I woke to the smell of pine smoke and roasting meat.
For a moment, I forgot where I was. My body was warm, comfortable, and pain-free. So different from the servant's cot I'd slept on for nineteen years that I thought I was dreaming.
Then the memory crashed back. The rejection. The transformation. Running through the forest.
Elena.
I sat up quickly, my heart racing. The shelter was empty except for me. Pale morning light filtered through gaps in the walls. How long had I slept?
"Easy," Elena's voice came from outside. "You're safe. Just making breakfast."
I pushed myself to standing, testing my feet. The bandages were still there, but the pain was completely gone. I unwrapped one foot carefully.
Perfect skin. Not even a scar.
"Told you," Elena said, ducking into the shelter with two wooden bowls. "Wolf healing. Moon Wolf healing is probably even faster." She handed me a bowl filled with what looked like fish and wild berries. "You slept for fourteen hours straight."
"Fourteen hours?" Panic spiked through me. "The hunters-"
"Came within fifty feet of here twice. Never saw us." She settled cross-legged on the floor. "This place is protected by old magic. I told you. As long as we're careful, we're invisible."
I sank back down onto the furs, relief making my legs weak. "Thank you. For everything. You didn't have to help me."
"Yes, I did." Elena's blue eyes were serious. "You're not the first wolf the packs have thrown away. Won't be the last. We outcasts have to stick together."
I ate slowly, savoring each bite. The fish was perfectly cooked, flaky, and seasoned with herbs I didn't recognize. "Where did you learn all this? Survival skills, healing, hiding?"
"Trial and error. Lots of errors." She touched a scar on her forearm. "Got that from eating the wrong mushrooms. I was sick for three days. Thought I'd die. But I learned."
"You were fifteen when they banished you?"
"Fifteen and stupid enough to think I could go back to pack life someday." She smiled, but it didn't reach her eyes. "Took me six months to accept I was better off alone. Another year to stop hating them for it."
"Do you still hate them?"
Elena thought about that. "Not hate. That takes too much energy. But I don't forgive them either. They chose their rules over my freedom. That's something I'll never forget."
I understood that more than I wanted to admit.
We finished eating in comfortable silence. When we were done, Elena stood and stretched. "So. The Rogue Lands are two and a half days from here. But you can't make that journey looking like you do now."
"What's wrong with how I look?"
"You move like prey, not a predator. You don't know how to hunt, track, or fight. Your wolf is powerful, but you have no control." She moved to the entrance. "If we're going to get you there alive, you need training. Starting now."
My stomach twisted with nerves. "I don't know how to-"
"That's why I'm teaching you." Elena gestured for me to follow. "Come on. We're burning daylight."
Outside, the forest was beautiful in the morning light. Birds sang in the trees. A light mist clung to the ground. It would have been peaceful if I weren't so terrified of screwing this up.
Elena led me to a small clearing about twenty feet from her shelter. "First lesson: shifting. You did it once by accident. Now you need to do it on purpose."
"How?"
"Close your eyes."
I obeyed.
"Feel your wolf. She's right there, just under your skin. Can you feel her?"
I could. A presence in my mind. Watchful. Waiting.
Hello, I thought to her.
Finally, she responded. Ready to run?
"Now," Elena continued, "shifting is about letting go of control while maintaining awareness. You need to trust your wolf completely, but not lose yourself in the process."
That sounded impossible.
"Don't think about it too much. Just... let her out."
I reached for my wolf. Felt her surge forward eagerly.
Pain exploded through my body.
My bones cracked. My skin stretched. I screamed as the transformation took hold, just as agonizing as the first time.
But faster.
Within seconds, I was on four legs instead of two. The world looked different from this angle. Colors were muted, but I could see movement I'd missed before. Every scent was magnified-earth and pine and Elena's nervous sweat.
We did it, my wolf said, pride in her mental voice.
I tried to take a step and immediately face-planted into the dirt.
Elena's laugh rang out. "Don't worry. Everyone's clumsy their first few shifts. Try again."
I pushed myself up. My legs felt wrong-too many joints bending in directions that didn't make sense. But I managed to stand without falling this time.
"Good. Now walk."
I took a tentative step. Then another. By the third step, something clicked. My body remembered how to move like this, even if my mind didn't.
"Perfect!" Elena clapped. "Now shift back."
That was harder. I didn't know how to let go of this form. Panic rose in my chest.
Calm, my wolf said. Just reverse what we did. Pull inward instead of outward.
I tried. Nothing happened.
"You're thinking too hard," Elena called. "Stop trying to control it. Just... be human again."
