Lira Fenwick has spent her life hidden away in the Duskborne Pack, protected by her overbearing father and kept in the dark about her true origins. Born under a rare lunar eclipse, whispers of her birth carry an ancient prophecy—one her father has kept buried. The pack members are protective, yet distant, leaving Lira to feel like an outsider in her own home. When the Grimhowl Pack, the largest and most powerful in the country, attacks Duskborne, Lira is captured and brought to the northern territories. There, Alpha Caius Vexmoor reveals a shocking truth: Lira is his destined mate, a bond that could either unite their warring packs or destroy them both. But Lira’s powers, long dormant and unknown, are tied to an ancient prophecy—one that a hidden enemy seeks to unleash. As Lira grapples with the weight of her newfound destiny, she must decide whether to embrace her fate or risk everything to protect the ones she loves. But the deeper she digs, the more she realizes that the truth may be more dangerous than anyone ever imagined. And the shadows are closing in.
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The moon looked wrong tonight. It hung lower than usual, cloaked in shadows, tinged with a dull red that bled into the dark sky. The air felt heavy, like the whole forest was holding its breath. I stood alone in the clearing, arms wrapped around myself, listening to the silence that pressed in from all sides. Something wasn’t right. Not with the moon. Not with me. I had no words for it, just a gnawing feeling under my skin—like a thousand tiny sparks waiting to ignite. “Lira!” I turned at the sound of my name. Kora’s voice cut through the quiet, loud and urgent. She pushed through the tall grass, face flushed, golden eyes scanning until they landed on me. “There you are,” she exhaled, brushing wild strands of hair from her face. “You’re not supposed to be out here.” “I needed air,” I said, not bothering to lie. “Too many eyes back there.” She frowned, stepping beside me and glancing at the sky. “You see it too, don’t you?” I nodded. “The moon looks... off.” “It’s not just the moon.” She dropped her voice. “The Leaders are asking for you. Again.” I sighed. “Of course they are.” They always wanted something—answers to questions I couldn’t give, explanations for things I didn’t understand. I’d grown used to the stares, the whispered conversations behind my back. The girl who hadn’t shifted. The one who didn’t fit. Kora touched my arm gently. “They’re not in the mood to be ignored tonight. Something’s going on.” “Something’s always going on,” I muttered. “And somehow it’s always about me.” She hesitated, then said, “They’re talking about Grimhowl.” My breath caught. “What about Grimhowl?” Kora looked uneasy, her voice lower now. “Rumors. Scouts near the northern border. The Leaders think it’s a warning—or a sign.” “A sign of what?” She didn’t answer right away. Her silence spoke louder than anything she could’ve said. “Caius Vexmoor,” she finally whispered. The name alone sent a chill racing down my spine. Alpha of Grimhowl. Ruthless. Unforgiving. The stories about him were half-myth, half-terror—his wolf black as death, his eyes silver and cold. He was the kind of Alpha who didn’t bother with threats. Just action. “They think he’s preparing for something,” Kora went on. “And they think… it might involve you.” My heart thudded against my ribs. “Me? Why?” “I don’t know,” she said. “But they’ve been whispering all evening. They won’t say anything directly, but I think they believe it’s connected to why you haven’t shifted.” I looked away, jaw tight. I hated that word—why. As if there had to be a reason I was different. As if I hadn’t asked myself the same question a thousand times. At nineteen, I should have shifted years ago. All the others had—most before they turned sixteen. But my wolf had never come. No howling under my skin. No clawing at the surface. Just silence. I tried to laugh, but it came out bitter. “So now they think Caius Vexmoor has something to do with my defective wolf?” “You’re not defective.” “You don’t have to say that.” Kora’s brows pulled together. “I mean it, Lira. You’re not broken. You’re not some mistake the Moon Goddess forgot to finish. Whatever’s happening, I don’t believe it’s about you. Not really. They just want something to blame.” Blame. That’s exactly what it felt like—being a problem they couldn’t solve, a question they couldn’t answer. I stared at the trees surrounding us, tall and unmoving. “It’s like I’m waiting for something I don’t understand. Every day I wake up hoping something will feel different. But nothing ever does.” Kora stepped closer, her voice firm. “Then maybe different is coming. Maybe it’s already here.” A shiver ran through me. The wind stirred the grass, whispering secrets I couldn’t quite hear. “You think Grimhowl’s coming?” I asked. “That Caius… he’s coming?” “I don’t know,” she admitted. “But the Leaders are scared. That’s never a good sign.” I hated the fear in her voice. I hated that mine echoed it. “What do I do, Kora?” I asked. “What if all of this leads to something I can’t handle?” She looked me dead in the eye. “Then you won’t handle it alone.” And just like that, the knot in my chest loosened. She always had a way of grounding me—of reminding me that no matter how twisted the path became, I didn’t have to walk it in the dark. “We should go,” she said, glancing toward the trees. “The Leaders won’t wait much longer. Even if you don’t want to hear what they have to say, it’s better to be there than let them spin more stories in your absence.” I nodded, casting one last look at the strange, pale moon. It felt like it was watching me. Like it knew something I didn’t. As we started walking back toward the village, I couldn’t shake the feeling crawling up my spine—like something had just shifted, and I wouldn’t understand it until it was far too late to turn back.LIRAWe all felt it.The change.The