Nyra's POV
The Alpha estate appeared around me like a large room, every covered surface and polished stone, a record of power and legacy. I stood stiffly in the grand hall, my arms crossed over my chest tightly, my spine was as straight as a tempered steel. The massive house crackles and spits, throwing still shadows over an ancient complex depicting wolf hunts and mass victories, but the warmth does not penetrate the ice precisely in my veins.
Across from me, Draven stepped like a caged predator. His heavy boots hit the stone floor in a rhythm that matched my heartbeat. The firelight catches in his dark hair, highlighting the silver strands at his temples that were not there seven years ago. His jaw works below his skin. The muscles there are filled with tension.
The past hour has unfolded in chaos, warriors rushing to fortify the borders, elders gathering quietly, urgent circles, pack members preparing for potential discharge. Auren was moving upstairs under Gareth's watchful eye, away from the chaos and prying stares. Now it is just us, alone in this cave-like room, facing each other like fighters across a battlefield, rather than two people who once shared breaths, dreams and a future.
I can see the truth still settling on him like fresh snow, that he has a son, a child born of his blood. That the life he chose to leave behind did not simply disappear when he turned away from it. There is something always suspicious in the way his fingers flex and release at his sides, as if it was eager for solid ground.
I don't give him time to find it.
"Why is Kael after Auren?" I demand, my voice sharp enough to cut glass, slicing through the silence between us.
Draven exhales slowly, bringing a hand down his face before bracing both palms against the edge of the long wooden table that controls the center of the room. Ancient oak, marked by centuries of Alpha councils and war planning. His shoulders bunch below his dark tunic as he lifts his eyes to mine.
For a second, I catch something in his expression that makes my stomach tighten, uncertainty mixed with frustration. It was an unfamiliar look on him. Draven Blackthorn has always been decisive, confident to the point of arrogance.
"I don't know," he admits finally; the words seemed to cost him something.
My fingers dig deeper into my arms, hard enough to get bruised. "That is not good enough."
His eyes darken, storm gray deepening to charcoal as his Alpha presence sparks below the surface, that unmistakable energy that makes lesser wolves lower their stare and bare their necks. But I am not one of his subordinates, not anymore.
"You think I have not been trying to figure that out?" The edge in his voice could draw blood. "Kael has been stirring trouble in the shadows for years, picking off our border patrols, turning smaller packs against us, disturbing trade routes." "But this" he gestures sharply toward the window, where beyond these walls his warriors prepare for war, "this is the first time he made such a bold move. He wants something, and it is not just Crescent Moon territory."
I swallow hard, my heart beating painfully against my ribs as realization hits like ice in my veins. It is not Crescent Moon. It is Auren.
Draven watches me closely, his head slants slightly as he catches the shift in my scent, the easily understood tense of my body. His eyes narrow with sudden intensity. "You know something."
I turned away, not able to bear the weight of his inspection. My fingers curl into fists at my sides, nails biting into my palms.
He steps closer, the floorboards creaking below his weight. "Nyra."
My name on his lips still sounds like something sacred, despite everything. I hate myself for noticing.
"I do not know why Kael wants him," I say finally, each word measured and tensed with control. "But I do know Auren is not normal."
Silence stretches between us, thick and expectant. The fire pops and hisses in the place, a log splitting with a sound like bones that are breaking.
Draven does not speak, does not push. He waits, his patience is always his most upsetting quality.
I wet my lips, my throat suddenly dry. "He is different and stronger than he should be at his age." I hesitated. The truth was heavy on my tongue. "Sometimes, when he is angry or scared, things happen." My fingers tighten unconsciously. "Dangerous things."
Draven straightens, his entire body going still in that victimizing way of his, a wolf scenting prey on the wind. "What kind of things?"
I hesitate, admitting this feels like peeling back the final layer of armor I have built around us, exposing the most helpless part of myself I had spent years protecting. Not just Auren, but the truth of what he is and what he can do. The reason I have kept him hidden all these years, moving from town to town whenever someone looked too closely or asked too many questions.
My mind flashes back to the alley three months ago, the rascal who cornered us behind the inn, their eyes shining with malice and hunger as they closed in. Auren's small body vibrating against mine, his terror a tangible thing in the air between us. And then, the moment his fear cracked the night like thunder, the way the wolves were thrown backward, as if they were hit by an invisible striking ram, their bodies defeating into brick walls with enough force to shatter bone.
