LOGINBeing wolfless would have been bearable if it weren’t for the blood in my veins.
They stopped calling me Aflira after that. I became wolfless. Then I became the “Broken Omega.” But the worst name was the one I carried long before sixteen. TRAITOR’S DAUGHTER. I was eight when they excited my father. I remembered the smell os smoke from the torches lining the pack circle. The way warrior’s avoided looking at me they dragged him forward, his clothes were torn, his face was bruised but his back was straight . I remember the way he stood in the center of the pack circle, bruised, bloodied, eyes hollow. How accused him of betraying Moonfall during a border conflict. I remember the Alpha calling him traitor. Warriors died in ambush, and someone has to be blamed. My father had been the lead scout he had known the train he had been trusted. And trust, once broken, demanded blood. My father never begged. He never shouted his innocence. I didn’t understand politics or power at eight years old, I only understood that my fathers eyes searched for me in the crowd. When he found me, he didn’t look angry or ashamed. He just looked at me, he looked sad. “I would never betray you,” he said, not to the Alpha but to me. That look haunted me for years, then they executed him. My mother’s scream haunted me for years as her scream echoed through the trees when they struck him down. She held me so tightly I couldn’t breathe. Three nights later, she disappeared. No announcement, no explanation. Some whispered she had fled in disgrace, others murmured that she knew too much and had been silenced. No one searched for her. I stopped asking questions after that. After that, our home was taken away. I was moved to a small wooden hut at the edge of the territory the place where widows, orphans, and outcast were sent to be forgotten. I was neither, yet somehow both. The other children avoided me at first then they began to mock me. “Traitor’s daughter.” “Cursed blood.” When I didn’t shift at sixteen, it was as if fate itself had confirmed their suspicions. The pack began treating me like an omen.I stood at the edge of the training grounds, with hands raw from scrubbing bloodstains from the dirt. Warriors passed without looking at me Some whispered. Some laughed. A few threw glances of pity at me. I carried water buckets heavier than my thin arms could manage. If I faltered, I was reminded that at least I was allowed to stay. As if existing were a privilege. Yet, despite everything, I never felt empty. I learned long ago that pity hurt more than cruelty. The forest whispered when I walk alone among trees, injured animals sometimes calmed when I touched them once, I pressed my hand against a wounded rabbit and watched its bleeding slow unnaturally fast. I never told anyone if they believed I was cursed now, what would they do if they thought I was something else entirely? So I stayed quiet. I endured.Nobody moved. Nobody spoke. The voice had echoed across the entire world. Not Blackthorn. Not the valley. The world. I knew it the same way I knew the gates were awakening. The connection confirmed it. Every living thing had heard those words. The path has opened. The silence that followed felt unnatural. The storm was gone. The rain had vanished. Even the wind had disappeared. The world seemed to be waiting. Watching. Listening. And somewhere beyond the fractured sky something was coming. The crack overhead continued spreading. Slowly. Relentlessly. Silver light poured through it like liquid starlight. The sight should have been beautiful. Instead, it filled me with dread. Because the connection wasn't reacting with curiosity. It was reacting with terror. Pure. Ancient. Primal terror. The same terror I had felt in the First Anchor's memories. The same terror that had haunted every vision since the beginning. Whatever was approaching the connection kne
The moment those words echoed through the connection, the world seemed to stop. The Seventh Heir has been found. The voice wasn't human. It wasn't the convergence. It wasn't the gate. It was something older than all three. Ancient. Unimaginably ancient. A presence buried beneath centuries of silence. The declaration rippled through Blackthorn like a shockwave. The Watchers remained kneeling beyond the walls. Thousands of silver-armored figures frozen in reverence. Not confusion. Not surprising. Recognition. As though they had been waiting for those words for a very long time. And somehow that terrified me more than the crack in the sky. More than the gates. More than the thing beyond the Veil. Because if the Watchers knew what the Seventh Heir was... then I clearly didn't. The connection roared. Images flooded my mind. Not visions. Not memories. Symbols. Ancient symbols. Seven circles arranged around a larger one. Seven figures standing beneath silver star
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 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
The sanctum was falling apart around us. Stone cracked overhead in violent bursts while silver light surged uncontrollably through the fractured structure at the center of the chamber. Every pulse of unstable energy shook the ground harder than the last. And above us I could still feel the pack.
The sanctum began to die. Not all at once. Slowly. Painfully. Like something ancient was realizing it could no longer hold itself together. The massive crystalline structure at the center of the chamber cracked wider with every pulse of destabilized energy spreading through the network. Silver
Darkness detonated across the sanctum. The force of it slammed into the pillars hard enough to split stone apart as silver energy erupted through the cracks spreading across the chamber walls. The entire underground structure groaned like it was struggling to hold itself together. Kael grabbed my







