LOGIN
I have always wondered about death; the transition in between one’s life and the next… what happened after, and what happened to those who got left behind. Little did I know that my fate wasn’t to feed that curiosity.
It was to remember.
To remember that everything I believed myself to be, was merely echoes of the serpent eating its own tail.
And I know this because I died long before the world ever learned my name.
Just like I am about to do again.
Muffled sobs bled into the darkness of Clearwater forest, as Ishtar tore through the tangled branches and choking undergrowth.
“Run, my lady. Don’t look back. We’ll hold them back as long as our breath stays in our lungs. If one of us lives tonight, it has to be you. Please—live.”
Every word from her dying pack members clawed at her heart, tightening it until her lungs burned for air.
Her limbs screamed in protest. Muscles stiff. Every step sent fire through her body, as thorns and branches ripped into pale fragile skin, leaving blood in her wake. But guilt burned hotter than the wounds. Poppy was right, she was her father’s shame. A weak liability unfit to be Luna. Maybe it was the darkness, the grief or the pain and guilt she felt, but all she wanted was to die. She felt so deserving of her misfortunes and darkness, that she felt a belonging, but even the forest was unwelcoming, and it took its toll without mercy. Tears blurred her vision, streaking hot and relentlessly down her cheeks as her heart broke again and again with every fading sound behind her. Growls. Dying cries. The wet, sickening thud of bodies hitting the forest floor. However, despite that, she could not slow down. She could not stop. Not after her last remaining family had given their lives in place of hers. Not after they had believed in her more than she ever had. Coward. Something inside of her hissed as she tried to shift again. The urge rose instinctively, wild and desperate, her wolf clawing at the edges of her mind, begging to be let loose. Please. Just this once. Ishtar pleaded silently. Her body answered with agony. Her bones seized instead of reshaping. Her lungs locked. A sharp, breath-stealing pain ripped through her spine, dropping her to one knee with a broken gasp. “No—” she whispered, fury and despair tangling together, as she tried again. Nothing. Her wolf remained trapped, suffocating beneath a weak body that refused to obey. A sob tore free, before she could stop it. Ishtar hated herself at that moment, with a violence that eclipsed everything else. Hated her sickness. Her weakness. Hated that even now, now when survival demanded it most, her stupid body betrayed her. Gathering her strength, she staggered back to her feet, and ran again, blind with tear-filled rage, her heart pounding so hard, she thought it might tear itself free. Roots snaked across the forest floor, slick with moss and shadow, and she did not see the thick one rising before her until it was too late. Her foot caught, twisted, before the world pitched violently. Her fall forced all the air out of her lungs. Her head rang sharply, bright stars bursting through her vision, but it was the pain in her abdomen that stole her breath entirely, a deep frightening ache that made her curl instinctively inward. Ishtar gasped repeatedly for air as a bloodcurdling scream forced its way up her throat. However, just before it escaped, a twig broke a little distance away from her, sending a wild alert through her system. Her hand flew to her mouth instantly, as she groaned; her teeth digging into her skin until it bled. Until the taste of her blood grounded her just enough to remain silent. Beads of sweat broke on her forehead, and for a moment, her vision blurred. When the sounds finally drifted away, she pushed herself up with trembling arms, and as she took a step, warmth trickled down her legs. Ishtar’s breath hitched, but she did not look. She couldn’t afford to. Instead, she clenched her jaw until it hurt, teeth digging deeper into skin, and forced her legs to move again; each step a fresh wave of pain she carried without sound. She ran hunched forward now, one arm wrapped protectively around her abdomen, the other still clenched between her teeth. Please—live… she reminded herself desperately. For them. For the lives they traded for yours. However, through it all, one face haunted her. Pete. Anger surged, hot, but beneath it was something far worse. A desperate, aching longing that made her chest constrict until she thought it might cave in on itself. Where are you? Ishtar hated herself for that thought, even as it surfaced. Hated that part of her even more that still reached out for him in fear. He should have fought for us. He should have chosen us. Ishtar muffled a sob, and for a fleeting moment, she imagined him bursting through the trees, furious and wild, calling her name like he used to, before lies, before ambition, before Poppy. The illusion shattered as quickly as it formed because it was not Pete that burst through the trees; it was a pack fang who used to be family. “I found her, she’s over here.” A shout started and ended with a howl. Ishtar turned and ran, forcing her burning legs to move faster, even as the forest began to thin, the ground sloping down beneath her feet. Soon, the air changed. Open and exposed. Cliff. Her heart thundered wildly, as she broke through the last line of trees and skidded to a halt. Beneath the edge was an endless darkness. Footsteps