Mag-log inChapter Four
The Shadowpaw training grounds lay shrouded in perpetual twilight, even at midday. Ancient pines blocked most of the sun’s light, creating a landscape of shadows and half darkness that suited the pack perfectly. Shadowpaw wolves trained here to move unseen, to kill silently, to become one with the darkness itself. They were the scouts and assassins of the werewolf clans, feared, respected, and never quite trusted by the other packs. Ragnar Strikefast stood in the center of the combat ring, his chest heaving, his knuckles bloodied. Around him lay three training partners, groaning and clutching various injuries. He had been sparring for hours, working out his rage on anyone foolish enough to step into the ring with him. It was not helping. "Enough." Alpha Obsidian Nightprowl’s voice cut through the clearing like a blade. The gathered wolves immediately fell silent. Obsidian emerged from the shadows, literally, his form coalescing from darkness as if he had been part of the forest itself. He was tall even for an Alpha, with black fur so deep it seemed to absorb light. In human form, his features were sharp and aristocratic, his eyes the pale grey of winter ice. Those eyes fixed on Ragnar with calculating interest. "Walk with me," Obsidian commanded. It was not a request. Ragnar followed his Alpha away from the training grounds, through the dense forest toward the heart of Shadowpaw territory. They moved in silence, Obsidian’s presence radiating the kind of patient menace that made even his own pack members nervous. Finally, they reached a small clearing where a stream ran black with minerals from the rocks. Obsidian settled onto a fallen log, gesturing for Ragnar to sit. When Ragnar remained standing, the Alpha merely smiled, an expression that never reached his eyes. "Your mate's bond was severed last night," Obsidian said. It was not a question but a statement of fact. Ragnar’s jaw clenched. "Yes, Alpha." "By Marina Nightwater. Without your consent, without warning, without even the courtesy of explanation." Obsidian’s voice was conversational, almost sympathetic. "That must be difficult." "It is a private matter, Alpha." "Nothing is private when it affects my pack’s warriors." Obsidian leaned forward slightly. "You are one of my best, Ragnar. Deadly, efficient, loyal. But for the past day you have been distracted. Angry. Taking your rage out on training partners who do not deserve it." He paused. "That makes it my concern." Ragnar forced himself to relax his clenched fists. "I apologize, Alpha. It will not happen again." "I am not looking for apologies. I am looking for information." Obsidian’s pale eyes glittered in the dim light. "Why would Marina break your bond? What could possibly motivate such a drastic action?" "I do not know." The admission tasted like acid. "She would not tell me." "Interesting." Obsidian stood, beginning to pace around the clearing. "Marina Nightwater. Hybrid of Silvermoon and Shadowpaw blood. Beautiful, talented, and never quite accepted by either pack. She lives on the edges of Silvermoon territory, isolated and alone." He glanced at Ragnar. "Except for you. You were her anchor, her connection to the Shadowpaw part of herself. Breaking that bond would leave her completely untethered." Ragnar had not thought of it that way, but Obsidian was right. Marina’s mixed heritage had always been a source of pain for her. Her Shadowpaw father had died when she was young, killed in a border dispute with Bloodfang. Her Silvermoon mother had raised her, but the pack had never fully accepted a child with darkness in her blood. Ragnar had understood that isolation. He too was a hybrid, though his mixed bloodlines were more accepted in Shadowpaw than Marina’s were in Silvermoon. Their mating had been practical as much as emotional, two outsiders finding companionship in their shared otherness. "Unless," Obsidian continued in a speculative tone, "she plans to forge a new connection. A new bond that requires her to be unattached." Ice formed in Ragnar’s stomach. "What do you mean?" "The Blood Moon Hunt takes place in two days. In Bloodfang territory." Obsidian stopped pacing and turned to face Ragnar directly. "It is their sacred mating ceremony. Unmated wolves from across the territories are permitted to attend." "Marina would not..." Ragnar began, but even as he spoke, pieces began falling into place. The timing of the bond breaking. The secrecy. Marina’s refusal to explain. And worst of all, the emergency Council meeting that Alpha Thornwhisper had called three days ago, a meeting Marina had attended. "She is going to the Hunt," Ragnar said slowly as horror and fury warred in his chest. "Silvermoon is sending her to Bloodfang." "As a spy," Obsidian agreed. "Almost certainly. The question is this. What exactly is her mission?" He resumed his seat on the log, looking entirely too pleased with himself. "The Silvermoon Pack has been decimated by the plague. They are desperate, paranoid, looking for someone to blame. And who better to blame than their aggressive warrior neighbors?" "Bloodfang has nothing to do with the plague," Ragnar protested. "They have lost wolves too. I have seen the reports." "Reports