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LYRA'S POV
The floor is cold. That is the first thing I notice every morning. The second thing is the ache in my knees. I have been scrubbing these hallways since I was old enough to hold a brush. Before the sun even thinks about rising, I am on my hands and knees. My brush scratches against the stone floor. My bucket of soapy water smells like lye and failure. The packhouse hallway stretches in front of me like a never-ending river of dirt. Behind me, the kitchen staff shouts and bangs their pots. Above me, in warm beds, my family sleeps. I am the Beta's daughter. But no one treats me like one. "Faster, Lyra!" Marta's voice cuts through the morning like a whip. She is the head maid, and she hates me. I do not know why. Maybe because I remind her that her job could have been mine. "The Alpha's guests arrive this afternoon. Every speck of dust must be gone." "Yes, Marta," I say quietly. I dip my brush into the bucket and keep scrubbing. The soap burns my cracked knuckles. My back screams from yesterday's work. My hands have calluses that no seventeen-year-old girl should have. But I do not complain. Complaining only makes things worse. I learned that lesson a long time ago. --- By mid-morning, the packhouse is loud with noise. Young wolves run past me, laughing. Their faces shine with excitement. They are getting ready for the Moon Festival—three days of dancing, food, and mate ceremonies. Some of them will find their true mates under the full moon. Some of them will dance until dawn. I watch them from the floor, my brush frozen in my hands. I dream about the festival every year. I imagine wearing a clean dress. I imagine someone looking at me like I matter. I imagine the Moon Goddess finally giving me someone who will take me away from this place. But dreams are for girls with soft hands and warm beds. Girls like my half-sister, Mira. Mira walks past me an hour later. She is two years younger than me, with our father's dark hair and our mother's bright eyes. She wears a blue dress that costs more than I will ever own. Three friends follow her, giggling about boys and dances. "Look at her," Mira says, loud enough for everyone to hear. She does not look at me. She never looks at me. "Still scrubbing like the servant she is." Her friends laugh. I keep scrubbing. When I was little, I used to cry when Mira said things like that. Now my eyes stay dry. You cannot cry forever. At some point, your body just gives up. --- The debt collectors arrive after lunch. I am in the kitchen, scrubbing the stone floor near the back door, when I hear the front doors slam open. Heavy boots march into the packhouse. Men's voices—low, angry, dangerous. I freeze. "Where is Beta Rowan?" a voice growls. It is deep and rough, like rocks grinding together. I crawl closer to the kitchen door. I know I should mind my own business. That is the first rule of surviving in this house: keep your head down and your mouth shut. But something pulls me forward. Fear, maybe. Or the terrible feeling that my life is about to change. I peek through the crack in the door. Three men stand in the main hall. They wear dark coats and hard faces. The leader has a scar running from his ear to his chin. In his hand, he holds a folded paper. My father's name is written on the front. My father, Beta Rowan, hurries down the stairs. His face is pale. His hands shake. I have never seen my father afraid of anything. He is a Beta. He is supposed to be strong. But right now, he looks like a mouse trapped in a corner. "Gentlemen," he says, his voice too high. "I just need more time—" "You've had six months of time," the scarred man says. He slaps the paper against my father's chest. "The Alpha of Shadowfang Pack wants his money. You borrowed fifty thousand silver marks for gambling. You promised to pay it back by the full moon." Fifty thousand. My stomach drops. My father has a gambling problem. Everyone knows it. But I did not know it was this bad. "I can pay," my father says quickly. "I just need—" "You have nothing left," the scarred man interrupts. "Your pack's Alpha already refused to cover your debt. Your wife's jewelry is gone. Your land is gone." He leans closer. "Our Alpha is losing patience, Rowan. Pay by sundown tomorrow, or we take something you cannot replace." They leave without another word. My father stands alone in the hall for a long time. His shoulders shake. I think he might be crying. I crawl back to my bucket and scrub until my hands bleed. --- That night, a guard finds me in the servant's quarters. "Beta Rowan wants you in the pack hall," he says. His face is strange. Pity, maybe. Or disgust. "Now." I follow him through the dark hallways. My stomach twists into knots. My father has never summoned me before. He