The air out here always lied.
It pretended to be calm—cool, damp, smelling of rain and pine, like nothing could go wrong. But underneath, something old and restless kept churning, like holding your breath too long.
Caspian leaned against the old oak at the edge of Shadow Peak territory. He looked tense, shoulders tight, standing there almost out of stubbornness. Deep down, his wolf—wild, gold-eyed, barely under control—kept clawing at him. It wanted out. Wanted her.
And there she was.
Kaelen.
Pressed close, her breath shaky and quick against his neck. She smelled like moon-mint and sandalwood—a mix of calm and fire that was all her. Her skin burned, her heart hammered. She felt almost too alive.
Caspian didn’t move. He couldn’t. Something inside him fought back—duty and desire tearing at each other until he couldn’t tell them apart.
Their meetings never lasted long. Never enough to quiet the pull between them, just enough to remind them how cruel it was to call something this real forbidden.
“Four weeks,” she whispered, her words breaking against his skin. “Every morning, it gets worse. The magic’s heavier. It’s like wearing armor made of stone.”
He swallowed and pulled her closer, tracing the curve of her back with his hands, trying to remember it. “It’s not safe,” he said, voice rough. “Patrols doubled after the last full moon. Silas is twitchy. He feels something shifting. We can’t keep meeting. Not for a while. Maybe a month. Maybe two.”
Silas. His brother. His Alpha. The one who’d ordered any witch crossing the border to die, no questions.
But Kaelen wasn’t just any witch.
She was his mate.
The one the universe chose for him—and the one the law said he couldn’t have.
Kaelen pulled back, just enough so he could see her face. Moonlight caught her eyes, turning them a soft, tired green weighed down by sadness. “You’re burning,” she said quietly. “I can feel it. You’re tearing yourself apart holding it in.”
Her hand lifted, shaky, and brushed his jaw. That tiny touch sent a shock through him. He shuddered. His eyes flashed gold before he caught her hand and pressed it to his chest so she could feel his heart racing.
“I’m fine,” he said, voice flat. “I’m the Beta. Duty comes first.”
The words tasted like sawdust, useless. They did nothing to calm him.
“Your duty is killing you,” Kaelen said, fierce and soft. “It’s killing your wolf. I can feel it screaming for me, Caspian. And you keep locking it away for a law that never cared about you.”
He didn’t answer. He couldn’t. The truth sat between them, heavy in the dark.
Kaelen let her hand drop. Slowly, she reached into her battered jacket and pulled out a single, deep red rose. It looked perfect—full, alive, almost glowing in the moonlight.
“I brought this tonight,” she said, voice thin. “It’s not just a gift. It’s a test.”
He frowned. “A test for what?”
“Us,” she said. “For how real the Prophecy is.”
That word just hung there, sharp as a blade.
She lifted the rose, careful, like it was dangerous. Their eyes met—his uncertain, hers steady but afraid. Then she pressed the rose to his throat, right over his thudding pulse.
The change hit instantly.
No sound. No light. No spark. The petals just bled out, the stem shriveled, and in seconds the flower turned to black dust in her hand. It left a smear of ash on his skin, cold and dark.
Caspian froze. His body didn’t understand, not right away. He stared at Kaelen. Her face was pale, eyes wide, tears sliding down her cheeks.
“What in the moon’s name was that?” he whispered, raw.
Her hand shook as she brushed the soot from his neck, barely touching him. The air stank of burnt earth and magic.
“That,” she said, voice cracking, “was my life magic meeting our bond. The Prophecy—the Shattering—it’s real. The Silent Tide says when a powerful wolf bonds with a witch, it breaks the old laws. Every time we touch, Caspian, we’re not just risking getting caught. We’re proof.”
His head spun. He stared at the ashes on her fingers. A flower turned to dust, just from her touch.
His wolf whimpered inside, recognizing the danger—ancient, forbidden.
“I can’t hold it back anymore,” Kaelen whispered, barely there. “The power’s building. I had a vision last night—not of the Council, but of Kellan.”
That name hit him like ice water.
“He knows where I am,” she rushed out. “He’s sending scouts into the borderlands, not to hunt wolves—to track magic.”
His heart dropped. Kellan. His cousin. His second-in-command. Always too ambitious, too hungry for power.
“No,” Caspian said, shaking his head. “Kellan’s loyal.”
“No,” Kaelen shot back, fear sharp in her eyes. “Kellan’s with the Silent Tide. He’s hunting me. He thinks I’m the Key — the one who’ll make their prophecy real. If he finds us, you’re dead for treason and he’ll use me as their weapon.”
Something cracked in the darkness.
Not loud, but clear enough — dry leaves, a branch snapping.
Someone was out there.
“They’re here,” Caspian breathed. His eyes flared gold, body tensing, the animal inside clawing up.
He smelled them now. Three wolves. Their scent sliced through the damp air, tangled with the old ash still on his collar. If they found them here, it was over.
“They’re coming from the river trail,” Kaelen said, tracking them in her mind with magic. “Circling north. You have to go. Now. Head back the way we came — you’ll hit the main path first.”
Every bone in him screamed to stay, to fight, to protect her. But his Beta training screamed louder. This wasn’t the time for heroics. This was the time to live.
He grabbed her face, rough and aching. “Four weeks,” he said, low and fierce. “Same moon, same place. Stay hidden. Learn control. Get stronger. Because if I lose you now, Kaelen — the destruction they’re afraid of won’t be the prophecy. It’ll be me.”
Her breath hitched. Tears glimmered in the shadows. She nodded.
They touched foreheads for a heartbeat. Not a kiss — a promise.
And then he ran.
He didn’t shift all the way — a full transformation would draw too much attention. He half-shifted instead, fast and silent, moving through the trees with unnatural speed. Every stride ripped at him. Every moment away from her burned.
He ran until he couldn’t hear the scouts anymore. When he stopped, he crouched at the edge of Pack land, the way home just ahead. Moonlight spilled across the path, silver and cold.
He hid behind a thicket of junipers, chest heaving. Forced the gold out of his eyes, tried to slow his breathing. The scent of pine and home filled him, almost covering the bitter edge of burned magic.
He touched his collar, where the ash lingered. Still there. Black, faintly warm — a quiet reminder of what they’d done. What they were.
He stayed there for a while, staring at the path. Thinking of his brother. The laws. Kaelen’s shaking hands. The rose that died when it touched him.
And then he stood.
The Beta of the Shadow Peak Pack squared his shoulders, set his jaw, and stepped into the open. On the outside, he looked steady — every inch the loyal second-in-command. Inside, he burned.
Every step home felt heavier. The scent of the pack wrapped around him — pine, stone, dominance — but underneath, barely there, still the smell of ash.
He didn’t know if Silas would notice. Or if Kellan’s wolves had already picked up the trail. All he knew was that the border wasn’t just a line between lands now. It had turned into the line between duty and love.
And it was already breaking.
Tomorrow, the border air would pretend again — like nothing had happened, like everything was safe. But Caspian would know better.
The world was shifting.
And it smelled like burnt roses and moonlight.