can be falsified. Wolves can be sacrificed to deflect suspicion." Obsidian’s words were casual, but his eyes were sharp. "But you are right. Bloodfang is not behind the plague. I know this with certainty." Something in the Alpha’s tone made Ragnar’s skin prickle. "How can you be certain?" "Because I know who is responsible." Obsidian stood again and moved to the black stream. He knelt, trailing his fingers through the dark water. "Tell me, Ragnar. What do you know about ancient shadow magic? The old rituals, the blood curses, the techniques our ancestors used before the modern packs arose?" Ragnar’s mouth went dry. "Alpha, what are you saying?" "I am saying that the plague is shadow magic. Sophisticated, powerful, and precisely targeted to avoid detection." Obsidian pulled his hand from the water, watching the droplets fall. "I am saying that whoever created it would need extensive knowledge of forbidden techniques, access to rare ingredients, and the absolute ruthlessness to test it on children." The implications hung in the air like poison. Ragnar wanted to reject them. I wanted to believe there was another explanation. But Obsidian’s expression held no deception, only cold, calculating honesty. "You," Ragnar whispered. "You created the plague." "I initiated a strategic weakening of our rival packs, yes." Obsidian’s tone was matter of fact, as if discussing the weather. "The Shadowpaw Pack has been relegated to the margins for too long, Ragnar. We are feared but not respected. Powerful but not influential. Bloodfang, Silvermoon, and Goldenridge control the best territories, the richest resources, and the most political power." He turned to face Ragnar fully. "I am simply rebalancing the scales." Ragnar took a step back, his mind reeling. "You are murdering children. Entire families. You are destroying..." "I am ensuring our pack’s survival and dominance." Obsidian’s voice remained calm, but power radiated from him, Alpha authority that made Ragnar’s wolf instinctively want to submit. "In fifty years, perhaps less, the other packs would have grown strong enough to eliminate us entirely. We are the smallest of the four major clans, Ragnar. We survive by being too dangerous to attack and too useful to destroy. But that balance is precarious." "This is madness," Ragnar managed. "The other packs will discover the truth. They will unite against us." "Will they?" Obsidian smiled. "Silvermoon already suspects Bloodfang. They are sending Marina to seduce Alpha Silvain and gather evidence of his guilt. When she reports back, truthfully, that Bloodfang is innocent, Silvermoon will have wasted time and resources on a dead end. Meanwhile, the plague continues. More wolves die. Paranoia grows. Eventually the packs will turn on each other. And when they are sufficiently weakened..." He spread his hands. "We will be positioned to claim what should have been ours all along." Ragnar’s wolf snarled inside him, furious and horrified. Yet his human mind saw the terrible logic. If the major packs destroyed each other through suspicion and war, Shadowpaw could emerge dominant. And Obsidian was patient enough to wait decades. "You are telling me this because..." Ragnar’s voice trailed off as realization struck. "Because you want me to help you." "You are one of my best warriors, and your bond with Marina gives you certain advantages." Obsidian moved closer, his presence overwhelming. "I want you to go to Bloodfang territory. Observe Marina’s mission. And when the time is right, ensure that the evidence she discovers points exactly where I want it to point." "You want me to frame Bloodfang for your crimes." "I want you to serve your pack and your Alpha." Obsidian’s expression hardened. "Marina betrayed you, Ragnar. She broke your bond without explanation, without remorse. She is using herself as a weapon against another pack, selling her body and her loyalty to whoever offers the best deal. Does that sound like someone worthy of your protection?" Ragnar wanted to argue. Wanted to defend Marina. But Obsidian’s words struck at the wound that had been bleeding since last night. Marina had chosen her mission over him. Severed their bond without even trying to find another way. Treated him as disposable. "What would you have me do?" Ragnar heard himself ask. Triumph flashed briefly in Obsidian’s eyes before his expression smoothed. "Attend the Blood Moon Hunt. You are unmated now, so you have every right to be there. Watch Marina. See if she succeeds in seducing Silvain. And if she does..." He pulled a small vial from his pocket, filled with dark liquid that seemed to writhe with shadow magic. "Ensure that Silvain discovers exactly what I want him to discover." Ragnar took the vial with numb fingers. "What is it?" "Concentrated plague essence, refined to carry a specific magical signature." Obsidian’s smile was cold. "Plant it somewhere in Bloodfang territory. Marina’s belongings would be ideal. Make it look like she brought it with her. When it is discovered, it will appear that Silvermoon sent her not only to spy but to spread the plague deliberately." "That will destroy any chance of peace between the packs," Ragnar said slowly. "That is the idea." Obsidian