Smoke and silence rule the ruins of the Mantle pack. Lyra, once a fierce warrior-wakes shackled and ritual-silenced, her wolf buried but not dead, a living emblem of everything Lucius, the cruel Alpha of Onyx Crest, used to cement his power. Brian, the heir raised to obey, is taught to deny the bond he never wanted; one whispered word from Lyra cracks that obedience and sparks a secret, dangerous connection. As their flickering bond strengthens, Lyra's wolf claws back to life and Brian's loyalties split, igniting a rebellion against a family built on sacrifice and fear. When Asher seizes the crest and brands them fugitives, what begins as escape becomes a fight for more than revenge-it's a war to remake the packs into something kinder and just, and to claim a throne built on unity rather than domination.
Brian smelled smoke before he saw the bodies. It hung in the high hall like a bad memory-thick and soft, clinging to the stone, settling into the cracks where the light didn't reach. Men and women in torn cloaks slumped against the blackened pillars, eyes empty or full of things they couldn't say. It should have been a clean job, Lucius had said. Clean like a blade. Instead it felt ragged, like someone had dragged a net through the pack and only kept what they liked.
He walked slow. He had to-slow suited him when his insides were a riot. His father stood at the dais, the cloak heavy on his shoulders, voice like iron in the hush. Asher leaned at his side, all teeth and angles, looking like he'd swallowed a wasp and liked it. Guards moved like shadows. Their boots slid over ash and broke old prayers.
"You said the Mantle were stubborn," Lucius said, not looking at Brian. "You said they would bend. Did they bend, my son?"
Brian kept his face blank. He'd learned that early-how to put a lid on the storm so no one saw the lightning. "Some bent," he answered. The word tasted like the inside of his cheek. He'd watched the Mantle fall from a distance, learned the rhythm of surrender and the slow drag of chains. When they paraded the captives through the yard later, Brian followed. He should have had nothing but duty in his chest. Instead there was a hollow that had the shape of a name he didn't want.
They pushed them into the slave pens like cattle. He saw men clench and hold each other close, and women with children who wouldn't cry-too shocked or too dead inside to find a sound. That's where he saw her.
Lyra stood with chains at her wrists, dark hair stuck to her neck. Her face was clean, if you could call something clean that had ash smeared across it. She didn't beg. She didn't bow. She held herself like a blade waiting to be pulled. Her mouth-liquid with bruises-was shut, held by a ribbon of shadow that must have been the ritual's mark. You could see it at the corner of her jaw, a small scab that would scar a voice for life.
He felt something like a tug. Not his heart. Not exactly. It was a quiet thread, like the pluck of a harp string you didn't know you owned. He blinked and the sound of his boots on stone was loud, like someone else had dropped a pan. He shouldn't have noticed her. She was one of many. But his gaze stuck.
A guard spat and laughed at her. "You see that one?" he jeered. "They say she was the Alpha's daughter. Look at her now-silent as a mouse."
Lyra's eyes were a different thing. Wolf-amber with ragged gray around them now, but there was something beneath that-coal under ash. She didn't answer. She couldn't. But her eyes went straight to him and held like a dare.
Brian should have turned away. He didn't. He moved closer until the guard snarled and shoved him back with a cuff to the chest. He tasted iron and old fear and something else, a memory that wasn't his. His palm brushed the cool of the metal bars. He could have walked away. He didn't.
"Bring her to me," Lucius said quiet, like a man ordering rain.
The guard looked surprised. "My lord?"
"Bring her." Lucius's voice was a knife in a cloak. "I will look at what we have taken."
They dragged Lyra forward. Up close, Brian could see the marks etched into her skin where the ritual had been performed-pale lines that ran like runes. The ribbon across her mouth was not cloth he could unweave; it was deeper, a seam that swallowed sound. The effect was obscene and small: a woman, once loud enough to turn grown men, reduced to a quiet thing.
When she reached the dais she didn't flinch. The chain at her wrist clinked with prideful little sounds. Lucius studied her like a merchant judging a new coin. Asher grinned feral, waiting for the punch line. The captives fell into silence as if some great bell hung over the yard and had been struck.
Brian stepped forward because his feet moved before his will caught up. Up close, her scent hit him-smoke and pine and something clean underneath it. A wolf scent, old as stone. It did something to him. He felt the thread pull harder, a hum through the pads of his fingers where they rested on the rail.
She looked at him then and, for the briefest instant, mouthed a single word. It wasn't meant for the men around them. It wasn't loud. It was nothing more than the motion of her mouth, a ghost of a sound. "Sera," she said without sound.
