thinks Alpha Garrick has been lax with border security..."

​The voices faded as the two maids hurried down the corridor, leaving Seraphina alone in the musty silence of the library.

​Her heart hammered against her ribs. The Alpha King was coming. For a pack like the Silver Crescent, which prided itself on flawless discipline and military might, a royal inspection was a trial by fire. But for Seraphina, it was a death sentence. An Alpha King possessed senses sharper than any ordinary werewolf. What if he smelled her defect from across the courtyard? What if he viewed her very existence—a wolfless Vaelcrest—as a mutation that threatened the purity of the high bloodlines?

​"Seraphina!"

​The library door swung wide open, and Brandon stepped into the room, his eyes scanning the shadows until they locked onto her. His face was unusually pale, the arrogance from that morning temporarily replaced by a tense, rigid anxiety.

​"There you are, you useless ghost," Brandon snapped, marching down the aisle and grabbing her roughly by the upper arm. "Why are you hiding in the dark? The entire pack is being mobilized."

​"I was just moving the linens, Brandon," she said, keeping her voice level despite the sting of his grip. "What’s happening?"

​"The Alpha King is arriving by nightfall," Brandon said, pulling her toward the exit. "Father wants every single pack member in the courtyard. The omegas are cleaning the grand hall, the warriors are reinforcing the perimeter, and you—" he shoved her toward the back door of the packhouse "—are going to the outer valley. The head healer needs winter-root and moon-fern for the welcoming teas. Move your human legs, Seraphina. If the King arrives and the tea isn't brewed to his court's standards, Father will have your head on a spike before the King can even ask your name."

​"The outer valley is close to the border, Brandon," Seraphina countered, looking out at the dark, dense tree line of the Whispering Woods. "The scouts said there are rogue hunters out there."

​Brandon let out a harsh, mocking laugh. "Then I suggest you don't get caught. Besides, if a hunter takes you, it saves us the embarrassment of introducing you to the King. Now go!"

​He slammed the back door in her face, leaving her standing on the wooden porch, the cold wind biting through her thin grey tunic. Seraphina took a deep, steadying breath. She didn't fear the woods. In fact, the forest was the only place where the suffocating judgment of the pack couldn't reach her. Grabbing a small leather foraging pouch from the porch railing, she hurried down the wooden steps and disappeared into the shadowed embrace of the trees.

​The deeper Seraphina walked into the Whispering Woods, the quieter the world became. The oppressive, anxious energy of the Silver Crescent packhouse faded, replaced by the earthy scent of damp moss, pine needles, and rotting leaves. Here, she wasn't the pack's greatest shame. She was just a creature moving through the trees.

​She knelt by a mossy log, her fingers carefully plucking the silver-veined leaves of a moon-fern. Her wrist still felt strangely warm under her sleeve, a dull, rhythmic throb that seemed to sync with the rustle of the wind.

​The sound of snapping bone and tearing metal shattered the silence of the grove.

​Seraphina jumped to her feet, her hand instantly flying to the small iron skinning knife she kept tucked into her belt. It wasn't much against a wolf, but against the wilderness, it was comfort. She listened intently, her human ears straining. A low, agonized whine cut through the fog—a sound of pure, unadulterated pain.

​Slowly, carefully, she parted the thick ferns and crept toward a deep ravine near the boundary line.

​There, thrashing in the dirt, was a wolf.

​But it wasn't just any wolf. Seraphina’s breath caught in her throat. It was massive—easily the size of a small horse—with fur as black as a starless night, so dark it seemed to absorb the scant sunlight filtering through the canopy. The beast’s muscles rippled with terrifying power, but it was currently pinned to the earth. Its rear leg was caught in a massive, heavy-duty iron jaw trap. The teeth of the trap were jagged, coated in a dull, shimmering liquid that Seraphina recognized instantly.

​Liquid silver.

