The Lycan King’s Shadow

1479 Words
Serena The forest behind Ironfang was the same as I remembered; wild, ancient, whispering with secrets only wolves could hear but under the moonlight, walking beside the Lycan King, it felt… different. Dangerous. I’d expected Darius Wolfe to be arrogant, cold, maybe even cruel, every rumor about him painted him as such, but as we walked beneath the towering pines, the silence between us wasn’t cold. It was heavy. A strange kind of awareness hummed in the air… almost magnetic. The summit hall and all its poisonous eyes were far behind us now and I could breathe again. “You made quite the scene back there.” I said not wanting to discuss my beta with him. Darius’s voice was deep, velvet and smoke. “They needed to know that I am not letting anyone disrespect you." “You declared me yours before the entire summit. Do you always claim what doesn’t belong to you?” He glanced down at me, the corner of his mouth lifting slightly. “Only when I see something I can’t ignore.” My heart gave a traitorous flutter, but I ignored it. “You don’t even know me.” “Don’t I?” He murmured. “I know strength when I see it. I know pain when it hides behind pride. And I know a woman who doesn’t belong in the shadows, no matter how hard she tries to.” The words hit deeper than I expected. For a moment, I forgot to breathe. We reached the clearing where the trees opened up to reveal a hidden lagoon, its surface still and glassy, reflecting the moon above like a silver coin tossed into darkness. Mist curled over the water, soft and ghostly. I stopped by the edge, inhaling the scent of damp earth and pine. “I used to come here,” I said quietly, “before I was banished.” He came to stand beside me. His presence was massive. He was easily a head taller, broad-shouldered, all quiet power. His aura was steady, commanding, but not suffocating. “Then it’s a good place to start again,” he said softly. The wind picked up, carrying the cold through my coat. I wrapped my arms around myself. Before I could protest, Darius shrugged off his cloak and draped it over my shoulders. I froze. “I don’t need…” “Take it,” he said simply. “The night is cruel to those who pretend they don’t feel it.” Reluctantly, I pulled the cloak tighter. It smelled like him: woods, smoke, rain and something wild beneath it all. A scent that whispered safety even when everything about him screamed danger. We sat near the edge of the lagoon, the moonlight painting ripples of silver across his face. I studied him from the corner of my eye, his jaw was strong, his cheekbones sharp, the lines of his face drawn with impossible perfection. His golden eyes glowed faintly in the dark, a mark of his Lycan blood. “You shouldn’t have interfered back there,” I said finally. “Kael doesn’t take humiliation lightly.” “I didn’t do it for him,” Darius replied. “I did it for you.” “For me?” I gave a short laugh. “You don’t even know who I am.” He looked at me then, truly looked, and something in his gaze made my words falter. “When I looked at you tonight,” he said quietly, “I saw a wolf standing alone against a room full of predators and not bowing to any of them. You call that nothing?” My throat tightened. I looked away, down at the water. “You have no idea what I’ve been through.” “Then tell me.” “Why would you care?” He hesitated, “because I see myself in you, Serena Vale.” My name on his lips sounded different; darker, softer somehow. I shouldn’t have liked it, but the sound of it made something flutter inside me I didn’t want to name. We sat in silence for a while, the wind whispering through the trees. My body began to relax against the warmth radiating from him, his heat was impossible to ignore. I told myself it was the cold that made me inch closer. That it was exhaustion that made me rest my shoulder against his arm. He didn’t move. Didn’t speak. Only shifted slightly, letting me settle beside him, as though it were the most natural thing in the world. His scent wrapped around me like a quiet promise. The air felt heavier, slower. My heartbeat loud in my ears. Then, gently, he brushed his lips against my temple. It wasn’t a kiss, not really. Just the ghost of one. But it shattered something inside me. I stiffened then, slowly, exhaled. Strangely, I didn’t pull away. Maybe it was the loneliness that had followed me for years, or maybe it was his warmth against the chill of the night but for the first time in forever, I didn’t feel alone. The last thing I remembered was the lull of his heartbeat against my ear, steady and strong, and the way his hand rested protectively on my shoulder as my eyes grew heavy and then… nothing. When I opened my eyes, soft light filtered through the trees. The morning sun had begun to rise, spilling gold over the water. For a moment, I didn’t move. My head was resting against something solid, warm and when I tilted it up, my breath caught. Darius Wolfe was holding me like I was something fragile. Like I was a secret he wasn’t ready to let go of. His massive arms were wrapped around me, the heavy cloak still covering my shoulders. His head was tilted slightly back against a tree trunk, his eyes closed. The morning light touched his face, the strong lines of his jaw, the dark stubble, the faint scar that ran across his cheekbone. Gods. He was beautiful. Not in the pretty, polished way most Alphas were but raw, rugged and devastatingly real. I should have pulled away but instead, I stared tracing the shape of his mouth, the lines around his eyes, the dark lashes that shouldn’t have belonged to someone so dangerous. “Are you done staring, Little Moon?” My heart leapt. His voice was still rough from sleep, low and amused. He hadn’t opened his eyes yet, but the faint smirk tugging at his lips told me he was fully awake. Heat flared across my cheeks. “I wasn’t…” “You were,” he said, finally opening his eyes. They gleamed gold in the sunlight, predatory and knowing. “I could feel it.” I pushed away from him, clearing my throat. “You could have woken me.” “You looked peaceful,” he said simply. “Didn’t want to ruin that.” “You’re far too comfortable holding someone you barely know.” His smile deepened. “You fell asleep in my arms. That makes us acquainted enough, don’t you think?” I gave him a pointed look, standing up and brushing off my coat. “Don’t flatter yourself, Your Majesty.” He rose to his full height, towering, imposing and entirely too confident for his own good. “You look cold,” he said. “Stay close. The walk back is long.” “I’m fine…” but his hand found mine before I could protest, warm and steady, enveloping it completely. For someone his size, his touch was surprisingly gentle. We walked back through the forest in silence, though every step made me too aware of him, of the size difference, of his quiet strength, of the strange comfort I felt near him despite everything I knew I shouldn’t feel. When we reached Ironfang grounds, the sound of raised voices broke the morning calm. Wolves rushed about, murmuring, pointing toward the council chambers. Something was wrong. Before I could ask, a pair of guards approached, their faces grim. “Alpha Vale,” one said, his tone clipped. “You are to come with us immediately. You’re under investigation.” My heart dropped. “Investigation? For what?” “Murder.” The word hit me like ice. The crowd’s whispers started almost instantly. I caught Kael’s scent before I saw him standing at the top of the steps, his expression dark, unreadable. Behind him stood another woman, tall, beautiful, with the crimson mark of the Crimson Shadow Pack on her collar. My mark. Darius’s growl rumbled beside me, low and dangerous. “This is a mistake,” he said, his eyes flashing gold but I already knew. Mistake or not, this was the beginning of something far darker and this time, I wasn’t sure even the Lycan King could save me.
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