"He can push things away," I say carefully, choosing each word with deliberate precision. "Without touching them."
Draven does not react right away. He processes the words, his brows jointly together as if they were piecing together fragments of a puzzle he should have recognized long ago. Something sparks in his eyes, recognition, understanding, and behind it all, a dawning realization that makes my skin feel uneasy.
"Nyra." His voice drops lower, almost cautious. "Has he ever?"
"I have tried to suppress it," I interrupted, my own frustration bleeding through the cracks in my composure. I taught him how to control it, to make sure no one ever saw what he could do. Because I knew this would happen." I met his gaze directly, heat burning behind my eyes. "I knew that if the wrong people found out, they would not see him as a child. They would see him as a weapon."
Draven's jaw tightens, a muscle jumping below the shadow of stubble. "You think I see him that way?"
I exhaled sharply, the sound like a laugh but too bitter, too dull. "I do not know how you see him, Draven. Seven years ago, you made it very clear where your priorities lay."
Something sparks across his face: guilt, pain, maybe even regret, before it is swallowed by the mask he wears so well. But I refuse to let myself care, refusing to acknowledge the way my heart still twists at the sight of his pain. That weakness almost destroyed me once. I will not let it happen again.
He exhales heavily, running a hand through his hair, a gesture so rare but familiar that I have to look away. "His abilities are not random, Nyra."
I narrowed my eyes, alertness moving along my spine. "What do you mean?"
He hesitated for only a heartbeat before continuing, his gaze never leaving mine. "Before you arrived, the seer spoke of an ancient threat aroused in the east. She said that something long suspended had awakened, and that the key to stopping it lay in what was lost and forsaken." His gaze sharpens and becomes more intent. "Nyra, the signs she described, match the old stories. The legends of the first bloodlines."
I shivered, raising goosebumps around my arms despite the fire's heat.
The first bloodlines. The original wolves, born not of bite or heritage but of heavenly energy, were the children of the moon and earth, gifted with abilities that surpassed anything a normal werewolf could possess. Their descendants were rare, their bloodlines concentrated over centuries until they were little more than myths whispered around pack fires. Nearly extinct.
Draven continues, his voice sounded serious with significance. "Auren's power is not just strange, It is bloodline magic."
My stomach twists with fear and disbelief. The implications were over me like icy water.
I shook my head, refusing to accept it. "That is just a myth. Stories to frighten pups and impress humans."
"No," Draven says, with such certainty that it startled me to my core. "It is not."
His conviction unsettles something deep inside me, a truth I have been running from since the first time I saw Auren move objects with nothing but his fear.
I grabbed the edge of the table, my nails biting into the ancient wood. "Even if that is true, what does it have to do with Kael?"
Draven's expression hardens, becomes something carved from winter stone. "Kael has spent years hunting for something, artifacts, knowledge and power tied to the old ways. If Auren is part of that legacy, then Kael might see him as the missing piece he has been searching for."
I stared at him, my mind racing through terrible possibilities. The missing piece to what?
A weapon? A sacrifice? A key to unlocking something that should remain forever sealed?
Boil rises in my throat. "No." I shake my head passionately, stepping back as if distance could somehow make the truth less frightening. "I will not let him be dragged into this. He is just a child."
Draven's gaze softens, the hard lines of his face soften. "I know."
I dodged the quiet sincerity in his voice, not prepared for the way it slipped past my defenses.
It is the first time since I returned that he has looked at me not as an ally, not as a bitter memory of what could have been, but as something else and someone else. A mother desperate to protect her child.
Draven breathes slowly, his shoulders remaining tense below the weight of unspoken responsibility. "I will not let Kael take him, Nyra. No matter what it costs."
I want to believe him. I want to trust that he means every word, that his promise is not just another pretty deception that will shatter the moment something more important claims his attention. But I have learned the hard way that promises, even those made with the best intentions, are fragile things. They are easily broken when tested against duty, loyalty, and the expectations of others.
A sharp knock at the heavy oak door makes us both turn, the moment breaking between us.
Gareth steps inside, his unpleasant face cruel in the firelight. The Beta's eyes are shadowed with concern, his usual unrelated behavior cracked by something that looks like fear. "Draven, we have a problem."
I do not like the way he looks at us, the indistinct hesitation in his manner, the way his eyes sparked with unease. A cold vision moved down my spine.
Draven straightens, instantly reversed to Alpha posture. "What happened?"
Gareth hesitated, his eyes directed towards me before returning to his Alpha with visible reluctance. "It is Auren."