​The silver was burning through the wolf's flesh, sending wisps of foul-smelling black smoke into the air. The wolf's eyes—a piercing, fierce molten gold—were wide with fury and pain. It snapped its jaws violently at the air, its lethal fangs bared, trying to bite through the reinforced steel of the trap, only to burn its own muzzle.

​"Hey... steady," Seraphina whispered, stepping out from the brush, her hands raised in a placating gesture. "Stop thrashing. You're only making the silver burn deeper."

​The black wolf’s head snapped toward her. A low, vibrating growl rattled through its massive chest, a sound so primal and heavy that it made the dirt beneath Seraphina's boots vibrate. Its molten gold eyes locked onto hers, burning with an intense, lethal intelligence that made her blood run cold. This wasn't a wild animal. This was a high-ranking werewolf shifter. Probably a rogue, she reasoned, considering it was caught out here alone near the borders.

​"I’m not going to hurt you," Seraphina said, taking a slow, deliberate step forward. "I know you can understand me. Look at my hands. I don't have weapons. I don't even have a wolf scent."

​The wolf paused, its ears pinning back against its head. Its nostrils flared as it caught her scent—or rather, the complete lack of a predatory aura. It seemed momentarily confused, its fierce golden gaze tracking her movements with profound suspicion.

​"If you keep pulling, that trap will take your foot off," she murmured, kneeling a few feet away from the beast’s snapping jaws. The heat radiating from the wolf was immense, smelling of ozone, ash, and dark cedarwood. "I’m going to release the spring. But you have to stay still. If you bite me, we both die out here."

​The wolf growled again, a warning sound, but it stopped thrashing. It pinned her with a heavy, unblinking stare, watching her like a predator evaluating an inexplicable prey.

​Seraphina moved closer, the metallic tang of the burning silver stinging her eyes. She reached down, her hands grasping the heavy, rusted lever of the hunter's trap. The iron was freezing, but the silver residue made it slick. She braced her feet against the muddy slope, pouring every ounce of her human strength into the mechanism.

​"Come on," she grunted, her muscles straining, her face turning flush. The lever didn't budge. The trap was designed for beasts of immense power.

​The black wolf watched her, a low huff escaping its muzzle, almost as if it were scoffing at her fragile, human weakness.

​"Shut up," Seraphina gasped, wiping sweat from her brow. "I’m working on it."

​She closed her eyes, shifting her weight, and gripped the rusted lever again. Deep within her chest, that strange, phantom spark from her dream flared to life. A sudden, unexpected rush of heat flooded her veins, pooling directly into her hands.

​With a sharp intake of breath, she pushed down. ​The heavy iron jaws snapped open with a resounding crack. The release was so sudden that Seraphina flew backward, tumbling into the dirt and leaves.

​The black wolf didn't hesitate. It pulled its bloodied, smoking leg free from the trap, stumbling slightly as it stood. The silver had done significant damage, but even wounded, the beast was magnificent. It towered over her, its massive shadow completely engulfing her small frame as she sat in the mud.

​Seraphina held her breath, her hand slowly moving toward her small iron knife. If the rogue decided to eliminate the witness, she wouldn't go down without a fight.

​The wolf stepped closer, its heavy, padded paws making no sound on the forest floor. It lowered its massive head until its wet, black nose was just inches from her face. It inhaled deeply, catching the scent of her hair, her skin, the sharp tang of her fear, and that bizarre, underlying note of something ancient and utterly unidentifiable.

​Its golden eyes searched hers, filled with a complex, unreadable emotion. There was no rage in its gaze now. Only a deep, calculating intensity.

​"Go," Seraphina whispered, her voice trembling slightly. "The Silver Crescent patrols will be here soon. They'll kill you if they find you."

​The wolf held her gaze for one more long, agonizing second. Then, with a sudden, graceful turn, it leaped over the ravine, its powerful legs carrying it into the dense fog of the Whispering Woods. Within moments, it was gone, leaving nothing behind but the shattered iron trap and the scent of ash and cedarwood.

