LOGINThe Rot
POV: Alpha Kaelen Blackwood
It had been one month since the Blood Moon Ball. One month since I cleansed the pack of its weakness. One month since I sent Elara Vance into the snow to die.
So why did the pack feel weaker than ever?
"Alpha, we lost two more patrols on the eastern ridge last night," Marcus said, tossing a bloody dossier onto the mahogany table.
We were in the War Room, a bunker beneath the main pack house. The air was stale, smelling of old coffee and unwashed wolf. My top advisors sat around the table, their faces grim.
"Rogues?" I asked, rubbing my temples. A headache had taken up permanent residence behind my eyes since the night of the ball. It was a dull, thrumming pressure that never went away.
"Organized rogues," Marcus corrected. "They didn't just attack; they tested the perimeter. They knew exactly where the shift changes were. It’s like they can smell the gaps in our defense."
"There are no gaps in our defense," I snapped, slamming my hand on the table. "We are the Blackwood Pack. We are the iron wall of the North."
"The wall is rusting, Kaelen," my father’s voice came from the shadows in the corner.
Former Alpha Silas Blackwood sat in his wheelchair, a blanket over his legs. He was old, his body failing him, but his eyes were still sharp. He wheeled himself forward. "The bond of the Alpha affects the land. It affects the warriors. A pack without a Luna is vulnerable. A pack with a... broken Alpha is a target."
I growled low in my throat. "I am not broken."
"Then why can't you sleep?" Silas challenged. "Why does the pack feel anxious? The bond you severed... nature does not forgive that easily."
"I did what was necessary!" I stood up, my chair scraping loudly against the concrete floor. "I removed a runt who would have made us a laughingstock. Do you think the Council would respect a Luna who can't even shift? Who scrubs floors?"
"Power comes in many forms," Silas murmured, looking at me with something akin to pity. "You threw away a gift from the Goddess because it didn't come wrapped in the package you wanted."
"I have a Luna," I stated cold, buttoning my suit jacket. "And tonight, I will make it official. Once I mark Zara, the pack bond will stabilize. The anxiety will end. The defenses will hold."
Silas didn't say anything. He just looked at the map on the table, where red markers indicated our losses. "Good luck, son. You’re going to need it."
The Master Suite smelled of roses. Too many roses.
I walked in to find Zara waiting on the bed. She was wearing black lace lingerie that left very little to the imagination. The room was dim, lit only by candles. It was a scene set for seduction, designed to entice a male wolf.
It made my stomach turn.
"Finally," Zara purred, crawling across the mattress like a cat. "I was beginning to think you’d forgotten about me."
She stood up and walked toward me, wrapping her arms around my neck. She looked up, her eyes hungry. "Is it time?"
"It’s time," I said hollowly.
This was the solution. The biological fix. Once I sank my teeth into her mating gland—the sensitive spot where the neck meets the shoulder—our scents would merge. The pack would recognize her as Luna. The mystical unrest that had plagued my warriors would settle.
Zara kissed me. Her lips were soft, her technique practiced. She tasted of mint and expensive lipstick.
I kissed her back, trying to ignite the fire. I pressed her against the wall, my hands roaming her curves. She moaned, tilting her head to the side, baring her neck.
"Do it, Kaelen," she whispered. "Mark me. Make me yours."
I looked at the pale skin of her neck. I could hear the pulse thrumming beneath it.
Do it, I told myself. Seal the deal.
My canines elongated. I felt the familiar itch in my gums as my wolf pushed forward. I leaned in, my breath hot on her skin.
But as I opened my mouth to strike, a scent hit me.
It wasn't roses.
For a split second, the room didn't smell like Zara. It smelled of ozone. Of deep, freezing snow. Of her.
ELARA.
The name wasn't spoken; it was screamed inside my mind.
Rage, my wolf, woke up from his month-long depression with a violence that nearly blinded me.
NO! Rage roared. NOT HER. NOT THE FALSE ONE.
My body locked up. I was frozen, my teeth centimeters from Zara’s skin.
"Kaelen?" Zara asked, sensing my hesitation. "What’s wrong?"
