MasukThe Den Of Shadows
POV: Elara Vance
I didn't know how long we had been walking.
Time had dissolved into a rhythmic blur of crunching snow and burning muscles. The euphoria of the shift had faded, leaving behind a bone-deep exhaustion that made every step a negotiation with gravity.
I was in human form again. The shift back had been less painful than the first time, but it had left me naked and trembling. I was wrapped in Alaric’s heavy fur cloak, which smelled of cedar and rain, swallowing my small frame entirely.
Alaric walked ahead of me. He didn't look back to see if I was keeping up. It was a test, I realized. He had saved me from the wolves, but he wasn't going to carry me. If I wanted to survive in his world, I had to walk on my own two feet.
"Where are we going?" I croaked. My throat felt raw, likely torn from the scream I had released during the transformation.
"Home," Alaric said simply. His voice carried easily through the wind, deep and resonant.
"The Shadow Pack doesn't have a home," I argued, my breath misting in the air. "Everyone knows you’re nomads. Ghosts."
Alaric stopped. He turned slowly, his silver eyes catching the moonlight. "Everyone knows what we want them to know. The Blackwood Pack thinks we are savages who sleep in the dirt. That is why they fear us. And that is why they will never find us."
He gestured to the mountain face looming ahead of us. It was a sheer cliff of black granite, slick with ice, rising hundreds of feet into the air. There was no path. No cave. Just a dead end.
"I can't climb that," I whispered, clutching the cloak tighter. "My legs... they won't hold."
"Look closer, Lycan," Alaric commanded. "Stop looking with your human eyes. Use the wolf."
Use the wolf.
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. I reached for that well of fire deep in my chest. It was simmering now, quiet but present. I pulled on it, just a little.
When I opened my eyes, the world shifted. The darkness brightened. And there, etched into the stone face of the cliff, I saw the faint hum of energy. Runes. Ancient, glowing markings that concealed a narrow fissure in the rock, hidden by a heavy glamour.
"Magic," I breathed. Wolves didn't use magic. Witches did.
"Old magic," Alaric corrected. "From before the Great Divide."
He stepped toward the solid rock wall. Instead of crashing into it, he passed right through the stone as if it were mist. He turned back, his hand extended from the rock face. "Coming?"
I hesitated. Behind me lay the river, the Blackwood pack, and the man who had shattered my soul. Ahead lay a wall of rock and a pack of monsters.
I stepped forward.
The sensation was like walking through a waterfall of ice water. I gasped, stumbling out the other side—and froze.
I wasn't in a cave. I was in a valley.
Hidden inside the ring of mountains was a massive, lush sanctuary. The wind didn't bite here.
The air was warmer, heated by geothermal vents that sent steam curling into the sky.
There were structures—not the primitive tents I expected, but beautiful, rugged cabins built into the treeline and the rock face itself. Lanterns glowing with blue fire hung from the branches of massive ancient pines.
And there were wolves
.
Dozens of them. Men and women with scars and hard eyes, sparring in a central dirt ring, sharpening weapons, or tending to fires. They were huge, just like the ones I had seen in the woods.
As Alaric and I stepped into the light, the camp went silent.
Every eye turned to us.
Alaric didn't speak. He simply walked toward the largest cabin at the center of the camp. The wolves parted for him instantly, bowing their heads in deep respect.
But as I walked behind him, the heads didn't stay bowed. They lifted. Noses flared, sniffing the air. I saw confusion ripple through the crowd. They smelled the Blackwood scent on me—the scent of an enemy. But beneath that, they smelled something else.
"Alpha," a woman stepped forward. She was tall, with a shaved head and a scar running from her lip to her ear. She blocked our path, eyeing me with open hostility. "You brought a stray? A Blackwood stray?"
"I brought a recruit, Val," Alaric said calmly, not breaking stride.
"She smells like a servant," Val sneered, stepping closer to me. "She smells like fear. She won't last a day in the pits."
I shrank back, my old instincts telling me to submit, to look down, to apologize for existing. Val was a dominant female. In the Blackwood pack, I would have been on my knees by now.
No, the voice in my head growled. We do not kneel.
Alaric stopped. He looked at me, then at Val. He was waiting.
Val smirked and reached out to shove my shoulder. "Go back to the kennel, little bi—"
Before her hand could touch me, my hand moved.
I didn't think. I didn't plan it. My reflexes were suddenly razor-sharp. I caught Val’s wrist in mid-air.
Val’s eyes widened. She tried to yank her hand back, but I held on. My grip was like a vice. I felt the power surge in my veins, unauthorized and volatile.
"Don't," I said. My voice was quiet, but it carried a strange, harmonic resonance. "Touch. Me."
I squeezed.
There was a sickening crunch of wrist bones grinding together.
Val shouted in pain and dropped to one knee, her other hand going for a knife at her belt.
"Enough," Alaric’s voice cracked like a whip.
I released Val instantly, stepping back, my chest heaving. I looked at my own hand in horror. I had just broken the wrist of a warrior. Me. Elara the weakling.
Val cradled her arm, looking at me not with anger, but with shock. The entire camp was staring.
Alaric looked at Val. "Get that healed." Then he looked at me, a flicker of pride in his silver eyes. "She stays in my quarters tonight. Tomorrow, she enters the Gauntlet."
"The Gauntlet?" I asked, my voice trembling again.
"Training," Alaric said, turning toward his cabin. "You have raw power, Elara. But power without control is just a bomb waiting to go off. I’m going to teach you how to be a weapon."
He opened the door to his cabin and held it for me.
"Rest," he commanded. "Because Elara Vance died in the snow tonight. Whoever wakes up tomorrow has a lot of work to do."
I walked into the darkness of the cabin, leaving the old me behind at the threshold.
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