LOGINThe deeper I ran into the forest, the more the air changed.
It wasn't just the smell of pine and damp earth anymore. It was the sharp, metallic tang of adrenaline and sweat.
The background noise of the academy was gone, replaced by a raw, feral symphony. Branches snapped like bone. People shouted. Someone somewhere let out a high, desperate scream of pure frustration.
What had started as a structured race was rapidly degenerating into complete, unhinged chaos. These weren't just teenagers running a course. They were predators shedding their human masks.
"Shit," I muttered, hitting the brakes. I ducked just in time as two boys came tumbling down a muddy ridge, rolling straight across the dirt path in front of my boots. They weren't running. They were trying to tear each other apart. One freshman had the other pinned by the collar, his knuckles white. "You pulled my jacket, you bastard!"
"You were too slow!" the other roared back, his eyes flashing a faint, unstable yellow. "You cheated!"
"You deserved it!"
A punch landed with a sickening, heavy smack. Another immediately followed. I blinked, watching the mud fly.
"This is crazy," I whispered. Stepping neatly over their tangled, flailing legs, I kept moving before either of them realized I looked like an easy target to vent their rage on.
Apparently, Alpha Academy believed in practical education. Very practical. And entirely bloodthirsty.
A few yards ahead, the savagery only worsened. A massive student reached out and grabbed the back of a smaller guy's shirt, violently yanking him backward into the brush. "Move!"
"No! Let go!" The smaller guy yelled.
"You're clogging the path!" The massive student growled. It was obvious the stronger ones were targeting the smaller ones because they were fast.
Nobody stopped to help. Nobody complained to the instructors. Nobody called for a time-out. It was every single wolf for themselves, and the civilized surface of the academy was tearing at the seams.
My eyes widened as I leaped over a thick tree root. Nobody had told us we could actively sabotage each other. Then again... nobody had told us we couldn't.
That dark realization made my blood pump a little faster. In a world with no rules, a weak-smelling target like me was practically prey. I couldnt let anyone catch me.
The trail narrowed sharply, squeezing between two enormous, jagged boulders. It was a bottleneck. Students were actively throwing elbows and shoulders just to force their way through the gap first.
A girl brutally elbowed another in the ribs, forcing a breathless gasp from her victim.
Someone else deliberately brought their combat boot down hard on another student's foot.
Low, warning growls vibrated through the trees, making the hair on my arms stand up.
A heavy-set Alpha shoulder-checked a smaller boy so violently that the kid flew sideways, crashing face-first into a thorny bush.
"Trouble," I muttered. No matter how much I tried to remain nonchalant about the whole situation, my body was in hyper alert, my heart thumping wildly as adrenaline rushed through my veins. I can't lose no matter what.
I kept my center of gravity low, sliding through a tiny opening in the chaos before any of the heavy-hitters noticed me. Being completely forgettable was suddenly turning into my favorite superpower.
*
Far above the canopy, inside one of the fortified stone watchtowers built into the mountain, the atmosphere was entirely different.
A younger professor stared at the central crystal screen, his hands gripping the edge of the console in disbelief. "They're fighting. It's an absolute free-for-all down there."
Beside him, an older instructor didn't even look up from his tablet. "They're future Alphas, Marcus. What did you expect?"
"But they're sabotaging one another! It's chaotic."
Professor Hawthorne calmly folded his arms over his chest, his gaze fixed on a smaller screen in the corner. "Conflict reveals character, Marcus. A smooth sea never made a skilled sailor."
"Shouldn't we intervene? Send out the enforcers?" Marcus asked, worried.
"As long as nobody intends to permanently break a classmate..." Hawthorne's expression remained chillingly placid. "...No."
Marcus blinked, swallowing hard.
"That is somehow comforting and terrifying at the same time," he murmured.
*
Back in the thick of the woods, a deep, resonant roar echoed from somewhere right up ahead. The sheer power of the sound vibrated right through the soles of my shoes. I instinctively slowed my pace, my muscles tightening.