placed a hand on Ragnar’s shoulder. "Silvermoon and Bloodfang will go to war. Both will be weakened. And we will be perfectly positioned to pick up the pieces." His grip tightened. "Unless you have objections?" It was phrased as a question, but the Alpha’s tone made it clear there was only one acceptable answer. Ragnar had seen what happened to wolves who disobeyed Obsidian. "No objections, Alpha," Ragnar said, though the words tasted like betrayal. "Good." Obsidian released him. "There is one more thing. Marina will likely try to contact you at some point. She will realize she needs information or help or someone she thinks she can trust." His smile widened. "Be available to her. Pretend to forgive her. Let her think you are willing to help with her mission." "You want me to spy on the spy." "I want you to control the narrative." Obsidian began walking back toward the pack grounds, forcing Ragnar to follow. "Marina is clever and resourceful, but she is also emotionally vulnerable right now. She is isolated from both her packs, bonded to a mission that requires her to betray anyone who trusts her. She will be desperate for any genuine connection." He glanced back. "Use that." Ragnar clutched the vial, feeling its unnatural warmth through the glass. Everything Obsidian said made twisted sense. Marina had betrayed him. She was walking willingly into another pack’s territory to seduce their Alpha and gather evidence against them. She was choosing duty over loyalty. Why should he protect someone who had discarded him so easily? "I will do it," Ragnar said. "I will attend the Hunt. I will watch Marina. And I will make sure the evidence points where you want it to point." "Excellent." Obsidian’s approval felt like a collar tightening around Ragnar’s throat. "Remember, Ragnar. You are not doing this for revenge. You are doing this for the pack. For our survival. For our future dominance." "For the pack," Ragnar echoed hollowly. They emerged from the forest into the training grounds. Everything looked normal. Warriors sparring, scouts practicing stealth techniques, pups learning to harness their shadow magic. No one would guess their Alpha had just confessed genocide and recruited an accomplice. "One more thing," Obsidian said quietly, his voice low enough that only Ragnar could hear. "If Marina discovers what you are doing, if she tries to expose the truth..." He met Ragnar’s eyes. "Kill her. Make it look like an accident, a casualty of her mission. But ensure she cannot reveal what she has learned." Ragnar’s stomach turned to ice. "Alpha, I..." "She broke your bond, Ragnar. She is already dead to you." Obsidian’s voice was gentle, almost sympathetic. "Ending her physical life is simply making the metaphor literal. Can you do this?" Could he kill Marina if necessary? The female he had spent two years bonded to, who had shared his bed, his secrets, his loneliness? He thought of the pain when the bond severed. The humiliation of her refusal to explain. The casual way she had discarded him. "Yes," Ragnar said. "If necessary, I can kill her." "Good." Obsidian clapped him on the shoulder. "Then we understand each other. Attend the Blood Moon Hunt. Play your part. And remember, you are serving the greater good of our pack." The Alpha walked away, leaving Ragnar standing alone in the training grounds. Wolves around him practiced the arts of shadow and silence, unaware that their leader had set in motion a plan that would drown the northern territories in blood. Ragnar looked down at the vial in his hand. The plague essence swirled within, dark and toxic. He should refuse. Should throw it away. Should warn Marina. Should expose Obsidian’s plans. But Marina had broken their bond. Had chosen her mission over him. If she could betray him so easily, she deserved whatever fate awaited her. Ragnar pocketed the vial and headed to his den to prepare for the journey to Bloodfang territory. He had a Blood Moon Hunt to attend, a former mate to observe, and a pack to frame for genocide. His wolf snarled in protest. His conscience screamed warnings. None of it mattered. He had made his choice. Just as Marina had made hers. In two days, when the blood moon rose over Bloodfang territory, their choices would collide in ways neither of them could imagine. The game was in motion. The pieces were moving into position. And somewhere in the shadows, Obsidian Nightprowl smiled, watching his carefully laid plans unfold exactly as he intended.The second message from Obsidian arrived six weeks after the first.Marina read it at the map table in the early morning before the leadership group had assembled. Vael had forwarded it through the eastern ground channels with a brief note attached that said simply: you should read this before the others do.Marina read it twice.Then she sat with it for ten minutes before she did anything else.The message was longer than the first one. Obsidian wrote the way he did everything, precisely and without excess, but the length meant he had something substantial to communicate and had taken the time to structure it carefully.He had accessed the secondary archive's dark tablets.Not Marina's three. The four that belonged to Vael's people, the original holder's primary documentation. He had been working through them systematically and had found something the eastern community had missed because their frequency scanning had not been able to read a particular notation embedded in the fourth t
