LOGINThe White Wolf
POV: ELARA VANCE
The pain was a living thing. It wasn't the dull ache of a bruise or the sharp sting of a cut; it was a total restructuring of my atomic existence. Bones snapped and lengthened with the sound of gunshots. Muscles tore and re-knit in milliseconds. My skin felt like it was being flayed open to make room for something... bigger.
I should have been dead. The shock alone should have stopped my heart. But the fire inside me wouldn't let me die. It demanded to be let out.
Yield, the ancient voice commanded in my head. Let me take the reins.
I stopped fighting. I surrendered to the agony.
And then, the pain vanished, replaced by a surge of power so intoxicating it felt like I had swallowed a star.
My vision shifted. The pitch-black forest was suddenly illuminated in sharp, high-definition clarity. But the colors were wrong. The snow wasn't just white; it hummed with a pale blue energy. The trees had auroras of life pulsing within them. And the Shadow Wolves... they looked like jagged tears in the fabric of the world, radiating heat and malice.
I stood up.
Wait. I didn't just stand. I towered.
The ground felt miles away. I looked down at my paws. They were massive, easily the size of dinner plates, covered in fur that was so white it seemed to glow. My claws were curved obsidian scythes, sinking deep into the frozen earth with barely a flex.
I wasn't a wolf. I was a monster.
A low rumble started in my chest. It wasn't a growl; it was the sound of tectonic plates shifting.
The Shadow Wolf leader-the brute with the missing ear-had stopped his advance. He was staring up at me, his crimson eyes wide with a very un-predatory emotion: Terror.
He was big for a wolf, easily four feet at the shoulder. But I was looking down on him. I was double his size.
He snarled, a desperate, defensive sound, and lunged.
Too slow, my wolf mocked.
Time seemed to slow down. I saw his muscles bunch before he leaped. I saw the trajectory of his jaw aiming for my throat. I didn't panic. I didn't flinch. Instinct-honed by centuries of ancestors I didn't know I had-took over.
I simply swiped my paw.
It was a casual motion, like swatting a fly.
CRACK.
My claws connected with the Shadow Wolf’s ribcage. The force of the impact sent him flying through the air. He smashed into a pine tree twenty feet away with a sickening wet thud, collapsing into a heap of whimpering fur. He didn't get back up.
The clearing went dead silent.
The other four Shadow Wolves froze. They looked from their broken leader to me, their tails instantly tucked between their legs.
Subordinate, my wolf thought. Make them kneel.
I stepped forward. The snow crunched loudly under my weight. I lowered my massive head, staring directly into the eyes of the nearest wolf, and opened my mouth.
I didn't bark. I released a sound that vibrated the needles off the pine trees. It was the Alpha Command-amplified.
"DOWN."
It wasn't spoken; it was projected. A telepathic hammer blow.
The four wolves collapsed instantly, pressing their bellies into the snow, exposing their throats. They whined, the high-pitched sound of absolute submission. They weren't just surrendering; they were begging for mercy.
The adrenaline began to fade, and with it, the euphoria. The reality of what I had just done crashed into me.
I had shifted. Me. The Runt. The Wolfless.
I looked at my reflection in a patch of ice near the treeline. A stranger stared back. A beast of myth and nightmare. White fur, sharp ears, and eyes…
My eyes were glowing a brilliant, electric violet.
Lycan, a deep, unfamiliar voice spoke from the shadows.
I spun around, a growl ripping from my throat, ready to kill again.
A man stepped out from behind a thick cluster of oaks. He wasn't shifting. He was in human form, wearing dark tactical gear and a heavy fur-lined cloak. He was tall, with skin the color of polished bronze and hair as white as my new fur, tied back in a warrior’s knot.
But it was his scent that hit me-rain, ozone, and old blood. Powerful. Ancient.
He didn't look afraid. He looked... reverent.
He walked past the whimpering Shadow Wolves as if they were harmless puppies, his silver eyes locked on mine. He stopped ten feet away and slowly, deliberately, lowered himself to one knee in the snow.