Three desperate-looking students had cornered a massive, broad-shouldered Alpha near a fallen oak tree, clearly trying to completely block his path. One lunged for his arm. Another stood directly in his blind spot. The third reached aggressively for his backpack, trying to tear his registration number off.
The cornered Alpha didn't panic. His golden eyes flashed with a blinding, lethal light. Thick, black claws extended from his fingertips, and he unleashed a terrifying, bass-heavy growl that shook the leaves above us. The three attackers scattered so fast they nearly tripped over their own feet trying to escape his reach.
I ran watching them flee into the brush. It looked like even weaker ones were working in team, targeting the bigger ones.
With the path temporarily cleared by the giant Alpha's wrath, I quietly took advantage of the opening and slipped past.
...Thank you for your sacrifice, random strangers.
I was actually beginning to think I had successfully outrun the worst of the madness. Until I felt a sudden, violent jerk. My backpack snapped backward, pulling me off balance.
"What the-!"
I spun on my heel, my adrenaline spiking as I found myself staring at a flush-faced, green eyed freshman gripping my left strap. He was panting heavily, his face dripping with sweat and desperation. "If I can't pass the gate..." he wheezed, pulling harder, "...neither can you."
For a split second, I just stared at his white-knuckled grip.
"Excuse me?" I said, my voice deadpan.
"My ranking matters!" he yelled, trying to yank me completely off the trail.
"So does my backpack," I replied coldly.
The guy blinked, momentarily thrown off by my tone. "What?"
"I've grown incredibly emotionally attached to it over the last twenty minutes." I know I'm spouting nonsense but I can't let him see my fear. Before his exhausted brain could process my completely unreasonable explanation, I twisted my torso sideways.
I slipped my left arm completely out of the strap, using his own pulling force against him, and violently yanked the bag free with my right hand. His fingers closed around empty air, the sudden loss of resistance sending him stumbling backward into the dirt.
"Sorry," I called out over my shoulder as I took off. "I have severe attachment issues." He probablt thinks I'm talking about my backpack but no sir, I want to be in this academy no matter what.
Behind me, I heard him groan from the ground. "What the hell is wrong with her?"
I couldn't help but grin, despite the burning sensation in my lungs. One crisis successfully avoided. A few hundred yards later, the forest trail abruptly split into three distinct paths. I slowed down, my breath coming in ragged gasps as I surveyed the options.
The left path looked worn and heavily traveled. The right path disappeared into a dense, dark thicket of pine trees. The straight path looked suspiciously peaceful, almost too quiet.
...Fantastic. Three terrible choices.
I picked the middle path. Naturally, It took exactly two minutes to realize it was the wrong one. I came to a grinding halt, the dirt kicking up around my boots. The trail didn't lead to a checkpoint. It ended abruptly at the edge of a sheer, rocky cliff face that dropped down into a jagged ravine.
No bridge. No signs. Nothing but a dead end. I looked around and then I looked back at the empty trail behind me.
"Congratulations, Bellona," I whispered to the empty air. "You've officially managed to get lost in a straight-line race." I let out a long, defeated sigh. Panic began to bubble in my chest.
I turned around, preparing to retrace my steps and face the chaos of the main trail again when a deep voice came.
"Wrong way." The voice was low, smooth, and entirely too calm for the middle of a war zone. I froze, every muscle in my body locking up. Slowly, very slowly, I turned my head toward the sound.
Leaning carelessly against the trunk of an enormous, ancient pine tree stood the mysterious transfer student. His hands were tucked deep inside the pockets of his long black coat, his dark hair falling slightly over his forehead. His expression was completely unreadable, his dark eyes fixed entirely on me.
Denzel Darkmoor.
For one terrifying second, a chill ran down my spine. I wondered how long he had been standing there. I hadn't heard a single footstep.
"You know..." I said carefully, trying to steady my racing heart. "You should wear a bell."
One of his dark eyebrows lifted just a fraction. "I don't think bells suit me." He said and to be hoinest I hundred percent expected him to ignore me.
"I disagree," I countered, crossing my arms. "They'd vastly improve your personality."
