Beranda / Werewolf / The Lycan King's forgotten Goddess / Chapter 5: The Pull Neither Understood

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Chapter 5: The Pull Neither Understood

Penulis: zeh_nyx
last update Tanggal publikasi: 2026-05-17 02:45:07

Eros Draven pov

I was never supposed to be here.

The Violet Pack was beneath my concern. Another insignificant territory ruled by an Alpha more interested in appearances than true strength. Another fragile border I would normally cross without a second glance.

My time was not meant for weak packs and their petty politics.

I had kingdoms to oversee.

Enemies to monitor.

A throne built on blood, discipline, and survival.

This place should have meant nothing to me and yet the moment I crossed its borders, I stopped.

Not because of movement.

Not because of sound.

Not because of visible power.

A scent.

Faint.

Elusive.

Barely there.

But enough.

My entire body went still.

A cold breeze moved through the trees, carrying traces of pine, damp earth, and wolf then it reached me again.

Soft.

Familiar.

Impossible.

My jaw tightened instantly.

“No,” I said under my breath, my voice quieter than the storm rising inside me.

I inhaled again, slower this time.

Sharper.

The scent remained.

Delicate.

Unmistakable.

A memory I had spent four centuries trying to bury.

“That’s not possible.”

Behind me, my Beta’s horse shifted.

Dylan frowned immediately.

“My King?”

I barely heard him.

Because my focus was already gone.

For centuries, I had mastered control.

I did not chase ghosts. I did not entertain false hope.

I didn't reopen wounds that had nearly destroyed me.

She was gone.

I knew that better than anyone.

I had watched fate rip her from existence.

I had bled for that loss.

Burned kingdoms for it.

Buried the man I once was beneath crowns, war, and endless responsibility.

And yet this scent—

It cracked through centuries of certainty like fractured steel.

“She’s dead,” I said more firmly, as though repetition itself could force truth into place.

Dylan’s expression sharpened, concern flickering beneath his discipline.

“Who?”

I ignored the question.

Because I did not have an answer I was willing to give.

Not aloud.

Not even to myself.

Before logic could interfere, I turned my horse.

Toward the source.

“My King?” Dylan called again, confusion sharpening his tone. “The council expects us before sunrise.”

“Then they’ll wait.”

My voice left no room for debate.

And for the first time in centuries—

I followed instinct.

Each step closer made the sensation worse.

Not violent.

Not overwhelming.

Something far more dangerous.

Persistent.

Quiet.

Like fate itself had wrapped invisible fingers around my spine and was steadily pulling me forward.

I hated it because I did not understand it. some part of me already did.

By the time I reached the grand hall, the scent had intensified.

Still subtle.

Still impossible.

But strong enough to fracture reason.

The massive doors opened.

Every wolf in the room bowed instantly.

Fear swept through the hall.

Submission.

Instinct.

None of it mattered.

Because I saw her.

Freya Lunareth.

Standing at the center of the room.

Silver gown.

Straight spine.

Defiant eyes.

She should have looked small surrounded by wolves stronger than her.

She didn’t.

She looked like the only thing in the room worth noticing.

And when my gaze met hers the world shifted.

Not physically.

Not visibly.

But something ancient inside me reacted with terrifying force.

For one impossible second I forgot how to breathe.

It wasn’t her.

It couldn’t be.

And yet The scent.

The pull.

The unbearable familiarity.

No.

This woman was younger.

Mortal.

Different.

But her scent…

Moonlight.

Wildflowers.

Power.

My fingers curled at my sides.

Dylan stepped closer, lowering his voice.

“My King… do you wish me to intervene?”

“No.”

The answer came too quickly.

Too sharply.

My eyes never left her.

“Not yet.”

Because I needed to understand what I was seeing.

Kaelen was speaking.

Some rehearsed performance of power.

But his voice had already become meaningless background noise.

My attention remained fixed on her.

The way she stood.

The way she refused to bow.

The way something buried deep beneath her skin seemed to pulse in silent rebellion.

Then she spoke.

“I reject you.”

The hall froze.

Shock erupted instantly.

Kaelen’s anger followed.

“You don’t get to do that.”

But Freya She didn’t flinch.

Not once.

I felt my wolf stir beneath my control, something dangerously close to approval surfacing.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

“No?” she asked him calmly. “And why is that?”

No trembling.

No heartbreak.

No fear.

Only steel.

Dylan’s voice lowered.

“She rejected her Alpha publicly.”

“I can see that.”

“That should be impossible.”

I didn’t answer.

Because I was too busy watching the impossible unfold and for reasons I did not fully understand I admired it.

As Kaelen’s control began to fracture, Freya remained calm.

Cold.

Resolved.

She wasn’t begging for survival.

She was claiming it.

The hall saw rebellion.

I saw something else.

Recognition not of identity But of power.

Something ancient stirred beneath her.

Subtle.

Buried.

But undeniable.

My instincts sharpened immediately.

There it is.

The realization was quiet and deeply unsettling.Something had been sealed inside her.

Something powerful.

Something old.

Something I had once felt long ago—

In another lifetime.

In another loss.

And that terrified me more than any battlefield ever had because if I was right then fate had not merely returned a ghost.

It had rewritten death itself.

When she walked away from Kaelen, renouncing her place in the pack, I should have let her go.

Instead I followed from a distance.

Silent.

Watching.

Because I needed answers.

Outside, beneath silver moonlight, Kaelen made his mistake.

He grabbed her.

Possessive.

Arrogant.

Weak.

“You belong to me,” he snapped.

My jaw tightened instantly.

Freya’s voice was colder than winter itself.

“I don’t belong to anyone.”

The words hit harder than they should have.

Kaelen tightened his grip.

And then everything changed.

Power exploded from her.

Raw.

Ancient.

Violent.

Kaelen’s body was thrown backward with crushing force.

The courtyard erupted.

Shock.

Fear.

Chaos.

But I stood perfectly still because I knew what I had just witnessed.

Not fully.

But enough.

Dylan stared beside me, disbelief written openly across his face.

“My King… what is she?”

For once I had no immediate answer.

Freya herself looked shaken, staring at her own hands as though they no longer belonged to her.

And perhaps they didn’t.

Because that power did not feel newly created.

It felt awakened.

Reclaimed.

Remembered.

My gaze locked onto hers once more.

She looked confused.

Frightened.

Far stronger than she understood.

And for the first time in four hundred years I felt something dangerously close to obsession begin to stir.

Not because she was powerful.

Not because she was beautiful.

But because she felt impossible.

“Interesting,” I said quietly.

Dylan glanced at me.

“Interesting?”

My voice lowered.

“No.”

I took one slow step forward, unable to look away.

“Far more dangerous than that.”

Because deep within my soul, where memory and instinct still warred against reason, one terrifying truth had begun to take shape.

This woman was not an accident.

She was not random.

And she was absolutely not insignificant.

Whether she was fate’s cruelty…

Divine punishment...Or a second chance I had buried centuries ago I would uncover the truth.

No matter what it cost.

Because for the first time in four hundred years something had reached through grief, death, and time itself…

And forced me to feel again.

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