로그인The front court of the packhouse had been transformed into a stage for power.
Servants swept the flagstones with frantic precision while warriors lined the entrance in perfect formation. Near the stone steps, the elders gathered in their ceremonial robes, their expressions carved from expectation and old law. At the center of it all stood Cassia Ashford. She wore silver silk that caught the morning light, positioned exactly where a future Luna should be. Her posture was flawless, her smile practiced, her presence a declaration that she already belonged beside the throne. Mira kept her head down, balancing a heavy water jar against her hip. She had been ordered to carry supplies for the ceremony, a task meant to keep her useful and invisible. She stayed behind the other workers, making herself as small as possible. Everywhere she looked, the pack arranged itself around rank. And at the center of that arrangement was an empty space waiting to be filled. Mira did not dream of standing there. She only wanted to finish her work without becoming a cautionary tale whispered among the servants. Black vehicles rolled into the court, tires silent on the stone. Warriors lowered their heads in unison. Elders straightened. Even the air seemed to still, thickening with a pressure that had nothing to do with weather and everything to do with authority. Darius Blackthorne stepped out. He was young for an Alpha, but no one questioned his right to lead. His dark coat was immaculate, his expression controlled, his eyes cold with the kind of discipline that came from years of being watched. Wolves submitted without being told. Shoulders dropped. Gazes fell. Mira felt the pressure too, but it landed differently on her skin. It wasn’t command. It was silence. A sudden, hollow quiet that made her breath catch in her throat. Cassia stepped forward with a radiant smile, moving as if gravity naturally pulled her toward him. She was the picture of legitimacy, the answer to every political question the pack had been asking. Darius greeted the elders with measured respect. Cassia offered a formal welcome, her voice clear and confident. Everything was proceeding exactly as tradition demanded. But inside the Alpha’s chest, Fen went still. Darius caught a scent beneath the crowd. It was faint, almost negligible. Not strong. Not noble. Not even properly wolf. Yet his wolf pressed forward with a certainty that bordered on violence. Darius nearly turned away from Cassia mid-sentence. He forced himself to remain facing her, but the correction took half a heartbeat too long. Cassia noticed. Her smile didn’t falter, but something tightened at the edges of her eyes. She had spent years preparing to be chosen, and she had just felt the moment his attention fractured. Darius did not know whose scent had disturbed him. Fen did. As the formal welcome concluded, Mira tried to retreat with her empty jar. She moved along the edge of the court, keeping to the shadows. But a young wolf bumped her shoulder hard, deliberate and careless. The jar slipped. Water shattered across the stone path directly in front of the Alpha. Silence fell over the court like a blade. Spilling water before the Alpha was not a grave crime, but for someone like Mira, any mistake was an invitation for public shame. Cassia turned her head slowly. Elder Corvin’s expression hardened into disapproval. Mira dropped to one knee, gathering broken ceramic with trembling hands.Do not shake. Do not speak first. Do not give them more. She focused entirely on the shards, refusing to let her humiliation become entertainment. Darius looked down at her. His human mind catalogued the obvious: weak scent, servant clothes, low rank, no wolf pressure. She was nothing the pack valued. She should mean nothing to him. But Fen reacted with a recognition so fierce it stole his breath. Darius’s chest tightened. His fingers curled at his sides. Mira lifted her eyes for one second. The moment their gazes met, the old mark beneath her clothes burned like a brand. She heard a low growl—not from the court, but from inside the Alpha himself. She did not understand what this was. She only knew it felt like danger. Fen surged forward, demanding. Darius’s hand twitched, almost reaching for her. Then Cassia stepped closer, her voice soft and perfectly pitched for the audience around them. “Alpha, she is only Mira. The wolfless one.” The word wolfless snapped Darius back into his role like a leash. His face went cold. He ordered Mira to clean the mess and leave—neither cruel enough to be condemned nor kind enough to offer protection. The court exhaled. Order was restored. Mira lowered her head and reached for another shard. A sharp edge sliced her finger. Blood welled instantly, bright against the pale stone. Across the court, Darius flinched before she did. Cassia saw it. Blood dripped from Mira’s fingertip onto the broken ceramic. And deep inside the Alpha’s chest, his wolf snarled as though the wound belonged to him.The main hall erupted into chaos the moment the howls faded.Servants scrambled back from the cracked altar as if the stone itself might bite. Warriors turned instinctively toward Darius, hands hovering near weapons, waiting for a command that had not yet come. Low-rank wolves whispered frantic prayers, their eyes wide with a terror that had no name.Maera raised both hands, her voice cutting through the panic with practiced priestess authority.She commanded silence.She claimed the sounds beneath the floor were merely echoes trapped in old ritual stones. She spoke of forbidden chambers retaining wolf-memory, insisting there was nothing living, nothing trapped, and nothing dangerous below them.Just residue.Elder Corvin stepped forward immediately to support her.“The priestess has already explained the contamination,” he declared, his tone meant to close the matter.But the explanation did not settle the room this time. Too many ears had heard the distinct, mournful cadence of livi