Silence stretched between us. The forest around us felt strangely muted, the distant sounds of the race fading into the background.
Did I say too much? Am I in trouble now? Maybe I should get going...
Then, to my absolute surprise, the corner of his mouth twitched. It wasn't quite a smile. But it was close enough that I had to question whether my oxygen-deprived brain was hallucinating. He lifted a gloved hand from his pocket and pointed casually toward a narrow, completely hidden trail obscured by a thick cluster of briars. "East."
I blinked, looking from the hidden path back to his dark eyes. "You're sure?"
"I don't guess," he said flatly.
"Thank you," I said geniunly already jogging backwards.
He lowered his hand, his gaze intensifying. "You're losing time, Ashford."
...WAIT! How did he know my name?
Lets focus on race right now. I'll ask him later. I quickly adjusted the strap of my backpack, clearing my throat. "Thanks once again."
"You would have found it eventually," he murmured. His voice was so quiet that the wind almost stole the words away.
Before I could ask him why he was just lingering in the dead ends of the course, he pushed himself away from the tree. With impossible fluid grace, he melted into the shadows of the pines, disappearing as silently as he had arrived. I stared at the empty space for a beat, dumbfounded.
"That was kind of him," I muttered to myself. Still, a strange, heavy feeling settled in the center of my chest. It didn't feel like a coincidence. It felt like he had been waiting there. Specifically for me. And he also knew my name.
Shaking off the bizarre thought, I forced my legs to move, hurrying down the hidden trail Denzel had pointed out. A few hundred meters later, the dense brush cleared, and I emerged onto a high, rocky ridge that overlooked the lower valley section of the course. The sudden movement below caught my eye, and I stopped, looking down.
Alexander Knight. And Dareth.
They were racing side by side, their movements terrifyingly fast. They looked like twin blurs of black and silver cutting through the terrain. Suddenly, Dareth lunged violently sideways, deliberately trying to shoulder-check Alexander straight off the narrow, rocky ledge.
Up on the ridge, I caught my breath. A few yards behind them, Atlas shouted something warningly, his voice echoing off the stone walls. Alexander didn't even blink. He didn't even turn his head to look at the threat. Without breaking his flawless, predatory stride, the future Alpha King simply executed a microscopic shift to the left. It was a perfectly timed, effortless sidestep.
Dareth’s heavy frame barreled right past the empty space where Alexander had been a millisecond prior. The aggressive wolf lost his balance entirely, stumbling three clumsy, frantic steps forward before his boots managed to grip the gravel.
Alexander just kept running. He didn't slow down. He didn't look back to gloat. He moved as if Dareth hadn't even existed. As if a lesser wolf wasn't even worth the energy of a backward glance.
I watched the entire exchange from the ridge in stunned silence.
They both were in the lead, if I could see them that means I'm still in the race. With one last look at the trail below, I tightened my grip on my backpack straps, took a deep breath...
And ran...