My breath catches in my throat, my heart tripping over its next beat.
"What about him?" I demand, stepping forward, every maternal instinct floods to the surface.
Gareth's lips pressed into a thin line, his expression looking serious. "He is gone."
Nyra's POV
The floor seems to slant below me, the world shifting on its axis. For a moment, I couldn't breathe, could not think, could not even feel anything beyond the distant space expanding in my chest.
I did not remember moving, but suddenly I was shoving past Gareth, my feet carrying me toward the grand staircase with desperate speed. My heartbeat sounds in my ears, drowning out everything but the insane prolongation pulsing through my veins. Not again. Not again. Not again.
I take the stairs two at a time, my hand barely touching the flashy handrail. I heard Draven's heavy footsteps behind me, feeling the rush of his Alpha power crackling through the fresh air before a storm, anger and fear joined together into something frightening.
The corridor stretches endlessly before me, each step seeming to extend the distance rather than close it. When I finally reached the guest chamber where Auren was taken, I opened the door with enough force to crack the wood against the stoned wall.
The room is beyond empty. Silent. The four-poster bed stands undisturbed, its covers still neatly tucked in. The wooden toys Gareth had quickly gathered for him, carved wolves and bears, sit untouched on the small table. The window is wide open, curtains rolling like ghosts in the cold night breeze. My stomach declines, a sickening void opening inside me. Then I see it.
A single scrap of black fabric caught on the edge of the window frame, flapping weakly against its wooden prison. I cross the room in three streps, fingers trembling as I pluck it free. The texture is wrong, not wool or cotton, but something slippery and rough. The fabric warriors use for secret missions are treated to minimize scent.
A simple odor loiters in the air, sharp and unfamiliar, not pack, not destructive, but something else altogether. Something that raises the hair on the back of my neck and sends first warning signals racing through my body. My blood runs cold as recognition hits. Kael's men.
Draven fills the doorway behind me, his massive frame blocking the light from the corridor. His scent shifts, darkens with an anger so intense that it makes the air feel heavier and harder to breathe. I hear the simple crack of bones as his hands begin to shift unintentionally, claws extending from human fingertips.
"Gareth," he complained, not looking away from me, from the evidence gripped in my trembling hand. "Gather the trackers, send word to the northern outposts." "I want every warrior assembled within the hour."
Gareth hesitates only for a second. "The Elders will want to meet, to discuss strategy before."
"I do not give a damn what the Elders want," Draven cuts him off, his voice dropping to a register that makes my wolf instinctively want to bare her throat. "My son has been taken, strategy is secondary to speed now."
My son. The words hang in the space between us, weighed with newfound recognition and fierce possession.
My voice shook as I turned to face him fully, the scrap of fabric seized in my fist like a lifeline. "They took him."
Draven's eyes met mine, and what I see there steals the breath from my lungs, not just anger or determination, but fear. The same fear that is flowing through my veins, turning my blood to ice.
"We will find him," he says, and there is something in his tone I have never heard before, a vulnerability beneath the steel, a father's desperation behind the Alpha's command.
For the first time since I walked back into Crescent Moon territory, I did not see the man who abandoned me, who chose duty over love, power over happiness. I see someone else, someone just as terrified as I am, just as willing to tear the world apart to find what has been taken.
"How?" My voice cracked on the word, betraying the fractures spreading through my carefully built walls.
Draven steps closer, close enough that I can see the mark of silver in his irises, smelling the pine and smoke scent that, even after all these years, makes something inside me ache with recognition.
"Because Kael made one critical mistake," he says, his voice low and deadly. "He did not just take a child, he took the son of an Alpha and a forsaken mate." His eyes shone with something ancient and victimizing. "And there is nothing more dangerous in this world."
He stretches his hand toward me, not touching, not confidently, but offering.
"We hunt together," he says, and it is not a question but a statement, an acknowledgment of something primal and undeniable between us.
For seven years, I have carried my pain like armor, wrapped my bitterness around me like a disguise. I have told myself I would never again trust Draven Blackthorn with anything I valued and anything I loved. But this is not about us. It is about Auren.
I take his hand, feel the familiar calluses against my palm, the strength in his fingers as they close around mine.
"We hunt together," I agree, sealing an agreement that is more binding than any mate bond.
Beyond the window, the moon rose full and heavily above the forest, and it filled the land with silver light. Somewhere below that same moon, my son waits, scared, alone and surrounded by enemies. But not for long.
