Prologue
In Angrath Vale, power was only respected when it behaved. The city lay deep within an ancient forest, stone streets woven between towering trees that had watched generations rise and fall. Lantern light glowed warm against moss-covered walls at dusk, and the air always smelled faintly of pine, iron, and smoke. People lived close there….close enough to notice when something was wrong, close enough to whisper when someone didn’t fit.
I had never fit.
Angrath Vale was guarded by five packs, each sworn to protect the city and enforce laws older than written record. The packs kept balance. Balance kept us alive. Anything that threatened it was corrected swiftly, or removed entirely. I had grown up knowing this, feeling it in the way conversations quieted when I walked past, in the way eyes lingered just a moment too long.
My name was Angora.
And my power did not stay where it was told. It reacted before thought, before restraint. Fear reached it first. Anger followed. Instinct came last, loud and unrelenting. My magic fractured outward when I lost control, and my wolf mirrored it….restless, unpredictable, never fully settling into itself. The council called it instability. My family called it a curse they didn’t know how to protect me from.
I forgot things.
Not small things like names or chores, but moments. Hours vanished. Sometimes entire conversations left no trace behind, as if my mind slipped sideways and returned without warning. I would be standing in the market one moment and blinking at my front door the next, unable to remember how I got there. The healers said it was a side effect of my fractured power, my mind shielding itself from overload. The council said it was another reason I could not be trusted.
They reminded me often.
I had scorched the stone without meaning to. Cracked glass with a breath held too long. Once, when I was younger, the lamps along South Row shattered one by one as I passed, sparks raining into the street while people screamed and scattered. No one was hurt, but the fear lingered longer than the smoke. Since then, I had been careful. I counted my steps. I measured my breathing. I kept my emotions tightly leashed, even when they clawed back. Still, accidents happened.
And when they did, they were never small. My family watched me with quiet worry, and I always knew that look. My mother pretended not to notice when my hands trembled after a surge, but she cleaned broken dishes with shaking fingers. My father spoke of the future in careful terms, as if any certainty might shatter if spoken too boldly. They loved me, fiercely and helplessly, and that helplessness weighed heavier than the council’s threats ever could.
The council had summoned me more times than I could count.
Warnings. Restrictions. Conditions for my continued freedom. They spoke of containment as if it was mercy, of isolation as if it was safety. They reminded me that Angrath Vale could not afford risks, that one unstable force could undo generations of peace. Sometimes, late at night, I almost believed them.
The only reason I was still there….still walking those streets, still breathing free air….was Kail. Alpha Kail of Emperfang stood at the edge of every council chamber where my fate was discussed. He did not shout. He did not threaten. He simply refused to let them forget that I was a person, not a weapon waiting to fail. When they argued for containment, he argued for time. When they spoke of danger, he spoke of control learned, not imposed.
He had supported me since before I understood how deep the council’s fear ran. Kail never asked how my power worked. Never pressed when I could not explain what I didn’t remember. He watched instead. Noticed when my focus slipped, when my wolf stirred too close to the surface. He stepped in quietly, redirecting conversations, moving me away from crowded spaces before panic could spark something worse.
He never spoke of his past. Never of how long he had lived, or how many councils he had stood before. Everyone knew he had not aged the way others had, that time touched him differently. Immortality was whispered about but never questioned aloud. Whatever burden it carried, he bore it without complaint, without explanation. Sometimes I wondered how long he could keep standing between me and the laws that governed this city.
Emperfang was his responsibility. Hundreds of lives depended on his judgment. I was not his announced mate yet. I was not his blood. I was simply the problem that kept returning, no matter how many warnings the council issued.
And lately, the warnings had changed.
They were no longer about if I lost control again.
They were about when.
I felt it in the way the elders watched me now, measuring instead of advising. In the way my family avoided speaking of futures that included me staying in Angrath Vale. In the way Kail’s silence lingered longer after each council meeting. Something was shifting. I did not know what choice they were preparing to force.
I only knew that whatever came next would decide whether I remained part of this city… or became the threat they had always believed me to be.
And it had all begun on an ordinary morning, with a kettle placed in the wrong cupboard, and a mistake too small to matter… until it did.