MasukHe killed a witch to stop a curse. Instead, he became its prison. Vaelor Rauvenhollow is an Alpha doomed by his own blood. An ancient evil is sealed inside him, one that feeds on his strength, his rage, his life. Every full moon, it claws closer to freedom. Every heartbeat brings the end of the world nearer. The only person who can stop it is the daughter of the woman he murdered. Ilyra Morwen crosses into wolf territory knowing she will not leave alive. She comes not for revenge, but to finish the spell her mother died casting. What she finds is worse than a monster… it is a man already breaking. They are enemies bound by blood, magic, and a curse that refuses to sleep. Hate turns to tension. Tension turns to something dangerous. And the thing inside Vaelor is watching them both. Because the seal is cracking. The shadow is awake. And when it breaks free, love will not be enough to save anyone. Read if you dare, before the curse does..
Lihat lebih banyakPOV: Vaelor
"She's waiting for you at the stones."
My father's voice cut through the great hall like a blade. I looked up from sharpening my knife, meeting his iron gaze. The firelight threw shadows across his scarred face, making him look older than his years..
"A witch?" I asked, standing. My wolf stirred beneath my skin, restless and hungry.
"Trespassing on sacred ground." He crossed his arms. "The pack expects blood, Vaelor. Don't disappoint them."
I nodded once, sheathing the blade at my hip. This was a test. Another one. My father had been testing me since I could walk, preparing me for the day I'd take his place as Alpha. A lone witch on our borders? Easy prey.
"I'll bring you her head," I said.
He smiled, cold and approving. "Good boy."
The night air bit at my skin as I left Rauvenhollow's walls behind. Six of my father's best warriors flanked me, their boots crunching through snow. None of them spoke. They didn't need to. We all knew what happened to witches who crossed into wolf territory.
The sacred stones rose ahead, ancient and dark against the star-scattered sky. Power hummed in the air around them, old magic that predated even the first wolves. And there, standing between two of the tallest monoliths, was her.
She didn't run. That was my first mistake, thinking she would.
"You're trespassing," I called out, my hand moving to my blade. My wolf surged forward, pressing against my consciousness, demanding I shift and tear her apart.
The witch turned to face me. She was younger than I expected, maybe thirty winters at most. Dark hair spilled over her shoulders, and her eyes caught the moonlight like chips of amber. She wore simple robes, no armor, no visible weapons.
"Vaelor Rauvenhollow," she said. Not a question. A statement.
I stopped ten paces away, my warriors spreading out behind me in a half circle. "You know my name. Good. Then you know what happens next."
"I know what you think happens next." She didn't flinch, didn't reach for magic or defense. She just stood there, impossibly calm. "But you're wrong."
One of my warriors, Gareth, growled low in his throat. "Let me end this, my lord. She insults you."
I raised a hand, silencing him. Something about this felt wrong. Witches didn't walk into wolf territory alone. They didn't stand and wait for death.
"Why are you here?" I demanded.
"To stop something terrible." She took a step closer, and I saw fear flicker across her face. Not fear of me. Fear of something else. "Your bloodline, Vaelor. There's something tied to it, something that shouldn't exist. I came to sever it before it's too late."
My wolf snarled inside me, furious at her words. "You're lying."
"Your wolf," she pressed on, her voice urgent now. "Can't you feel it? It's not whole. There's something else inside you, something sleeping, waiting."
Ice flooded my veins. How could she know? I'd felt it for months now, the strange hollow place in my chest, the sense that my wolf was incomplete somehow. But I'd told no one. Not even my father.
"You know nothing about me," I spat.
"I know more than you think." She reached into her robes, and three of my warriors lunged forward, swords drawn.
"Stop!"
The shout didn't come from me. My uncle, Draeven, burst from the tree line, his face twisted with greed and fury. He moved faster than any of us expected, faster than he should have been able to. Dark magic crackled around his hands.
"Foolish boy," he snarled at me. "Talking to the witch when you should be taking what she knows."
Everything happened too fast.
Draeven launched himself at the witch, his corrupted claws extended. She threw up a shield of shimmering light, but he tore through it like paper. I heard her scream as his claws raked across her side, saw blood spray black against the snow.
"No!" I didn't know why I shouted it. Didn't know why my body moved before my mind caught up. I crashed into Draeven, sending us both sprawling. My warriors stood frozen, confused, caught between orders and instinct.
"What are you doing?" Draeven roared, shoving me off. "She has power, knowledge we can use."
The witch, Lyseth, I realized I didn't even know her name until that moment, collapsed against one of the stones. Blood poured from the wound in her side, too much blood. Her face had gone white.
"You've killed us both," she whispered, looking at Draeven with something like pity.
Then she looked at me.
"I'm sorry," she said. "This wasn't how it was supposed to happen."
Power exploded from her body, raw and desperate. It wasn't controlled, wasn't careful. It was the magic of a dying woman trying to finish what she started, no matter the cost. The curse hit me like lightning.
Fire tore through my veins, burning me from the inside out. I screamed, falling to my knees as something ancient and terrible wrapped around my soul. My wolf howled in agony, thrashing against chains I couldn't see.
"What did you do?" I choked out.
Lyseth's blood pooled beneath her, steam rising where it touched the sacred stones. "I sealed it," she gasped. "The thing inside you. I locked it away. It's the only way to keep it from waking."
