LOGINIn the harsh world of werewolves, Aflira's life is a curse. As a "wolfless" omega, she's been rejected by her pack, the Moonfall, and treated as a pariah. But when she's caught trespassing on Blackthorn Dominion territory, Alpha King Kael Blackthorn intervenes, sensing something extraordinary about her scent. As Aflira navigates her new life under Kael's protection, she discovers hidden strengths and a mysterious connection to the ancient power of the Primordial Luna. But with rival packs and traitors threatening her life, can Aflira unlock her true potential and claim her rightful place as Kael's Luna Queen?
View MoreThe night I turned sixteen, the moon was bright enough to expose flaw and mercilessness. It hung above the Moonfall clearing like a silent judge, silver light spilling over the trees and onto the gathered pack members below.
I remember standing in the center of the teenagers of the moon fall pack, my heart pounding so loudly I was sure everyone could hear it. The air smelled of Pine and anticipation, laughter echoed through the trees. Tonight was the night . The night every child of the pack waited for. The night we would meet the other half of ourselves. Parents stood proudly at the edge of the clearing, waiting patiently to witness their children’s first shit. I stood in the center of the clearing with the other sixteen year olds, my hands trembling at my sides. Around me parents whispered encouragement to their children. I have learned not to look at familiar faces in crowds. My father was long gone and executed as a traitor before I could fully understand what betrayal meant. My mother had disappeared soon after, swallowed by rumors and silence. So I stood alone under the full moon, pretending I didn’t notice the empty space where my family should have been me The moon Goddess was supposed to bless us at sixteen. Bones would crack, skin would split, fur would rise. And for the first time, we would meet the other half of our souls. I waited for my wolf. Around me, my peers began to tremble. Gasps filled the clearing. Their cries filled the night half agony, half triumph. Wolves burst into existence, howling proudly beneath the silver sky. The pack erupted in applause and cheers. I felt… nothing. No heat, no tearing bones. Just cold. I told myself it was delayed. That maybe I was simply different, my breathing grew shallow as the last of the teenagers shifted successfully. Wolves ran in circles, nudging their parents, basking in praise. I was still standing there, still human. The whisper began “She hasn’t shifted. ” “Is she scared?” “Maybe it's delayed.” I swallowed hard and lifted my face towards the moon. Surely it hadn’t forgotten me, surely I wasn’t invisible even to the Goddess who ruled us. I kept waiting. Hours passed, the moon climbed higher nothing happened. The laughter grew distant. The Alpha finally approached me, his expression unreadable. “Sometimess,” he said carefully, loud enough for the remaining onlookers to hear, “the Moon Goddess tests patience.” But there was doubt in his eyes. That was the first night I understood what it meant to be alone. I walked back to my small hurt alone that night. No wolf waited inside my mind, no second heartbeat echoed in my chest. Only silence. “Broken Omega,” Lyra Moonfall had called me earlier that day, laughing with her friends. “Even the Moon Goddess rejected me .” The next morning, they began calling me wolfless. By the end of the week, they had a new name. BROKEN OMEGA.For one terrible second, nobody moved. Nobody breathed. The massive crack stretched across the night sky like a wound carved into reality itself. Silver light poured from within it. Not lightning. Not moonlight. Something older. Something is wrong. The sight froze everyone on Blackthorn's walls. Warriors. Watchers. The Hollow Order. Even Seraphine. Even Lucien. Because whatever was happening none of them had expected it to happen now. The crack vanished almost as quickly as it appeared. The night sky returned. The storm remained. The rain continued falling. But the damage was done. Every person present had seen it. Reality itself had split open. And deep inside the connection, something screamed. I dropped to one knee. Pain exploded through my chest. The connection surged violently enough to make my vision blur. Thousands of emotions crashed together. Fear. Confusion. Desperation. Not mine. Not Blackthorn's. The gates. The gates were afraid. The real
The moment Seraphine finished speaking, the connection exploded inside me. Not with pain. Not with fear. With memory. Ancient. Violent. Buried beneath thousands of years of lies. The world vanished around me. The rain. The wall. The Watchers. Everything disappeared. And suddenly I was standing at the edge of the end of the world. The sky burned silver. Not sunlight. Not fire. Something worse. The horizon itself seemed torn apart as massive fractures stretched across the heavens. Entire cities stood abandoned beneath those broken skies. The beautiful civilization from the First Age was dying. Not slowly. Not peacefully. It was collapsing. People ran through the streets. Screaming. Praying. Fighting. And at the center of it all stood the largest gate I had ever seen. Far larger than Blackthorn's. Far larger than the desert gate. It towered over the landscape like a mountain of black stone. Open. Fully open. Beyond it existed only darkness. Not empty da
The moment Seraphine spoke those words, something inside me stopped. Not my heart. Not my breathing. Something deeper. The connection. It went completely silent. For the first time since the sanctum collapsed. No whispers. No emotions. No memories. Nothing. And somehow that terrified me more than when it screamed. Rain continued falling across Blackthorn's walls while thousands of Watchers stood motionless behind Seraphine. Waiting. The entire world seemed to be holding its breath. "The First Anchor didn't close the gates alone." The sentence echoed inside my mind. Lucien looked furious. Not angry. Afraid. There was a difference. And for the first time since meeting him, I wondered how much he truly knew. Or worse how much he wasn't telling me. Seraphine's silver eyes remained fixed on mine. Patient. Like she knew exactly what effect her words had caused. "You should leave." Lucien's voice carried across the wall. Cold. Sharp. Seraphine barely glanced to
The name hit me like a physical blow. The Watchers. The connection recoiled so violently that I nearly lost my footing. Not fear. Something deeper. Older. The same instinct tells prey to run before it sees the predator. The same instinct that warns of danger long before the mind understands why. Every part of me knew one thing. The Watchers were not supposed to be here. Rain continued falling across Blackthorn as hundreds of silver lights moved through the forest beyond the northern border. The sight was mesmerizing. Terrifying. Beautiful in the worst possible way. The lights flowed between the trees like rivers of stars. Perfectly organized. Perfectly synchronized. No army moved like that. No army could. Kael's gaze remained fixed on the approaching formation. "How many?" Lucien swallowed. "A thousand at least." The answer sent a ripple through everyone standing on the wall. Even the experienced warriors nearby looked uneasy. Because Blackthorn had faced enem
The moment Lucien said those words, every instinct inside me screamed that something was wrong. Not because he had found me. Because he expected to. As if this moment had been inevitable from the very beginning. The underground chamber fell silent except for the faint hum of the gate behind us.
The storm arrived before sunrise. Heavy clouds rolled across the mountains surrounding Blackthorn territory, swallowing the pale morning light until the entire forest looked darker than it should have. Wind moved violently through the trees, carrying the sharp scent of rain and something colder un
For the first time in weeks, Blackthorn territory slept peacefully. No panic moving through the pack bonds. No invisible pressure crawling beneath the ground. No fear hanging over the territory like a storm waiting to break. Just silence. Real silence. And somehow that frightened me more tha
The world shattered into silver.Light exploded through the sanctum in violent waves, consuming everything in sight as the fractured convergence structure erupted beneath my hands. The force of it slammed through the underground chamber hard enough to tear pillars apart and send cracks racing acros






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.