LOGINDawn came too quickly.
I had not slept. How could I, when every breath felt like shards of glass in my lungs? The rejection wound was unlike anything I had imagined—a constant, burning ache that radiated from my chest through my entire body. My wolf was silent, retreating so deep inside me I could barely feel her presence.
Maybe she had died. Maybe part of me had died with her.
The cell door crashed open. Beta Damon stood there, his expression unreadable. Behind him, I heard voices. Many voices.
"Get up," he said quietly. "It is time."
"Time for what?" I forced myself to stand, using the wall for support. "You said I would be escorted to the border—"
"Plans changed." He would not meet my eyes. "Alpha's orders."
Dread pooled in my stomach. "What orders?"
He did not answer. Instead, he grabbed my arm—not roughly, but firmly—and led me out of the cells. We climbed the stairs and I realized we were heading toward the main courtyard, not the border gates.
The morning sun blinded me as we emerged. When my vision cleared, my heart stopped.
The entire pack was assembled. Hundreds of wolves lined the courtyard in a massive circle. At the center stood a wooden platform that had not been there yesterday. And on that platform stood Kieran, dressed in formal Alpha attire, his face a mask of ice.
"What is this?" I tried to pull back but Damon's grip tightened.
"I am sorry, Sera." His whisper was genuine. "I tried to talk him out of it."
They dragged me toward the platform. The crowd parted, and I saw their faces—contempt, satisfaction, indifference. No one looked at me with pity. No one was going to help.
Damon forced me to my knees at the base of the platform. Kieran looked down at me, and for a fraction of a second, something flickered in his amber eyes. Then it was gone.
"Shadowpine Pack." His voice carried across the courtyard with Alpha command. "We are gathered to witness the formal banishment of Sera Winters, who dared to claim a bond with your future Alpha."
Murmurs rippled through the crowd. I saw Lydia Frost standing near the front, a satisfied smile on her perfect face.
"This Omega," Kieran continued, and the word dripped with disdain, "presumed to rise above her station. She attempted to use the sacred mate bond to manipulate her way into a position of power she could never earn."
"That is not true!" The words burst from me before I could stop them. "I did not choose the bond—the Moon Goddess—"
"Silence!" Kieran's Alpha power slammed into me like a physical force, driving the air from my lungs. "You will not speak unless given permission."
He descended the platform steps, each footfall deliberate and measured. When he reached me, he crouched down so we were eye level. Up close, I could see the dark circles under his eyes, the tension in his jaw, the way his hands trembled slightly before he clenched them into fists.
"You thought you could trap me," he said, loud enough for everyone to hear. "You thought your pathetic bond would force me to make you Luna. But you are nothing, Sera Winters. You have always been nothing. An orphaned burden this pack took in out of mercy."
Each word was calculated to destroy me. The crowd murmured approval.
"Please," I whispered, so only he could hear. "Why are you doing this? Just let me go—"
His hand shot out and gripped my chin, forcing me to look at him. His amber eyes burned into mine and for just a heartbeat, I saw it again—that anguish, that barely restrained pain.
Then his lips moved, forming words so quiet no one else could possibly hear: "Forgive me."
Before I could process what he meant, he released me and stood.
"Strip her of the pack mark."
The healer stepped forward, an ancient woman who had tended my childhood injuries more times than I could count. Even she would not look at me as she pressed her hands to my shoulders. Magic burned through me, searing away the invisible mark that identified me as Shadowpine Pack.
The pain was excruciating. I screamed.
"Let this be a lesson," Kieran's voice cut through my agony. "To anyone who attempts to manipulate the sacred bonds for personal gain. To anyone who forgets their place in the natural order."
The marking burned away completely and I collapsed forward, gasping. Without it, I was nothing. Worse than nothing. I was a rogue.
"However," Kieran said, and something in his tone made me look up. "I am not without mercy."
He gestured and warriors dragged someone forward. My heart lurched.
It was Thomas, the elderly groundskeeper who had sometimes snuck me extra food when I was a child. The kindest soul in this entire pack.
"This wolf," Kieran announced, "was discovered helping the rejected Omega. Providing her comfort. Questioning Alpha authority."
"No," I whispered. "No, he did not—"
"Sera Winters, you have a choice." Kieran's eyes locked on mine, and I saw something terrifying there. Something desperate. "Accept your banishment in silence and leave immediately. Or speak against this pack one more time, and Thomas dies. Executed for treason."
The crowd went silent. Everyone was watching me now.
Thomas shook his head frantically. "Do not, child. Just go. Save yourself—"
A warrior hit him, and he crumpled.
"Choose," Kieran demanded. His hands were shaking now, those strange black marks flickering across his skin again before vanishing. "Speak and he dies. Or accept your fate and he lives."
I looked between Kieran and Thomas. Between the Alpha who was destroying me and the old man who had shown me kindness.
There was no choice.
"I accept," I said, my voice breaking. "I will go. I will never speak against this pack or its Alpha. Just please, do not hurt him."