If a knife had been slid into his chest he would have reacted in less time. The word-simple, soft-sat at the base of something in him he had always sworn dead. A memory that smelled of salt and night fires. A lullaby his mother had hummed when he was small and couldn't sleep. A scrap of an old tongue he had read about in forbidden texts once, a word used in oaths between lovers and blood. No one alive used it anymore. Yet here it was, breathed by a woman who should have been nothing but a prize.
Something in the air changed. Brian's hands went cold. He could hear his own blood in his ears. The guards noticed, then they didn't. Asher's smile thinned like curd. Lucius tilted his head, like he was looking at a pattern in the sky and trying to make it mean something he could name.
"Did she speak?" Asher asked, loud and casual. He leaned forward, eyes glittering. "Or did she swallow her tongue like the rest?"
Lucius's mouth was a line. "She speaks when it suits my purposes. Not before." He laughed and the sound slid over the stones.
Brian found his voice when he needed to. "I claim her." He said it like a fact. He didn't ask. He didn't think about the taste of the word he had just heard. He didn't measure the consequences. He said it because something fierce and private had taken the steering wheel in his chest.
There was a silence that lasted a breath. Men looked between father and son like that was a play they didn't understand. Asher's face went a dark and furious color that made him look younger and meaner. "You what?" he barked. "Brian, you don't-" His hand moved toward his belt, a pose of a man ready to make a point with steel.
Brian lifted his chin. "I take her as my prisoner." He spoke the words slow. "Not executed. Not sold. I take her into my care."
Lucius's eyes bored into his face. "And what will you do with her?" There was something in the question that sounded like a test and an accusation both. The hall seemed to exhale and hold its breath.
"Train her if she can fight," Brian said. He heard himself lie like a good soldier. "Or keep her. She is mine to use as I see fit."
Asher barked out a laugh-sharp and ugly. Around them men began to murmur, like coals being stirred. He saw a few heads nod, some in approval and some in the bitter way of those who liked a show of power. But Asher's glance at him didn't leave his eyes; it went hot and dangerous.
Lyra did not move. Her voice could not answer him. But her eyes watched his face as if she were taking his measure. The chain at her wrist clinked one time like a punctuation mark.
On the way down from the dais, Brian felt every man's gaze prick the back of his neck. He heard Asher hiss to a guard, "Watch him. He gets soft, we gut him." The guard grinned like a dog that smelled blood.
Brian kept his jaw steady. The thread in his chest thrummed, soft and stubborn. He had no right to this feeling. He had a name to live by-obedience, honor, the crest on his sleeve. He shook the old promises in his head like dust off an old cloak. For now, he had decided. He would claim the silent woman and put a lid on whatever that one syllable had done to him.
He didn't notice then that someone in the crowd had slipped away, fingers working at a small knife under a cloak. He didn't see the way Asher's jaw tightened as if pulling a bow. He only saw the woman with ash under her skin and the small, impossible promise in her mouth.
When they led Lyra past him, her head tilted the slightest bit. Her eyes met his and in the hollow between words something like a smile ghosted-no joy, not yet, but recognition. The kind of look that said, We both remember, even if we don't know why.
As the pen doors clanged shut behind them, Brian heard the whisper of a guard by his ear. "If you keep her, keep your head on straight, lad. This place eats soft men."
He looked up at the gray towers of Onyx Crest. Above, banners snapped like accusing hands. He felt the thread hum again at his ribs, a small bright pain. He put his palm to the place and swore to himself, quiet as a prayer, that he wouldn't let it go. Behind him, in the dark, a plan began to sharpen like a blade.
Outside, the wind pushed ash across the yard like a reminder. Inside, someone had spoken a word that might change everything. And somewhere, in a room not far away, Asher's smile had the look of a thing that waits for a trap to spring.
It would be a long winter before anyone guessed how right he was.
Chapter 1 Ash and Silence
31/12/2025
Chapter 2 The Quiet Between Words
31/12/2025
Chapter 3 Threads and Lies
31/12/2025
Chapter 4 Sparks in the Yard
31/12/2025
Chapter 5 Nightproof Promises
31/12/2025
Chapter 6 The First Blow
31/12/2025
Chapter 7 Nightfall and Choices
31/12/2025
Chapter 8 Hollow Crowns
31/12/2025
Chapter 9 The Blood-Moon Break
31/12/2025
Chapter 10 The Stone That Hums
31/12/2025
Chapter 11 Wake Me When It Burns
Today at 17:19
Chapter 12 When the Stone Answers
Today at 17:27