LOGINDamien’s Regret
Damien couldn’t sleep.
It had been three days since the mating ceremony, and yet his mind refused to rest.
The moment he had spoken those fateful words—"I reject you."—something inside him had fractured.
His wolf, once strong and unshakable, was now restless, pacing within him, howling in distress. It clawed at his mind, demanding to be set free, but he refused to acknowledge the ache buried deep in his chest.
It didn’t make sense.
Lyra was nothing—a weak, unwanted she-wolf with a cursed mark. His rejection should have freed him. It should have strengthened him.
Instead, he felt like he was dying.
He slammed his fist against his desk, sending papers flying. The grand study of the Bloodmoon Pack’s packhouse was empty, save for him and the suffocating silence.
A knock on the door broke through his thoughts.
"Come in," he growled.
The heavy wooden doors creaked open, revealing Serena, his beta and closest advisor. She hesitated before stepping forward, her expression troubled.
"Damien," she said carefully. "There’s something you need to know."
He exhaled sharply, rubbing his temples. "If this is about the pack’s reaction to the rejection—"
"It’s not," she interrupted. "It’s about the rogues."
His muscles tensed.
"Another attack?"
She nodded grimly. "Alpha Rowan’s forces are moving fast. We lost three border patrols last night. Our warriors are struggling to hold them back."
Damien clenched his jaw.
Rowan.
The rogue king, a vicious warlord who had spent the last decade slaughtering packs and claiming their territories.
Damien had always prepared for war, but something about this felt different.
More dangerous.
"They’re getting stronger," Serena continued. "Too strong. It’s almost as if—"
"As if they have inside knowledge of our weaknesses," Damien finished darkly.
Serena hesitated before nodding. "Yes."
A cold sense of unease slithered through him.
Someone was helping Rowan from the inside.
"Gather the council," he ordered. "I want every warrior on high alert. We need to be ready."
Serena shifted uncomfortably. "That’s… not all, Damien."
He narrowed his eyes. "What else?"
She took a slow breath before saying, "The Moon Council has requested an audience with you."
Damien stiffened.
The Moon Council was an ancient group of elders, rarely interfering in pack matters unless the situation was dire.
If they were reaching out, it meant something was very, very wrong.
"Did they say why?" he asked.
Serena hesitated, then spoke the words that sent a chill down his spine.
"It’s about Lyra."
Silence fell over the room.
Damien’s heartbeat stuttered.
His mind flashed back to the last time he had seen her—her tear-streaked face, the pain in her eyes as the guards had dragged her away.
He had refused to look at her. Refused to acknowledge the sickening guilt clawing at his chest.
And now, three days later, the Moon Council was summoning him?
"Set up the meeting," he said, his voice rough.
Serena nodded and left without another word.
As the door closed behind her, Damien ran a hand through his hair, breathing heavily.
Something wasn’t right.
And for the first time since that night—
He felt a flicker of fear.
---
The Moon Council’s Warning
The Moon Council’s sacred hall was carved into the heart of the mountain, its walls lined with ancient symbols that pulsed faintly with magic.
Damien stood before the three elders, their expressions grave. The air felt thick, charged with unseen power.
"Alpha Damien Blackwood," one of them intoned. "You have made a grave mistake."
Damien straightened. "If this is about my rejected mate—"
"It is," the elder interrupted, his voice sharp. "And you would do well to listen."
Damien’s wolf growled, but he forced himself to remain silent.
Another elder, a woman with piercing golden eyes, leaned forward.
"The mate you cast aside was your only salvation."
A chill crept down Damien’s spine.
"What… what do you mean?"
The elder sighed. "Lyra Everwood is not cursed. She is the last heir of the Moonblood Clan. The power in her veins is greater than any Alpha’s. She is the only one who can stand against Rowan."
Damien’s breath caught.
Lyra? The weak, unwanted she-wolf he had exiled?
His mate?
The only one who could save his pack?
"No," he whispered. "That’s not possible."
The elder’s golden eyes hardened.
"It is not only possible," she said. "It is true. And you—" she paused, her voice filled with quiet fury, "—threw her away."
Damien’s chest tightened.
The mate bond was gone. But something deep inside him—something primal—ached.
He had rejected her.
He had exiled her.
And now… she was the key to saving them all.
His hands curled into fists.
"Where is she?" he demanded.
The elders exchanged glances.
"Lost to you," the first one said. "For now."
Damien’s heart pounded.
He had to find her.
Before it was too late.
