The first thing Elara Moon smelled when she opened the infirmary door was blood.
Not fresh enough to frighten her. Not old enough to disgust her. It sat somewhere in between, sharp and metallic beneath the bitter smoke of crushed wolfsbane leaves. Someone had tried to treat a silver wound with heat again.
Fools.
Elara tightened her grip on the basket hanging from her arm and stepped inside.
Three warriors crowded around the treatment table, blocking the lantern light with their broad shoulders. Their training leathers were torn, their boots muddy from the northern border, and one of them was laughing too loudly for a room where another man was bleeding.
"Move," Elara said.
The laughter stopped.
Garrick, a thick-necked warrior with a scar through his eyebrow, looked over his shoulder. When he saw her, his mouth curled.
"The little herb girl is here."
The others chuckled. Elara ignored them and set her basket on the side counter.
The wounded man on the table was barely conscious. His name was Tomas, one of the younger border guards. A strip of cloth had been wrapped around his ribs, already soaked black-red. The skin around the wound was gray. Silver poisoning. Slow, ugly, and painful enough to make even a grown wolf beg.
"Who burned it?" Elara asked.
No one answered.
She looked at the iron poker still glowing in the brazier.
Of course.
"You sealed the surface and trapped the silver inside." She reached for a clean blade. "If you wanted him dead, you should have saved everyone the trouble and slit his throat."
Garrick stepped closer. "Careful, Moon."
Elara did not look up. "Careful is what I am being. You should try it someday."
The room went quiet enough for her to hear Tomas's shallow breathing. A smarter wolf would have swallowed the words. A stronger wolf could have afforded them.
Elara was neither, according to every person in Blackthorne Pack.
She was the orphan no family wanted to claim. The healer's assistant who smelled faintly of old herbs instead of power. The girl whose wolf had never fully risen, no matter how many full moons had passed over her head. In a pack that respected strength above mercy, Elara was useful only when someone stronger was bleeding.
Still, Garrick moved aside.
They always did when death entered the room. Death made even cruel men practical.
Elara cut away the ruined bandage. Tomas groaned, fingers clawing at the table. The wound beneath was worse than she expected: a jagged tear below the ribs, burned shut at the edges, with black veins spreading under the skin.
"Hold him down," she said.
"Ask nicely."
Elara finally lifted her eyes to Garrick's. "Hold him down, or explain to Alpha Kael why one of his border guards died because you were too busy measuring your pride."
The name worked better than kindness.
Two warriors grabbed Tomas's shoulders. Garrick pinned his legs. Elara uncorked a vial of moonmint oil and poured it over her hands. The scent rose cool and clean, pushing back the blood.
Tomas's eyes fluttered open. "Elara?"
"I am here."
"Hurts."
"I know." Her voice softened despite the men watching her. "Bite down."
She placed a folded strip of leather between his teeth. Then she opened the wound.
Tomas screamed.
The sound bounced off stone walls. One warrior turned pale. Elara kept working, sliding the blade through burned flesh with steady hands. She found the first silver shard near the rib, then another buried deeper. By the third, sweat rolled down the back of her neck and her own vision blurred at the edges.
Silver hated wolves. Even through gloves, even through oil, it reached for the beast inside the blood.
Elara's wolf stirred weakly, a shadow behind a locked door.
Not now, she told it.
Her wolf answered with a whimper and vanished.
When the last shard clicked into the metal bowl, Tomas's breathing evened. Elara packed the wound with crushed moonroot and clean moss, then wrapped his ribs properly. The gray veins under his skin began to fade.
No one laughed now.
Garrick looked at the bowl. "That all of it?"
"If fever comes before dawn, send for me."
"So you can play hero again?"
Elara cleaned her blade with slow, deliberate strokes. "So he does not die."
Garrick leaned against the table, close enough that his scent of sweat and iron crowded her. "Do you ever get tired of pretending you belong in rooms like this?"
There it was.
The reminder.
It came in different shapes every day, but it always meant the same thing: Know your place.
Elara set the blade down. "No."
His eyes narrowed.
"Because when your kind is stupid enough to get cut open," she said, tying the final knot in Tomas's bandage, "my hands are the only reason you walk out again."
For one dangerous second, Garrick looked as if he might strike her.
Then the infirmary door opened.
Every wolf in the room straightened.
Elara knew who it was before she turned. The air changed first. It always did around him. Pressure swept through the room like a storm rolling over the mountains, heavy enough to bow the spine. The scent followed: cedar, cold rain, and Alpha blood.
Kael Blackthorne stood in the doorway.
He wore no crown. He needed none.
At twenty-seven, the Alpha of Blackthorne Pack had the kind of face people remembered for the wrong reasons. Not because it was beautiful, though it was, in a harsh and unforgiving way. They remembered it because his eyes made lying feel impossible. Dark gray, almost silver beneath the lanterns, they took in the room with a single glance: Tomas unconscious, the bloody bowl, Garrick too close to Elara.
Garrick stepped back.
"Report," Kael said.
His voice was low. Calm. That made it worse.
Garrick cleared his throat. "Rogue skirmish near the northern stones. Tomas took silver. The wound is handled."
Kael's gaze shifted to Elara.
Her fingers tightened around the stained cloth in her hands.
He rarely looked at her directly. Alphas did not need to notice girls like Elara Moon. When he did, something in her chest always forgot its work for half a beat.
Foolish, foolish heart.
"Is it handled?" Kael asked her.
The warriors stared. Heat climbed her neck.
"Yes, Alpha," she said. "Three shards removed. The poison was trapped under a burn seal, but the veins are clearing. He needs rest, water, and no more heroic medicine from men who think fire solves everything."
One warrior coughed into his fist.
Kael did not smile, but something almost moved at the corner of his mouth.
"You heard her," he said. "No more fire."
The warriors lowered their heads.
Kael crossed to the table. Elara forced herself not to retreat as he stopped beside her. Up close, his power pressed against her skin. Her wolf, usually silent, stirred again.
This time it did not whimper.
It lifted its head.
Elara's breath caught.
Kael looked down at her, and for a strange second the infirmary seemed to tilt. His scent sharpened. Cedar. Rain. Something darker beneath, like the first night of winter.
Her pulse stumbled.
No.
That was impossible.
Kael's nostrils flared. His eyes narrowed, not with recognition, but with confusion. As if he had heard a sound too faint for anyone else.
Then the moment snapped.
"The Moon Ascension is tonight," he said, stepping back. "All unmated wolves are required in the main hall."
Elara lowered her eyes. "Yes, Alpha."
"Even healers."
"I know."
His gaze lingered one heartbeat longer.
Then he turned and left, taking the storm with him.
The room breathed again.
Garrick gave a low whistle. "Careful, herb girl. Look at the Alpha like that and someone might think you have dreams above your station."
Elara picked up her basket. Her hands were steady. Her chest was not.
"Do not worry," she said. "I know exactly where I stand."
But as she walked out of the infirmary and into the cold corridor, her wolf paced beneath her skin for the first time in years.
Awake.
Restless.
Waiting.
Tonight, under the full moon, every unmated wolf in Blackthorne Pack would gather to see if fate had chosen them.
Elara had never expected fate to remember her name.
Now, with Alpha Kael's scent still burning in her lungs, she was terrified that it had.