LOGINBella's POV
The room they gave me was at the far end of the east wing. Small. Plain. A single bed with a iron frame, one window that faced the back wall of the packhouse and a wooden chair that looked like it had given up on life years ago. No flowers. No welcome. No nothing. Just four walls and a door that locked from the outside. I sat on the edge of the bed and looked at my hands. The mark on my wrist had stopped glowing but it was still there, settled into my skin like it had always been there. Like it belonged. Like it had simply been waiting for tonight to show itself. I pressed my thumb against it. It didn't hurt. It didn't burn. It just... was. Outside, the party had stopped. I had been here all alone without food or water and no one bothered to come ask the omega in the east wing if she was alright. Nobody came. Not Zane. Not Elder Crest. Not a single packmate or warrior or even a house servant knocking to bring water. I was alone in the way only truly unwanted people understand. The kind of alone that isn't just physical. The kind that settles into your bones and whispers that the world keeps spinning just fine without you in it. I lay back on the bed and stared at the ceiling. Today I had been humiliated in front of every Alpha in the region. I had been rejected publicly, laughed at, insulted and dumped in this place. My wrist carried a divine mark that nobody wanted to acknowledge and I had signed marriage papers that the elders slid in front of me with shaking hands while Zane stood ten feet away with his back turned. He hadn't looked at me once during the signing. Not once. I should have cried. Any reasonable person would have cried. But the tears wouldn't come and I wasn't sure if that made me strong or just empty. I closed my eyes and pulled the thin blanket over myself without bothering to change out of my uniform. What was the point. Sleep came slowly. Shallow at first, restless, my mind replaying Zane's voice over and over. I reject you, Bella Cooper. The laughter. The flower hitting my shoulder. Tyla's face twisted with fury and relief at the same time. Then deeper sleep pulled me under like water. And that was when the light came. It started small. A thin silver thread at the edge of my vision, the kind you notice in that strange space between sleeping and waking where everything feels both real and impossible at once. I turned toward it instinctively. It grew. Slowly at first and then all at once, silver light poured into the room like the moon itself had leaned down and pressed its face against the window. It filled every corner. It swallowed the shadows. It was warm in a way light had no business being warm. Something I had no word for. I sat up. I was not afraid. I knew I should have been but I wasn't. In the center of the light, a figure formed. Woman-shaped but not a woman. Too still. Too luminous. Her hair moved like it was underwater and her eyes when they opened were the exact silver of a full moon on a cloudless night. She looked at me and I felt it in my chest like a bell being struck. The room was absolutely silent. She stepped closer and the light moved with her, gentle and unhurried and she stopped at the foot of my bed and looked at me for a long moment without speaking. Like she was making sure it was really me. Like she had been looking for a very long time. When she finally spoke, her voice came from everywhere at once. From the walls and the floor and somewhere deep inside my own chest. "Bella Cooper." My name in her mouth sounded different. Heavier. Like it meant something it had never meant before. "Yes," I whispered. She tilted her head slightly. "Do you know how long I have been searching for you, child?" I shook my head. She smiled. It was the saddest and most beautiful smile I had ever seen on any face in my entire life. "They hid you well," she said softly, almost to herself. "Your whole life, kept small. Kept invisible. Kept in the back of every room so nobody would look too closely." Her silver eyes held mine. "But I always knew where you were." My throat tightened. "Who are you?" I asked, even though some part of me already knew. The light around her pulsed once, warm and ancient and absolute. She didn't answer that question directly. Instead she reached out and her fingers, cool and impossibly gentle, touched the mark on my wrist. It lit up immediately, blazing silver and gold so bright I had to squint. "This mark was never about him," she said quietly. "It was always about you. About what you carry. About what you were born to do." "I don't understand," I whispered. She looked at me with those moon eyes and spoke with the kind of certainty that leaves no room for doubt anywhere in your body. “Child… I finally found you. You are the chosen one. The pack's true Luna. The royal healer." The light exploded. And everything went white.Bella's POVThe assembly had taken everything I had.Not physically. Not the way healing took something, that specific draining quality of power moving through me and leaving a hollow behind. This was different. Standing in front of three hundred faces and telling them the truth, all of it, the network, the objects, the name that Elder Crest had confirmed with the particular heaviness of a man setting down something long carried, that had taken something from a different place. Somewhere closer to the center of me than the mark or the gift or any of it.The part that had spent three years being told it didn't matter.Standing in that courtyard and asking three hundred people to trust me with the truth of their fear had required me to trust them first with mine. That was the exchange. I understood it clearly. It didn't make it easy.Zane had stood beside me the entire time.Not in front of me. Not slightly behind me in the way that would have suggested he was managing me or covering f
