LOGINNight fell hard over the North Spire.
It wasn’t gradual or gentle. One moment the mountains were bruised purple by dusk, the next they were swallowed whole by darkness, the moon clawing its way free from storm clouds like a pale wound in the sky. Seraphina felt it before she heard it. The pressure. It pressed against her chest, against her skin, into her bones—an invisible force that made every breath feel heavier. Wolves, dozens of them. Circling the stronghold, their presence rippling through the air like a warning drumbeat. “They’re here,” she said quietly. Darius, standing at the far end of the balcony, didn’t turn. “Yes.” He rested his hands on the stone railing, his posture loose, almost bored. But she could feel the tension coiled beneath his calm, the predator fully awake. “They won’t attack the walls,” he continued. “Not yet. They’re testing.” Seraphina wrapped her arms around herself, the cold biting through the thin layers of her gown. “Testing what?” “How far I’m willing to go,” Darius replied. “And how far you can be pushed.” Below them, a howl rose—low, drawn-out, deliberate. It was answered by another, then another, until the night vibrated with it. A challenge. Seraphina swallowed. “They want me.” “Yes.” The word was unadorned. Truth without comfort. She turned to face him. “Then why haven’t you sent me away?” At that, Darius finally looked at her. Moonlight cut across his face, sharp and silver, catching in his eyes and turning them almost black. For a moment, she thought he wouldn’t answer. “Because sending you away would confirm their suspicions,” he said. “And because—” He paused, jaw tightening. “—you are safer here than anywhere else in this world.” Safe. The word felt fragile. Temporary. A horn sounded from below—a single, deep note that echoed off the mountainside. Darius straightened. “They’ve sent an emissary.” Seraphina’s heart kicked painfully. “An emissary means rules, doesn’t it?” “Rules,” Darius agreed. “And games.” He turned toward the door. “Stay close. Do not speak unless spoken to.” She nodded, then hesitated. “And if they try to take me?” His gaze sharpened. “They won’t.” The certainty in his voice sent a shiver through her. The great doors of the stronghold opened to reveal a lone figure standing in the courtyard below. He was tall, broad-shouldered, his hair silver-white despite his young face. Power rolled off him in controlled waves. An Alpha. “I am Riven Frostclaw,” the Alpha called, his voice carrying easily through the night. “I come under the old laws.” Darius descended the steps with unhurried grace, Seraphina half a step behind him, just as he had ordered. The wolves lining the courtyard stiffened as he passed, lowering their gazes instinctively. Riven’s eyes slid to Seraphina. They lingered. Seraphina felt something brush against her mind—curiosity edged with hunger. Not physical. Instinctual. Like fingers testing the edge of a blade. She drew a sharp breath. Darius moved instantly. His arm came up, not touching her, but close enough that she felt the wall of his presence slam down between them. “Careful,” Darius said softly. “You’re staring at my wife.” Riven’s lips curved. “Contract bride,” he corrected. “Not the same thing.” The air snapped. Darius smiled—but it was all teeth. “Say it again,” he invited. Riven raised his hands slightly in mock surrender. “Peace. I came to observe, not provoke.” “Then observe from a distance,” Darius replied. Riven chuckled, but his gaze sharpened. “You know why we’re here. The council’s walls are thin. Word travels.” “Yes,” Darius said. “It always does when you’re afraid.” Riven’s eyes flicked to Seraphina again. “Is it true, then? That she bled silver?” Seraphina’s stomach dropped. Darius’s voice turned glacial. “You don’t ask questions about my wife’s blood.” “Your wife doesn’t smell human,” Riven said calmly. “She smells like something unfinished.” The words sent a tremor through Seraphina’s chest. Darius stepped forward, his presence flaring—raw, dominant, undeniable. Wolves in the courtyard shifted uneasily, some lowering their heads without realizing it. “She is under my name,” Darius said. “Under my protection. And under my command.” Riven studied him for a long moment. Then he laughed. “So it’s true,” he said. “Nightfang is afraid.” There was silence in the room. Seraphina felt it then—rage, sharp and immediate, roaring through the bond like fire through dry grass. It startled her, not because it was Darius’s, but because she felt it as if it were her own. Before she could stop herself, she took a step forward. “I am not his weakness,” she said. Every head turned. Darius’s breath caught. Riven raised a brow. “You speak boldly for a bride who doesn’t understand what she is.” Seraphina’s hands trembled at her sides, but she didn’t back down. “I understand enough to know this—if you came here expecting submission, you came to the wrong mountain.” A murmur rippled through the wolves. Riven’s smile widened, sharp with interest. “She has teeth.” “Yes,” Darius said quietly. “She does.” Riven inclined his head. “Then allow me to test something, Alpha Nightfang. A challenge—under the old laws. No