Chapter 1: The Weight of Rust and Ruin
The iron collar didn't just chafe. It was a living, breathing parasite that actively chewed through my flesh.
Forged by paranoid Lycan sorcerers, the rusted band was practically welded around my throat. But where others just felt pain, my mind—naturally wired like a master architect—constantly mapped the flawed energy circuits of its ancient suppression runes. I could physically see the flow of their archaic magic. I knew exactly where the magical load-bearing points were, and I knew how to shatter them. I just didn't have the raw kinetic energy to trigger the glitch in its system. Not yet.
For five years, I survived this constant, visceral agony by building an impenetrable, emotionless firewall in my mind. No fear, no anger, no panic. The collar fed on emotional spikes; so I became a void. Out here on the desolate, rotting edges of the White Mane Pack territory, humans were less than dirt, and I was just another ghost in the mud.
Which was absolutely perfect. Because if this archaic collar ever broke, the suffocating, cataclysmic aura of the last Phantom Dragon would violently explode out of my body and level half this miserable forest. And then I’d be dead. Again.
I hooked a freezing, mud-caked finger under the rough wool of my cloak, pulling it higher to hide the metal. It hummed against my skin today—a low, vibrating burn that meant the ambient magic in the air was violently unstable.
"Sereia… slow down, honey," a frail voice rasped from behind me.
I killed my stride instantly. I dumped the fluid, silent walk of an apex predator and let my shoulders slump. I dragged my boots in the freezing mud, rounding my spine to make myself look smaller, weaker. Just like that, the deadly, immortal creature vanished, and I was Sereia again: a tired, unremarkable human orphan.
I turned to see Old Martha leaning heavily on her knotted walking stick. Her thin chest heaved, gray hair plastered to her forehead with cold sweat.
"Take your time, Martha," I said softly, deliberately dialing back the commanding, draconic gravel in my tone. I hoisted her heavy wicker basket onto my own shoulder, forcing a grunt as if the load actually weighed something. To my suppressed muscles, it felt like a handful of feathers. "We’ve got enough Moon-w**d. We don't need to push deeper today."
"Just… just over this next ridge," Martha panted, her cloudy eyes scanning the dark roots. "The apothecary pays double for fresh Blood-root. We can finally fix that awful leak in the roof."
My chest tightened with a suffocating wave of guilt. Five years ago, High Elder Vance and his Council butchered my entire kin. I still remembered the sickening smell of burning scales and pulverized stone. Martha had found me face-down in a muddy ditch, half-dead and entirely feral. She was the only reason I hadn't slaughtered every Lycan in this territory. I owed her my restraint.
"Okay," I sighed. "But only to the ridge. The air smells… wrong today."
Wrong was putting it mildly. The crows had bailed twenty minutes ago. The wind had flatlined. My suppressed instincts were furiously clawing at the inside of my skull, screaming at me to shift.
"Oh, thank the Goddess!" Martha suddenly gasped, dropping hard to her knees in the damp dirt. At the base of a rotting oak tree sat a massive, untouched patch of Blood-root.
"Look at this, Sereia! It’s an absolute fortune!" Martha’s hands shook violently as she pulled out her rusted sickle.
SNAP.
A tree branch splintered just beyond the ridge. The sound cracked through the dead silence like a cannon shot.
Before my conscious brain could process the threat, the dragon buried deep inside my soul violently woke up. The sharp, metallic taste of ozone hit the back of my throat. The iron collar instantly recognized the rising threat and clamped down hard, shooting a spike of blinding, white-hot agony straight into my brain stem. I stumbled sideways, biting the inside of my cheek until it bled to keep from screaming.
Then, the smell hit us.
It was the gut-churning, putrid stench of wet fur, rotting meat, and feral panic. Rogues. A starving, mindless pack of them.
But that wasn't what froze the blood in my veins.
Beneath the sickening odor of the Rogues, a second scent slammed into me. It violently cut through the atmosphere like a freshly sharpened executioner's blade. Winter pine. Biting, arctic frost. And something dark, metallic, and terrifyingly electric.
In a fraction of a millisecond, the absolute, emotionless firewall I had maintained for five years was violently hacked. The sheer density of the aura rolling over the ridge bypassed all my cognitive defenses. It wasn't just a physical threat; it was a cosmic command rewriting my biology.
Submit. Drop to the earth. Bare your throat.
"S-Sereia…" Martha whimpered, her eyes rolling back into her head as the crushing pressure stopped her weak human lungs from drawing air. She collapsed into the dirt.
My carefully constructed logic completely shattered, and my dragon soul went utterly feral. Bow to no one, my blood hissed. This catastrophic spike in my emotions was exactly the fuel the iron collar was waiting for. It recognized the system error, clamped down hard, and shot a spike of blinding, white-hot agony straight into my brain stem. I stumbled sideways, but the explosive shockwave of my aura was already building.
If I released it, the blast would instantly stop Martha's weak heart.
Gritting my teeth so hard I tasted hot blood, I frantically forcibly rebooted my mental firewall and violently shoved the dragon back into its agonizing cage.
HOOOOOOWWWWL!
A roar of pure, unfiltered bloodlust shattered the woods. A second later, the m******e started just over the ridge. Sickening crunches of snapping spines and wet, tearing flesh filled the air. Someone was literally tearing a pack of feral wolves apart with his bare hands in a psychotic, blood-drenched s*******r.
I scooped Martha’s limp body up into my arms like a pile of dry laundry. I abandoned the Blood-root. And I bolted.
I tore through the thick underbrush, forcing myself to run like a desperate, terrified human to avoid leaving inhumanly deep footprints. Behind me, the horrific sounds of the s*******r amplified. A severed, twitching wolf arm crashed heavily through the canopy and slammed into the mud right where we had been kneeling.
I didn't look back. But as I crested the massive hill shielding our hidden valley, a cold realization washed over me.
The tearing sounds had completely stopped. The screams had ended.
And the wind had violently shifted. The blood-crazed Alpha had run out of things to kill, and that suffocating smell of frost and metallic blood was now tracking us.
*** Xander's POV ***
The blood-frenzy was a bottomless, suffocating black pit.
I didn't know how many Rogues I had slaughtered. Five? Ten? My claws were slick with hot gore, my white fur matted and heavy. The beast inside me was roaring, completely off its leash, demanding more flesh to tear, more bones to snap. I was losing myself to the madness.
I stood amidst the c*****e, chest heaving, the toxic red haze of the frenzy blinding me to everything but violence. I was ready to tear the forest down to its roots.
Until a scent cut through the metallic stench of death.
It didn't smell like fear. It didn't smell like a wolf, or a Rogue, or prey.
It smelled like... a thunderstorm. Sharp ozone, burning embers, and something so ancient and impossibly powerful that my feral mind halted in its tracks.
The violent red haze in my vision flickered. A jolt of electricity shot straight down my spine, bypassing my Alpha conditioning entirely and striking directly at my soul.
Mate.
The word echoed in my fractured mind, an absolute, undeniable cosmic claim. The beast didn't want to kill anymore. It wanted to find the source of that impossible, intoxicating fire. It wanted to claim it.
I turned my massive, blood-soaked head toward the ridge. My glowing red eyes locked onto the faint, fading trail of ozone in the mud.
I began to hunt.