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“You’re carrying his child.”
The whisper didn’t echo. It landed like a blade between Lyra’s ribs, quiet and surgical, and it cut her world open before the ceremony even had a chance to begin.
Her body froze mid-breath inside the crowded dressing room. The air smelled of juniper oil, damp wool, and the metallic tang of fear. Around her, other girls adjusted veils and whispered prayers to the Moon Goddess, but all of it faded into a dull roar.
Behind her, the older healer’s hand trembled where it hovered above Lyra’s stomach. The woman’s face had drained of color, her knuckles white with the effort of not pulling away too fast.
“No…” Lyra breathed. The word was too small for the weight of it.
“The Moon Goddess protect you,” the healer whispered, eyes wide and glassy. “If Alpha Kael finds out before the mating ceremony—”
A horn shattered the night.
Deep, resonant, absolute. It rolled across the pack grounds like a decree, vibrating in Lyra’s bones.
The Blood Moon Ceremony had begun.
Lyra’s pulse didn’t race. It turned violent, slamming against her ribs like it wanted out. _Mate._ The word surfaced in her mind unbidden, dragged up by the wolf that had been restless since dawn. Beneath her skin, her wolf stirred, anxious and confused, sensing danger but not understanding why.
But it wasn’t only fear crushing her chest tonight.
It was the secret growing inside her. Hot, alive, impossible to hide much longer. A secret powerful enough to turn pack against pack, to start a war that would drown Mooncrest in blood.
“You cannot tell anyone,” Lyra said quickly, her voice rough. She reached out and caught the healer’s wrist, her grip desperate. “Please. Not yet. Not until I know what this means.”
Before the woman could answer—
The dressing room door slammed open.
The sound cracked through the room like a gunshot.
Beta Damon stood in the doorway, chest heaving, sweat clinging to his brow despite the cold night air. His eyes were wild, unfocused. “The Alpha is looking for Lyra.”
Fear sliced through her, clean and immediate.
Alpha Kael never looked for her.
Not when she served his meals. Not when she mended his torn leathers. Not when she slept in the servant’s wing, two floors below his chambers. He looked through her, over her, past her. The only time he acknowledged her existence was to issue a command or correct a mistake.
Not unless something terrible had happened.
The celebration grounds were a riot of sound and color. Bonfires threw sparks into the sky, where they mingled with the blood-red light of the Blood Moon hanging low and heavy overhead. Drums carved from ancient oak pounded a rhythm that made the earth vibrate. Wolves drank, laughed, fought, and mated under the promise of the moon.It was supposed to be sacred.
But the moment Lyra stepped outside, the world went quiet.
It wasn’t a natural silence. It was the kind that came before a storm, thick and charged and wrong. Hundreds of eyes turned toward her. Conversations died mid-word. Cups paused halfway to lips.
Whispers followed immediately, slithering through the crowd like snakes.
“That’s her.”
“The omega?” “She’s beautiful…” “No wonder the Alpha noticed her.”Lyra kept her chin high, though every instinct screamed at her to run. She focused on breathing. In. Out. The cold night air burned her lungs. _Don’t let them see you break. Don’t give them the satisfaction._
Then she saw him.
Alpha Kael Ravencrest stood beside the ceremonial fire, a statue carved from shadow and violence. He wore black from throat to boot, the color of a storm cloud before it broke. His expression could have frozen a river. Power rolled off him in waves, thick and suffocating, forcing weaker wolves to drop their gazes and lower their heads without even realizing they’d done it.
He looked dangerous tonight.
More dangerous than usual.
And when his dark eyes found her across the clearing, the mate bond between them snapped taut.
It was like being struck by lightning.
A sharp gasp tore from Lyra’s throat. Her knees buckled. _Mate._ The word echoed through her soul, ancient and inescapable.
Kael felt it too.
His entire body went still, as if he’d been turned to stone mid-step. The firelight caught in his eyes, and for one fleeting second, Lyra saw something raw and unguarded there. Shock. Recognition. Hunger.