Elder Crest's POVI had not expected to live long enough to say Selene's name out loud in a council context.That sounds dramatic. I am aware it sounds dramatic. But I have been on this council for thirty years and in those thirty years I have read the restricted texts twice, once when I first accessed them as a newly appointed elder trying to understand the full scope of what this council was responsible for knowing, and once ten years later when a rogue witch operating near our southern border produced work that bore superficial similarities to documented Selene craft and sent me back to the archive in a cold sweat that turned out to be unnecessary.Both times I read those texts I came away with the same feeling. The feeling of having looked at something so large and so patient and so entirely indifferent to the normal rhythms of pack life that the appropriate response was not fear exactly but a kind of profound recalibration of what the word threat actually meant.Most threats were
Bella's POVThe search teams found four more objects before sundown.Four. Distributed across the packhouse in locations that told a story when you mapped them together. One behind a loose stone in the warriors' corridor. One pressed beneath the lip of the main gate's guard post. One inside the hollow leg of a table in the junior elders' meeting room. One tucked behind the water cistern serving the family wing.The family wing.That one landed differently than the others.Bram brought them all to Darian's secondary chamber wrapped carefully in cloth that Elder Crest had consecrated for containment, the kind of old pack ritual that most modern wolves treated as ceremonial rather than functional until a situation like this one made the distinction feel considerably less academic.Elder Crest examined each object in turn with the focused attention of a man consulting a language he hadn't spoken in years but hadn't entirely forgotten. He turned them carefully, studied the symbol arrangeme
Zane's POVThe scout's message was five words.Garrett is at the gate.Not the eastern gate where he'd disappeared from eleven days ago. The main gate. The front entrance, facing the pack square, where visitors presented themselves formally and guards processed arrivals in full view of anyone standing in the courtyard.He'd walked up to the front door.I stood in Darian's secondary chamber holding the message parchment and felt the specific cold clarity of a situation revealing its own shape. Men who ran because they were afraid didn't come back to the front gate. Men who ran because they'd been given instructions and completed them did.Garrett hadn't fled. He'd been sent somewhere and now he'd returned, which meant whatever he'd gone to do was finished, and whoever had sent him either wanted him back inside our walls or had discarded him in a way that pointed him back here.Neither option was comfortable."Bring him in," I told the scout. "Hold him in the eastern receiving room. Nob
Zane's POV Bella's grip on my arm was tight enough to leave marks. I'd felt her strong before. In the courtyard this morning when the light had poured out of her and the flagstones had lit up beneath her feet, I'd understood intellectually that the woman beside me carried something enormous inside her. But this was different. This was her fingers finding the bone of my forearm through muscle and sleeve and holding on like I was the only solid thing in a world that had just tilted sideways. "Bella." I covered her hand with mine. "What did you hear?" She didn't answer immediately. Her eyes were unfocused in the way I'd started recognizing as her processing something through the mark rather than through ordinary thought. Whatever the name was, it hadn't just arrived in her mind. It had arrived in her body, in the same place everything else arrived that the mark decided she needed to know. The corridor was empty around us. Bram's team had moved ahead toward Darian's chambers. Wren h
Bella's POVShe's already here.The words left my mouth before I fully understood what had produced them, that layered quality in my voice again, my wolf speaking through me with the particular certainty of something that didn't deal in approximations or maybes.Zane went completely still beside me."Where?" he said quietly."Inside the walls," I said, pressing my hand harder against the blazing mark, trying to read it the way Darian had been teaching me to read everything else, not with my mind but with whatever was underneath my mind, older and less polite about what it noticed. "Not the forest. She came in before we came out here. We were moved out here so she could go in."Zane had his communication stone out before I finished speaking, the small pack-linked crystal that let Alphas relay urgent signals to warriors across the territory simultaneously. He pressed it and said two words."Lockdown. Now."The signal went out like a stone dropped in still water, rippling fast in every d







