The city never slept.
Moonfall pulsed with restless life—neon lights buzzing like hungry insects, horns blaring, voices rising and falling like waves crashing against steel and glass. To humans, it was chaos. To Elara, it was camouflage.
She wove through the crowd like smoke, head lowered, hood drawn over raven-black hair that brushed her shoulders. No one paid her any mind, and that was how she preferred it. A predator disguised as prey. A wolf forced to live in human skin.
Her heart drummed against her ribs, steady, controlled. It had to be.
Here, in this concrete jungle, showing even a glimpse of what she truly was could mean death. The Lycan Containment Unit—humans armed with silver and hate—watched the shadows with hawk eyes. And worse, the packs.
She didn’t belong to any of them. Not anymore.
Not since blood painted the forest floor.
Not since her family’s screams were swallowed by the night.
Elara tightened her grip on the worn strap of her messenger bag, shoving the memory down where it couldn’t claw its way up. The city had no use for wolves. Here, she was just another ghost drifting through the noise.
Until the scent hit her.
Musky. Wild. Dominant. Wolf.
Her entire body went rigid. She knew that scent. Not personally—no, she would have remembered—but by instinct. It screamed Alpha.
Her pulse spiked. She forced her stride not to falter, but her wolf stirred under her skin, restless and sharp. Alphas didn’t belong in Moonfall. The city was neutral ground, the one place packs were meant to leave untouched.
So what in the Goddess’s name was he doing here?
She risked a glance over her shoulder. That’s when she saw him.
Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dark hair gleaming under the streetlights. His presence cut through the crowd like a blade, parting people without a word. Every step he took was power wrapped in human form. And his eyes—wolf-gold, burning, searching—landed on her.
Heat shot through her veins, sudden and violent. Her wolf roared in recognition.
No. No, no, no.
This couldn’t be happening.
A bond. A pull. The kind no rogue could afford, and no wolf could escape.
Her breath caught, chest tightening as if invisible chains wrapped around her. She stumbled, heart hammering, and the sea of humans blurred.
Fated.
The word carved itself into her bones, undeniable and cruel.
She didn’t wait to see if he would come closer. She ran.
Her boots slammed against wet pavement as she bolted down an alley, lungs burning, shadows clawing at her as though they wanted to hold her still. She didn’t care where she went, only that she put distance between herself and that gaze, that pull.
Because if what she felt was true—if the bond was real—then her carefully built life in hiding was about to crumble.
And the secret she carried would not stay buried for long.