LOGIN- RAVENA
The two goons Elder Marrow picked to dump me at the edge of the world didn't say a word the whole trip. They just gripped my arms, dragging me through the dirt until the dirt turned into frozen slush.
We were heading for the Hollowland.
Every wolf grew up hearing stories about this desolate, tundra-like expanse, and none of them were good.
It’s basically a massive, frozen graveyard where the pack threw its trash. There were no trees, no shelter, nothing but these nasty, black "Iron-Grip" shrubs poking out of the permafrost like skeleton fingers.
The wind didn't just blow out there; it made this horrible, constant wailing sound that got right under our skin and made us think of a dying pup. It’s where rogues went to starve or freeze to death. And now, without Astraea’s warmth humming under my skin, the cold hit me twice as hard.
The thought made me shudder so bad that my teeth clicked.
"Keep moving," the bigger guard grunted, giving my shoulder a rough shove forward.
"I am moving," I snapped back, though it came out sounding way more breathless than I wanted.
My head was spinning, trying to find a way out of this. I wasn't going to survive a night in the Hollowland. Without my wolf, the frost would take my toes by midnight. I needed a gap. Any gap.
Then I heard the rushing water.
It was faint at first, but the closer we got to the border, the louder the roar grew.
The river.
My dad mentioned it once, years ago, when he was drunk, talking about how the old pack lines used to run along the water. Nobody in the Crimsonridge Pack ever messed with that river because the current was notoriously suicidal. But they didn't know what my dad taught me before he passed. He’d thrown me into the lakes since I was big enough to walk. I could swim circles around any of these landlocked idiots.
It was a stupid gamble, but freezing to death in a ditch wasn't an option.
"Hey," I said, digging my heels into the icy mud and pulling back.
The guards stopped, looked down at me as if I were something stuck to the bottom of their boots.
"What?" the left one muttered.
"Look at me," I said, lifting my hands a little so they could see the caked mud and the dried, flaky blood stiffening the fabric of my shirt. "I’ve been in a cell for four days. I smell like rot, and my clothes are glued to my skin. Let me wash off in the shallows for two minutes. I'm not going anywhere in these chains anyway."
The big one looked at the rushing river, then back at me. He actually laughed. "You want to jump in there? Go ahead. Save us the walk. That water will snap your neck in five seconds."
"I’m just staying by the rocks," I lied, keeping my voice as pathetic and miserable as possible. "Please. I can barely breathe with this grime on my face."
They traded a look, shrugged, and the big one unlocked the heavy iron cuffs around my wrists, keeping his hand on his dagger. "Two minutes. If you try to run, I’ll take your legs off."
"Thanks," I muttered.
I stumbled down the slick rocks toward the bank, my bare feet stinging against the rocks. The water looked almost black, churning violently as it rushed down from the northern peaks. I didn't hesitate. If I thought about how cold it was going to be, I’d lose my nerve.
I took one deep, freezing breath, stepped onto the ledge, and launched myself straight into the middle of the white water.
The river wasn’t actually that bad at first, cold enough to make me shiver, sure, but manageable.
"Hey! What the hell—"
The guard’s shout was cut off instantly as the river swallowed me whole.
It felt like hitting a brick wall made of solid ice. The cold punched every bit of air right out of my lungs, and for a second, my brain went completely blank with panic. The current grabbed me like a ragdoll, spinning me around and slamming my shoulder against a submerged boulder. I fought my way up, gasping for a breath of air, before the river dragged me under again.
I couldn't even see where I was going. Everything was a blur of dark green, white foam, and freezing pain. I didn't try to swim against it. That would just drain the little strength I had left. Instead, I just tried to keep my head up, letting the river carry me away from the border, away from the goons, and away from the Hollowland.
I didn't know how long I drifted. Seconds, minutes, it all felt like one endless, numbing nightmare. My fingers went numb first, then my arms, until I couldn't even tell if I was paddling or just floating like a dead branch.
Then, the sound changed.
A deep vibration rolled from the river, rattling through my bones. The water started moving faster, tilting downward.
A waterfall.
"Oh, shit," I tried to yell, but a wave choked me before the word could even leave my mouth.
Before I could grab onto a rock or even try to swim to the bank, the floor dropped out from under me.
I was airborne for a terrifying split second, the wind catching my wet hair, and then I was falling.
The second I went over that waterfall, everything changed. I expected the plunge to shock my system with pure, bone-chilling ice, but instead, the water suddenly turned warmer with an unnatural, heavy heat that swirled around me like a subterranean hot spring the closer I drifted toward the ledge.
I hit the deep plunge pool at the bottom of the falls with a massive splash, sinking straight down into the darkness. The pressure was immense, pressing against my ears, but the water here was calmer.
My vision was tunneling into black spots. I was falling forward, my arms giving out entirely, and I braced myself to smash right into the jagged rocks.
Instead, I hit something solid and surprisingly warm.
I forced my heavy eyelids open, squinting through the wet hair plastered across my face. I hadn't hit the ground. I had plummeted right off the ledge and landed sideways across a man’s lap, my dripping wet head resting against his thigh.
He stayed completely still, making no move to pull away, and didn't try to push me off. He just sat there naked on a low rock by the water's edge, looking down at me with wide eyes like I was something strange the waterfall had just thrown up.
Hell! What kind of psycho freezes their ass off in this ice water?