​Seraphina let out a breath she felt like she’d been holding for a century. She scrambled to her feet, her hands shaking as she brushed the dirt from her tunic. She quickly gathered her foraging pouch, completely forgetting about the remaining moon-ferns. She needed to get back. The forest suddenly felt a lot larger, and a lot more dangerous, than it had an hour ago.

​By the time Seraphina returned to the packhouse, the sun had dipped below the jagged peaks of the mountains, painting the sky in violent shades of crimson and bruised purple.

​The entire Silver Crescent Pack was gathered in the grand courtyard. Hundreds of wolves stood in perfect, rigid rows, separated by rank. At the front stood Alpha Garrick, dressed in his formal leather armor, flanked by Luna Evelyn, Brandon, and Cynthia. Every single one of them looked as tense as a drawn bowstring.

​Seraphina tried to slip quietly into the shadow of the western colonnade, hoping to blend in with the background, but Brandon caught sight of her.

​"Where have you been?" he hissed under his breath, grabbing her wrist and yanking her into the very back row of the pack formation, where the lowest-ranking omegas stood. "The King’s vanguard is already at the gates. If you disgrace us now—"

​A horn blew.

​The sound was deep, resonant, and carried a metallic ring that vibrated straight through the stone floor of the courtyard. The heavy iron gates of the Silver Crescent fortress swung open, and the vanguard of the Crimson Dominion marched inside.

​They were magnificent and terrifying. Hundreds of elite royal warriors, clad in black-and-crimson armor forged from enchanted metals, moved in perfect, synchronized symmetry. Their movements were entirely silent, save for the rhythmic thud of their boots. The sheer martial power radiating from them was enough to make the Silver Crescent warriors look like children playing with sticks.

​And then, the air shifted.

​It didn't just change; it compressed. A suffocating, crushing weight descended upon the courtyard, so dense and powerful that the oxygen seemed to vanish from the air. It was an Alpha aura, but it was unlike anything Seraphina had ever experienced. Garrick’s aura was a puddle; this was an ocean, dark, vast, and violently demanding submission.

​At the center of the royal guard, a man walked forward.

​Kaelor Draven Ashthorne.

​He was strikingly handsome, with sharp, aristocratic features carved from pale marble, and hair as black as a raven's wing. He wore a heavy, dark fur cloak over his obsidian armor, but it was his eyes that made Seraphina’s heart stop.

​They were molten gold.

​Seraphina’s breath hitched. The black wolf. The immense size, the scent of ash and cedarwood that now rolled off the royal entourage, the piercing, intelligent golden gaze—it was him. The wounded wolf in the woods hadn't been a rogue. It had been the High Alpha King himself.

​As Kaelor stepped into the center of the courtyard, his overwhelming aura flared, a silent, authoritative command that swept across the ranks.

Kneel.

​Instantly, like a row of dominos falling to a mechanical whim, the members of the Silver Crescent Pack dropped. Alpha Garrick went down to one knee, bowing his head deeply. Luna Evelyn bowed her face to the cobblestones. Brandon and Cynthia collapsed instantly, their bodies trembling under the sheer pressure of the King’s divine right to rule. Hundreds of warriors and omegas hit the ground in perfect unison, their heads bowed, their eyes pinned to the dirt.

​Except for Seraphina.

​She didn't mean to stand. She wanted to kneel. Her mind screamed at her to drop to her knees, to blend in, to hide from the terrifying monarch standing just fifty paces away. But her body refused to move. It wasn't an act of rebellion; it was sheer, paralyzed fear. But deeper than the fear, that strange, ancient spark within her chest flared up again, casting an invisible, protective shield around her soul. The crushing weight of Kaelor’s aura struck her, but instead of forcing her down, it simply rolled past her like water over stone.

​She stood completely upright, the only vertical figure in a sea of bowed heads.