The crowd noticed instantly.
A ripple of shock spread through the gathered wolves. This wasn’t supposed to happen. Omegas didn’t get matched to Alphas. Especially not to Alphas like Kael.
“No…” Kael’s voice was deadly quiet, but it carried. It always carried.
Lyra’s heart shattered before he even said another word.
Not because he rejected the bond.
But because he looked at her like she was something foul he’d stepped in. Disgust twisted his mouth. His gaze raked over her—over the simple silver gown she’d been forced into, over the trembling of her hands, over the truth she was trying so hard to hide—and when it returned to her face, there was nothing left but hatred.
Pure, unfiltered hatred.
Then he began walking toward her.
The crowd parted without being told. Wolves pressed back, making a path of open space between them. Each step Kael took made the air heavier. Lyra’s wolf whimpered, cowering inside her, sensing the threat even if her mind couldn’t yet name it.
Something was wrong.
Terribly wrong.Kael stopped inches away from her. So close she could smell cedar and steel and the cold fury rolling off him. For one dangerous second, neither of them spoke. The mate bond between them burned like acid in her veins.
Desire.
Pain. Need. Rage.Then, without warning, his hand closed around her throat.
Gasps exploded through the crowd.
“You think I wouldn’t discover what you did?” he growled, voice low enough that only she could hear. His fingers weren’t squeezing—not yet—but the threat was there, coiled and ready.
Lyra stared at him, drowning. “W-what?”
“You betrayed my family.”
Confusion hit her like a physical blow. “I don’t understand—”
“LIAR!”
His Alpha aura exploded outward.
It was a physical force. The air pressure changed. Several wolves closest to them dropped to their knees, whining, unable to breathe under the weight of his fury. Kael’s eyes had turned pitch black, the gold of his wolf completely consumed.
“The border attack three nights ago,” he said coldly, each word a shard of ice. “My brother died because someone leaked patrol routes to rogue wolves.”
Lyra’s blood turned to ice.
She remembered that night. She’d heard the screams from her room. She’d prayed to the Moon Goddess that it wasn’t true.
“And now,” Kael continued dangerously, leaning closer, “I discover my mate is the traitor.”
The crowd erupted.
“What?!”
“She killed the Beta heir?” “The omega betrayed the pack?”“No…” Lyra shook her head violently, tears already spilling over. “I swear I didn’t— I didn’t even know the patrol routes—”
Kael’s hand moved too fast for her to follow. He threw something at her feet.
Metal clattered against stone.
A silver chain.
Her breath stopped.
It was hers. The thin chain she wore around her ankle, the only thing her mother had left her before she died. She’d lost it three days ago while collecting herbs near the western fence.
Why was it found near the border?
Panic flooded her chest, cold and suffocating. Someone had planted it. Someone wanted her dead.
Kael leaned closer, his voice dropping to a whisper meant only for her. “You disgust me.”
The bond inside her cracked.
It was a sound only she could hear. A high, keening note of splintering glass. Tears burned her eyes, hot and furious. “Kael, please— listen to me—”
“I, Alpha Kael Ravencrest…”
His voice thundered across the entire grounds, amplified by his Alpha authority. It rolled over the crowd, over the fire, over the moon itself.
“…reject Lyra Nightshade as my mate.”
Agony exploded through her body.
It wasn’t like pain. It was like being torn in half while still alive. A scream ripped from her throat, raw and animalistic, as the mate bond shattered violently inside her soul. The connection that had existed since birth snapped, leaving a wound that went deeper than bone.
Her knees hit the ground hard. She didn’t feel it.
The pain was unbearable.
It felt like dying alive.The crowd watched in stunned silence. Some looked horrified. Others satisfied. A few looked away, unable to witness it.
Kael stared down at her, his expression carved from ice. “You are nothing to me.”
Something inside Lyra broke completely.
