The night the moon turned red, the world felt wrong.
It hung low above the forest, vast and unnatural, its crimson light spilling across the trees like blood across stone. The air felt heavier, quieter, as though the land itself was holding its breath. Old stories spoke of nights like this, of change and ruin, but most had long dismissed them.
They were wrong.
Kael moved through the forest with careful precision, his steps silent despite the uneven ground. He had travelled far without rest, yet exhaustion was something he refused to acknowledge. Pain could be ignored. Fear could not.
And fear was close.
He stopped in a clearing where the red light reached the ground, mist curling between the trees. The feeling of being watched pressed in around him.
“You can come out,” he said calmly. “You are not as hidden as you think.”
A low chuckle answered him.
“That is disappointing,” a voice replied.
A man stepped from the shadows, his presence sharp and controlled. His eyes caught the light in a way that revealed what he was.
A werewolf.
Kael studied him briefly. “I am here to speak with your Alpha.”
The man’s expression shifted with faint amusement. “You walk into our territory and expect an audience.”
“I am not asking,” Kael said. “I am warning.”
That changed things.
“And why should we listen?” the werewolf asked.
Kael met his gaze. “Because if you do not, your pack will not survive what is coming.”
Silence stretched between them before the man gave a small nod.
“Ronan,” he said. “If you are lying, you will regret it.”
Kael’s expression did not change. “I already regret worse.”
The Nightfang stronghold was carved into the mountain, its stone walls lit by firelight that cast shifting shadows along the corridors. The moment Kael entered, he felt the weight of it. Territory. Power. Control.
Every eye turned towards him.
Ronan walked beside him, his voice low. “Do not give them a reason.”
“I am not the one looking for one,” Kael replied.
They stopped before large carved doors that opened without ceremony.
At the far end stood the Alpha.
Lucien.
He did not need to move to command attention. His gaze settled on Kael, sharp and unwelcoming.
“You have entered my territory uninvited,” Lucien said. “Explain.”
Kael stepped forward. “The southern territories have fallen.”
A ripple moved through the room.
“To vampires,” he added.
Silence followed.
“They are no longer scattered,” Kael continued. “They are organised, and they are preparing for war.”
Lucien descended slowly. “And you know this how?”
Kael did not hesitate. “Because I was one of them.”
Tension rose immediately, but Lucien raised a hand and the room stilled.
“A former vampire,” he said. “That is not something one simply escapes.”
“No,” Kael said quietly.
Lucien studied him. “Then why come here?”
Kael exhaled slowly.
“Because of her.”
Ronan frowned. “Her?”
“There is a woman among them,” Kael said. “She is not like the others.”
Lucien’s gaze narrowed. “Why would that matter?”
“Because she is the reason they will win.”
Far from the forest, within walls of black stone, Seraphina stood before a tall window overlooking the vampire kingdom.
The same red moon lit her world.
She could feel something shifting, something she could not yet name.
Behind her, the doors opened.
“You are troubled,” a calm voice said.
She turned to face him.
He moved with quiet authority, his presence controlled and unyielding. The man she was bound to. The future king.
“I am aware,” Seraphina replied.
He studied her closely. “You feel it, do you not?”
“The change,” she said.
A faint smile touched his lips. “Good. It means you are ready.”
“For what?”
“For what we are about to become.”
The words unsettled her.
“And where do I stand in this?” she asked.
He reached for her hand, his grip firm.
“Beside me,” he said. “As my queen.”
Seraphina held his gaze, but something in her chest tightened.
Not fear.
Something far more dangerous.
Doubt.
Back in the stronghold, Kael stood beneath the red glow of the moon.
Ronan stepped beside him. “This woman. You came here because of her.”
Kael did not answer immediately.
When he did, his voice was quieter.
“She is not what she appears to be.”
Ronan studied him. “And what is she to you?”
Kael’s jaw tightened.
“That is exactly the problem.”
Far away, Seraphina lifted her gaze to the crimson sky.
For reasons, she could not explain, her heart began to race.
As though something was drawing closer.