Chapter Two - The Stranger's Eyes
The stranger's presence filled the hall like a storm that had finally broken through the walls. For a heartbeat,
everything was silent-the kind of silence that feels louder than noise. The fire crackled, the shadows flickered, but
all I could hear was the furious beating of my heart.
His eyes. Moon above, his eyes were unlike anything I had ever seen-dark, endless, pulling me into a place I
didn't recognize. My chest tightened, my breath caught, and a whisper curled through my soul like it had been
waiting for this very moment: Mate.
No. It couldn't be.
Maverick rose slowly from his throne, his voice laced with sharp command. "You dare to enter unannounced?"
The man didn't bow, didn't flinch. He simply stood there, tall and unyielding, his gaze never leaving mine. "I go
where I am meant to go."
The hall stirred. Lionel's lip curled. "Arrogant."
But Maverick raised a hand, silencing him. "State your name, outsider."
"Zion," he answered, his tone steady, deep, unshaken. "And I come for a matter of blood."
Blood? My knees nearly buckled beneath me. Why would someone like him, someone with such power in his
stance, speak as though fate itself had pushed him here?
Maverick's eyes narrowed. "This is Silver Fang territory. You do not come here making claims without reason."
Zion finally broke his gaze from me, turning to face the Alpha. "Reason enough stands before you." His head
tilted ever so slightly in my direction.
My heart lurched violently.
The murmurs began instantly. I could hear them even beyond the hall-guards shifting, council members
whispering, the weight of suspicion pressing down.
Maverick's jaw tightened. "Aurora?"
The way he said my name made it feel like a curse. My throat closed up. I wanted to deny it, to tell them all that I
didn't understand, that there had been some mistake. But I couldn't speak. Zion's stare held me captive, and
something inside me knew.
Lionel laughed, the sound cold and sharp. "Surely not. Not her. Of all the women in this pack, he points to the
weakest? The Moon must be mocking us."
Heat burned in my chest, shame crashing against the strange pull Zion's presence brought.
But Zion didn't falter. "Mockery is for those who fear the truth."
The way he spoke... as if he was certain. As if he knew something no one else did.
Maverick's voice turned to steel. "You come here speaking riddles and claiming ties to what is mine. If you want
her, you had better be ready to prove your worth."
Lionel smirked, stepping closer. "Or perhaps the girl will prove hers."
My stomach dropped.
---
By the time the meeting ended, the entire hall buzzed with tension. Zion stood firm despite Maverick's threats,
and though nothing had been decided, I was sent away with Lionel's eyes burning holes into my back.
I walked quickly through the corridors, my palms damp, my thoughts tangled.
"Aurora."
The voice made me spin. It was him. Zion. He stood there, leaning against the stone wall as though he had every
right to linger in the Alpha's hall.
My breath hitched. I took a step back. "Why are you following me?"
"I'm not." His lips curved into the faintest smile, but his eyes remained serious. "I'm staying where I need to be."
I shook my head, heat rushing to my cheeks. "You don't know me. You don't know anything about me."
"Wrong," he said softly. "I know enough."
I hated the way my chest fluttered at his words. "You've made a mistake. If you think I-if you think I could ever
be-" My voice broke. I couldn't say it. I couldn't put the word mate into the air, not when I'd been told all my life
that I was cursed, weak, unwanted.
Zion's gaze softened, though it still held that unshakable weight. "I don't mistake the call of my own blood."
I froze.
He stepped closer, but not enough to touch. Just close enough that I felt the air shift around me. "Whether you
believe it yet or not, Aurora, you are mine. And I-" His jaw tightened, like the words cost him something. "-I am
yours."
My lips parted, but before I could respond, a horn's sharp cry cut through the air.
---
The sound was unmistakable: the alarm. Rogues.
My body stiffened. Shouts erupted outside, warriors rushing past with weapons drawn. The ground seemed to
vibrate beneath their feet.
Zion's head snapped toward the doors. His entire frame tensed, his presence turning lethal. "Stay here," he
ordered.
"No," I whispered, though fear clawed at me. I had seen the aftermath of rogue attacks before. Blood. Death.
Families torn apart.
Zion looked back at me, eyes blazing. "You're not ready."
His words sliced deeper than he could know. Not ready? Hadn't I heard that my entire life? Weak. Useless. A
shame.
Anger surged hot through my veins, burning away the fear for just a moment. "Then I'll never be ready, will I?"
Zion's expression shifted-surprise, then something unreadable. He said nothing, only turned and ran toward the
chaos outside.
And before I could think better of it, I followed.
---
The night exploded with snarls and screams. The scent of blood and smoke thickened the air as shadows moved
between the trees. Warriors clashed with dark, snarling shapes, teeth flashing, claws tearing into flesh.
I stumbled to the edge of the clearing, my body frozen as I watched.
A rogue lunged at one of our warriors, knocking him down, jaws snapping for his throat. Before I realized what I
was doing, my voice tore from my throat. "No!"
I grabbed the nearest rock and hurled it. It struck the rogue's head with a c***k. For the briefest second, the beast
staggered.
The warrior scrambled free, finishing the rogue with a blade to the chest.
My chest heaved. My hands shook. But a strange energy hummed in my veins, sharp and alive.
Then another rogue turned, its eyes locking on me.
I froze. My legs refused to move, my body trapped in terror.
"Move!" someone shouted-Asher, I realized dimly-but it was too late. The rogue lunged, its jaws open wide.
Suddenly, a blur slammed into it midair.
Zion.
He moved like lightning, his blade slicing through fur and flesh in one clean strike. The rogue crumpled, lifeless.
And then he was in front of me, his body shielding mine, his eyes blazing with fury. "I told you to stay inside."
"I-" My voice trembled. "I couldn't."
He exhaled harshly, his hand gripping my arm, firm but not cruel. For a heartbeat, we stood locked together in the
middle of chaos-his strength and my trembling defiance.
Behind him, another horn sounded-short, sharp, urgent. The warriors' cries grew desperate.
Lionel's voice boomed over the battlefield. "They're breaching the northern gate!"
Zion's grip tightened. His gaze locked with mine, fierce and unyielding. "Stay with me, Aurora. Do you
understand? Don't leave my side."
Before I could answer, the ground shook with the thunder of approaching rogues, their snarls rising like a tide.
And as the shadows poured into the clearing, surrounding us from all sides, my heart whispered the same
desperate question over and over:
What if this is the night I die?