ELARA'S POV :
The ceremonial grounds of Silver Ridge had never looked more beautiful.
I stood at the edge of the clearing, my fingers trembling against the white silk of my gown. Thousands of lanterns hung from the ancient oaks, their golden light dancing across the faces of the assembled wolves. The scent of night-blooming jasmine and pine filled the air, mingling with the electric anticipation that crackled through the crowd.
Twenty-four years. I had waited twenty-four years for this moment.
My mother's voice echoed in my memory, soft and warm. "The Mate Ceremony is the most sacred night of a wolf's life, Elara. You'll feel it in your soul—a pull so powerful that nothing in this world or the next could break it."
I had believed those words with every fiber of my being. I had watched Alpha Kael lead our pack with strength and ferocity, admired the way he protected the weak. I had convinced myself that the reason no other wolf caught my attention was because the Moon Goddess was saving me for him.
Tonight, I would become Luna of Silver Ridge.
The ceremonial drums began to beat. My heart pounded against my ribs as I stepped forward into the lantern light. The crowd parted before me, wolves bowing their heads in respect as I passed. I was the daughter of the former Beta—not of noble blood, but respected nonetheless. My father had died defending the pack from rogues when I was twelve, and my mother had followed him only two years later.
I had been alone since then. Raised by the pack, trained by the elders, I had learned to survive. But tonight, I would finally belong to someone.
The clearing opened before me, and there he stood.
Alpha Kael.
He was magnificent in his ceremonial robes—deep crimson and black, the colors of Silver Ridge's ruling house. His dark hair was swept back, revealing the sharp planes of his features, the uncompromising line of his jaw. He stood on the raised dais, surrounded by his council and the pack's most elite warriors. The firelight caught his storm-grey eyes, making them gleam like polished steel.
My breath caught. This was it.
I walked toward him, my legs moving of their own accord. I saw his gaze flick toward me, and for just a heartbeat, something flickered in those grey depths. Pain? Regret? Gone so fast I could have imagined it.
I reached the base of the dais and ascended the steps slowly. When I stood before him, close enough to feel the heat radiating from his body, the bond snapped into place like a physical blow.
I gasped. The mate bond blazed to life in my chest. I could feel Kael's presence inside my mind—his strength, his authority, the weight of his responsibilities. But beneath it all, something felt wrong. A darkness, coiled and waiting, that didn't belong to him.
"Alpha Kael," I breathed. "I am honored. I am yours."
The silence stretched.
Kael looked at me with cold grey eyes. "Elara," he said, his voice cutting through the clearing like a blade. "Daughter of Beta Marcus. You have no rank. No power. No influence."
I blinked, confusion flooding my senses. "I... Alpha, I don't understand—"
"I have waited twenty-four years for my mate," Kael continued, his voice rising so the entire pack could hear. "The Moon Goddess promised me a wolf worthy of my position. A wolf who could stand beside me as an equal."
My heart cracked. "Kael, please—"
"Look at yourself," he said, his tone sharp. But his eyes flickered to my face, and I saw something—hesitation, perhaps. A flicker of conflict. "You are nothing. An orphan raised on the charity of others."
The words cut deep. But his voice sounded strained, his jaw tight, as if each word caused him physical pain.
The crowd murmured. Some wolves gasped. Others looked away.
"I reject you," Kael declared. His voice cracked on the final syllable. "Before the Moon Goddess and this entire pack, I reject you as my fated mate. I reject the bond that ties us. I reject everything you are and everything you could have been."
The bond screamed.
Agony ripped through my chest—white-hot and blinding. I clutched at my heart, feeling the sacred connection wither and tear. But it did not break completely. Something held on, some stubborn thread of fate that refused to snap.
Kael's eyes widened. He felt it too. The bond should have severed cleanly. But it didn't.
"I... I don't understand," he muttered, his composure cracking. He pressed his hand to his temple, wincing as if struck by a sudden headache. "Why is it still—"
The ceremonial flames flickered. The lanterns swayed. And somewhere in the crowd, someone screamed.
