LOGINMona's POV
The Shadow Walker moved faster than thought. One moment it stood at the edge of the circle, the next its claws were inches from my throat. Derek's wolf form slammed into it mid-leap, but passed right through as if the creature was made of smoke. The Shadow Walker solidified just in time to backhand him into a tree with a sickening crack. "Derek!" I rushed toward him, but Marcus grabbed my arm. "Don't! Physical attacks won't work. Only phoenix fire can—" The Shadow Walker's hand wrapped around my throat, lifting me off the ground. Its touch was ice, burning cold that made my flames sputter. "The Shadow King sends his regards," it hissed, breath like rotting meat. "You will make a fine addition to his collection." I grabbed its wrist, channeling phoenix fire through my palms. The creature shrieked, dropping me, its arm dissolving where I'd touched. "Impressive," it snarled as shadows reformed its limb. "But you're untrained, uncontrolled." It was right. The fire came in spurts, wild and unfocused. Each burst drained me more than it should. "Together!" Marcus shouted, launching his own phoenix fire at the creature. Our flames merged, creating a wall of white-hot fire that made the Shadow Walker retreat. But I could see Marcus struggling too – phoenix fire wasn't meant for combat, not like this. "Mona!" Sophie appeared from nowhere, throwing something that sparkled in the moonlight. "Grandmother said to use this if shadows came!" I caught the vial – crystallized sunlight, ancient magic from the old days. Without thinking, I shattered it against my burning palm. The effect was instantaneous. My phoenix fire turned golden, blazing with the power of concentrated daylight. The Shadow Walker screamed, its form beginning to dissolve. "Impossible! You're just a child—" "I'm a Phoenix Wolf," I snarled, advancing on the creature. "And you picked the wrong night to hunt me." But as I raised my hand to deliver the final blow, the Shadow Walker laughed. "Did you think we sent only one?" The ground erupted. Five more Shadow Walkers emerged from the earth itself, surrounding us. The pack wolves who tried to help passed right through them, unable to make contact. "Run!" Professor Aria commanded, weaving complex spells that barely slowed the creatures. "Get to the Academy grounds! They can't enter consecrated territory!" "No!" Marcus pointed to the forest. "The Bloodmoon sanctuary is closer!" "We're not following you anywhere," Derek growled, back on his feet despite his injuries. "Then die here," Marcus snapped. "Your choice." The Shadow Walkers attacked simultaneously. Phoenix fire, Academy magic, pack wolves – nothing stopped them for long. Leon dragged Elena to safety while Selena, surprisingly, stood her ground and fought beside the others. "There!" Sophie pointed to a shimmering barrier between two ancient oaks. "A portal!" "That's the sanctuary entrance," Marcus confirmed. "Hurry!" But as we ran toward it, one of the Shadow Walkers materialized directly in our path. Its claws raked across my back, tearing through fire and flesh alike. I screamed, falling to my knees. "Mona!" Derek caught me, his hands coming away bloody. "No, no, no—" "Shadow poison," the creature laughed. "Even phoenixes can't burn it away." Black veins spread from the wounds, visible through my translucent skin. The fire under my surface began to dim. "Get her through the portal!" Marcus roared, holding off three Shadow Walkers with a massive fire wall. Derek lifted me, running. But the portal was shrinking, reacting to the shadow presence. Others made it through – Sophie, Leon, some Academy wolves. But as Derek reached the threshold carrying me, it solidified. "No!" He slammed against the barrier. "Let us through!" "Only Bloodmoon blood can pass now," Marcus said, suddenly beside us. "The sanctuary's defenses have activated." "Then take her!" Derek thrust me toward Marcus. "Save her!" "I can't. She has to cross on her own power." Marcus touched the spreading black veins on my back. "And she's fading fast." The Shadow Walkers circled closer, savoring their victory. "Unless..." Marcus's eyes widened. "The mate bond. It might be enough." "What are you talking about?" Derek demanded. "Bite her. Complete the mate bond now. Your blood in her system might give her enough strength to—" "Are you insane? She's dying! The bite could kill her faster!" "She's dying anyway!" I grabbed Derek's hand weakly. "Do it." "Mona—" "Trust me." I managed to smile through the pain. "What's the worst that could happen? I die and resurrect again?" "That's not funny." "Derek." I squeezed his hand. "Please." He looked at Marcus, who nodded. "At the junction of neck and shoulder. It has to be deep enough to exchange blood." Derek shifted partially, his canines extending. "I'm sorry," he whispered, then bit down. Pain exploded through me, but different from the shadow poison. This was fire meeting lightning, phoenix flame dancing with wolf storm. Our souls crashed together, merging, bonding in ways that transcended physical. The black veins met the mate bond's power and hissed like water on hot metal. "Now!" Marcus shoved us toward the portal. "While the energies are fighting each other!" Derek carried me through. The moment we crossed, the portal slammed shut, cutting off the Shadow Walkers' howls of rage. We were in a vast cavern lit by floating flames. Ancient symbols covered the walls, pulsing with power older than memory. Other phoenixes – actual phoenixes – perched on crystalline formations, their burning eyes watching us with intelligence. "The Bloodmoon Sanctuary," Marcus breathed, relief evident. "We're safe. For now." Derek laid me down gently, but didn't release me. The mate bond hummed between us, new and raw and overwhelming. "The shadow poison?" I asked weakly. "Fighting the mate bond," Marcus observed, kneeling beside us. "But winning. We need the Eternal Flame." "The what?" Marcus pointed to the cavern's center, where a massive pyre burned with every color imaginable. "The source of all phoenix fire. It can burn anything, even shadow poison. But..." "But what?" Derek demanded. "To use it, she has to enter it. Completely. And not everyone survives their first immersion." "What's the survival rate?" I asked. Marcus hesitated. "For normal phoenixes? About half. For a Phoenix Wolf who hasn't even shifted yet? Unknown. You'd be the first." "Wonderful odds," I muttered. "There is... another way," a new voice said. We all turned. A woman materialized from the flames themselves – ancient, beautiful, with fire for hair and stars for eyes. "Grandmother?" Marcus gasped, dropping to one knee. "Hello, grandson." She looked at me with those impossible eyes. "And hello, great-granddaughter. Lyra's child. The one prophecied." "Prophecied?" Derek asked. "The Phoenix Wolf who would either save or destroy our kind," she said simply. "Depending on one choice." "What choice?" I asked, though the spreading numbness made talking difficult. "Whether to embrace both natures... or sacrifice one to save your life." She gestured, and images appeared in the flames. "Enter the Eternal Flame as you are, and you might die. But if you survive, you'll emerge as a true Phoenix Wolf, both natures united." "And the other option?" "Let me burn away your wolf side. You'll live, but only as a phoenix. The mate bond would break. Your connection to the wolf world would end. But you'd survive." Derek's arms tightened around me. "No. There has to be another way." "The shadow poison spreads," the ancient phoenix observed. "You have minutes to decide." I looked at Derek, at Marcus, at the Eternal Flame that could save or destroy me. "What would my mother choose?" I asked. The ancient phoenix smiled sadly. "Lyra faced the same choice once. She chose to keep both natures." "And it killed her," Marcus said quietly. "No," the ancient one corrected. "It made her powerful enough to give birth to you. Her death was... something else. Something we discovered too late." "What?" I demanded. "The Shadow King isn't collecting rare wolves," she said, her form beginning to fade. "He's collecting phoenix wolves specifically. Because he is one." "That's impossible," Marcus protested. "We would know—" "Would we? When he's mastered shadow to hide his fire?" She looked directly at me. "He's your grandfather, child. Lyra's father. And he's coming for you." The ancient phoenix vanished, leaving us in stunned silence. The black veins reached my heart. "Choose," Marcus said urgently. "Now!" I looked at the Eternal Flame, then at Derek. "Together?" I asked him. Understanding dawned in his eyes. "You want me to enter with you?" "The mate bond might protect us both. Or kill us both." "Mona—" "Choose!" Marcus shouted. "The poison—" I made my choice. I grabbed Derek and rolled us both directly into the Eternal Flame. The last thing I heard before the fire consumed everything was my own scream. Or maybe it was Derek's. Or maybe it was the fire itself, welcoming us home.Mona's POV The bone jutted through Derek's shoulder at an angle that made my stomach turn, white and sharp against his torn flesh, while his wolf form flickered in and out like a broken television signal."Don't shift!" Sophie screamed, her hands pressing against the wound as blood pooled beneath him on the Bloodrose courtyard stones. "If you shift now, the bone could pierce your heart!"But Derek couldn't control it. The injury from the territorial dispute with the Western Packs had damaged something deeper than flesh—it had severed his connection to his wolf. His body kept trying to transform, caught between human and beast, each attempt tearing the wound wider."Mom," Cassian knelt beside me, his twenty-one-year-old face carved from stone. "The Western Pack Alpha did this deliberately. He knew exactly where to strike to cause a shift-lock."Shift-lock. The condition every wolf feared more than death. Trapped between forms, unable to complete the transformation either way. Most die
Mona's POV The contraction hit Lyra like a freight train, and through our pack bond, I felt it three hundred miles away."She's not ready," Selena said, her hands glowing with green healing light as she worked over Lyra's swollen belly in the hidden medical facility. "The twins are coming too fast. Their energy—it's unlike anything I've ever felt."My sister had arrived minutes before me, her witch-sense detecting the labor before Rose's emotional perception could pinpoint it. Now Selena stood as the only thing between my daughter and whatever these twins truly were. One child, Althea, had taught Selena to balance motherhood with power. But this—delivering the twins everyone feared or coveted—this tested even her evolved abilities."Where's Corin?" I asked, knowing her husband's calming presence helped stabilize her power."Teaching at the Academy. Althea's with him." Selena's hands trembled slightly. "Mona, these babies—their energy is rewriting the room's molecular structure. Look.
