LOGINThe compound changed after the name was spoken. Hollow Alpha.
Not loudly. Not immediately. But fear moved differently once it had a face. Even one no one had truly seen.By dawn, the territory no longer felt like a fractured pack struggling to survive. It felt like a fortress waiting for siege.Guards lined every wall. Patrols moved constantly across the perimeter. No fires burned openly anymore beyond the inner compound.Even conversation had changed. Shorter. Quieter. HeavieThe missing hunters did not return with the sunrise. Nor with the afternoon. By the second morning, hope had begun to change. Not disappear. Change. Into determination.The entire territory felt different. Work continued. Meals were prepared. Patrols rotated along the walls. But beneath every task lingered the same question.Where were they?Kael gathered the senior wolves before dawn. A map of the northern forest lay across the strategy table. Every known trail had been marked. Every recent patrol route noted."We search until we find them," Kael said. "No unnecessary risks. No one separates from the group. If this is a trap, we don't give our enemy another victory."Rhen nodded. "I'll lead the northern team.""I'll go with you," Elara said.Kael looked at her for a long moment. Then nodded once. "Stay together."Within the hour, three search parties left the territory. Snow crunched beneath their boots. Cold wind swept through the trees. The forest
The refugees stayed. And winter continued. The two facts became inseparable.Every morning, the territory woke to the same reality. More wolves. The same amount of snow. And fewer supplies than the day before.No one complained openly. Not at first.The newcomers worked where they could. They helped repair buildings. Cleared snow from pathways. Assisted hunters preparing equipment. They did everything possible to earn their place.Yet food remained food. No amount of gratitude changed that. Every meal shared still came from the same dwindling stores. And everyone knew it.The atmosphere within the territory slowly changed. Not dramatically. Not visibly. Quietly. Like ice spreading across a lake. One thin layer at a time.Elara noticed it during the following week. Conversations stopped when certain wolves approached. Groups gathered more frequently. Whispers lingered longer than they should have.Nothing openly hostile. Not yet. But pressure was building.
The refugees waited in silence. Snow drifted around them. Cold wind swept across the southern gate. No one moved. Twenty wolves. Men. Women. Children. Elderly. All exhausted. All hungry. All desperate. The sight alone was enough to make the situation feel impossible. Elara stood beside Kael. Rhen remained nearby. Several guards watched cautiously. Nobody spoke at first. Because everyone understood the problem. The territory was already struggling. Food supplies were shrinking. Winter was growing harsher. Fear was spreading. And now twenty more lives stood outside the walls. Waiting. Hoping. One of the older refugees finally stepped forward. His movements looked slow from exhaustion. "We don't want trouble." His voice cracked slightly. "We only need shelter." Silence followed. Because shelter required food. Food required resources. Resources required sacrifices. The math was simple. Th
The fracture was small. So small that many wolves didn't notice it.That was what made it dangerous.Large breaks could be repaired. Large threats could be confronted. But small cracks? Small cracks spread quietly. One day the stone looked strong. The next day it collapsed.Winter continued tightening around the territory. Snow covered nearly every path beyond the walls. The forests stood silent beneath heavy frost. The rivers remained frozen.And the food situation continued worsening. Not catastrophically. Not yet. Just enough to keep everyone worried.Elara noticed the change during breakfast. The communal hall was quieter than usual. Conversations ended quickly. Laughter had become rare.Wolves still worked together. Still shared meals. Still carried out their duties. Yet something had shifted.A question lingered beneath every interaction. How much longer can we keep doing this?The Hollow Alpha would have been pleased. That thought irritated her
The hunting grounds existed. That was the problem.If they had been empty, the decision would have been easy. If they had been dangerous beyond doubt, the answer would have been obvious.Instead, the prey was there. Abundant. Healthy. Close enough to matter.And located precisely where everyone least wanted it to be. The northern forest.Elara stood beside the strategy table the following morning as another meeting unfolded. Snow tapped softly against the windows. The storm from the previous night had weakened, but the cold remained. Always the cold.Rhen pointed toward the map. "The scouts confirmed multiple herds."Several wolves exchanged glances. Good news. Potentially."How much would it help?" one representative asked.Rhen answered immediately. "A lot."The room grew quieter. Because everyone knew what that meant.The territory needed food. The northern forest had food. Simple.Except nothing involving the Hollow Alpha was ever simp
The cold worsened. Not suddenly. Not dramatically. Slowly. Relentlessly. Each morning felt slightly colder than the last. Each night seemed longer. Darker. More exhausting. Winter had settled over the territory like a living thing. Patient. Unforgiving. And with every passing day, the pressure grew. Elara noticed it first in the small things. The shorter conversations. The tired expressions. The growing silence around communal meals. Nobody complained openly. Not yet. But worry had become a permanent presence. The bond pulsed steadily beneath her ribs. Yet even it felt strained by the atmosphere surrounding the territory. Fear was no longer approaching. It was here. Not the terror of battle. Not the panic of invasion. The quieter kind. The kind that settled into thoughts when nobody was looking. The kind that whispered questions.
Silence held the battlefield. Not peace. Not calm. Control. The kind that came just before something broke.Kael stood between Elara and the enemy, his presence steady, immovable. Power rolled off him in quiet waves, contained but ready.The leader faced him across the clearing. Unshaken.
The bond surged again. Stronger than before. Elara felt it tear through her chest, not as pain, but as pressure. Something vast pressing against something fragile, waiting for it to either collapse or hold. She clenched her teeth. Hold. Kael was clo
The first strike came without warning.Kael moved through the shadows like a blade, silent and precise. One guard dropped before he could react. Another turned, too slow. The forest swallowed the sound of impact as bodies fell into darkness."Now," Kael ordered.The unit surged forwar
The smoke was a lie.Kael knew it the moment they moved closer. Too steady. Too visible. Too easy."They want us to see it," Rhen muttered."Yes," Kael replied.The unit slowed as they approached the ridge. Below them, the false camp stretched across a small clearing. Fires burned







