LOGINRonan
The council chamber was thick with the scent of aged parchment and flickering torchlight. I sat at the head of the long oak table, jaw clenched as the elders droned on about border skirmishes and grain shortages. My mind, however, was miles away with Yara. It had been two long months since her last mind-link. Back then, her voice had been bright and hopeful as she begged me to convince Father to assign Ian the rogue wolf mission. “It’s a chance for him to prove himself,” she had said. “Father will finally see he’s worthy.” After days of persistent arguments and persuasion, Father had finally relented. Just as Yara had predicted, Ian returned victorious from crushing the rogues. Father was genuinely impressed — so much so that he had been secretly planning to merge a smaller allied pack into Shadowveil to enlarge Ian’s territory and was even preparing lavish gifts as a sign of acceptance. For a moment, it seemed like everything was falling into place for my sister. Suddenly, a faint, crackling mind-link brushed against my consciousness — weak, like a whisper carried on a dying wind. Brother… Yara’s voice, barely there. I’m sorry… My heart slammed against my ribs. I shot upright, gripping the table edge so hard the wood groaned. The elders fell silent, eyes wide. “Yara?” I growled through the link, pouring every ounce of my Alpha strength into it. “Yara, what’s happening? Talk to me!” The connection flickered badly — distance, interference, or something worse. Fragments came through: pain, betrayal, darkness. Then it severed completely, leaving only an echoing void. Before I could roar in frustration, Father’s urgent, time-sensitive mind-link crashed into me like a thunderclap. “Ronan. Come to the throne room, Now!” I didn’t bother excusing myself properly. I shifted mid-stride, my massive black wolf tearing through the palace corridors, claws scraping stone. Servants scattered out of my path. The strange pain in my chest intensified, a deep, soul-wrenching ache that told me something catastrophic had happened to my sister. I burst into the throne room, shifting back to human form as I skidded to a halt. Father stood rigid before the ancient Lineage Flower pedestal, his face carved from granite, eyes glowing with lethal fury. The sacred flower was an ancient, magical bloom that bloomed with one petal for each member of the royal bloodline and only shed a petal when one of us was on the verge of death or had suffered a mortal wound. Yara… “Your sister is in mortal danger,” Father said, voice low and vibrating with power. “One of the petals has fallen. She is in great danger.” Rage and fear collided inside me. “What exactly happened?!” I snarled, stepping closer. “I don’t know either,” Father growled. “Only the flower’s warning. Summon the Seer. Now!” The royal Seer was brought in haste, her frail form draped in silver robes. She knelt before the sacred mirror, entering her trance with a low chant. The surface shimmered, then cleared to reveal vivid, painful visions. I watched in growing horror as the scenes unfolded: Yara, my proud, loving sister standing on the balcony in a beautiful silver gown, preparing a grand welcome for Ian’s return. The public announcement. Ian holding that red-haired woman’s hand. The pregnancy declaration. The humiliation. The argument. Mira’s staged fall and miscarriage. The aura suppression that made blood pour from Yara’s nose. The public rejection. The white porcelain bowl of poison. And then the worst: Mira’s cold, triumphant voice after they believed Yara dead: “Dump her deep in the forest. Let the wild beasts and vultures feast on her body. She deserves no honor or pyre. Erase the barren Luna completely.” I saw Ian standing there, unmoved, his hands on that woman while my sister’s broken body was carted away like refuse. A roar tore from my throat. My claws extended fully, fangs lengthening as my wolf demanded blood. “That worthless, treacherous scum! He dared lay hands on the Alpha King’s daughter? He rejected her? Poisoned her? Threw her to the forest like garbage?!” My chest heaved with barely contained violence. The pain in our bond, the faint broken mind-link all made sense now. She had reached out in her final moments, apologizing. And I had been sitting in a damn meeting. I spun toward the assembled royal warriors who had rushed in at the commotion. “Mobilize the elite strike force! We leave immediately! Your orders are clear: retrieve my sister’s body — unscathed. Kill any beast, guard, or scavenger that touches her. If Ian or his pack interferes, show them no mercy.” I shifted again, my howl shaking the very foundations of the palace — a promise of vengeance that echoed across the capital. The warriors fell in behind me as we exploded out of the gates, a thunderous wave of royal wolves racing toward Shadowveil territory. The forest blurred beneath my pounding paws. Every stride fueled by fury and guilt. Hold on, Yara. Just a little longer. Your brother is coming. And when I find you… Ian will regret the day he ever laid eyes on you.IanThe attendant led us down a wide, sunlit corridor lined with ancient tapestries and gleaming marble statues. She stopped before a set of ornate double doors carved with the royal crest and pushed them open with a graceful motion.“These are your quarters for the duration of your stay,” she said warmly, stepping aside to let us enter.The suite was breathtaking. A spacious living area opened into a luxurious bedroom with a massive four-poster bed draped in silk. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked the royal gardens, and fresh flowers filled crystal vases on every surface. The air smelled of lavender and polished wood.Mira let out a soft, delighted gasp as she stepped inside, her eyes wide with awe. “Oh, Ian, look at this!” she exclaimed, spinning around the room with girlish delight. She ran her fingers over the embroidered curtains, opened drawers filled with fresh linens, and stepped onto the balcony with a happy giggle. “This is even more beautiful than I imagined. We’re re