The Grand Courtyard of Alpha Academy had transformed from a chaotic survival zone into something far more chilling. The afternoon sun cast long, amber shadows across the cobblestones, but no one was celebrating.A massive, double-sided digital projection floated above the stone stage, glowing in high-contrast neon silver. It displayed the final leaderboard of the Freshman Survival Trial.But it wasn't just a scoreboard. It was an executioner’s block."Ranks fifty-one through one hundred," Professor Hawthorne’s voice boomed across the silent courtyard, completely devoid of warmth. "Your journey at Alpha Academy ends today. You have thirty minutes to pack your belongings and exit the main gates. The transport buses are waiting."A collective, breathless gasp rippled through the crowd.Behind me, a girl burst into heavy, devastated sobs. Beside her, a boy who had fought like a demon in the mud forest slammed his fist against a stone pillar, his knuckles bleeding. They had survived the ph
The trail sloped sharply downhill before opening into a wide, grassy field. The landscape was a chaotic mess, littered with fallen logs, massive boulders, and shallow patches of thick, sucking mud.I could already see dozens of students ahead of me, their dark academy uniforms blurring against the green.Including Vanessa. And unfortunately, Susan."Please, Goddess, don't let them notie me." I muttered under my breath.Taking a deep, painful breath, I pushed my tired legs harder. Every single muscle in my body screamed in violent protest. My palms still burned like fire from climbing the stone wall, my knees ached, and even my lungs had officially filed a formal complaint.Too bad. Nobody was listening, and I sure as hell wasn't stopping. Not today. Not ever.Home wasn't waiting for me, it was trapping me. If I failed this trial, if I couldn't survive Alpha Academy, I’d be sent straight back to the Ashford estate. Back to cleaning Vanessa's room. Back to pretending I didn't exist. Bac
The deeper I ran into the forest, the more the air changed.It wasn't just the smell of pine and damp earth anymore. It was the sharp, metallic tang of adrenaline and sweat.The background noise of the academy was gone, replaced by a raw, feral symphony. Branches snapped like bone. People shouted. Someone somewhere let out a high, desperate scream of pure frustration.What had started as a structured race was rapidly degenerating into complete, unhinged chaos. These weren't just teenagers running a course. They were predators shedding their human masks."Shit," I muttered, hitting the brakes. I ducked just in time as two boys came tumbling down a muddy ridge, rolling straight across the dirt path in front of my boots. They weren't running. They were trying to tear each other apart. One freshman had the other pinned by the collar, his knuckles white. "You pulled my jacket, you bastard!""You were too slow!" the other roared back, his eyes flashing a faint, unstable yellow. "You cheated
The academy forest swallowed us almost immediately.Towering pine trees blocked out most of the sunlight, leaving patches of golden light dancing across the forest floor. The air smelled fresh, carrying the scent of damp earth, moss, and hundreds of excited wolves racing ahead.Everywhere I looked, students were already overtaking one another; some were unbelievably fast, while others had partially shifted.Wolf ears appeared. Golden eyes glowed. Claws extended from fingertips.Apparently... That was allowed. "...Right."I looked down at my completely ordinary human hands. "...Guess I'll be using the ancient human technique."I sighed dramatically. And that ancient human technique isn't anything extraordinary; it was just..."...Effort."*Far above the forest... hidden inside stone watchtowers built into the mountainside, dozens of professors silently observed the trial. Crystal screens floated before them, displaying different sections of the course.One professor smiled. "Alexander
I reach the registration area after escaping Vanessa and Susan, a bit relieved....Achievement unlocked: Escaped the mean girls. Estimated peace time: Three minutes.The registration area looked like controlled chaos.Hundreds of first-year students crowded around long wooden tables while professors checked names, handed out schedules, and barked orders loud enough to scare birds out of nearby trees. Every few seconds, another luxury car pulled into the academy, adding to the already overwhelming crowd of excited students.I carefully set Vanessa's mountain of luggage beside the registration desk and stretched my aching shoulders."Oh, thank the Moon Goddess," I muttered. "I was starting to think these bags, and I had formed a lifelong bond."The professor behind the desk looked up from his clipboard."Name?""Bellona Ashford."He scanned the list before giving a short nod. "Year One."A polished black badge card slid across the table.Bellona Ashford.Year One.Dormitory Assignment:
If surviving Alpha Academy had a handbook, rule Number One would probably say this: Don't arrive carrying your adopted sister's entire wardrobe. Unfortunately... nobody had mailed me a copy.I adjusted the two suitcases digging into my shoulders and shifted the garment bag threatening to slide off my arm for what had to be the hundredth time. A backpack hung from one shoulder, a shoebox rested awkwardly against my hip, and somewhere beneath the mountain of expensive luggage, I was fairly certain there was still a person named Bellona Ashford.Vanessa, on the other hand, walked several steps ahead without carrying so much as a handbag.She looked perfectly composed in a cream-colored dress that probably cost more than my entire closet. Her blonde hair danced gently in the morning breeze as if even the wind knew better than to upset Alpha Damien Ashford's precious daughter.I, meanwhile, was one poorly balanced suitcase away from rolling down the mountain."Bellona," Vanessa called my n







