The council hall was supposed to be a sanctuary, a neutral place where all packs met under the promise of peace. Instead, it had become a slaughterhouse.
Kaida’s instincts screamed before her ears even registered the sound of splintering wood and a high-pitched scream. Her claws dug into the stone floor instinctively as she scanned the chamber, every sense on fire. Smoke curled from torches knocked to the ground and the faint metallic tang of blood hung thick in the air.
The old Alpha of the council lay sprawled across the dais, crimson soaking the ceremonial robes that marked decades of leadership. A dagger, blackened and jagged, protruded from his chest, its hilt carved with the mark of a shadow wolf long thought extinct.
“Everyone, out!” Kaida roared, her voice cutting through the chaos like a blade. Shadowclaw warriors surged around her, forming a protective ring while others dragged the injured toward the nearest exit.
And then she saw him.
Torin. Alpha of the Ironfang pack. Dark, tall, his presence commanding yet unnervingly calm in the midst of the chaos. Every fiber of Kaida’s being wanted to strike him down, to tear him apart for the way her blood screamed when he stepped into view. Yet another, deeper part of her, the wolf inside her twined with something primal she couldn’t name.
“Kaida,” he said, voice low and measured, carrying over the chaos as if he were speaking directly to her alone. “It’s not what it looks like.”
Kaida bared her teeth, claws flexing, every muscle coiled like a spring. “Explain, Torin. Now. Or I swear I’ll make you wish you had never been born.”
He didn’t flinch. His eyes held her gaze, dark and unyielding and she felt her wolf shiver in recognition, a pull she had never felt with any other.
Before he could respond, a flare of fire erupted near the back of the hall. Screams erupted as the smoke thickened, choking the air and blinding half the crowd. Kaida moved instinctively, pushing her warriors to shield the panicked council members, pulling the injured out of collapsing beams.
Her senses picked up another presence—fast, lethal, weaving through the chaos. She lunged toward it, claws extended but the figure vanished into the smoke, leaving nothing but a smear of blood across the floor.
Kaida’s heart hammered. “Torin,” she hissed, voice tight, “this was planned. By whom? Who sent them?”
“I don’t know,” he admitted, his tone surprisingly calm. “But it wasn’t me. Someone wants this chaos. Someone wants to set our packs against each other.”
Her growl was low and dangerous. “You expect me to believe that? You were the first to step into this hall, calm as stone while everyone else screamed. How is that innocent?”
He stepped closer but not threateningly, his dark eyes locking onto hers. “Because I’m tired of being a pawn in a game I didn’t choose to play. You and I, Kaida… we’re the only ones who can stop this.”
She felt a tremor inside her chest, the pull of something raw and ancient. Her wolf recognized him in ways she couldn’t explain and her pulse betrayed her. The thought made her teeth itch to bare in both anger and desire.
“Stop speaking in riddles,” she snapped. “Every second we waste, someone dies.”
A sharp whistle split the air, drawing both of their attention. From the shadows of the hall, a figure darted forward, moving with unnatural speed, leaving a trail of crimson. Kaida lunged, claws slashing but the attacker melted into the smoke before she could strike.
Torin’s hand brushed her arm as she turned back to face him. “Someone else is here,” he said. “We need to find them before more blood is spilled.”
Kaida inhaled sharply, the acrid scent of smoke filling her lungs. Her pack looked to her for guidance, their eyes wide, filled with fear and trust. She could not falter, not now. Survival came first.
But neither could she ignore the strange, electric pull toward Torin. Every instinct of her wolf, every heartbeat, insisted that he was bound to her in ways beyond reason. Something deep and primal whispered in her mind: he was hers, whether she wanted it or not.
Kaida drew herself tall, forcing her attention outward. “Gather the injured. Secure the exits. No one leaves until I say.” Her voice rang with authority, a spark that flared through the remaining warriors. “And find out who is behind this, every shadow, every whisper. I want answers.”
Torin’s jaw tightened. “Agreed. But we have to work together, Kaida. You and I—if we can’t trust each other, none of this matters. Not our packs, not the council, not—”
“Don’t,” Kaida snapped, cutting him off. “Do not presume what matters to me. I am Alpha of the Shadowclaws. I answer to no one but my pack.”
He gave a ghost of a smile, one that did not reach his eyes and nodded once. “Understood. But your wolf… she knows the truth, Kaida. You feel it, don’t you?”
Her ears twitched involuntarily, claws flexing. Yes. Yes, she did. And it terrified her.
The wind outside shifted, carrying a faint metallic scent. Kaida’s gaze went to the doorway, where a mark was scorched into the stone—a wolf’s head with eyes painted crimson, staring as if it knew her soul.
She swallowed hard. This was not random. This was a message. And the message was for her.
“Get everyone out,” she ordered. “Torin… if you value your life, stay close. One wrong move, and you’ll regret it.”
He only nodded, eyes locked on hers, acknowledging the unspoken tension between them. Something unyielding simmered beneath the surface, something neither politics nor war could deny.
Kaida led her pack out into the night, senses straining. Every shadow could be an enemy; every whisper could conceal a dagger. Her wolf pressed against her consciousness, sharp and restless, warning her that this attack was only the beginning.
Outside, the council hall smoldered. Flames licked the sky, smoke curling like a malevolent serpent. Kaida’s warriors formed a perimeter, her pack gathering close, tension coiling tight around her like steel.
Torin’s presence beside her was a contradiction she couldn’t name, irritating, magnetic, maddening. Every instinct screamed for distrust, yet every pulse of her wolf whispered otherwise.
“Do you always arrive at chaos like this?” she asked, voice sharp, forcing herself to focus on the practical over the impossible.
“Only when the world is burning,” he replied, with a faint smirk. “And only when someone might need saving.”
Kaida narrowed her eyes. “Are you implying I need saving?”
He raised his hands in mock surrender. “Not exactly. But your pack might. And if we don’t find the real killer soon, there won’t be a pack left to protect.”
The wind shifted again, carrying with it a faint echo, footsteps in the forest, silent and deadly. Kaida’s claws flexed. She would hunt them down. Whoever had dared mark her territory, whoever had attacked the council, would pay.
And yet… a part of her couldn’t tear her eyes from Torin.
The pull was undeniable. The spark was there, like lightning in the bone. Her wolf trembled, restless, whispering of a bond she didn’t yet understand.
Kaida inhaled sharply, steadying herself. Duty first. Pack first. Desire… later.
But as she glanced at Torin, she realized the pull might not wait.
And deep down, she knew the real war had just begun.