เข้าสู่ระบบThe great hall of Aldrian's fortress was packed with wolves from across his territory, all of them dressed in silks and furs and jewels that glittered in the candlelight. The air was thick with the smell of roasted meat and expensive wine, heavy with laughter and gossip and the clink of goblets. Tapestries depicting bloody hunts and triumphant battles covered every wall, and the central hearth held a fire big enough to roast an entire deer.
Lyra moved through the crowd with a heavy pitcher of wine, her head down, her shoulders hunched, her coarse linen dress marking her as a servant. She filled cups, wiped spills, and stayed out of the way, just as her mother had taught her. The wolves inside her paced and snarled, their senses reaching out to touch everything in the room. She could smell things she had never noticed before, the fear on the youngest wolves and the anger simmering beneath every conversation. And beneath all of it, something else. Something that made her wolves stop and lift their heads. Lyra followed their gaze to a figure standing in the shadows near the entrance. He looked old, bent and limping, leaning heavily on a gnarled wooden staff. His back was hunched, his movements slow and painful, and a hood covered his head. He stood apart from the other guests, ignored and unnoticed, and the wolves around him looked at him with barely concealed disgust. Mate, the white wolf whispered. Mate, the dark wolf agreed. Lyra nearly dropped the pitcher. Mate. The word echoed in her head, impossible and terrifying. She was a slave, a bastard, a girl whose own father had never acknowledged her existence. She could not have a mate. She could not have anything. But the wolves were certain. The old man in the shadows was hers. Before she could process the revelation, a hand closed around her wrist. "Slave. You have been ignoring me." Elara's voice was sharp as broken glass. Lyra's blood ran cold. She had been so focused on the old man that she had forgotten to watch for the princess. "I am sorry, my lady," she said. "I did not see you." "Of course you did not see me." Elara's voice dripped with contempt. "Perhaps you would like to pour me some wine as an apology." Lyra stepped forward and raised the pitcher, but before she could pour, Elara's hand shot out and knocked it sideways. Wine splashed over the rim, a cascade of deep red that soaked into Lyra's dress and dripped onto the floor. A few drops landed on Elara's gown, staining the pale blue silk near the hem. "My gown!" Elara shrieked. "You did this on purpose! I want her executed!" The room went silent. Aldrian rose from his throne and walked to the edge of the dais. "The girl is worthless," he said, "but execution is excessive." "She attacked me," Elara insisted. Ziera stepped forward, her green eyes glittering. "Sell her to the rogue traders." Lyra's blood turned to ice. "Please," she whispered. "I did nothing." "Silence." Aldrian's alpha power pressed down on her, forcing her to her knees. "Two days until your eighteenth birthday. If you manifest a wolf, you will be given to my soldiers as a breeder. If you remain wolf-less, you will be sold to the rogue traders." Lyra bowed her head, hiding the tears that burned in her eyes. Tears of rage, not sorrow. And then she felt it again. The presence. The old man was limping toward her. His staff clicked on the stone floor as he walked. The crowd parted before him, faces twisting with disgust. He stopped directly in front of her, close enough that she could see the scars on his hands and smell pine and smoke on his clothes. "Stand up," he said. His voice was low and rough, but there was something beneath it, something young and powerful that did not match his bent and broken appearance. Lyra stood. He reached up and pushed back his hood, and the face beneath was not old at all. It was young, thirty years old at most, with sharp features and a strong jaw and dark hair that had been powdered grey for his disguise. Scars marked his face, a white line from his temple to his jaw and another across his nose, but beneath the scars, he was beautiful in a fierce and weathered way. His eyes were the color of molten gold, and they burned with a fire that stole her breath. "I am Kael," he announced. "And you are mine."Lyra sat on the edge of the bed and watched Sena pour hot water into a chipped ceramic basin. The steam rose in soft curls, carrying the scent of something herbal that the young woman had left with the bread, though Lyra could not name the leaves or flowers. It smelled clean, and that was enough."Wash yourself, Lyra," Sena said, gesturing to the basin. "You cannot face them looking like you just crawled out of a kennel."Lyra stood and crossed to the table, dipping her hands into the warm water. It stung her cracked skin, but she welcomed the pain because it reminded her that she was still alive, still whole, still here. She splashed water on her face and neck, scrubbing away the dirt and sweat of days on the run.Kael watched her from the bed, his golden eyes following her movements. "There is a stream behind the cottage. You can wash properly there later, if you want."Lyra dried her face with a cloth that smelled of lavender. "That would be later." She paused, gathering herself, t
