LOGINAURORA'S POV
The drive to the Shadowpine Pack clinic was short, and I sighed when I stepped into the space, which reeked of blood and antiseptic.
I pushed through the front doors, used to the smell as I headed straight for my office.
"Aurora?"
I turned back to see Dr. Lyra Montgomery, who had appeared beside me.
Her honey-colored hair was pulled back into a ponytail I felt was too tight.
"You're here early."
"I couldn't sleep."
I dropped my bag on my desk and instantly reached for the stack of patient charts, grateful for the familiar routine.
"What do we have today?"
Lyra studied me with the intense focus she usually reserved for complex diagnoses.
"Are you okay? You seem different."
“How do? Different as in oh your test came back okay or you have just five day more to live different?” I asked her, forcing a chuckle.
Her eyes didn’t leave mine as she replied, "Different as in, Luna Aurora resumed work this early after taking a break after Asher’s birth!”
"Let’s just say, I was pulled back to the version I was before I became just a wife and mother."
I flipped open the first chart, "Mrs. Peterson's test results came back. Did you review them?" I said, changing the subject.
"Yes, but Aurora." Lyra started, touching my arm, "What's going on? Yesterday you were stressed about Alaric's first love moving in. Today you're acting like it doesn't matter."
"It doesn't matter." The words came easier than I expected. "Now, Mrs. Peterson. What's your assessment?"
Lyra hesitated before she launched into her analysis, and we spent the next eight hours working through patient after patient.
I took on complex cases I would have previously deferred to the senior doctors.
My mind felt unburdened by the constant worry of pleasing my husband and maintaining our perfect family image.
This was who I used to be.
This was who I would be again.
It was dark by the time I returned home, and I could hear laughter emanating from inside the warmly lit house as I parked my car.
The dining room table was set with candles flickering in crystal holders.
Seraphina was at the head of the table, serving what looked like my pot roast recipe.
"Aurora! You're home!" She was smiling so brightly that it irked me, "I made your favorite dinner. I wanted to thank you properly for your generosity."
I looked at the pot roast and then at Alaric, who had a pleased expression.
This wasn't my favorite.
I hated pot roast.
But Alaric loved it so I used to make it once every week to please him.
I pushed down the rage in me and forced a smile at both of them.
"How thoughtful,” I hung my jacket on the back of my chair and took a seat.
"Though actually, my favorite is the salmon with dill sauce. But this looks lovely."
Seraphina's smile faltered, "Oh. I thought Alaric said…"
"He must have been thinking of his favorite," I spat as I served myself a small portion. "An honest mistake."
Seraphina began to serve Alaric, placing things after things on his plate.
He smiled at her, accepting everything without even a bit of restraint.
I beheld the growing intimacy between both with indifference because I had mourned my marriage already in my previous life.
Dinner passed in uncomfortable silence as Asher chattered about his day.
But both Alaric and Seraphina kept stealing glances at me, expecting something—anger, jealousy, or the emotional breakdown I had had in my previous life.
I gave them nothing but polite distance and excused myself after dinner to go and review more of my patient files.
I had just closed my bedroom door when footsteps approached in the hallway.
"Aurora," Alaric's worried voice came through the wood. "Can we talk?"
I opened the door to see him standing there with dark, troubled eyes, still handsome in his black shirt and blue jeans.
A part of me instantly remembered loving this man desperately.
But the rest of me remembered dying while he celebrated with another woman.
"What is it?" I asked.
"What's happening to us? You've been different since yesterday."
I said nothing and continued, reaching for my hand, "You've been cold and distant.”
I stepped back before he could touch me, and something flickered in his eyes…pain? But there was something else too.
I frowned as it disappeared before I could see it.
“Aurora?”
"Nothing is happening, Alaric,” I kept my voice steady, "I am simply trying to focus on my work. You should do the same too."
"Aurora, please talk to me…”His voice carried a note of desperation.
Another flashback to when I laid down on the surgical bed and watched them care less, I shook my head taking a step back.