​Kaelor walked slowly down the central pathway, his golden eyes scanning the kneeling ranks with a cold, dismissive indifference. But as he neared the back rows, his head snapped to the side.

​His molten gold eyes locked directly onto Seraphina.

​Time seemed to dilate. Seraphina stood frozen, her chest heaving, her eyes wide as she looked straight into the face of the tyrant king. She knew what happened to people who defied the crown. She knew she was exposing her lack of a wolf spirit to the most dangerous man on the continent.

​Kaelor paused in his stride. His sharp eyebrows pulled together in a look of profound confusion. He looked at her pale face, her bruised throat, her faded grey tunic—and then his gaze flicked down to her hands, which were still stained with the dark mud of the Whispering Woods.

​He didn't speak. He didn't order his guards to execute her for insubordination. Instead, his nostrils flared, inhaling the crisp night air. A subtle, unfamiliar scent was twisting through the heavy aroma of the packhouse—a scent that carried a microscopic note of silver starlight and ancient earth. It was a scent that didn't belong to a human, and certainly didn't belong to any ordinary wolf.

​"Your Majesty," Alpha Garrick spoke up from the front, his voice strained as he remained on his knee. "The Silver Crescent welcomes you. Is there... an issue with the alignment?"

​Kaelor tore his gaze away from Seraphina, his expression shifting back into a mask of cold, unreadable royalty. He took a slow, deliberate breath, his broad shoulders squaring under his fur cloak.

​"No," Kaelor said, his voice a deep, resonant baritone that sent shivers down the spines of everyone present. "The alignment is sufficient, Alpha Garrick. Rise, and show me to the grand hall."

​"Of course, Your Majesty," Garrick said, quickly standing and gesturing toward the main doors.

​As Kaelor walked past the rows of bowing wolves, he didn't look back at Seraphina. But his hand, hidden beneath the folds of his dark cloak, slowly clenched into a tight fist.

​The grand hall was filled with the clinking of silver chalices and the low murmur of royal courtiers, but Kaelor Draven Ashthorne stood by the high arched window, completely ignoring the feast prepared in his honor. He held a glass of dark wine, but he hadn't taken a single sip.

​His golden eyes were fixed on the dark silhouette of the mountains outside, but his mind was trapped in the courtyard.

The girl.

​When he had been caught in that silver trap, his wolf had been furious, ready to tear apart any living thing that approached. But she had stepped out of the brush—a fragile, scentless creature with eyes full of a strange, indomitable spirit. She had freed him, using a strength that shouldn't have belonged to a human, let alone a wolfless girl.

​And then, in the courtyard, she hadn't knelt.

​His aura was designed to crush the will of any predator, to force even the strongest Alphas to their knees. Yet she had stood there, looking at him with fear, but completely unbroken by his power. And that scent...

​Kaelor closed his eyes, inhaling deeply. Even now, the faint, ghostly note of her scent lingered in his senses, cutting through the heavy perfumes and roasted meats of the hall. It was a pull—a deep, visceral tug that vibrated against the very core of his inner wolf. His beast, usually silent and brooding, was pacing restlessly behind his ribs, scratching at the walls of his consciousness with a frantic, desperate energy.

Mate.

​The word echoed through his mind, heavy and impossible.

​The Alpha King had spent a century without a mate, believing the Moon Goddess had deemed him too monstrous to have a fated match. But right now, his wolf was howling, pointing its invisible muzzle directly toward the lower quarters of the Silver Crescent Packhouse.

​Kaelor opened his eyes, the molten gold burning with a sudden, dangerous fire. He turned away from the window, looking out over the crowded hall.

​She was here. Somewhere inside this pathetic, sniveling pack, his fated mate was hiding. And whether she was a wolf, a human, or something entirely broken, he would tear this entire kingdom apart to claim her.