Elder Corvin’s voice carried through the main hall, smooth and practiced.He announced a public blessing for Cassia Ashford to confirm her recovery after the recent ritual disturbance. The official purpose was to reassure the pack and reaffirm her place as Luna candidate.But Mira knew the real reason.This was meant to overwrite Fen’s rejection. To prove Maera’s rite had worked. To show that Cassia was stable enough to rule.Mira had been ordered to attend from the far edge of the hall. It was a deliberate choice. If Cassia remained calm with Mira present, the council could claim the problem was contained.Galen leaned in, his voice barely a breath against her ear.“They are using you as a test.”Mira kept her gaze fixed on the crescent altar. Her posture was perfect, her expression neutral.“Then I will watch what fails.”She would not give them the satisfaction of seeing her flinch.Maera began the blessing with reverent precision.Cassia knelt before the crescent altar. Moon oil w
Morning light did not bring relief.The black-silver circle on Mira’s wrist remained, stark against her pale skin.In the privacy of Darius’s study, Galen traced the mark with a careful finger. It was not a scar or a burn. Beneath the surface, it shifted faintly, like a chain dragging through deep water.He compared it to the copied Moon Rite script from the mirror. The shape matched an old command perfectly.Contain resonance. Prevent host recall.Darius went cold as the translation settled in the room. This binding had never been about healing Cassia. It was designed to suppress Sera’s recognition of Mira.Tovan asked if they could show the mark to the pack as proof.Galen shook his head grimly. The council would only claim Mira was becoming more rite-tainted. The very evidence that revealed the truth could be twisted to condemn her publicly.Maera had turned Mira’s pain into a weapon against her.By midday, the courtyard buzzed with relieved whispers.Cassia Ashford walked through
Galen turned the moon-silver strip over in his hands, his expression grim.The script etched into the metal was ancient, but its purpose was terrifyingly clear. This was not a curse meant to harm, nor a ward meant to protect.It was surveillance.“It wasn’t designed to kill her,” Galen said, his voice tight as he addressed Darius and Tovan. “It was designed to watch. Maera has been waiting for Mira to react. Not just since the passage opened. Possibly for years.”Tovan frowned, crossing his arms. “If Mira is the true host, why let her live at all?”Galen had no answer.Darius did. His voice was low, carrying the weight of a realization that made the air feel colder.“Because a stolen wolf that remembers its host may still need the host alive.”The silence that followed was heavy. Mira had not been ignored by accident. She had been monitored like a dormant vessel, kept breathing only because her existence served someone else’s design.By midday, Elder Priestess Maera announced a privat
Mira did not touch the glass again.Every instinct screamed at her to press her palm against the silver light, to reach for the wolf that wore another woman’s face.But she had learned that desperation was a trap.She called Darius instead.He arrived within minutes, Galen and Tovan flanking him like shadows. The air in the room shifted instantly, heavy with Alpha authority and warrior vigilance.Tovan circled the mirror first, his movements silent and predatory. Galen knelt to examine the embroidered cloth, his fingers hovering over the black-silver thread without making contact.“Old Moon Rite binding,” Galen murmured, his voice tight. “This isn’t just a message channel. It’s a surveillance anchor.”Darius’s expression went cold, his jaw locking as he stared at the covered frame.“Maera placed this inside a guarded room.”The implication hung in the silence like poison. A guard had been bribed, a servant manipulated, or Maera’s ritual reach had bypassed the packhouse seals entirely.
Cassia appeared at morning inspection with Maera beside her, looking restored.Too much better.Her hair was smooth, her face held color, and her hands were perfectly still. The silver sleeve of her gown hid the wounded wrist beneath layers of pristine fabric. To the gathered pack, she looked healed.Elder Corvin seized the moment immediately.He announced to the courtyard that the priestess had stabilized the Luna candidate after the contamination from the old passage. The message was deliberate and clear: Maera heals, Cassia endures, and Mira disrupts.Mira watched from the edge of the stones, feeling no relief.Instead, horror settled in her chest. The bond that had burned all night was now dull and cold. It wasn’t peace. It was a forced muting. Sera hadn't been healed; she had been silenced.Tovan moved through the crowd, testing the silence.He walked past Cassia with a sealed cloth from the Moon Rite passage hidden in his palm. He stayed far enough away to avoid accusation, but