does not even look at me most days. Not since my mother died. He blames me for her death, you see. She died giving birth to me. I killed her by simply being born. My father has reminded me of that every single birthday. Every single holiday. Every single time he looks at my face and sees her eyes. The pack hall is bright with lanterns. A long table sits in the middle. My father stands at the head of it. Beside him sit three strangers, the debt collectors. They have returned. And they are smiling. My blood turns to ice. "Ah," the scarred man says when he sees me. "The daughter. She is pretty enough. The Alpha will be satisfied." "What?" My voice comes out as a whisper. "Father, what is happening?" My father will not look at me. He stares at the table instead. His hands grip the edge until his knuckles turn white. "Lyra," he says slowly, "you are no longer my responsibility. I have sold your contract to the Shadowfang Pack. Their Alpha has agreed to accept you as payment for my debt." The room spins. I think I might be sick. "You sold me?" My voice cracks. "I am your daughter. Your blood." "You are the reason my mate is dead," he says flatly. No emotion. No regret. Just a fact. "You owe me this. Now you will pay." The scarred man stands up. He signals to two guards I did not notice before. They move toward me. "No." I step backward. "No, you cannot do this. The Moon Goddess—the laws—" "The Moon Goddess does not care about servants," my father says. He finally looks at me. His eyes are cold as winter stones. "And the laws do not apply to debts. You belong to Shadowfang now. What their Alpha does with you is none of my concern." The guards grab my arms. I struggle. I kick. I scream. But they are stronger than me. They drag me toward the door. I look back at my father one last time. I want to see regret. I want to see love. I want to see anything that proves I am more than a transaction to him. His face is empty. Then, as the guards pull me through the doorway, he speaks. His voice is quiet. Almost kind. That makes it worse. "Pray the cursed Alpha kills you quickly." --- The night air hits my face like a slap. The guards throw me into a metal carriage. The door locks behind me. Through the small window, I see the packhouse getting smaller and smaller. My home. My prison. My father's house. I press my forehead against the cold glass and let the tears come. They burn hot down my cheeks. I do not wipe them away. I have been sold like cattle. My father is gone. My life is over. And somewhere ahead of me, in the darkness, the cursed Alpha of Shadowfang Pack is waiting. Who is he? And what will he do to me when I arrive? The carriage rolls forward into the night. I have never prayed before. But I pray now. Moon Goddess, please let him be merciful. The only answer is the howl of wolves in the distance.CASSIA'S POVI start with the servants.They gather in the kitchen at dawn, yawning and rubbing their eyes. I walk in like I own the place. They straighten up when they see me. The Beta's wife. Someone important."Have you heard?" I ask, keeping my voice low.They lean in."About the girl," I say. "The one Alpha Kael brought here."One of them nods. "The debt payment.""She's not just a debt payment." I pause. Let the silence hang. "She's cursed."Their eyes widen."Have you noticed the strange things happening since she arrived?" I ask. "The blackouts. The whispers. The warriors dropping to their knees?"More nods. They've felt it too. They just didn't have a name for it."That's her," I say. "She's bringing death to this pack. The hunters are coming because of her."I leave them whispering among themselves. The seeds are planted.---I move to the training field next.The warriors are sparring, grunting, swinging wooden swords. I stand at the edge until one of them notices me. Rina.
RONAN'S POVI press a cold cloth to my jaw and wince.Kael hits hard. I'll give him that.The bruise is already darkening. Purple and blue spreading across my skin. I look at myself in the mirror and almost laugh. A prince of the Eastern Court, beaten up over a girl who won't even look at me.A knock on my door.I turn. "Come in."My warrior enters. His face is pale. He's breathing hard like he ran here. In his hand, he holds a sealed letter."The reply," he says. "From the Eastern Court."My heart stops.I take the letter. Break the seal. Read the words.The Eastern Court welcomes the heir. Bring her immediately. The hunters are closer than you know. Do not delay.I read it twice. Three times.They're giving me permission. They're telling me to move now.I look at my warrior. "Leave me."He bows and disappears.I stand alone in my room, the letter clutched in my hand. My jaw throbs. My head spins.I can't wait anymore.---I walk through the fortress. My boots echo against the stone.