"I thought your bloodline was extinct," he said, his voice rough and deep. "The White Lycans haven't walked this earth for five hundred years."
My wolf growled, confused. Enemy? Friend?
"Shift, child," the man said softly. "You are safe here. I am Alaric. And you have just awakened a power that will burn this world to the ground if you do not learn to control it."
Shift? I didn't know how. I had never done this before. Panic flared in my chest. What if I were stuck like this? What if I were a monster forever?
"Breathe," Alaric instructed, sensing my rising panic. "Picture your human skin. Picture the lock on the cage. Pull the power back in."
I closed my violet eyes. I thought of my hands. My small, scarred, human hands. I thought of the cold. I thought of the girl who just wanted to be invisible.
The pain returned, sharper this time, as bones snapped back into place. I collapsed onto the snow, gasping, shivering, naked and vulnerable in the freezing air.
Alaric was there in an instant. He didn't touch me inappropriately; he simply unclasped his heavy cloak and threw it over my shaking form, wrapping me in warmth and his scent.
"Who are you?" he asked, crouching beside me.
My teeth chattered so hard I could barely speak. I looked at this stranger, this dangerous man who commanded Shadow Wolves, and I realized I had two choices. I could be Elara Vance, the rejected Omega. Or I could be the girl who just swatted a monster like a fly.
I looked him in the eye.
"I am the one," I whispered, my voice breaking, "who is going to make them pay."
Alaric’s lips curved into a dark, terrifying smile.
"Good," he said. "Then let’s get to work.”
The Ticking Clock POV: Alpha Kaelen BlackwoodThe room finally went quiet after Marcus and Alaric sprinted down the hall.Elara slammed the door shut, locking it with a heavy iron deadbolt. She didn't turn around right away. She just leaned her forehead against the wood, her shoulders heaving as she tried to control her breathing. Her oversized sweater was ruined, covered in soot, sweat, and her own blood.She looked like a Warlord who had completely lost her mind. And she had done it for me."Come here," I said quietly. My voice was raspy, throat raw from screaming.She didn't move for a long second. Then, she pushed off the door and walked slowly back to the bed. She didn't sit in the chair. She climbed right onto the mattress, crawling over the smoking furs, and curled into my side.I wrapped my arms around her. The skin on my chest was still painfully cold, despite the raging fires in the room, but the moment I touched her, the mate bond hummed, trying to soothe the jagged
Blood and FirePOV: General Vesh (Elara Vance)The pack healers were useless.They stood near the heavy oak door, sweating profusely in the unbearable heat of the braziers, offering pathetic excuses. They mumbled about the magic being too ancient, the necrosis being too deep. One of them actually had the absolute nerve to tell me to prepare for the inevitable.I nearly threw him out the window.I kicked everyone out of the room. Marcus, Alaric, and the healers. I told them if anyone opened that door before I said so, I would incinerate them.I was alone with Kaelen.He had passed out again. The ice on his chest was spreading. It was crawling up his collarbone, turning his tanned skin a sickening, translucent blue. The violet fire from my hands was barely slowing it down anymore. The True King's magic was adapting, building a resistance to the raw heat.I paced the floor at the foot of the bed, wiping the sweat from my eyes, my brain working in manic, frantic overdrive.Fire i
The Ice BathPOV: Alpha Kaelen BlackwoodIt felt like drowning in a frozen ocean.I couldn't feel my arms or my legs. There was no pain, just an overwhelming, heavy numbness that dragged me down into the dark. I wanted to just let go. It was so quiet down there.But every time I started to drift away, a brutal, scorching heat slammed into my chest, dragging me violently back to the surface.I forced my eyes open.My vision was completely blurred, swimming in a haze of smoke and glaring light. The first thing I registered was the smell. Burning wood, singed fur, and the sharp, coppery tang of ozone.I was in my bedchamber at the Northern Keep. But the room looked like the inside of a blast furnace.There were six massive iron braziers dragged into the room, stationed completely around the bed, roaring with thick, crackling fires. The heat in the room must have been over a hundred and twenty degrees. The heavy furs on my bed were literally smoking at the edges.And standing rig