I collapsed to my knees, the pain overwhelming me. I was dimly aware that the fire had turned strange—golden flames now edged with crimson, casting eerie shadows across the clearing.
A woman's scream cut through the chaos. Then another. Then another.
I forced my eyes open and watched in horror as three wolves crumpled to the ground. Their bodies hit the earth with sickening thuds, limbs splayed at unnatural angles. Their eyes were frozen in expressions of terror.
"What happened?!"
"They're dead!"
The crowd erupted into chaos. Elders rushed to the fallen wolves, pressing hands to still chests, shaking their heads with growing dread.
"Nothing," the healer whispered. "No wound. No poison. They just... stopped. As if the very life was drained from them."
I forced myself to my feet, every instinct screaming at me to move. Three wolves. Three dead. And in the moment before they fell, I had felt something—a pulse of energy surging through the bond.
I looked at the dead wolves. Their eyes were fixed on one point. On the dais. On Kael.
I looked at Kael. He was frozen, his face pale. His eyes were wild, darting around as if searching for something unseen. And for just a moment, I saw it—a flicker of darkness in those grey depths. Then he blinked, and it was gone.
What was that?
The Elders examined the bodies. Elder Marcus rose slowly, his ancient face ashen.
"The Blood Moon," he whispered. "Look at the sky. The Moon is bleeding."
Everyone looked up. The silver moon had turned crimson, bleeding across the sky like an open wound.
"There are no prophecies," Kael snarled. "This is her doing." He pointed at me, his finger trembling with barely contained rage. "She cursed our pack."
"I didn't—" I started.
"Seize her," he ordered. "Take her to the border. Chain her beyond the pack lines."
I could have fought. My wolf was strong, trained in combat since I was fourteen. But I didn't fight. I looked at Kael, really looked, and saw something that made my blood run cold.
His eyes were wrong. The grey had darkened. And for just a moment, I saw something looking out at me from behind them. Something ancient and hungry.
I made a choice. I let the warriors seize me. I let them drag me through the crowd. Because I needed to get away. I needed to think. To understand.
Why did the bond refuse to break? Why did those wolves die? And what was that shadow in Kael's eyes?
The warriors hauled me through the pack borders. The forbidden forest loomed ahead, dark and menacing, its ancient trees twisted with age. One tree stood above all others—the One-Eyed Tree, a massive oak scarred with a single knothole that looked like an unblinking eye.
They chained me to the tree, wrapping silver-lined chains around my wrists and ankles. The metal burned, sending spasms of pain through my body. But even as my wolf retreated, I was already planning.
I had noticed things over the years. Hidden weaknesses in silver restraints. Ways to slip bonds others considered unbreakable. I had kept the knowledge to myself like a secret weapon.
"Weak," one warrior muttered, shaking his head as he backed away. "I can't believe our Alpha was given such a pathetic mate."
"Don't call her that," another growled. "She's nothing now. Less than nothing."
I said nothing. I watched them go, memorizing their faces, their scents. Information. I was gathering information. Because knowledge was power.
When they were gone, I looked up at the Blood Moon. Its crimson light bled across the sky, painting the forest in shades of rust and shadow. Somewhere, the families of the dead were weeping. Somewhere, Kael was fighting whatever darkness had taken root in him.
I tested the chains, feeling them shift. Almost loose enough to slip. Almost free.
And then I heard it.
"Wake up, little wolf."
The voice was ancient and female, echoing through my mind like wind through hollow bones. It wasn't my own thoughts. It was something else, something old and powerful that had been sleeping for a very long time.
And now, it was waking up.
My eyes widened. I wasn't alone. Something had noticed me.
I should have been terrified. Instead, I felt something unexpected.
Finally, I thought, my wolf stirring with interest. Someone who might have answers.
The chains groaned. The silver tarnished. And in the distance, I heard the first howl of the Blood Moon—a sound that had not been heard in a thousand years.
The hunt was beginning.
But this time, I had no intention of being the prey.