- RAVENAI stood there on the rocky ridge, the wind tearing at my grey coat, my fingers tightly gripping the edge of my basket to keep my hands from shaking. A wild, electric jolt of pure adrenaline shot straight up my spine, completely consuming the cold.Every six months.I had spent the last ninety days wondering how a wolfless, exiled rogue like me was ever going to get past the iron-clad gates of the most secure military academy in the north. I had been preparing to risk my life just to sneak over the outer walls. But the door wasn't locked. The door was right here, built by the very man who kept this village alive.I wasn't moving away from my vengeance. Without even realizing it, I had walked right into the epicenter of the plot. The path to Grand Alpha Roderic D’Arden didn't require me to scale a fortress; it required me to prove myself to Chief Rod."When..." I swallowed hard, forcing my voice to remain steady, though a dangerous, lethal spark was blooming in my chest. "When
- RAVENAThree months in the Hollow-Eye Remnant had done more than just heal my broken bones; it had given me a strange sort of peace. For the first time since the slaughter at the Valecrest estate, I wasn't looking over my shoulder every five seconds, waiting for a Crimsonridge executioner to drag me back to a cell.Life among the outcasts was quiet, built on a gentle rhythm of shared survival. It turned out that being a wolfless rogue was the only passport I needed to be trusted here. We all shared the same hollow space in our chests, the same quiet grief of being discarded by the high pack houses. Every day, I carved out a place for myself, helping in the communal kitchen and working in the small stone infirmary.I was honestly amazed the first time I walked into that clinic. For an underground village hidden in a volcanic crater, their shelves were incredibly well-stocked. They had clean bandages, high-grade surgical tools, and rows of rare tinctures that most rogue camps would h
- RAVENAThe small timber cabin Edith had given me was quiet, save for the rhythmic clicking of the dying embers in the hearth. For three days, I barely left the mattress. My body was paying the price for the miles I’d dragged it through, and every muscle felt like it had been shredded and stitched back together with rusty wire. The friction burns from the silver-iron shackles on my wrists were finally starting to scab over, thanks to a pungent moss salve Rayna had brought me, but the hollow ache where Astraea used to be remained. Without a wolf’s rapid healing, I was just a fragile, breakable human.Somewhere in the deep, freezing middle of the night, the ambient temperature in the cabin suddenly shifted.I woke up with a gasp, my hand instantly flying to the heavy Crimson Gibcasite pendant resting against my collarbone. It wasn't the bitter winter wind that had startled me awake. It was the strange air. The draft coming through the floorboards suddenly felt dense and dry, carryi
- RAVENAThe journey deeper into the woods felt like a slow, agonizing march through a labyrinth designed to swallow people whole. The tall woman kept her silence as she marched ahead at a relentless pace. Rayna trotted silently beside her with her tiny bare feet.I had to struggle just to keep from falling behind. The oversized trousers kept slipping down my hips, forcing me to clutch the thick waistband with one hand while using the other to hoist myself up the steep incline. My legs were still shaking from days of running without food, but the real agony was the deep, throbbing ache left by the Crimsonridge cells. My wrists and ankles were still raw and bloody from the heavy silver-iron shackles they’d chained me with, and my back was stiff from the beatings the enforcers handed out like daily rations. The Council’s binding ritual had left my entire nervous system feeling like it had been set on fire. Every step reminded me of the hell they'd put me through.We climbed higher,
- RAVENARayna shrank back so fast she practically dissolved into the thick trunk of the pine tree. Her small shoulders shook under her wool shawl, her eyes fixed on the dirt as if looking at her mother would somehow make things worse. One look at the kid was enough to see how frightened she was.I didn't want to get a child killed, and I definitely didn't want to get my throat ripped out by a woman who looked like she could snap me in half with her mind.Using the rough bark of the tree behind me, I forced myself up. My knees wobbled violently, my feet slipping slightly on the slick moss, but I managed to stay upright, leaning heavily against the trunk just to keep from collapsing right back into the dirt."She didn't do anything," I croaked out, my voice cracking. "It’s my fault. I’m just... I'm harmless. Look at me."The woman’s pale eyes didn't soften. They stayed sharp as flint, tracking the way my hands shook against the bark."I'm wolfless," I said, the words scraping their way
- RAVENAMy feet felt numb and heavy, and every step sent an ache through my back. Between the injury after the Council's punishment, an escape through the freezing river, the drop off that waterfall, the lack of a wolf to keep me warm, and the hollow emptiness in my stomach, I was completely running on fumes. I hadn't eaten a real meal in days. My throat had gone completely dry, making every swallow a struggle.I didn't know where I was going anymore. I was just putting one foot in front of the other, moving away from the border, away from the Crimsonridge Pack, and away from that angry, paralyzed wolf by the pool.Eventually, the forest started to spin. The dark pines blurred together into a messy green smear, and my knees buckled. I didn't even try to catch myself. I just tipped forward, collapsing onto a bed of frozen moss beneath a massive, ancient pine. The ground was hard and unforgiving, but right then, it felt like a feather bed. I let my eyes close, the freezing cold wrappin
- RAVENA"Hey! Drop that!" the paralyzed man shouted from the pool, his voice booming with a furious authority that made the water vibrate.I didn't answer. I just backed up into the slushy gravel, my breath hitching as I clutched the heavy pile of dry clothes against my chest."You're dead if I cat
- RODERIC"Lucas, get out," I muttered, not bothering to open my eyes. "And stay out.""You need help getting down the rocks, Alpha," Lucas said from somewhere behind me. His boots crunched on the frozen gravel, the sound far too close for comfort. "Don't act like you can just glide down there.""I
- RAVENAI woke to the feeling of rough hands dragging me across the cold stone floor. All I could sense was gray light and voices yelling around me. They didn't even bother to open the cell door properly, just ripped the hinges from the frame."Time to face your punishment, kinslayer," one of the
- RODERICI was doomed. I began to realize that I was never getting out of this fucking wheelchair. It was like a moving cage. I clenched the metal rim until my fingers blanched as I dragged myself an inch forward, simply to feel the metal against my skin. My legs were like twigs, useless limbs co