Tonight, Kael Nightbane will learn what it means to steal from wolves.
The pack house bursts into chaos within minutes. Warriors stream through the corridors, their faces hard with purpose. Some shift mid-step, bones cracking and reforming as hair ripples across the skin, while others remain human, gathering weapons and supplies with silent efficiency.
Inside me, my wolf paces restlessly, desperate to break free, to hunt and to tear through forest and field until we find our cub. I push down the urge to shift, panic will not help Auren now. Strategy will.
Draven stands in the center of the great hall, his presence drawing every eye like a lodestone. He has shed the formal attire of the Alpha's chambers, now dressed in black gear that mirrors what I wore during my years as a lone wolf mercenary. The sight jars me, this warrior version of him mixing with my memories of the man in ceremonial furs and silver chains.
"They have perhaps a two-hour head start," he announces, his voice reaching every corner of the room. "The storm tonight will slow them down, they will not risk shifting with a hostage child."
My breath catches. I had not even noticed the gathering storm, but now I could hear the distant rumble of thunder, feeling the electric charge in the air. Nature itself matches with our hunt.
"Alpha," one of the Elders, steps forward, a weathered woman with silver hair pulled into a tight braid. "This looks like a trap, Kael would not risk such a bold move without possibilities."
"Send scouts first? Negotiate?" "While my son spends hours or days in the hands of a man who has sworn to destroy our bloodline?" Draven's words slice through the air like blades. "No. We move now, with overwhelming force."
My fingers find the pendant at my throat, a small silver wolf, the only thing I kept from my time as Draven's mate. The metal is warm against my skin, almost pulsing with an energy that mirrors the restless beating of my heart.
"Kael will not expect us both," I say, the sound of my voice strange in this hall where I once stood as Luna. "He knows Crescent Moon politics." "He will expect debate, planning, proper channels." My lip curls with remembered frustration. "He will expect you to be slowed by protocol."
Draven's eyes find mine across the room, something unreadable sparks in their depths. "And he will expect you to hunt alone."
A murmur spreads through the gathered wolves. Most have avoided looking directly at me since my return, the forsaken mate, the one who left, the symbol of their Alpha's one great failure. But now their eyes track between us, sensing the shift in dynamics, the faking of an unexpected alliance.
"Together we are unpredictable," I continue, stepping closer to the map spread across the central table. "And we know something he does not." Draven raises an eyebrow. "What is that?"
"The western passes." I point to a section of the map where the mountains create a natural barrier between territories. "These were not properly mapped when I left. Kael will be expecting us to track him through the main valleys, where his forces can funnel us into prepared positions."
A slow, dangerous smile spreads across Draven's face. "But you found another way through."
I nod. During my years in exile, I mapped every inch of the borderlands, finding hidden paths and forgotten trails, my insurance against ever being truly trapped. "There is a series of ravines that connect, creating a passage too narrow for large groups, but perfect for a surgical strike team."
Gareth leaned forward, studying the area I had indicated. "That is dangerous land in a storm."
"For them," I agree. "But not for us." I look at Draven. "Not if we move as one."
Understanding passes between us, a reminder of how seamlessly we operated once together, before politics and duty and heartbreak separated us. In battle, we were legendary: the Alpha and Luna, whose wolves moved as if they were sharing one mind, anticipating each other's moves before they happened. The mate bond may have been severed, but the muscle memory of fighting together remains sketched in our bodies.
"Gareth, you will lead the main force along the expected route," Draven commands. "Make enough noise to convince Kael that is our primary approach." "Nyra and I will take a small strike team through the western passes."
The room falls silent as we look across the table. At that moment, seven years of bitterness and betrayal seem to withdraw, not disappearing but fading into the background of something more urgent, more primary.
"For Auren," he says softly, words meant only for my ears.
"For our son," I replied, the words felt strange and powerful in my tongue.
Outside, lightning cracks across the sky, revealing the pack house in stark white relief. The storm gathers strength, mirroring the mounting anger in my veins. I feel my wolf stir deeper inside me, muscles coiling, claws itching to tear through the flesh.
Kael wanted to strike at the heart of the Blackthorn pack. Instead, he is awakened by something far more dangerous than he could have imagined: two wolves with nothing left to lose and everything to fight for.
A parent's love is fierce. A wolf's revenge is merciless. And tonight, Kael Nightbane will face both.