blood. No harm.” Seraphina’s heart slammed against her ribs. Darius’s eyes never left Riven’s. “Name it.” Riven gestured toward Seraphina. “Let her stand unshielded. Just for a moment. If she truly belongs under your name, she’ll endure our presence.” Seraphina felt the wolves’ attention converge on her like a tide. Darius turned sharply. “No.” Riven shrugged. “Then you admit she cannot withstand the packs.” Darius’s jaw flexed. Before he could speak again, Seraphina reached out and touched his arm. The contact sent a shock through both of them. Darius froze. “I can do it,” she whispered. His gaze snapped to hers. “You don’t know what you’re asking.” “I know what refusing would mean,” she replied. “And I won’t let them think I’m a liability.” For a long moment, he stared at her—at the resolve in her eyes, the fear she refused to show. Slowly, reluctantly, he lowered his arm. The pressure hit her instantly. It was like stepping into deep water—heavy, crushing, filled with instincts not her own. Wolves’ dominance pressed in from every direction, testing, probing. Her knees buckled. Darius growled low in his throat. Seraphina clenched her fists, grounding herself, breathing through it. She focused on the thread she felt inside her—the warmth coiled beneath her skin, the steady presence of the bond. It answered her. The pressure shifted. Not gone—but balanced. Redirected. The wolves stilled. Riven’s eyes widened. “Interesting.” Seraphina straightened, her breathing steadying. She lifted her chin. “I’m still standing,” she said. A hush fell over the courtyard. Riven exhaled slowly, something like awe flickering across his face. “So it’s true,” he murmured. “Luna-blood.” Darius moved then, pulling Seraphina back against him, one arm wrapping around her shoulders in a gesture that was unmistakably possessive. “Enough,” he said. “You’ve seen what you came to see. Leave.” Riven bowed slightly. “For now.” As he turned away, he glanced back once more. “Be careful, Nightfang. The packs won’t wait forever. And neither will the bond.” When the courtyard finally emptied, the silence felt loud. Darius didn’t release her immediately. “You should not have done that,” he said quietly. “But I did,” she replied. His grip tightened briefly, then loosened. He stepped back, looking at her with something unreadable in his eyes. “You felt it,” he said. “Didn’t you? The bond responding.” “Yes,” she admitted. “It helped me.” “That’s what frightens me,” Darius said. She frowned. “Why?” “Because bonds aren’t meant to protect,” he replied. “They’re meant to consume.” A chill slid down her spine. Darius turned toward the stronghold, gesturing for her to follow. “From now on, you are never unguarded. Not even with me.” She blinked. “That doesn’t make sense.” He paused at the doorway, looking back at her one last time. “It will,” he said. “When you realize the bond is waking up.” As the doors closed behind them, sealing out the night and the wolves beyond, Seraphina felt it again—that steady warmth beneath her skin. It's very much awake. And for the first time, she wondered— Not whether she would survive being the Alpha’s contract bride… But whether Darius Nightfang would survive being bound to her.The words Darius had spoken in the courtyard spread through Kieran's territory before the sun had fully set.We rebuild.For many of the survivors those two words became the first real hope they had felt since the night their world had burned.The wolves who had arrived exhausted and broken now found themselves speaking quietly among one another about the future instead of only mourning the past.It did not erase their losses.It did not bring back the dead.But it gave them something to hold onto.And for wolves who had spent days believing they had lost everything, hope was a powerful thing.Inside the healer's quarters Darius sat near the window watching the activity outside. More survivors had arrived throughout the afternoon. Kieran's scouts continued searching the surrounding territories and every few hours another small group appeared at the gates.Some came wounded.Some came frightened.Some came carrying children.Others came carrying nothing at all.Yet every single one of
Rain fell steadily through the early hours of the morning covering Kieran’s territory in a cold quiet haze while most of the pack still slept.But inside the healer’s chamber Darius remained awake.Sleep had become difficult ever since his rescue because every time exhaustion pulled him under he saw the same things again.Fire spreading across the territory.Blood covering the ground.Rhyden falling.Ken fighting beside him until the very end.And the faces of wolves who had trusted him to protect them.Darius sat upright slowly against the bed despite the ache pulling through his body while the storm outside continued softly beyond the windows.His injuries were healing.But not fast enough for him.Nothing felt fast enough anymore.A quiet knock sounded before the chamber door opened and Kieran stepped inside already dressed for the day his expression serious.“You are awake early.”Darius gave a dry breath.“That makes one of us.”Kieran glanced at him carefully.“You should still