A month after they returned from the eastern territories, the anchor configuration began to speak.Not in words. Not in images. In frequency, the way all the configurations communicated, in the specific language of vibration that Marina had been learning to read since before she understood that was what she was doing.She was at the boundary stones running her morning check when it happened for the first time. A low warm pulse from the anchor, distinct from the broadcast, distinct from her own five frequencies, coming from the direction of the source level itself. Not an instruction. Not information in any format she could translate directly.More like a response.As if the source, whatever it was at its most fundamental level, had registered her continued presence and was acknowledging it.She stood very still and let it run through her and did not try to interpret it beyond what it was.A pulse.Then quiet again.She told Sable at breakfast.Sable looked at her over her cup with the
The journey home took two days.Marina spent most of it processing the two configurations she had absorbed, running them through her awareness the way she had learned to integrate new frequency work, slow and deliberate, checking each piece against what she already carried.The fundamental frequency reading was the simpler of the two. She understood its mechanics clearly now, the way it confirmed rather than revealed for people she already knew well, the way it would function as a diagnostic tool for corruption or deception in people she did not.The second configuration was harder to name.It was not a reading tool. It was closer to what the broadcast did, a sustained connection rather than a momentary contact, but instead of running outward to the pack frequencies it ran inward, toward the source level itself, in a stable and permanent way that did not destabilize the practitioner the way Sable's reconstructed third configuration would have.Vael had called it, when Marina described
Sable sat down on the floor across from Marina.Not in a chair, not at a formal distance. On the stone floor, the same level, the same cold surface. Marina noted it as a choice and filed it as the kind of choice that meant something.Lyra moved to the doorway without being asked. Vael stayed but stepped back. Silvain remained beside Marina with his shoulder close to hers.Sable looked at the third tablet for a moment. Then she looked at Marina."I found a reference to the configuration in the eastern records fourteen years ago," she said. "Not the full description. A notation from one of the original holder's companions about something she had developed and set aside." She paused. "I spent three years looking for the full documentation. When I could not find it I tried to reconstruct it from the notation.""And," Marina said."I got close enough to attempt it," Sable said. "Once. I will tell you what it did and then I will tell you why I stopped."Marina waited."The third configurati
They left for the eastern territories on a Thursday.Marina, Silvain, Lyra, and Sable. Sable had offered without being asked, and Marina had accepted without hesitation, because whatever was in the secondary archive had been left by the same bloodline that ran through Sable, and having her present felt like the right kind of preparation even if Marina could not fully articulate why.Cian had wanted to come.Marina had said no.He had argued for four minutes with the specific persistence of someone who had earned the right to push back, and Marina had listened to all of it and held the position. The archive responded to five-frequency practitioners. Cian's magic was clean and recovering but not configured for what they would encounter below the root level. Taking him in meant managing his safety on top of everything else.He had accepted it with poor grace and then organized the camp's eastern border monitoring in the time it took them to pack, which was his version of processing disag
Two weeks after Sable arrived, a message came from the eastern territories.Not from Vael. From Obsidian.Marina read it at the boundary stones in the early morning before the camp woke. The handwriting was precise and economical, the same quality she had seen in his observation logs in the Keep. No wasted words. No performance of remorse.The secondary archive had been located.He had found it in four days, which Vael's delegation had apparently received with the specific silence of people who had been looking for the same thing for thirty years and needed a moment to sit with that information.The archive was sealed below the root frequency level exactly as he had described. He could not access it. Neither could Vael's people using standard eastern frequency work. But the seal responded to contact from a five-frequency practitioner, and the response he had recorded suggested it was not a lock but a recognition mechanism.It was waiting for Marina specifically.She folded the message