“I have early rounds tomorrow. Good night," I said and shut the door before he could respond.
I didn't move, but rather rested my head against the shut door.
He stood there for a long moment before his footsteps retreated down the hall.
I just needed to survive twenty-eight days.
I was headed to my bed, ready to crash, when my child's cry shattered the quiet night.
Instantly, I rushed down the hallway and threw his bedroom door open to find it empty.
Panic instantly rose in my throat.
But then, his voice came again, and I realized that the crying was coming from further down the hall, from the other guest room where Seraphina usually slept.
I found them there, Asher being cradled in the laps of Seraphina, who was sitting on her bed and gently rocking.
She looked up when I entered with a sympathetic expression on her face.
I knew instantly that it was fake.
"He had a nightmare," she explained to me in a soft voice. "Poor thing was calling for you, but I would rather not disturb you since you work so hard. So I let him tag along."
"I'll take him."
Asher's face was buried in her shoulder, and he didn't even look up at the sound of my voice.
I held out my arms.
"But he's almost asleep again,” Seraphina argued, her hold on him tightening, "Maybe it's better if I just…"
"He's my son?” I didn't raise my voice, but something in my tone made her release him.
"Thank you for comforting him."
Then, I lifted Asher, who was half asleep, into my arms, his little body warm and trusting against mine.
As I turned to leave, something on Seraphina's nightstand caught my eye.
It was a small carved wooden charm, etched with symbols I didn't recognize.
It pulsed with a faint purple energy that made my wolf stir uneasily, it looked almost like the flash I had seen in Alaric's eyes just before.
I had noticed that bottle everywhere, in my previous life but I dismissed it as a pretty trinket.
What was that?
Black magic?
As I carried Asher back to my room, a terrible thought crept into my mind.
What if running away meant abandoning Asher to whatever Seraphina was doing to him? What if my freedom cost my baby boy everything?
What if the truth I knew was an illusion?
Nyra's POVMy breath caught for only a second as Silas walked in looking every bit as confident as ever.The last time I’d seen him was when he’d scurried away after Rhys’s threat.This time, however, he didn’t look at me.And I was certain it wasn’t because he couldn’t but rather because he was still trying to come to terms with the fact that I… I was sitting exactly where I was.The hearing began and his petition was read aloud.The room was calm as his accusation rang in the hall and by the time they were done, the room felt colder than it had been earlier.Father's expression remained unreadable as he said, “Present your defense.”Rhys was the one that stood for me.He calmly laid the first stack of documents before the council, making sure the guards had given every member before he started.“I won’t begin by defending a woman whose work has yet to speak for her.”“Instead, I’ll rather start with the legacy left behind by the man who occupied her administrative seat.”A sigh esca
Aurora’s POVI grunted as the whip lashed at my ankles and I barely dodged.“Again. Recite the spell correctly, Your Majesty,” the voice was robotic, sending my frustration rising through the roof.The sky was still the same bright blue, with rays casting down. The meadows were still the same as far as the eye could see, a wide endless expanse.But before me stood a door, one that levitated in the air and through which I could enter another phase of training, if only I could recite the complete 100 spells without making a single mistake.I had made a mistake at 71.Then at 80.Now I was struggling to hold myself back from yelling at the disembodied voice that seemed to mock me from above.“I just want to get through this,” I growled.The voice did not respond, because of course it didn't.It only replied when it came to asking about the training.I had no one to talk to.If I had my wolf at least, there would be some conversation to keep me company.I wouldn’t feel so alone, so numb an
Alaric’s POVCalm?My chest heaved and I struggled to contain the swirling emotions within me.Calm was one thing, but I needed to see Aurora first.I closed my eyes briefly and a growl escaped my lips before I could manage to say, in a much quieter tone, “Where is she?”“Not in the pack,” Elder Miriam raised a hand before I could speak and she continued, “Not on this plane, is a more accurate answer for you, Alpha Alaric.”Not on this plane?“What do you mean?” I pressed, my tone turning urgent. “Not on this plane means she isn’t anywhere at all.”“She isn’t,” Elder Miriam said. “I believe the best way to help you would be to tell you how this happened.”She paused briefly before continuing, her eyes gleaming with a light that I had not seen before.“You must have known of her Royal bloodline, right?”My brows furrowed.“What does that have to do with this?”“She came to me for help. We were conducting a ritual until inly a few minutes ago, Alpha Alaric. She was part of the ritual. Un