The days following Darius’s return passed slowly inside Kieran’s territory but the calm surrounding the pack did not erase the damage left behind by war because every person walking through the grounds carried the awareness that things had changed permanently.Nothing would ever return to the way it had once been.Still life continued.Warriors trained.Guards patrolled.Healers moved constantly between chambers treating injuries from the rescue mission and the battles that had come before it.And inside the healer’s quarters Darius remained confined to bed despite how much he hated it.By the third morning his frustration had become impossible to hide.“You are staring at the door again.”Seraphina’s voice carried quiet amusement as she stepped inside carrying a tray with fresh food and medicine prepared by the healers.Darius looked away from the entrance slowly.“I am not staring at the door.”“You have looked at it at least fifteen times since I came in.”“That is because everyone
Morning came quietly over Kieran’s territory but inside the healer’s chamber there was no real sense of peace because the weight of everything that had happened still sat heavily over every breath and every thought.Darius woke slowly to the faint light filtering through the windows and for a few seconds he simply stared upward trying to steady himself against the dull ache spreading through his body.Pain greeted him immediately.Not sharp enough to stop his thoughts but constant enough to remind him of everything he had survived.He shifted slightly and the movement alone pulled a strained breath from him.“You should not move too much yet.”Seraphina’s voice reached him softly from beside the bed and he turned his head carefully to find her already awake and watching him with tired but relieved eyes.“You are still here,” he murmured.Seraphina almost smiled.“You keep sounding surprised by that.”Darius studied her quietly for a moment before his gaze lowered slightly toward where
By the time they reached the borders of Kieran’s territory the exhaustion weighing on everyone had become impossible to hide.The warriors moved slower now and injuries that had been ignored during battle and escape finally began to show themselves fully beneath the morning light.But despite the pain and exhaustion there was something stronger carrying them forward.They had brought Darius back alive.That alone felt like victory.The guards stationed at the borders straightened immediately the moment they recognized Kieran returning with the others and within seconds word began spreading through the territory faster than anyone could contain it.They were back.And Darius was alive.Seraphina walked beside him as carefully as possible while two warriors carried him between them because he still lacked the strength to walk on his own.His eyes opened briefly as they crossed through the gates and for a moment he simply stared ahead at the familiar surroundings as though trying to conv
The journey back through the forest was slower than before because now they carried not only exhaustion and injuries but the fragile weight of survival itself.No one relaxed.No one allowed relief to fully settle.Not yet.Darius was alive but barely and every warrior around him understood that bringing him out of enemy territory had only been the beginning.Seraphina stayed close beside him as they moved through the dense trees her hand gripping his tightly whenever she could because letting go felt impossible after everything that had happened.His condition frightened her more the longer she looked at him.The bruises across his face had darkened and blood still stained parts of his clothes while his breathing remained shallow and uneven despite the distance now growing between them and the battlefield.Sarah walked near her watching carefully.“He needs treatment soon,” Sarah said quietly.“I know.”Seraphina’s voice felt weak from exhaustion and emotion but her eyes never left D
The battlefield was too quiet.That was the first thing Seraphina noticed as she knelt beside Darius, her hands trembling as they rested on his chest. The air still smelled of smoke and blood, but the sounds of battle had faded into an eerie stillness. No growls. No cries. Just the crackle of dying
The air shattered.Not with sound—but with pressure.Seraphina felt it first, a crushing weight pressing down on her chest as if the sky itself had lowered its hand. The moon dimmed another shade, its silver light bleeding into a sickly gray, and every wolf in the arena dropped to one knee.Includi
Night did not fall this time.It settled.The stronghold exhaled slowly, stone walls no longer trembling with ancient unrest, corridors no longer echoing with hurried footsteps and anxious voices. Torches burned low, firelight softening the sharp edges of a world that had been too close to breaking
Dawn arrived without warmth.The sky over the stronghold remained pale and strained, as if the sun itself was unsure it was welcome. The moon had faded, but it had not healed—and every wolf could feel it. The packs moved quietly, voices low, instincts unsettled.Seraphina stood at the center of the