Dead Weight POV: General Vesh (Elara Vance)Kaelen collapsed to the ground, and suddenly everything around us fell silent. There was no ringing in my ears or dramatic music swelling in the background—just an overwhelming quiet. The five thousand wolves from the Vanguard and the Shadow Legion stood frozen like statues in the snow, stunned by the sight of the undefeated Alpha of the North choking on his own icy blood. "Kaelen," I whispered softly. It wasn't a shout; it felt more like a hollow, useless murmur. I sank to my knees in the mud beside him. He was completely unconscious. His skin, which usually glowed with that annoying yet comforting golden warmth, was quickly turning a dull gray. I cupped his face, my thumbs pressing against his jaw. "Medic!" I shouted, finally snapping out of my shock. "Get a medic up here, now!" Beta Marcus broke away from the frozen crowd, sliding through the dirt to kneel beside Kaelen. He didn’t even bother calling for the pack healers. He took one
A Bad Trade POV: General Vesh (Elara Vance)Everything just went black.One second I was weaving the magic, feeling the purple fire singing in my veins, and the next, someone threw a switch.I was face down in the dirt, gasping like a fish thrown onto the deck of a boat. I couldn't get any air into my lungs. The black veins of the curse had crawled completely up my throat, wrapping around my windpipe like a vise grip of solid ice. It felt like I had swallowed a block of dry ice.Above me, the purple magic I had painted in the air was sparking dangerously, hissing and threatening to explode.We're out of time, Astra cried in my head. Her voice didn't sound majestic anymore. She sounded terrified, like she was drowning under a frozen lake. It’s in the heart. Vesh, it’s in the heart!I tried to push myself up, but my arms were completely dead. I was paralyzed. This was it. I had survived torture, I had survived rejection, I had survived freezing in the snow five years ago, just t
Face In The Dirt POV: Alpha Kaelen BlackwoodI didn't wait to see if they followed. I threw myself right off the edge of the cliff.I didn't care about military strategy. I didn't care about flanking maneuvers. I just wanted to rip things apart until the world stopped threatening my mate. I let the wolf take over in mid-air. The shift was violent and instantaneous. Clothes shredded into confetti, my bones snapped and elongated, tearing through muscle and skin to reform into a massive, nine-foot-tall Lycan.I hit the mud at the bottom of the gorge hard enough to leave a crater.I let out a deafening, chest-rattling roar and slammed straight into the frontline of the dead.The Vanguard crashed into the valley right behind me. It wasn't a battle. It was a total, unadulterated bloodbath.These things didn't fight like regular soldiers. They didn't feel pain. They didn't care if you cut off an arm; they’d just beat you with the stump. You had to physically tear them to pieces to ma
The Edge of SanityPOV: Alpha Kaelen Blackwood"I think I know what to do," Elara whispered, her cold thumbs gently stroking my jawline.Her breath ghosted across my lips, frantic and shallow. The black, necrotic veins of the True King’s curse pulsed visibly beneath the thin linen of her gown, b
The Hollow VictoryPOV: Alpha Kaelen BlackwoodThe silence in the ballroom was louder than the music had ever been.Five minutes ago, this room had been filled with the clinking of crystal, the rustle of silk, and the polite murmurs of alliance-building. Now, it was a tomb. The air still reeked
The Frozen BoundaryPOV: ELARA VANCEThe first thing I registered was the mud. It was cold, slick, and smelled of rot, pressing against my cheek. The second thing was the agony in my chest.It wasn't just a physical pain; it was a void. Where my heart should have been, there was now a gaping, rag
The Invisible GirlPOV: ELARA VANCEThe kitchen of the Blackwood Pack house smelled of roasted venison, rosemary, and the sharp, metallic tang of unwashed dishes. To anyone else, it might have smelled like a feast. To me, it smelled like exhaustion."Move it, Runt!"I didn’t flinch when the hip