CASSIA'S POVI watch her walk through the fortress like she owns it.Lyra. The debt payment. The servant who thinks she's something now.No guards follow her. No chains on her wrists. She moves through the hallways with her head held high, like the mark on her arm gives her the right to breathe the same air as me.It makes me sick.I press myself against the wall as she passes. She doesn't see me. She never sees me. She's too busy playing the victim, too busy making Kael feel sorry for her.But I see her.I see everything.---I've waited seven years for Kael.Seven years of standing, waiting while he chose other women. Elara. Mira. Sera. Each one beautiful. Each one dead.I thought I was patient. I thought I could outlast them all.Then Lyra arrived.And everything I worked for started crumbling.---I follow her through the fortress. She goes to the garden. Sits on a stone bench. Stares at the mountains like she's contemplating something deep.She's probably thinking about Kael. Abo
RONAN'S POV---I don't follow her.I watch Lyra run from the training field, her dark hair flying, her shoulders shaking. She disappears through the fortress doors. I stay where I am.My hands are still warm from touching her.She landed on top of me. Her chest against mine. Her breath on my lips. I can still feel the weight of her. The fear in her eyes when Kael's voice cut through the air.She is mine. I will kill you if you touch her again.Kael didn't say it. But his eyes screamed it. Possessive. Territorial.I found her first.---I walk back to my quarters. The fortress is loud around me—warriors training, servants rushing. No one looks at me twice. I'm just another guest. Just another prince visiting from the Eastern Court.They don't know who I am.They don't know why I'm really here.I close the door. Lock it. Pull the pendant from beneath my shirt.Silver. Worn smooth. A crescent moon wrapped around a broken crown.The symbol of the Silver Crescent Pack. The bloodline I've
ROMAN'S POVI have searched for ten years.Every pack. Every ruin. Every rumor that whispered of a survivor. I followed false leads and dead ends. I wasted years on lies.And then I found her.In a fortress at the edge of the world. Sold like cattle. Mated to a wolf who refuses to claim her.The Moon Goddess has a cruel sense of humor.I stand at my window and watch the sun rise over the mountains. The east wing is still dark. She is still sleeping. Or trying to sleep. I have seen the shadows under her eyes. She is scared.She hides it well. But I see it.My hand moves to my chest. Beneath my shirt, the silver pendant rests against my skin. I have worn it every day since my mother died.A crescent moon wrapped around a broken crown.The symbol of the Silver Crescent.The symbol of the pack my mother served.The symbol that now marks Lyra's wrist.I pull the pendant out and stare at it. The silver is worn smooth from years of touching.I found her, Mother. I found the heir.Now what do
LYRA'S POV I cannot stop thinking about Prince Ronan.His green eyes. His easy smile. The way he caught my elbow like I was someone worth catching. The way he said you are not trouble.I guess I wasn't fast to adjust the leather in my wrist. I think he saw the symbol.There was something in his eyes when he saw it. Recognition. Curiosity. Like he knew something I did not. I just remembered he stirred at my wrist at that moment we saw.I lie on my bed and stare at the ceiling. The mark pulses softly under my sleeve. It has been doing that more often now. Not painful. Just... present. Like a heartbeat that does not belong to me.I should go back to the library.I need answers.---The training field incident changed everything.Warriors avoid me now. They do not look at me. They do not speak to me. When I walk through the hallways, they step aside. Not out of respect. Out of fear.I am a monster to them.A servant girl who made trained wolves drop to their knees.I do not blame them. I
LYRA'S POV Three days pass after the training field. I do not leave my room. The guards bring food. I do not eat. The mark pulses on my wrist. I do not look at it. Kael does not come. I do not know if I want him to or not. The fortress is louder than usual today. Boots stomp through the hallwa
LYRA'S POV Three days pass in a blur of walls and whispers.I cannot stay in that room anymore. The stone is closing in. The ceiling is getting lower. i can't just forget about the the attack. And also about the new discovery. Every sound makes me jump.On the fourth morning, I make a decision.I
MAGNUS POV I wait until the girl is gone before I allow myself to breathe.The archive is dark and cold. The torches flicker. Shadows crawl up the walls like living things. I lean against the table and press my hand against my chest. My heart is pounding too fast. I am too old for this kind of sho
KAEL'S POVThe war room is cold and crowded.I called the meeting ten minutes after Lyra ran from the training field. Every captain. Every elder. Every warrior who witnessed what happened. They fill the long stone room with shuffling feet and whispered questions. No one knows why I summoned them.B







