Chapter 4: The Uninvited Guest

1143 Words
The transition from the Forbidden Forest to the civilized world felt like stepping out of a dream and into a nightmare of lace and lies. I stood before a full-length mirror in the Lycan King’s mobile command unit, barely recognizing the woman staring back at me. The gaunt, hollow-cheeked girl who had crawled into a hollow tree five years ago was dead. In her place was a creature of sharp angles and cold elegance. My silver hair, once matted with mud and blood, now cascaded down my back like a frozen waterfall, shimmering with a light that didn't come from the lamps. I wore a gown of midnight-blue silk, so dark it was almost black, with a neckline that dipped just low enough to show the jagged, silver scar on my shoulder—the mark of my survival. "You look like a goddess," Silas murmured from the doorway. He was dressed in the formal attire of a Lycan High Advisor, his violet eyes reflecting the tension in the room. "But remember, Elara, you are walking into a den of vipers. They won't just be surprised to see you alive; they will be terrified of what you represent." "Let them be terrified," I said, my voice as smooth as polished ice. I adjusted the silver cuffs on my wrists—not shackles this time, but weapons disguised as jewelry. "Terror is the only language the Black Mountain Pack understands." A small tug on my dress drew my attention downward. Leo and Liam stood there, looking impossibly regal in their miniature Lycan suits. Their golden eyes were wide, taking in the luxury of the carriage, but their postures were stiff, their little bodies humming with the predatory instincts I had spent years honing. "Mama, do we have to hide our tails today?" Leo asked, his brow furrowing. He was the more impulsive of the two, always eager to show his strength. "Only for a little while, my fierce one," I knelt, placing my hands on their shoulders. "Today, we are playing a game. We are the shadows that walk in the light. No shifting, no growling, unless I give you the signal. Understand?" "Understood," Liam whispered, his gaze drifting to the window. "We’re close, aren't we? I can smell the stagnant water and the old bones. It smells like... him." My heart did a painful stutter-step. Even at five years old, they could sense the biological tether to the man who had discarded them. I stood up, smoothing my dress. "It’s just a smell, Liam. It can't hurt you anymore." The Black Mountain Pack House was ablaze with light. It was the Five-Year Anniversary Gala, a celebration of "peace and prosperity" under Alpha Killian’s reign. Carriages and luxury SUVs lined the winding drive, filled with Alphas and Lunas from across the southern territories. As our carriage pulled up to the main entrance, the herald’s voice boomed over the crowd, announcing the arrival of various minor dignitaries. But when the carriage door marked with the crest of the Northern Lycan Empire opened, the music in the ballroom seemed to falter. I stepped out first. The silence that followed was absolute. It was the kind of silence that happens right before a storm breaks. I didn't look at the crowd; I kept my chin high, my silver eyes scanning the balcony where I knew he would be standing. "Presenting," the herald began, his voice wavering as he looked at the official scroll Silas had handed him. "Her Imperial Highness, the Silver Queen of the Northern Realms, and her heirs." I felt the eyes of a hundred wolves on me as I climbed the marble stairs. The whispers started almost immediately, a low hiss of disbelief and confusion. "Is that...?" "No, it can't be. She died in the ravine." "Look at her hair... that power..." I entered the ballroom, the twins flanking me like two golden-eyed guardians. The opulence of the room nauseated me—the crystal chandeliers, the tables overflowing with meat and wine, all built on the backs of those they deemed "weak." Then, I saw him. Killian stood at the far end of the hall, a glass of champagne frozen halfway to his lips. He looked older. The lines around his eyes were deeper, and the golden glow of his skin had faded to a dull, sickly bronze. Beside him, Sienna clung to his arm like a parasite, her face covered in a layer of powder so thick it looked like a mask. Killian’s glass shattered against the floor. The sound was like a starting gun. He began to move toward me, his movements jerky, as if he were a puppet being pulled by invisible strings. The pack bond—the broken, jagged stump of it—suddenly flared with a white-hot heat that made me want to gasp. He felt it too. I could see the agony and the dawning realization in his eyes. "Elara?" his voice was a broken whisper that managed to carry across the silent room. I didn't stop until I was standing directly in front of him. I didn't curtsy. I didn't smile. I simply looked at him with the cold, dead eyes of the woman he had murdered. "Alpha Killian," I said, the temperature in the room dropping five degrees with every word. "I believe you forgot to send my invitation. But as a Queen, I decided to overlook the slight." Sienna pushed forward, her eyes darting between me and the twins. "This is an outrage! You’re a rogue! You’re supposed to be dead!" "I was dead, Sienna," I turned my gaze to her, and she visibly flinched at the sheer cold radiating from my skin. "But the Forbidden Forest has a way of spitting back things it can't digest. Especially things that have been wronged." Killian wasn't looking at me anymore. His gaze had fallen to the two boys standing at my skirts. He turned ashen, his breath hitching in a way that sounded like a sob. He saw the golden eyes. He saw the shape of their jaws, the way they held their heads. He saw himself. "They..." Killian reached out a trembling hand toward Leo. "Elara, who are they?" Leo didn't wait for my signal. He stepped forward, his small chest puffing out, and let out a low, vibrating growl that shouldn't have been possible for a child his age. "Don't touch my mother, Alpha," Leo said, his voice echoing with the authority of a future King. The entire ballroom gasped. The power coming off the child was enough to make the lesser wolves in the room drop to their knees. I leaned in closer to Killian, my voice a lethal whisper meant for his ears only. "They are the heirs you threw into a ravine, Killian. And they are the reason your empire ends tonight."
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