emerged behind her, and she turned slowly, breath tearing from her sore chest, tears streaking her dirt-smeared face. And there they were. Pete, and beside him was Poppy. “Pete, you are here.” Ishtar’s voice broke. She moved to approach but froze when Pete’s expression twisted with something that churned her stomach—disgust. Poppy’s mocking cackle echoed as her eyes narrowed to a triumphant slit. Pete is mine now, sweetie. My mate, my Alpha, and I, his Luna. But here you are… pitiful, broken, a perfect ending to my plan. You didn’t stand a chance, did you? ” Pete shifted on his feet, hesitating, as though he could intervene, but fear rooted him in place. “Ishtar… I—” “You don’t get to speak, you coward. Not now, not ever.” Ishtar shrieked. Her body shook with anger, pain, and despair. “You… Did this?” Her gaze seared Poppy. “And you knew?” She turned to Pete, searching for an answer as Pete opened his mouth again, but closed it, looking away instead. “Pete, I am carrying your child. How could you do this to me? To us?” Ishtar’s statement seemed to bring tension as the pack fangs under Poppy’s command shared shocked glances. Their hostile expressions loosen instantly. “Oh! Spare me that, please.” Poppy stepped forward. “What kind of curse are you hoping to produce with that weak body of yours? You thought you were untouchable. Protected. Special, because your father was there? Well, where is he now? Fertilizing the earth, while you’re here, alone and weak, trembling on the edge of your own undoing.” She laughed gently, savoring every moment of her cruelty. “How dare you disrespect my father—” “How dare you disrespect your Luna.” Poppy shouted back, tearing Ishtar a slap that sent her to the ground. With Ishtar’s inability to retaliate, Poppy’s smirk deepened. “Enough. You are already a sight for sore eyes on my wedding night,” she said sharply. Her claws flexed with cruel precision. “Time to finish what we started.” Before Ishtar could react, the air erupted into violence. Poppy lunged, striking her with a slash of claws, while Pete stood frozen, unable to move. Pain tore through Ishtar as she was shoved, stumbling backward, tripping over roots and rocks. The cliff loomed ahead, jagged and merciless. So, this was it. Ishtar thought. This was the end. She took a brief silent look at Pete, just as Poppy’s claws shoved her again. This time, the world tilted violently beneath her. She flailed, wind screaming past her ears. Ishtar shut her eyes, droplets of tears escaping with the wind. Time slowed, each second stretching into eternity. Her body twisted, scraped, and tore against the unforgiving rocks. Each hit sent her closer. By then, her wolf and her baby had gone silent. However, in the silence between her heartbeats, she felt it, the culmination of betrayal, sorrow, and rage. She thought of her people, lying lifeless in the forest, their sacrifice in vain. She thought of Pete, standing there, guilt-ridden and impotent, the man who had once been her world. I will not die tonight. I will make them pay. Every single one of them. I swear to you, my child. I swear to you, father. Ishtar thought of her father, and as her gaze caught the full moon, she clenched her teeth in silence against the agony, against the wind, and the blood, and the terror. Against her body smashing against the earth below, as immediate darkness claimed her. **** “Lillia” The soft and calming scent of lavender was the first thing that called Ishtar to consciousness, followed by the gentle yet deep voice that sounded distant at first before they slowly wafted into her senses, pulling her closer to reality. She blinked, eyes fluttering open. “Lillia.” A face hovered above her, and when her eyes adjusted, she caught the deepest darkest eyes she had ever seen.Three days until Veil Night…The excitement surrounding Amelia’s recovery lingered long after the initial shock had faded, and with it, Lillia finally felt the wintry morning air in the warm embrace of her maidens. The cold forest was still shrouded in darkness, though faint traces of dawn had begun creeping across the distant horizon. For several minutes, the women remained exactly where they were, exchanging relieved smiles and embracing one another as though afraid the good news might somehow disappear if they let go too quickly. She had missed them.After everything they had endured since the joining ceremony, the moment felt almost unreal, because for once, setting Lillia’s situation aside; no one was in danger, and no one was in tears or panicking. No one was trying desperately to survive yet another deathly catastrophe. So, for the first time in days, they simply stood together and allowed themselves to be happy. Hearing a sudden movement, Lillia’s attention drifted beyo
Fenris’ wild gasp tore through Lillia’s consciousness as their bond surged violently back into place, the overwhelming flood of emotions crashing into her with such force that she instinctively clutched her chest. Her breathing became ragged almost immediately, each uneven breath struggling to steady the frantic pounding of her heart while fragments of the nightmare she had just escaped continued flashing relentlessly through her mind. Her hands flew quickly to her neck as the memory of Belial’s claws reaching for her through the haze remained painfully vivid. For several long seconds, she found herself staring blankly ahead, almost expecting the shadows around her to split apart and reveal those hollow eyes watching her once more. But instead, the familiar blue light from the blue fire greeted her, exposing the dimly lit canvas of Anubis’ tent that stood undisturbed around her while faint trails of smoke curled lazily upwards from an incense pot with still glowing ashes.She was ba