IanThe rumors had spread like wildfire through Shadowveil and beyond.Everywhere I turned — in the training fields, during meetings with the elders, even in casual conversations with warriors, the topic was the same: the long-lost Princess and the Grand Banquet being held in her honor. The entire kingdom seemed electrified by her return.I sat in our private living room that evening, the golden scroll resting on the low table in front of me. Mira lounged beside me on the couch, flipping through a catalog of luxury items while sipping herbal tea.“Have you been hearing the stories?” I asked, unable to keep the intrigue from my voice. “They say the Princess is extraordinarily beautiful. Silver hair like moonlight, eyes the color of storm clouds. Graceful, elegant, and kind in a way that makes people remember her years later.”Mira glanced up from her catalog, her expression carefully neutral. “The entire kingdom is obsessed. It’s all anyone can talk about these days.”I leaned ba
YaraThe heavy thud of boots echoed against the stone floor. Ronan instantly stood up, a rare, genuine smile breaking across his otherwise stern face."Ah, he's here," Ronan announced, stepping away from the table. He turned to my father and me, offering a brief, apologetic bow. "Forgive me, father. With the morning drills, I completely forgot to inform you that Alec would be joining us for breakfast today.""Alec?" I repeated, the name slipping from my lips before I could stop it.I looked toward the doorway, and my heart completely stopped. My breath trapped itself in my throat.Standing there, dressed in a sharp, dark military uniform that bore the crest of a powerful general, was the young man from the hospital. The stranger I had collided with. The one who had picked up my ultrasound from the floor."Yara, allow me to introduce my closest friend and one of our most powerful generals, Alec," Ronan said, completely oblivious to the sudden, icy dread paralyzing my limbs. "Alec
YaraThe impact knocked me backward. The printed ultrasound, the prescription, and my bag slipped from my grip, scattering across the polished linoleum floor."Oh, I'm so sorry!" a male voice apologized.My heart hammered against my ribs. I didn't look up at him. Desperate to hide my face, I dropped directly to my knees and began frantically sweeping the papers together with trembling hands.The young man crouched down beside me to help. His fingers closed around the glossy piece of photo paper that had slid the furthest away. He picked up the ultrasound image, his eyes dropping to the unmistakable shape printed on it.A warm, genuine smile broke across his face as he held it out to me. "Looks like you're expecting a baby. Congratulations."Panic flared into pure survival instinct. I snatched the image roughly out of his hand, jammed it into my cloak alongside the other papers, and scrambled to my feet. Leaving him confused on the floor behind me, I burst through the hospital do
YaraThe city hospital smelled of antiseptic and stale coffee. Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, casting a harsh, sterile glow on the scuffed linoleum floors. I kept my hood low and scarf high as I approached the reception desk, my heart hammering against my ribs. No one here knew who I was, but I still needed to be careful. The receptionist, a tired-looking woman in her forties, barely glanced up from her computer. “Purpose of visit?”I swallowed, my throat dry. “Ultrasound test.”She typed something quickly, then handed me a clipboard with forms. “Fill these out. Take a seat over there. We’ll call you when it’s your turn.”I nodded, found a long row of metal chairs in the crowded waiting area, and sat down. The chair was hard and cold against my back. Around me, people coughed, flipped through old magazines, or stared blankly at their phones. The air tasted faintly of disinfectant and anxiety. I kept my head down, filling out the fake name and details with shaking hands.Ti
_Flashback_ The night before Ian left for the rogue campaignI sat on the edge of our bed, arms wrapped around my knees, watching Ian pack the last of his things. The fire crackled softly in the hearth, but it did nothing to warm the cold dread in my chest.“You’re really leaving tomorrow,” I whispered, voice thick.Ian turned from his bag and sighed, walking over to me. He knelt in front of me, large hands resting on my thighs.“I’ll be back soon, love,” he said gently, rubbing soothing circles on my skin. “It’s just a mission. A chance to prove myself to the Alpha King. I’ll return victorious.”I shook my head, tears already stinging my eyes. “You don’t understand. Every time you leave, I feel like part of me goes with you. What if something happens? What if—”“Hey, hey.” He cupped my face, thumbs brushing away the first falling tears. “Stop sulking like this. I’ll be fine. I always come back to you, don’t I?”I wasn’t having it. The tears came faster. “You say that every t
IanThe dungeon air was damp and thick with the metallic bite of silver. Torches flickered weakly along the rough stone walls as I descended the narrow steps, my boots echoing sharply in the silence. Yara had been rotting down here for two days, and still some small, foolish part of me expected to
YaraThe first thing I felt was warmth — real, gentle warmth, not the bone-chilling dampness of the dungeon floor or the freezing forest earth where they had discarded me like rotting meat. Soft silk sheets cradled my aching body, and the faint, soothing scent of lavender mixed with healing herbs f
YaraChaos erupted in seconds.Mira’s screams pierced the night, raw and desperate, drawing guards and maids from their quarters like moths to a flame. I stood frozen in the guesthouse doorway, my hands still outstretched from where I had tried to catch her. Blood pooled beneath her on the stone p
YaraI stood frozen in the middle of our once-beautiful bedroom, the scent of roses now turning my stomach. Ian’s words hung in the air like smoke after a wildfire; thick, choking, and impossible to ignore.“You can’t be serious,” I whispered, my voice barely holding together. “You’re kicking me







