The feud between the clans had lasted centuries. Ironfang wolves and Bone Temple vampires—bound by blood, broken by betrayal. There was no peace, no mercy, no crossing of the lines that separated their kind. They were two sides of a coin, one silver, one bone, forever in opposition, a bitter echo of an old, forgotten war. The elders of both clans enforced the separation with a ruthless efficiency born of generations of bloodshed.
Thorne was hunting. He moved through the sacred groves, a place whispered about in both clans, where the air was thick with the perfume of ancient magic and the earth felt alive beneath his feet. The moon, a sliver of silver light, struggled to pierce the dense canopy of ancient oaks and towering pines, casting the forest floor in shifting patterns of shadow and gloom. Every shadow seemed to hold a secret, a lingering whisper from a time when the world was new. He followed the trail of the witch who had murdered his mother, a stench of rot and rage on the wind, a trail of broken branches and trampled moss. Vengeance burned in his veins, a cold, focused fire that had driven him for weeks. He was so consumed by the hunt, by the singular purpose of his revenge, that he almost missed the scent of her.
Serenya.
He caught a hint of something clean and intoxicating, a fragrance of night-blooming jasmine and something older, like a storm coming. It was a scent that had no business being in the sacred groves, much less on a vampire. Cautiously, he changed his course, moving silently between the gnarled trunks of the trees, his wolf instincts screaming at him to turn back. Every fiber of his being told him this was a trap, a dangerous mistake. But the scent called to him, a siren song that resonated with a part of his soul he hadn’t known was empty.
He saw her first. Bathed in moonlight, waist-deep in the silver pool at the heart of the grove, her skin was the color of alabaster, shimmering like something from a forgotten prophecy. Her dark hair floated on the surface of the water like ink, a stark contrast to the silver light. She was lost in a trance, eyes closed, lips parted in a silent prayer. She wasn't an assassin or a warrior. She was a priestess, communing with gods who no longer answered, a creature of ritual and light. She was a sworn enemy of his kind, but in that moment, she was only a vision.
Thorne couldn't move. He couldn't breathe. He smelled her blood, a rich, dark river of life that stirred a hunger in him he’d never known. But it was not a predatory hunger. It was a deep, resonating hum that vibrated through his bones and settled in his soul. She was more than his enemy; she was a missing piece he didn't even know existed. He felt his soul calling to her, a silent, primal hum that seemed to echo across the grove.
A whispered phrase, "A child born of forbidden love… hidden for centuries… until the time is right," echoed in the grove. It wasn't spoken, but felt, as if the words were being carved directly into his mind, a torrent of vivid images—the child, the curse, and him, a ghost in the shadows. But she was so lost in the trance that she didn't see the one thing that mattered.
She did not see the witch.
Thorne did. The assassin burst from the shadows with a snarl of pure hatred, a blade raised high, eyes wild with vengeance. She was not after him. She was after the vampire priestess, a target far more valuable, an enemy of all things natural. Serenya did not flinch, still lost in her vision, unaware of the threat. But Thorne, fueled by a primal fury he'd never known, moved. He leaped, a blur of silver and shadow, abandoning his own vengeance for the sake of hers. Claws tore flesh. Teeth shattered bone. The witch screamed once, a high-pitched cry that tore through the quiet of the grove, then never again.
The grove fell silent, the only sound the ragged breaths Thorne was pulling into his lungs. He stood over the corpse, blood dripping from his jaw, the taste of it metallic and bitter on his tongue. He had just saved the life of a sworn enemy. He didn't understand why, but in his gut, he knew he would do it again without a second thought.
She opened her eyes, clear and ancient and dark as the night sky. She looked at him. He looked at her. And in that shared glance, a force as old as the world itself ignited between them. It wasn't just a vision becoming truth; it was two souls, long-lost halves, snapping into place.
For Serenya, it was a blinding shock, a searing jolt that ripped her from her trance. She felt his grief, his rage, the lonely howl of his soul. His brother's last moments, the cold burn of betrayal, the years he’d spent hunting vengeance—all of it flooded into her, a violent torrent of emotion that was both foreign and utterly familiar. She saw him not as a wolf, but as Thorne, the man behind the growl, a soul as scarred and broken as her own.
For Thorne, the imprinting was a seismic shift. The white-hot fury that had been his constant companion for so long simply… faded. It was replaced by an overwhelming, protective instinct that consumed him. The singular, bloody purpose of his life vanished, replaced by a single, desperate need: to keep her safe. It was the feeling of finding a sanctuary in the middle of a war, of a key clicking into a lock he hadn't known was broken. One word echoed through both, MINE!
"You should not be here," she whispered, her voice a low, melodic sound that seemed to hum in the air around them. Her clan's law screamed in her mind, a frantic, ancient warning.
"Neither should you," he growled back, the words a challenge and a confession all at once, his own instincts warring with the new, foreign peace in his soul.
They were never meant to touch. But prophecy doesn't ask for permission. It demands sacrifice..
.