weight in the air.The land was wrong.And then we saw it.The Ashen Veil.It rose before us like a tidal wave of mist—thick, dense, and completely still. A shimmering curtain of fog stretched across the landscape, swallowing the forest whole. Trees disappeared into it and returned twisted, their trunks warped, their leaves a dull gray. The fog pulsed faintly… like it breathed.We stopped.No one had to give the order. We simply knew—this was the threshold. Beyond this point, the real danger began.Dain’s voice came from behind. “We’re close. This is where the horses stop.”I pulled my horse to a halt.One by one, the others followed.Morgana dismounted first. She stepped forward without hesitation and placed her hand on a jagged obsidian stone nestled at the edge of the Veil’s border. With a silver blade, she sliced her palm and pressed her blood against the rock. Ancient words slipped from her lips like wind through bones.The fog rippled.A sliv
MORGANAThe forest had grown too quiet.Not the peace of morning dew or resting birds. No, this was a hush heavy with omen. The trees knew what lay ahead. Even the wind dared not stir the branches now.I rode at the front of the group, the path ahead narrowing with every passing minute. The others followed—Caius and Lira side by side, Aldric behind them, Elias close to the rear. Dain brought up the last, ever watchful, though I suspected the Veil could not touch him.The Veil. We were nearing it now. I could feel the pull of its magic like a hand brushing against the edge of my mind, trying to slip in unnoticed. But I was older than such tricks. I had studied beneath moonlight and blood. I knew when shadow crawled too close.Still, there were truths I could not leave unsaid. Not now. Not when the dagger lay waiting and the fates of the bonded pair behind me would determine whether the prophecy ended in salvation or in ruin.“Lira. Caius,” I said, slowing my horse to a trot, allowing t
LIRAThe past two days felt like a delicate thread pulled tight—fragile, precious, and fleeting.I split my hours between my mother and Caius, between moments of laughter and quiet tears, between the present and the looming storm ahead. Every stolen glance, every touch, every smile was a promise I wanted to keep tucked in my chest, just in case.Just in case the Veil swallowed us whole.Elowen did the same. She was either with her father, learning pieces of her past, or with Elias, sharing pieces of her heart. I watched her from a distance sometimes, wondering how it must feel to finally have what was taken from her for so long, only to face the possibility of losing it again.Today, the sun rose too fast. The wind felt too still. The birds didn’t sing.Today, we leave for the Ashen Veil.I stood at the edge of the courtyard, dressed in my travel leathers and cloak, waiting. Behind me, the manor buzzed with quiet movement—final preparations, murmured goodbyes, armor being fastened, we
ELIASThe soft rustle of the wind through the trees barely reached me over the sound of my own thoughts.From the edge of the woods, I watched Elowen sitting beside Dain in the garden. They were talking quietly, the kind of quiet that said more than words. She leaned into his shoulder at one point, and he chuckled at something she said. It was awkward and new and... beautiful.I should’ve felt nothing but peace, but Frost was pacing inside me, his agitation growing with every second.‘She should be with us,’ he snarled. ‘We haven’t even marked her. We haven’t claimed what’s ours.’‘She hasn’t even had time to know her father,’ I said aloud, my tone firm. ‘You want to rip her away from that?’‘He’s had his time,’ Frost snapped.‘No, he hasn’t. He just got her back.’Frost growled low in my mind, but I stood my ground. ‘You know what it was like for us growing up. Imagine her—knowing her mother died to protect her, and her father was out there, but they never found each other until now.
SERAPHINAWe sat in silence again, watching the wind dance through the lavender, until footsteps crunched softly on the gravel path behind us. I turned my head and saw Dain and Elowen walking toward us, their hands loosely intertwined.Elowen’s face lit up when she saw Lira, but when her eyes found mine, her smile faltered. There was something in her gaze that mirrored my own heartache.She knew.Just like I did.They only had two days left.“Mind if we join you?” Dain asked, his voice unusually quiet.“Of course not,” Lira said gently, rising to her feet and wrapping Elowen in a warm embrace.The girls settled together, Elowen curling close to Lira like she belonged there. And she did, just as Lira belonged with us. I offered Dain a small smile as he took a seat beside me.He exhaled, his eyes drifting toward the horizon. “She doesn’t know what the Ashen Veil looks like,” he said after a moment. “Neither do most of them.”“You do,” I murmured, already knowing the answer.He nodded on
CAUISThe war room had emptied, but the weight of the vision still pressed against my chest like iron chains. Lira stood beside me, her presence always grounding, even in moments like this—when the future looked more twisted than ever. We didn’t speak as we walked through the halls of Grimhowl, Morgana silent at our side, her mind clearly racing. Aldric trailed us, his brows furrowed, lost in thought.We needed answers. And there was only one man who might unknowingly hold them.Dain.He’d been waiting in the east wing, training the guards, when Morgana summoned him. When we arrived, he was already sitting on a stone bench near the sparring yard, Elowen at his side. Her laughter quieted the moment she saw us.“Something’s wrong,” Dain said before I could open my mouth.“It’s urgent,” I said.Elowen’s brows pinched. Elias, always attuned to tension, approached from the courtyard and placed a gentle hand on her back.“El, come. Let’s give them a moment.”She hesitated, her eyes flicking
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