It was quiet. Final.
But before she could draw another breath, a scream echoed from the edge of the celebration grounds.
Raw. Desperate.
Everyone turned sharply.
A warrior stumbled into the firelight, his uniform torn and soaked in blood. He collapsed onto the ground, gasping. “The dungeons—”
Fear spread through the crowd like wildfire.
Kael moved forward instantly, his rage momentarily set aside for something colder. “What happened?”
The warrior looked up, eyes wide with terror. “The rogue prisoner escaped…”
Silence.
Then the warrior lifted a trembling finger and pointed directly at Lyra.
“He said the omega knows the truth about the Alpha’s brother.”
Lyra froze.
_What?_
Kael’s expression darkened until it was murderous. “What truth?” he demanded, voice lethal.
But the wounded warrior’s next words changed everything.
“He said…” The man coughed, blood bubbling at his lips. “…your brother was still alive when Lyra found him.”
The world stopped.
Kael slowly turned toward her. The look in his eyes wasn’t hatred anymore. It was worse. It was the look of a man who had found the person responsible for his brother’s death.
Murder filled his eyes.
Lyra’s breathing turned ragged. She’d never seen Kael look this dangerous before. And deep down, beneath the terror, a cold certainty settled in her chest.
Someone inside the pack was manipulating everything.
Someone wanted her to take the fall.Then Kael spoke the words that truly terrified her.
“Lock her in my room.”
The crowd fell silent in shock. Even Beta Damon looked confused. “Alpha… shouldn’t she go to the dungeon?”
Kael never took his eyes off Lyra.
“No.”
His voice turned dark, possessive, and final.
“She’s mine.”
He stepped closer, closing the distance between them in one fluid motion. His hand came up, and before she could flinch away, his thumb brushed her trembling lips. The touch was almost gentle. Almost.
“And before she dies…” His eyes dropped to her mouth, dark with something she couldn’t name. “…I want the truth screamed into my mouth.”
*“No…”*Kael’s voice didn’t sound human anymore. The dungeon corridor froze as the figure stepped into the torchlight. Tall, blood-soaked, wrong in every way that mattered. The face was unmistakable. Ronan Ravencrest. Kael’s older brother. The man whose death had shattered the pack ten years ago. Lyra’s pulse hammered against her ribs. Because Ronan should have been dead. She’d seen it. She’d smelled the iron in the air, felt the heat of his blood on her hands. She’d dragged herself away from his body, screaming his name until her throat tore. But the thing standing before them now wasn’t alive. Not really. Silver light burned in its eyes, unnatural and cold. Black veins webbed beneath skin gone pale as ash. Blood dripped from its claws in slow, deliberate drops, splattering against the stone like a countdown. Kael didn’t move. Didn’t breathe. For the first time since Lyra met him, the Alpha looked shaken. Unmade. “Ronan,” he whispered, and the name sounded
“Mother…?”The word slipped out of Lyra like a broken prayer she’d buried ten years ago.The woman at the end of the corridor looked exactly like her memory. Same silver eyes. Same dark hair. Same terrifying calm that could cut glass. Impossible. Lyra stared, her breath coming short and uneven while the world tilted off its axis. No. Her mother died ten years ago. Lyra had seen the blood. She’d knelt in it. She remembered the body, cold and wrong. Hadn’t she?The woman’s gaze softened when it landed on her. “You’ve grown beautiful.”Kael moved instantly, stepping in front of Lyra, a wall of heat and rage. Every warrior in the corridor went rigid. Hands drifted to weapons. “Who are you?” Kael demanded.The woman looked at him without a flicker of fear. Interesting. Nobody looked at Alpha Kael Ravencrest without fear. Not when his killing aura turned the air heavy and metallic. “You already know who I am,” she said, voice even and calm.Lyra’s chest tightened until