The only time she had felt something this chilling was beneath Azazel’s gaze. His glare in that pitch blackness had reduced her every emotion to pure dread. It had left her painfully aware of how unwelcomed and insignificant she was. Yet, even that memory was distant now, because then, at least, she felt unwelcome and insignificant; but this… this was different. Lillia felt suffocated by the overwhelming wave of animosity as though the fact she was living and breathing… no, her entire existence was wrong to begin with.The intense feeling settled over her slowly and completely, sinking through flesh and bones until it seemed to wrap itself around the very essence of her being. That stench, that unbearably putrid stench was hatred. Pure hatred. All the hairs on her neck stood with the coldness that washed down her body, drenching her in cold sweat. She could feel Fenris' wild instincts of survival kick in as she felt like a prey caught in a death trap, and her body was frozen. Fen
The disorienting icy impact was immediate. Cold seeped into her bones with the force of the waterfall driving her beneath the surface before the current dragged her downstream, and with it, pain shot through every injury on her body. For several terrifying seconds, all Lillia could do was allow the river to carry her while she fought to keep herself conscious. When she finally broke the surface, she sucked in a sharp breath and forced herself toward the bank, kicking and pushing until she crawled out of the river. Water streamed down from her clothes, soaking the ground she had stumbled on with momentary relief at finally being grounded and having her life in her hands again. Then, her sharp gaze swept the surroundings, and the first thing she noticed was the decay. The black corruption had crawled across the cliffs and devoured entire sections of the forest in the distance where they had initially ran from. It consumed everything it touched, leaving behind nothing but lifeless hu
Pain welcomed Lillia first when she came to. It seeped into her awareness before anything else, settling into every bruise, every cut and every aching muscle. The throbbing only intensified when she tried to move, disorientation washing over her as she pushed herself upright in the dimly lit cave.“Easy… easy Lillia, it’s alright.” A soft touch followed by a soft voice sounded beside her and familiarity seeped in. “Amelia?” Relief hit Lillia so suddenly it almost stole the rest of her breath. “It’s me.” Amelia smiled softly. “We got away. Are you alright? You passed out the moment we fell into the waterfall.”The mind space—the raging rapids—the entities—Amelia’s leg—Belial. Everything came slamming in all at once and Lillia’s eyes snapped wide open. “Your leg? Is your leg alright?” She watched Amelia gently move her dress, exposing black markings from the entity’s grip on her leg but other than that, the spreading rot was gone. “I am fine. Thank you Lillia.”Only when Lillia confi
Regaleon’s gaze settled on the folded parchment Shane had placed on the table. “What is this?” “The intel from House Blackwell was not the only message I received.” Shane answered quietly. “I’m afraid we may have a problem.” The amusement that had lingered within Regaleon’s dark eyes moments before, disappeared almost instantly, and his hand moved toward the parchment.Silver eyes have left the palace.The message was brief, yet the study fell silent like something had reached into the room and strangled sound before it could escape. So much that Shane felt it first… a tightening in his chest, and he shifted uneasily on his feet as the air around him solidified, pressing down with a weight that made it harder for him to breathe. Even the warmth from the fire felt distant as a sudden shiver worked up his spine. Regaleon did not look up. That was worse. His dark hair fell forward, veiling his expression as the air around him shifted, tightening the knot in Shane’s chest. When Re
For a second, the world seemed to pause. Elder Greyson’s guards faltered mid-step, movements slowing as every head turned toward the path leading to the gate. But it was night, and other than the vicinities illuminated by burning torches, everywhere was pitch, even more so, the path. Yet, the th
The knock on the door struck like a blow to stone as Lillia jolted awake, gasping hard. Her breath tore from her lungs as though she had fallen rather than slept.Her hands flew all over her body in frantic sweeps, searching for pain, blood. They searched for the brutal certainty of impact.But the
Maera froze as a sharp intake of breath from the other maidens followed. “Forgive me, my lady, but that… that won’t be possible,” She said, carefully choosing her words this time. “You cannot approach his Majesty unless summoned.” Fenris scoffed. He can’t be serious, can he… really? Only one way
Beautiful. She breathed as her face caught the silver glow. The full moon shone brightly at its peak, but like every other full moon, the ache began. It started deep within her bones; a slow, crawling soreness that spread through her body. The dull but consistent pressure in her mind un