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Dernier chapitre

  • THE ALPHA'S CURSED LUNA [ENGLISH]   Chapter 4

    ​The Grand Pavilion at the capital grounds was a sprawling sea of obsidian silk, roaring bonfires, and unbridled, dangerous ambition. Perched on the sacred plateaus dividing the northern and southern territories, the neutral sanctuary had been transformed into a brilliant, terrifying spectacle. Banners from the Seven Moon Kingdoms snapped violently in the biting mountain wind, each bearing the sigil of its ruling house.​The air was thick, heavy, and suffocatingly saturated with the competing scents of hundreds of high-ranking alphas, betas, and predatory warriors. It smelled of ozone, crushed pine, wet earth, leather, and blood. To an ordinary human, the atmosphere would have been physically paralyzing. To Seraphina, walking at the very rear of the Silver Crescent procession, it felt like entering a gladiator’s arena.​"Look at the Shadow Fang delegation," Cynthia murmured, her eyes gleaming as she adjusted the fur trim of her deep red gown. She walked directly ahead of Seraphina, f

  • THE ALPHA'S CURSED LUNA [ENGLISH]   Chapter 3

    The air inside the Silver Crescent territory grew thicker with every passing hour, charged with a frenetic, almost manic energy. The upcoming Blood Moon Ceremony was no longer just a sacred tradition; with the High Alpha King residing within their very walls, it had become a high-stakes political theater.​In the lower courtyard, far from the grand halls where the royal entourage dined, the pack was a hive of activity. Omegas hurried past with baskets of fresh silk, warriors polished their ceremonial armor to a mirror shine, and the daughters of the pack nobility huddled in small, whispering cliques.​Seraphina moved silently through the chaos, scrubbing the stone balustrade of the eastern gallery. She kept her head down, but her human ears, sharp from years of listening to things she wasn't supposed to hear, caught every scrap of gossip drifting through the mountain breeze.​"They say he hasn't looked at a single woman since he arrived," Tricia whispered, leaning against a pillars as

  • THE ALPHA'S CURSED LUNA [ENGLISH]   Chapter 2

    ​The heavy mahogany doors of the packhouse library creaked open, groaning under the weight of centuries of dust. Seraphina slipped inside, carrying a basket of faded linens she was supposed to be delivering to the washhouse. She knew she was taking a risk by detouring here, but the phantom warmth on her left wrist from that morning’s dream still burned in her thoughts.​She needed answers. She needed to know what a silver crescent mark meant, or if there had ever been another wolfless wolf who had seen a starlight-haired woman in their sleep.​But the peace of the silent library was instantly shattered by the sound of hurried, heavy footsteps echoing from the grand hallway outside.​"Did you hear?" a breathless voice whispered loudly just outside the cracked library door. It was Mindy, one of the main packhouse omegas. "The scouts just returned from the northern border. The royal caravan has changed its route."​"What do you mean changed its route?" another voice replied—Cynthia’s per

  • THE ALPHA'S CURSED LUNA [ENGLISH]   Chapter 1

    The cold morning mist always clung to the jagged peaks of the Whispering Mountains, but inside the training grounds of the Silver Crescent Pack, the air tasted of dirt, sweat, and humiliation.​"Again," Brandon barked, his voice echoing off the stone walls of the arena.​Seraphina Elyndra Vaelcrest pushed herself up from the mud, her breath hitching in her chest. Her hands were raw, scraped against the gravelly earth, and her oversized tunic was soaked through with muddy water. She wiped a streak of blood from her lower lip with the back of her hand, keeping her gaze pinned to the ground.​"I said, get up, Seraphina," Brandon sneered, stepping closer. His chest heaved slightly, not from exhaustion, but from the sheer thrill of the hunt. He was her cousin, the Alpha’s son, and the undisputed golden boy of the Silver Crescent. At twenty-four, his wolf was a massive, lethal beast with fur the color of midnight.​Seraphina, at twenty-three, had nothing. No claws. No fangs. No inner howl.

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