“The healer is dead.”The words hit Lyra harder than the rejection ever had. Her knees buckled. Kael caught her before she hit the stone, his arm locking around her waist with the kind of speed that had nothing to do with thought. His fingers dug into her, possessive and automatic, like his body refused to let her fall even when his mind wanted to push her away.Lyra barely felt it. Her mind was already fracturing. “No…” she whispered. “No, she can’t be…”Kael’s jaw clenched until a vein stood out. “She was slaughtered.”Cold terror poured through her veins, fast and freezing. The healer had known. About the pregnancy. About the fever that came at night, about the way Lyra’s senses sharpened when the moon rose, about the changes she didn’t understand and couldn’t explain. And now the only person who knew was dead. Someone was erasing everyone connected to her.Kael pulled back first, his face snapping into that blank, lethal mask he wore when the world got too
Snow fell like ash over the courtyard, each flake hissing out against the blood still warm on the stone. “You were the last person seen with my brother alive.”Kael’s voice cut through the silence like a blade. Cold. Final. A death sentence with no appeal.Lyra couldn’t breathe. Around her, the pack warriors stood frozen, spears half-raised, eyes darting between her and their Alpha. The air reeked of iron and winter. The silver-haired stranger stood apart from it all, arms crossed, watching with the calm amusement of a man who’d lit the fuse and was waiting for the blast.Kael turned to her slowly. Every step measured. Waiting. Demanding. Hurting.“Answer me,” he growled, low enough that only she could hear the fracture beneath it.Lyra’s chest tightened until it ached. She remembered that night—the way his brother’s hand had gripped hers, the fear in his eyes, the words he’d begged her to swallow. “I didn’t kill him,” she whispered. The truth tasted like glass.“That wasn’
“No.” The word left Lyra’s lips instantly. Sharp. Terrified. Impossible. Kael’s gaze slowly lifted from the blade to her face. And the look in his eyes almost destroyed her. Not rage. Not hatred. Disappointment. Like some part of him had desperately wanted her innocent, and now that part was dying. Damon stepped forward carefully, his face pale under the flickering torchlight. “The healer confirmed it an hour ago.” Lyra shook her head violently, the motion making her vision swim. “I never touched that blade.” “But your blood was on it,” Kael said quietly. The silence after those words felt deadly. It pressed against her chest, suffocating. Lyra’s chest tightened painfully. Someone was framing her. Again. But this time— The evidence looked undeniable. Kael stared at her for a long moment before speaking, his voice low enough that only she could hear. “Tell me the truth.” “I AM telling you the truth!” Her voice cracked, raw with desperation.
Blood poured from Kael’s chest. Hot. Endless. It ran down his torso in thick, dark rivers, soaking the front of his shirt and dripping onto the stone floor with a wet, steady rhythm. Lyra stared in horror as the Alpha slowly dropped to one knee, his breathing turning rough and uneven. Each inhale sounded like it tore through him. The sword buried through his body gleamed under the moonlight, the metal slick with crimson. Behind him, Beta Damon stood frozen. His hand still gripped the weapon, knuckles white with shock and disbelief at what he’d done. Shock filled the room. Even the masked stranger looked amused, tilting his head like he was watching a play reach its climax. Lyra’s voice cracked violently. “Kael!” She rushed toward him instinctively, every thought of self-preservation gone. But Kael’s hand shot out faster than it should have been possible. His fingers closed around her wrist before she could touch the blade. His grip was weak. But possessive. “
“Found you.”The voice came from the darkness behind her. Low. Male. Deadly calm.Lyra’s entire body froze. Every instinct screamed to run, but her legs wouldn’t move. The word settled over her skin like frost, and for a second she couldn’t breathe.Kael moved instantly. In one violent m
Kael dragged her through the castle like he wanted the entire pack to watch her break.The silver chains around Lyra’s wrists bit into her skin with every stumbling step. Each link was ice against her flesh, each pull a reminder that she was no longer pack, no longer protected. The broken mate bond