Lyra woke to the smell of smoke and pine and something else, something warm that took her a moment to place. It was Kael. His arm was still draped over her waist, his chest pressed against her back, and his breath came slow and even against her hair. He had not moved all night.She lay still, afraid to wake him, afraid to break whatever spell had let her sleep without dreams of the kennels or the whip or Elara's cruel smile. The fire had died down to glowing embers, and the morning light filtering through the small window was pale and grey. Sena was already awake, sitting in the corner with her knees drawn to her chest, watching them with an expression Lyra could not read."You should rest more," Lyra whispered.Sena shook her head. "I have rested enough. Eighteen years of sleeping on straw has made me light. A few hours on the floor is nothing."Kael stirred behind her, his arm tightening around her waist before he lifted his head. His golden eyes were hazy with sleep, and his dark h
The guest house was a small stone cottage at the edge of the village, separated from the other buildings by a narrow stream that flowed down from the mountains. Roran led them inside and lit a lantern, and the soft glow revealed a single room with a bed, a table, and a hearth that had not been used in months. Dust covered every surface, and the air smelled of cold ash and disuse."It is not much," Roran said again, almost apologetically. "No one has stayed here since the last trader passed through, and that was over a year ago. I will send someone with fresh linens and food."Kael nodded, his hand still resting on Lyra's back. "Thank you, Roran. I know this is unexpected."Roran's scarred face flickered with something that might have been concern. "Unexpected is one word for it. The pack is talking, Kael. You have been gone for weeks, and you return with a mate no one knew existed." He glanced at Lyra, then at Sena, who stood silently by the door with her grey eyes fixed on the floor.
The woman crossed the square with the confidence of someone who had never been told no, her red hair swinging against her back and her frost-colored eyes fixed on Lyra like a hawk sizing up prey. She stopped a few feet away and let her gaze travel over Lyra's torn dress, her dirty face, and her hands clasped tightly at her sides."So this is the great mate," Varya said, her voice dripping with contempt. "I expected someone worthy of a king, not a half-starved slave in rags."Kael stepped forward, positioning himself between Lyra and his cousin. "Varya, this is not the time or the place.""Then when is the time, cousin?" Varya shot back, not backing down an inch. "When you have married her in secret and presented us with a fait accompli? The pack deserves to know who you have brought into our home."Roran moved to stand beside Kael, his scarred face expressionless but his posture tense. "Varya, the king has just returned from a long journey. Let him rest before you bombard him with que
The path through the forest widened after they crossed the border, the trees thinning out to reveal a valley stretched between two mountains whose peaks were white with snow. Lyra had never seen mountains before, and she stopped walking again, unable to help herself, because the sight of them stole the breath from her lungs.Kael waited beside her without rushing, letting her take in the view while the last light of the sun faded behind the peaks. "They are called the Twin Sentinels," he said after a while. "The valley between them leads to my fortress. We will reach it by midday tomorrow if we rest tonight."Lyra looked at the dark shapes of the mountains and felt something settle in her chest, something she could not name but that felt like the opposite of fear. "They look like they have been here forever.""Longer than any pack. Longer than any king," Kael replied, his golden eyes reflecting the last light of the sky. "They watched my ancestors build the fortress, and they will wat
They reached the northern border just as the sun started sinking toward the horizon. The sky turned orange and red, bleeding between the dark shapes of the pines, and Lyra had never seen anything like it.In the south, the sky was always pale and washed out, hidden behind clouds or the smoke from Aldrian's fires. But here, the sky was vast and open and alive with color. She stopped walking without meaning to, her eyes fixed on the horizon, and something shifted inside her chest.Kael stopped beside her. "Beautiful," he said quietly.Lyra shook her head. "I did not know the sky could look like that." In the kennels, she had seen the moon through the high window and the sun through the cracks in the walls, but never a sunset like this, free and wide and endless. It made her feel small, but not the way Aldrian made her feel small; this was the smallness of being part of something bigger, not the smallness of being crushed under someone's boot.Kael pointed toward a line of ancient stones