Nyra's POV
The night was full of silence. Not the peaceful kind, but the sharp and waiting kind, the kind that presses against your skin and encircles tight in your lungs. Every branch that cracks below our boots sounds like a warning. Every blow of wind feels like it is trying to carry a message we can not quite decode.
We move like shadows through the western pass, the trees waving around us like a guard. The storm is holding off for now, the clouds rolling low and angry above our heads, but I can smell the rain in the air. It is coming, and when it does, it will either cover our route or make everything worse.
Draven runs just ahead of me, with his body tense and his senses sharp. Behind us, our strike team of six follows in silence, wolves and warriors I barely know, but move with the efficiency of soldiers used to being more than they were in numbers. I am grateful for the quiet. Every moment wasted on chatter is one we do not have to spare.
I kept scanning the ground, sniffing the wind and I kept listening. There is no sign of a struggle, no scent strong enough to catch yet. Kael's men know how to cover their tracks. They would have used scent masking, wind direction and probably even split paths to confuse us.
But they forgot one thing. They are not hunting alone. We are wolves chasing our cub.
I bent down for a while along the route, my fingers touching and feeling the flattened grass and the faintest impression of a boot. Smaller than what Kael's men would wear. My heart stutters.
"Auren passed through here," I whisper. Draven bent down beside me, his hand just an inch away from mine as he examined the ground. He did not speak, but I felt his breath catch, saw the tight set of his jaw.
He believes me. "We are close," I said, then I stood up.
We move faster now, passing through the narrow valley that stays between ancient stone and thick underbrush. The path is very dangerous, roots thick as wrists, uneven ground, a sheer drop to one side, but none of us slow down.
My muscles burn, but I barely notice. My wolf is at the edge of my skin, fur brushing the inside of my bones, ready to shift. But I held her back. Not yet and not until we are closer.
A distant sound cuts through the air, sharp and urgent. Gareth's team. The distraction is working.
Good. That means Kael's attention is right where we want it, far from here.
We move another mile before the track disappears again. Draven raised a hand, and we froze, breathing hard while listening.
Then I feel it. Not a sound and not a scent, but a pull. Auren.
My breath catches, and I close my eyes, trying to find it again. It is not instinct. It is not logic. It is something deeper. A bond.
My son. He is close. Scared, but fighting. I can feel the pulse of his panic like a drumbeat in my chest.
I open my eyes and turn sharply east. "This way," I say.
We changed our direction off the ravine path and pushed into the denser forest. The trees here are older and thicker, and their roots look like veins across the forest floor. Vines pull at our limbs, branches hold unto our clothes, but nothing stops us.
Then suddenly. Light. It flashes through the trees like lightning, but there is no thunder. Just this sudden and blinding pulse that turns the whole forest white for half a second. Then again. Brighter.
The ground vibrates below our feet, a soft tremble like the earth itself is holding its breath.
I freezed. So does Draven. My heart lodges in my throat. "That is him," I whisper, with my voice sounding harsh. "That is Auren."
Draven looks at me, eyes wide, silver glowing faintly in the dark.
"What the hell was that?" one of the warriors behind us mutters, breathless.
Power, I want to say. My son's power.
Another flash splits the trees, and this time I feel it deep in my bones, a rush of raw and untrained energy, wild and unfocused but strong enough to scorch the sky.
He is not just panicking. He is fighting back.
But if he is using that much energy, then Kael knows what he has now. And that means we are almost out of time.
Draven turns toward me, with his eyes hard. "He is not far. Maybe half a mile."
I nodded once. "Move," I said, slipping into a full sprint, the team falling in behind us.
The forest blurred around me, the wind slicing against my cheeks. My heart was pounding so loudly that I could not hear anything else.
Auren, baby, hold on. We are coming. Another flash. But this time it was brighter and closer.
And then, a scream. Not mine. Not Draven's. But it was Auren's scream.
Small. Broken. I do not think I can run. Through branches, over roots, cutting through underbrush like my skin does not matter. My wolf is sounding in my head, trying to be free.
But I do not need her. Not yet. Because I can feel him. I can feel my son.
And I will burn this entire forest to the ground before I let him get taken again.
We break through the last line of trees, and that is when I see it.
A flash of light that was so bright to turned night into day, pointing from a clearing just ahead. Trees waved, air pulses outward in a wave of invisible force, and I know. That is Auren.
That is my baby. And Kael just made his second big mistake.
He did not count on how dangerous a frightened cub could be.
Especially the ones born of wolves.