Rage consumed me. Blinding, absolute rage. My wolf burst free without my permission, bones cracking and reshaping. But it felt wrong, incomplete, like part of me was trapped behind a door I couldn't open. The pain made me insane.
I didn't remember crossing the distance between us. I didn't remember my claws finding her throat.
I only remembered the moment her eyes went dark, the moment the light left them. And the words she whispered with her last breath, so quiet only I could hear them.
"My daughter will finish what I started."
Her body went limp in my hands. I dropped her, stumbling back, my human form returning in broken waves. Blood covered my hands, my chest, dripping onto the snow.
"Vaelor." Gareth's voice sounded far away. "What happened?"
I opened my mouth to answer, but the words died in my throat. The ground trembled beneath my feet. Deep inside my chest, in that hollow place where my wolf felt incomplete, something stirred. Something that had been sleeping for a very, very long time.
And it laughed. The sound echoed through my skull, foreign and ancient and hungry. My warriors backed away, their faces pale with terror.
"My lord?" Gareth whispered.
I looked down at my hands, still stained with Lyseth's blood, and felt the curse settle into my bones like roots digging deep. Whatever she'd sealed inside me, it was awake now. And it wanted out.
Mixed POVVaelor:The change was not dramatic. That was what made it unsettling. The forest did not grow louder or darker. It simply stopped reaching for new forms. The pressure beneath the ground steadied into something controlled, like breath held at a measured pace. I had faced battles that announced themselves with violence. This felt more like a decision being enforced across reality.The entity stood still beside me. For the first time, it wasn’t reacting to everything at once. It was just… present. That should have been a relief. Instead, it felt like something narrowing.Ilyra:I noticed it in the silence between movements. The forest wasn’t exploring us anymore. It was categorizing us. Every small shift in emotion from the entity caused a proportional response, but never an excess one now. No overreaction. No chaos. Just clean adjustment. Like the world had learned our limits.And I didn’t know if that meant we were safe or already inside something that had finished deciding.
Kaelith POVThe first sign was subtle enough that most would have missed it.A hesitation in the forest’s response time. Not delay in the physical sense, but interpretive delay—as though the system beneath the world was no longer reacting directly, but considering multiple possible interpretations before choosing one.That alone should have been reassuring.It wasn’t.Because consideration meant branching.And branching meant growth.The entity stood at the center of the clearing now in a calmer state, though “calm” was becoming a misleading term here. Its emotions no longer triggered collapse, but they still influenced environmental weighting. The forest adjusted itself around it like a learning organism refining behavior.Vaelor remained close, still visibly alert, still mistrusting the stability we had just negotiated into existence. I understood his instinct, even if I did not entirely share his framing.Ilyra stood slightly apart, watching the entity with an expression that sugge
Vaelor:The moment the lattice stabilized, I expected relief. Instead, I felt weight. Not physical. Structural. Like something had quietly fastened itself around all of us and called it stability. The forest was no longer collapsing or reacting violently, but it was watching us with intent now. Waiting for consistency, not survival.I did not like that distinction.Ilyra:The air changed first. Not colder. Not lighter. Just… organized. Like the forest had decided we were no longer chaos passing through it but variables it could track. I looked at the entity and realized it was still trembling, but not breaking apart anymore. That felt like progress, but I couldn’t tell if it was healing or containment.Kaelith:It has begun structuring behavior. That is not the same as understanding. The system beneath this forest is not moral. It is functional. It does not care what the entity is. It cares what it consistently does. That is more dangerous than hostility because it rewards repetition,
Vaelor POVThe question didn’t come from the forest this time.It came from everywhere at once, but not as force. Not as command. More like pressure turning into awareness, like a vast intelligence finally pausing long enough to listen instead of act.Who do you want to be?The entity stood at the center of collapsing terrain, trembling but no longer screaming. The lattice beneath the world remained suspended, shifting faintly like a held breath that refused to release.Vaelor could still feel it under his boots—something immense, waiting for direction. Not dominance. Not submission. Direction.That was the most dangerous part.Things that large should not be asking questions.I tightened my grip on the entity’s arm without realizing it. Its breathing had steadied slightly, but only barely. It still looked like something standing between two versions of itself, neither willing to fully resolve.Ilyra stood a few steps ahead of us now, facing the crack directly. Her posture had change
POV: VaelorThe cellar was freezing and smelled of damp earth and rotting potatoes, and I kept my hand clamped firmly on the hilt of my sword while we moved through the rows of heavy ale barrels toward the hidden grate in the floor. Ilyra was right behind me, her breathing sounding fast and shallow
POV: IlyraThe further we pushed into the heart of the marsh, the more the ground seemed to dissolve beneath us until we were wading through waist-deep water that was black as ink and thick with the smell of rotting lilies, and I could feel the cold pressure of the bog pressing against my ribs as w
POV: VaelorThe rain was coming down in thick, grey sheets by the time we reached the gorge of the Ironclaws, and the sound of the river rushing hundreds of feet below the Stone Bridge was a constant, low roar that seemed to vibrate through my very bones. I could feel Ilyra’s exhaustion through the
POV: IlyraThe medical wing was deserted because the rest of the pack was still outside arguing about the fight, and the only sound in the room was the low crackle of a single lamp and the heavy, rhythmic breathing of the man sitting on the edge of the cot. Vaelor looked smaller than usual with his
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