Aurora’s POVWhere was I? Why had I come to this place?I wasn't blind to the fact that, despite it being evening when I started the ritual, it was suddenly daytime.I raised my gaze and looked up to the sky.I half expected to see something other than blue skies and white clouds, but there seemed to be no difference, at all.Still, I couldn't shake the feeling that this place was nowhere near my pack.My chest suddenly began to ache and I cried out, pressing my hand against it. I felt my heart beating fast, and I knelt to the ground, biting my IP to keep from crying out.It didn't take long for the pain to completely cease, but a strange, empty feeling was left.Searching deep inside, I could not help but let out a gasp.The mate bond, why wasn't it responding to me?The realization that I had no other way to contact anyone familiar was dreadful.It hit me like a slap to the face, and I had to force myself to begin breathing in a meditative rhythm before I ended up letting my panic ta
Aurora’s POVAt her words, I nodded emphatically, even though unease roiled in me“I am,” my voice went hoarse. “I have no choice in the matter anyway.”“You do,”Elder Miriam tilted her head towards the door. “You could run. You could wait for the next generation to do what you could not. You could pretend it doesn't exist after all.”I turned and saw Sylvia standing at the doorway, her face turning even more ashen as our eyes met.She looked away first, biting her lower lip.“If I do, others die,” I said, turning back to look into my teacup. I picked it up, and the warmth spread through my fingers. “Even if I run, my son will bear the brunt. My grandchildren too. It may spell the end of my bloodline, and I cannot allow that.”“So you fight,” Elder Miriam nodded.“Will you help me?” I asked, my voice smaller.“To fight, I cannot. But I can help you figure out where to aim your claws,” She tapped her teacup and rose to her feet. “You, standing there like a puppet. Are you not ready to a
Aurora’s POVThe weight in my chest seemed to increase further and further.I had not yet fully digested everything that happened. From meditation to having to kill Rosalie, rescue my son, and then, this.The memories of my childhood had fully returned. And I had yet to process them. But instinctively, I knew one thing I had to do: to kill Asura.Before I wouldn’t have been so insistent, but now I knew the truth.Because Asura had been the reason my parents had forcibly put me in hiding, placed those binds on me, and worked to save me from the mire.The Royal family’s decline? All connected to that entity. And so, I knew somehow that this was my fate. I had to deal with Asura or die trying.This had everything to do with my bloodline and for that very reason, I was stuck in this.After leaving the study, I only had enough time to take a shower and check on Asher. The events of the day had left a bit of a mark on him and I saw him for the first time in ages, laying still on the carpet,
Rosali Blackwood’s POVI had been lucky to get a chance to escape. If not for my remembering the Blood Moon was upon us, or feeling the strength of that pure energy that made my appetite rise, I wouldn't have gotten the energy to even leave the prison.I heard it from the prison guards that I was
Aurora’s POVUpon returning to the guest bedroom which was now more mine than ever, I closed the door and felt my chest ache with the sound.Meeting Alaric of this life was complicated when I was reborn. But it wasn’t the same as meeting Alaric with memories of the past life and what he did to me.
Aurora’s POVWhen I went down the stairs with Asher, I could hear voices emerging from the dining hall.Breakfast was already well underway and I walked in, meeting Alaric’s gaze frim across the room.“Look who’s awake,” it was Elder Miriam’s coice that jolted me jnto attention and I glanced at her
Aurora's POVIt wasn't until another hour before I finally drifted off.The dreams that swarmed in my head after sleep continued to fill a void in my head.I found myself staring into a scene, watching from an invisible observer’s view as several people talked. The words hit my ears, but I found I