Mona's POV The scream that tore from Myra's throat wasn't human—it was phoenix, pure and primal, as flames erupted from her seven-year-old body and consumed the First Pack warrior who'd grabbed her."Nobody touches my daughter," Nova snarled, her own transformation instant and devastating. Where my sister-in-law stood a heartbeat ago, now a creature of living flame roared into existence, her phoenix form magnificent and terrible. The funeral hall's temperature spiked twenty degrees in seconds.The First Pack warrior stumbled back, his ancient flesh regenerating even as it burned. These weren't ordinary wolves. They were the originals, the ones who'd walked the earth before civilization tried to tame us. And they'd come for the children—all of them."Protect the twelve!" Derek's command cut through the chaos as our pack shifted in unison. But the First Pack moved like synchronized death, each warrior three times the size of our largest wolf, their eyes holding centuries of cunning.No
Mona's POV Aria's hand felt like paper in mine—thin, translucent, the veins blue rivers beneath skin that had weathered eighty-seven years of secrets."Stop looking at me like I'm already gone," she whispered, her voice still carrying that teacher's authority even as her chest barely rose with each breath. "I have something to tell you first."I'd driven through the night when her assistant called. Aria Torres, the woman who'd guided our kind through integration, who'd built bridges between worlds, was dying. Not from violence or betrayal, but from the simple cruelty of time. The monitors beeped steadily in her private room at Sanctuary General, the hospital she'd helped establish for our kind forty years ago."Lyra's safe," I said, thinking she worried about my pregnant daughter, hidden somewhere even I didn't know. "The twins she's carrying—""Not about that." Aria's fingers tightened slightly on mine. "About your mother. About what really happened the night she died."My breath ca
Mona's POV The letter arrived on a Tuesday, carried by a crow that shouldn't have been able to find us through Derek's new protective barriers, but Leon always had a way of making the impossible happen.*Mona, Sophie's in labor. Complications. We need you.*I left Rose sleeping, her emotional exhaustion from last night's revelation still weighing her down. The twins were never alone—those words haunted me during the entire drive to Leon's territory. But my brother needed me now, and some things transcended even apocalyptic warnings.I found Leon pacing outside his bedroom, his Alpha composure shattered. "Three hours. Sophie's been screaming for three hours. The healers say the baby's turned wrong, and Sophie keeps losing consciousness between contractions.""Where's Aeron?""With the neighbors. He doesn't need to hear his mother—" Leon's voice broke. "Mona, I can't lose her."I pushed past him into the room. Sophie lay drenched in sweat, her face gray with pain. The healers looked up
Mona's POV The scream tore through the house at three in the morning—not Rose's scream, but somehow coming from her room.I found her curled in the corner, hands pressed to her temples, tears streaming down her face. "Make it stop, Mom. Please. I can hear them all.""Hear who?" I knelt beside my twelve-year-old daughter, but when I touched her shoulder, pain shot through me—not mine, someone else's. Fear. Desperation. The metallic taste of blood that wasn't in my mouth."Everyone." Rose's marks weren't just glowing now; they pulsed with each heartbeat, each pulse bringing another wave of foreign emotion. "The pack. The prisoners at the Academy. Lyra—God, Lyra's so angry. And Jin... Jin's dying."Derek burst through the door with Cassian behind him, but Rose held up her hand. "Don't touch me. You'll feel it too.""Feel what?" Derek asked, but I saw him stagger as he got too close, his face contorting with phantom pain."Everything." Rose's voice was older than twelve, older than any c
Mona's POV The mate bond screamed, then went silent.One moment, I felt Derek's presence like a second heartbeat. The next, nothing. Not death—I'd know death—but something worse. Absence. Like someone had wrapped iron around our connection and squeezed until even emotion couldn't escape."Mona?" M
Mona's POV The challenge circle reeked of old blood and fresh fear. Garrick stood at its center, gray-haired and scarred, a warrior who'd survived forty years of pack wars. Behind him, a dozen Silver Moon wolves watched with hungry eyes—wolves who remembered when phoenixes were enemies, not pack.
Mona's POV Selena's hands shook as she gripped mine, her nails leaving crescents in my skin. The shadow poisoning had left her thinner, her cheekbones sharp enough to cut glass, but her eyes burned with terrible clarity."The Shadow Walkers thought they were breaking me," she said, voice raw from
Mona's POV Alpha Cross stood in our ruined training ground like judgment carved from stone. His Nightshade enforcers flanked him—twelve wolves chosen for their absolute loyalty, their ability to kill without question. The dawn light caught the silver threading through his dark hair, making him loo