Kieran's face remained impassive, but I saw his throat work as he swallowed hard.
"Then run, Omega. And pray our paths never cross again."
The warriors released me. The crowd parted. And I ran, broken and bleeding, toward a border I would not survive beyond.
But as I reached the edge of the territory, I heard it—a sound that made my blood free
ze.
A wolf's howl, full of such anguish it did not sound like triumph.
It sounded like goodbye.
The dagger came from behind the wine table, too fast for anyone to shout a warning first.I felt it before I saw it, a shift in the air behind me sharp enough to prickle across my shoulders, the same instinct that used to warn me half a second before silver wire connected with skin. I turned, already too late to stop what was already in motion.The feast had been going for hours by then, the village finally allowing itself something close to celebration after days of tearing down and rebuilding. The rider who interrupted the memorial had delivered his news hours earlier, word of scattered Council loyalists fleeing toward the eastern border, nothing urgent enough to pull me away from the first real rest this village had earned in longer than anyone could count. My guard had dropped exactly enough for someone to notice.A woman I did not recognize lunged out from behind the table, robe torn and travel-stained, a blade in her hand that caught the firelight with a faint green sheen alo
The first wall came down before the villagers even finished clearing the square.Ropes strained tight against the old Council tower's foundation stones, a dozen hands pulling in unison while Shadowpine warriors braced the lines from behind. Kieran and I stood back and watched three years of fear collapse into a cloud of dust and broken mortar, stone by stone, until the building that had once decided who lived and who disappeared into service was nothing but rubble scattered across frozen ground.Nobody cheered. The silence felt more honest than cheering would have."It comes down faster than it went up," Alexei said, watching alongside us. "Fear always does."Work on the memorial started the same afternoon, before the dust from the tower had even fully settled. Villagers who had spent the morning tearing down came back with different tools by evening, carrying stone salvaged from the very walls that used to hold them down, repurposing it into something they chose this time instead o
I marched the Council out of the tower before any of them found time to plan an escape.Alexei walked at my left, Kieran at my right, Shadowpine warriors forming a loose line behind the robed prisoners so none of them mistook the walk down to the village for anything but what it was. Nobody spoke. The only sound was boots on frozen dirt and the occasional clink of a chain one of the warriors had looped loosely around wrists that had never once been bound before that morning.Word had already reached the village by the time we arrived. People stood outside their homes in the gray early light, some still in sleep clothes, others already dressed for work they had not expected to do that day. I recognized faces from the Neutral Plain, from the courtyard, from nights I had spent listening to stories about what the Council had cost this village long before I understood any of it myself.I stopped in the center of the square and let the prisoners bunch together behind me, exposed, with now
The first Council member reached the door and found it already blocked.Alexei stood in the frame, unmoving, flanked on both sides by Shadowpine warriors who filled the corridor from wall to wall. He carried no visible weapon, no blade drawn, no stance that suggested he expected a fight. The warriors behind him made the point clear enough on their own.The Council member skidded to a stop, gold bag swinging hard against his hip, and the ones behind him crashed to a halt just as fast, robes tangling, none of them prepared for the exit to be anything but empty."Move," one of them said, more demand than request, though his voice cracked on the single word.Alexei held his ground."You already lost the only protection that made demands like that mean something," he said. "Morvanna is dead. I felt it the same way you did."I reached the top of the corridor in time to see the color drain further from every face in that hall. Kieran stopped beside me, and for a moment we both stood in s
The stone broke apart in my palm before I felt any resistance give way.Not shattered. Crumbled, the way old ash crumbles, dust sliding between my fingers before I could register the weight leaving my hand. For one full second, nothing happened, and I thought I had simply destroyed a rock.Then the scream came.It tore through the vault walls, through a distance that should have swallowed any sound long before it reached us. Kieran flinched, hands going to his ears too late to block any of it. I recognized that voice even distorted by pain, even stretched past anything I imagined a voice could stretch to.Morvanna."That is coming from the Coven tower," Kieran said, breathing hard. "Sera, that has to be miles from here.""It does not matter how far," I said. "She is not going to survive whatever that stone was carrying."Her spirit had already begun to unravel in front of us, outline stretching thin and translucent, mouth open on a scream that matched the one echoing through the wal
I stepped closer to the shape of my father instead of taking his hand.Close enough now to see what I had missed from farther back. His eyes held no light in them, not the kind a living person carries even in memory, not the kind I remembered from every morning before the cellar. They were flat, painted on rather than felt, a surface with nothing moving behind it."You are not him," I said."Sera." Morvanna's voice sharpened, the patience in it thinning. "Do not do this.""He never called me that," I said. "Sera. My father called me Little Bird. Every single time, since I was old enough to answer it. You did not know that, did you. You built the face. You did not build the man."The shape of my father did not react. It simply stood there, arm still extended, waiting for a hand that was never going to meet it.Kieran's grip on my arm tightened, but he stayed quiet, letting me work through it on my own the way I needed to."They are puppets," I said, mostly to myself. "Both of them. Ka