The Roots That Bowed The glowing roots crawled slowly across the stone floor. No one moved. No one breathed. Hundreds of eyes watched as thick, silver-lit roots emerged from the cracks in the fortress, twisting and weaving through the stone as if it were soft soil. They moved toward Aria. The wolves around her instinctively stepped back. Fear spread through the hall like wildfire. Aria stood frozen. A voice echoed in her mind. Find me. The words felt ancient. Older than the Moon. Older than the packs. Older than anything she had ever known. Then the roots stopped. They hovered directly in front of her. For a long moment, nothing happened. Then they lowered. Like subjects bowing to a queen. A gasp swept through the hall. Several wolves immediately dropped to their knees. Others stared in horrified disbelief. Rowan stepped closer to Aria, despite the pain etched on his face. "What in the Moon's name is happening?" he whispered. Aria swal
Beneath the Mountain The tremor nearly knocked them off their feet. Dust fell from the ceiling as the stone chamber groaned around them. Guards stumbled backward, panic showing on their faces. Somewhere above, wolves howled in alarm. Aria steadied herself against the wall, her heart racing. The humming beneath the mountain grew louder. Closer. Alive. Rowan carefully grabbed her arm despite the pain etched on his face. “We need to leave. Now.” But Aria couldn’t move. Something was calling to her. Not with words. With recognition. The cracked symbol on the floor pulsed faintly beneath her feet, and suddenly the air turned unbearably cold. Kieran cursed under his breath. “Everyone out of this chamber!” The guards didn’t hesitate this time. They hurried toward the corridor just as another violent quake shook the fortress. A deep roar echoed from somewhere underground. Not an animal. Not exactly. Aria’s breath caught. The sound carried grief. Rag
The Earth Remembers Night had fallen again before Rowan finally woke. The room was dim, lit only by a low-burning lantern near the far wall. Rain tapped softly against the windows, and the scent of herbs filled the air. For a moment, Rowan couldn’t move. Pain spread through his body in slow waves, heavy and deep, but manageable. Alive. Barely. His eyes shifted toward the chair beside the bed. Aria sat there with her head resting on her folded arms, finally asleep. Rowan stared at her quietly. She looked exhausted, not physically, but in a deeper way. It was as if the weight of the entire world had settled onto her shoulders overnight. Moonlight slipped through the curtains, touching the silver strands hidden in her dark hair. Even as she slept, he could sense the power pulsing softly beneath her skin. It's different now. Not just lunar. Something older. Something the world itself recognized. Rowan pushed himself upright slightly, wincing. The movemen
The Ones Who Kneel Dawn didn’t bring the calm everyone hoped for. It crept in slowly, pale and chilly, as if even the sun was hesitant about what it might uncover. Aria stood at the edge of the clearing where the Sentinels had struck, her bare feet sinking into the damp earth, the moonlight still faintly kissing her skin. The forest around her buzzed with low murmurs—wolves shifting, guards changing positions, scouts returning with their updates. The night had changed everything. Again. Rowan approached from behind, surprisingly quiet for someone of his size. He held a folded cloak, draping it over her shoulders with a gentle touch. “You haven’t slept,” he remarked. She didn’t turn to face him. “Neither have you.” “That’s not the point.” Finally, Aria turned to him, her silver-flecked eyes softer than the power that simmered beneath the surface. “I needed to feel the ground. I had to make sure it’s still real.” Rowan let out a slow breath and stood beside her.
The Night That Struck Back The first arrow flew through the air without a sound. It sliced through the darkness like a whisper, just grazing Rowan’s shoulder before embedding itself deep into the tree behind him. The impact was sharp enough to splinter the bark. Rowan reacted in an instant. “Down!” He twisted, pulling Aria down with him as a second arrow zipped through the space where her head had been just a heartbeat before. They hit the forest floor hard, leaves and dirt flying as Rowan rolled, positioning himself between her and the encroaching shadows. Aria’s heart pounded against her ribs. Not out of fear. But recognition. “They followed us,” she said, already reaching inward—toward the lunar thread humming beneath her skin. Rowan was on his feet in a flash, his eyes blazing silver. “Stay behind me.” “I won’t,” she replied, her voice steady. The forest responded before he could argue. Branches creaked. Shadows thickened unnaturally, pooling between
When the Council Cracks Morian’s screams didn’t linger for long. The silver chains constricted, pulsing with a fire that mirrored the moon, forcing him down to his knees in the heart of the shattered oath circle. Smoke spiraled from his skin where the runes seared into his flesh, binding both truth and guilt. But what truly unsettled Aria wasn’t his suffering. It was the silence from the elders. They stood there, frozen—five figures who once wielded absolute power—now laid bare under the Moon’s judgment. Their robes fluttered weakly in the breeze, no longer emblems of authority but remnants of a deception too ancient to withstand the light. Rowan was beside Aria, blood drying on his forearm, his posture protective yet restrained. He felt it too—the moment when the world’s balance shifted. Finally, the iron-eyed elder spoke again, her voice stripped of its usual chill… now strained. “This was never meant to happen.” Aria turned to her slowly. “No,” she replied so
The Heartstone’s Breaking SilenceA chilly wind swept through the courtyard of the Moon Temple as Luna stepped outside, clutching her robe more tightly around her shivering form. The night sky above her swirled with streaks of violet light—an echo of the Heartstone’s erratic pulse within the temple
The Connection That IgnitesThe world seemed to shift the instant Luna placed her hand on the carved symbol faintly glowing beneath the temple stones. A wave of warmth surged through her palm—intense, electric, and all too recognizable. It was the same heat she sensed whenever Rowan was near… and t
The Pulse of the Moon’s JudgmentThe tremor struck the chamber so abruptly that dust cascaded from the intricately carved ceiling. Luna stumbled, her hand reflexively pressed against the frigid stone wall as the entire space throbbed with an unsettling silver illumination. Rowan rushed in, his arms
The River of Echoing SoulsThe forest was unnaturally still—so still that Luna could hear her own breathing echo in her ears as she strolled between Rowan and Kai, her fingertips grazing the luminous riverbank. The River of Echoing Souls sparkled like flowing moonlight, bending and undulating as if