I tried to force my jaw to close. I tried to force my wolf to accept this necessary union.
Mark her! I commanded my wolf. She is our choice!
SHE IS NOT OUR MATE! Rage snarled. I WILL NOT BIND TO TRAITOR BLOOD!
Rage took control. He didn't just stop me; he violently rejected the action.
A wave of nausea crashed into me, so potent I gagged. I shoved Zara away from me—hard.
She stumbled back, tripping over the rug and landing on the bed with a gasp. "Kaelen!"
I doubled over, clutching my stomach, dry heaving. It felt like I had tried to swallow poison. My skin was burning, my wolf thrashing against my ribcage, clawing at my insides in protest.
"Get out," I wheezed.
"What?" Zara sat up, looking more annoyed than concerned. "Kaelen, you’re ruining the moment. Just take a breath and—"
"I SAID GET OUT!" I roared, my eyes flashing a brilliant, unstable gold.
The Alpha Command slammed into the room, shaking the windows in their frames. Zara flinched, fear finally piercing her vanity. She grabbed her silk robe and scrambled off the bed.
"You’re crazy," she hissed, backing toward the door. "Everyone says you’re losing it, and they’re right. You can't even mark your own girlfriend? What kind of Alpha are you?"
She slammed the door behind her, leaving me alone in the candlelit room.
I collapsed onto the floor, bracing my back against the wall. I was shaking. Sweat dripped from my forehead.
I had failed.
An Alpha who couldn't mark a Luna was barely an Alpha at all. It was a sign of impotence, of a fractured soul. If the pack found out I couldn't complete the mating rite, my authority would crumble.
I reached for the bottle of whiskey I kept on the nightstand and took a long swig, ignoring the burn.
Why? I asked Rage, wiping my mouth. Why are you doing this to me? Elara is dead. We have to move on.
Rage didn't answer with words. He answered with a feeling. A deep, hollow, aching sensation in the center of my chest. It was a pull. A tugging on a thread that stretched out of the room, out of the pack lands, and into the dark, frozen North.
Not dead, Rage whispered, his voice weak but certain.
I squeezed my eyes shut. "She’s dead, Rage. Marcus saw the tracks. The cold took her."
NOT. DEAD.
I threw the whiskey bottle across the room. It shattered against the fireplace, the glass exploding like shrapnel.
I was going insane. That was the only explanation. The guilt was manifesting as hallucinations. Elara Vance was a pile of bones in the Wildlands by now.
I stood up unsteadily and walked to the window. I looked out at the moon. It was a sliver of silver tonight, cold and unfeeling.
"I will fix this," I vowed to the empty night. "I will purge this weakness. If I can't mark Zara, I will find another way to secure the pack. I don't need a mate. I am Kaelen Blackwood. I don't need anyone."
But as I stood there, looking North, my hand unconsciously drifted to my chest, tracing the scar where the bond used to be.
And for the first time in my life, I was terrified of the silence.
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 Gilded Cage POV: General Vesh (Elara Vance)The Capital city of Aethelgard did not smell like the North.There was no crisp scent of pine, no ozone of an approaching blizzard, and no metallic tang of fresh blood on the snow. The Capital smelled of blooming jasmine, crushed rose petals, and
The Tearing of the Soul POV: General Vesh (Elara Vance)The heavy thud of Kaelen’s broadsword hitting the mud echoed through the chaotic gorge like a death knell.No! Astra howled, throwing herself against the bars of my mind. Fight! Do not bow to them!I stared at the Alpha of the North. He s
The March of the Condemned POV: General Vesh (Elara Vance)The Binding Contract was laid out on the heavy mahogany table of the Grand Hall, the parchment pale as bone in the morning light.I stood before it, dressed in the dark leather and heavy wool of my Legion tactical gear. My blistered, ba
The Price of a Queen POV: Alpha Kaelen BlackwoodThe heavy oak walls of my private study felt like the bars of a cage shrinking rapidly around me.I swept my good arm across the massive mahogany desk, sending ancient leather-bound law books, inkwells, and maps crashing violently to the stone fl







