finally c
e that had carried her through the hunter's attack drained away all at once, leaving behind the brutal reality of hypothermia, blo
ole was the direwolf's silver eyes, watching her with a
en-sta
s against the infinite black, and beneath her feet stretched what might have been solid ground or crystallized moonlight. The aurora borealis da
was tall and ethereal, her form shifting between solid flesh and pure starlight. Hair like spun moonbeams flowed
divine mother who had breathed life into the first p
ing and glaciers shifting. Each word resonated through Reign's very soul. "They burned away
though it sounded small and mortal compared to
ine the core of who she was. "Because when offered chains disguised as destiny, you chose fre
b, not with pain but with a strange, cold fire
l starlight brushed against Reign's skin. "But no mortal flame can sever what I have woven. The bond of fro
felt like ice crystallizing in her veins, like power awakening from a long slumber. She looked down to
The marks spread up her arm in delicate spirals, beautiful and alien, pulsing with each beat of her heart. Where the old bloodmark had be
the new mark. "This is not the bond they would have forced upon you. This is the bond of the f
ed, staring at the intricate patte
e wild calls to you, you must answer in kind. One cannot exist without the other. The
lity bleeding through like ink through water. But the
taken is stronger than power given. Cl
attered like
m after the cosmic cold of her vision. Heat wrapped around her body-shocking after
ackled somewhere nearby, casting dancing shadows across what was clearly a cave. But this was no ordinary sh
with the casual confidence of an a
re alert and focused entirely on her. Steam rose gently from its coat, and she realized the
she felt... different. Stronger. The hypothermia was gone, her wounds ha
ntricate patterns visible even in the dim cave. As she watched, the markings pulsed once, and she felt
ment, their eyes met across the space between them, and Reign felt that stran
surprising delicacy for something its size. When it was close enough to touc
ade contact, the world
Wild. Anci
er starlight. The hunt. The kill. The sacred duty of guardianship passed down through generations
inally
to a manageable trickle. But the connection remained-a thread of silve
sunrise over the mountains. This wasn't just rescue or coincidence. This was d
watching her with what could only be described as satisfactio
whispered, her voi
in what looked impossibly like a smile. And somehow, without
aved eac
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