I stopped fighting. Stopped thinking. Just wanted to be human.
The shift happened instantly. One second, I was a wolf; the next, I was sitting naked in the dirt, gasping for air.
Elena tossed me a spare dress she'd brought from the shelter. "Better. Most new wolves take an hour to figure out the reverse shift. You did it in under a minute."
I pulled the dress on with shaking hands. "That was horrible."
"The pain fades with practice. Eventually, you won't even feel it." She helped me to my feet. "Again."
"Again?"
"You need to be able to shift instantly in a fight. No hesitation. No thinking. Just action." Her expression was serious. "Your life might depend on it."
She was right. I knew she was right.
So I shifted again. And again. And again.
By the tenth shift, the pain had dulled to a manageable ache. By the twentieth, I could do it in seconds without thinking.
"Good," Elena finally said when the sun was high overhead. "That's enough shifting for today. Now let's work on your senses."
She led me back to the shelter and handed me a strip of cloth. "Blindfold."
"What?"
"You need to learn to trust your other senses. Sight is the weakest sense a wolf has. Sound and smell are everything." She gestured to the cloth. "Put it on."
I tied the blindfold around my eyes. The world went dark.
"Now," Elena's voice came from somewhere to my left, "tell me what you hear."
I stood still and listened. Really listened.
Birds in the trees. Wind through the leaves. Water trickling somewhere distant-the stream we'd passed last night. Elena's breathing, calm and steady. Her heartbeat, strong and rhythmic.
And something else. Something farther away.
"There are wolves nearby," I said. "Three of them. Maybe a quarter mile east."
"Very good." Elena sounded impressed. "What else?"
I focused harder. "They're talking. I can't make out the words, but... they sound frustrated. Like they're looking for something and not finding it."
"They're looking for you," Elena confirmed. "They've been circling this area all morning. But they can't find us because of the wards."
She moved, her footsteps deliberately loud. "Now tell me where I am without looking."
I tracked her by sound alone. "Behind me. About five feet. Moving to the right now."
"Perfect. Your wolf senses are already strong. Moon Wolf heritage probably amplifies them." She removed the blindfold. "Last lesson for today: combat."
My stomach dropped. "I've never fought anyone."
"I know. That's the problem." She picked up two thick branches from a pile near the shelter. "These are training weapons. They won't kill, but they'll hurt enough to teach you to block."
She tossed one to me. I caught it clumsily.
"Defensive stance," she ordered, demonstrating. "Knees bent, weight on the balls of your feet, weapon up."
I copied her as best I could.
"Good. Now-"
She attacked without warning.
The branch came at my head fast. I barely got my own branch up in time to block. The impact jarred my arms.
"Too slow," Elena said. "Again."
She attacked from a different angle. I blocked, but barely.
"Faster."
Another attack. Another clumsy block.
We drilled for over an hour. My arms screamed. Sweat poured down my face. I gained more bruises than I could count.
But I was learning. My blocks got faster. My footwork improved. By the end, I was actually managing to counterattack a few times.
"Enough," Elena finally called, both of us breathing hard. "You're a natural. Most wolves take weeks to develop combat instincts. You've got them already. Just need to refine them."
I collapsed onto the ground, every muscle trembling. "I feel like I got hit by a tree."
"You basically did. Multiple times." She sat beside me, equally exhausted. "But you did well, Moon Wolf. Really well. Another few days of this and you might actually survive a real fight."
Might survive. Great.
We rested for a while, sharing water from a leather skin. The afternoon sun was warm on my face. For a moment, I let myself feel something close to peace.
Then Elena stiffened. "Quiet."
I froze. "What is it?"
"Voices. Closer than before." She stood slowly, listening. "They're coming this way. Multiple wolves."
My heart raced. "The hunters?"
"Sounds like it." She grabbed her pack and started shoving essentials inside. "We need to move. Now."
"But you said the wards-"
"Wards aren't perfect. If enough wolves search the same area long enough, eventually they'll find inconsistencies. Gaps." She tossed me a pack. "Fill this. Food, water, anything you can carry. We leave in two minutes."
I scrambled to help, throwing dried meat and herbs, and supplies into the pack with shaking hands.
Outside, the voices grew louder. Closer.
"...has to be around here somewhere..."
"...tracks lead this direction..."
"...Alpha King wants her found today..."
Elena and I locked eyes. Today. They were pushing harder now.
"Ready?" she whispered.
I nodded, even though I wasn't. Would never be ready for this.
"Then let's go." She moved to the back of the shelter, where a section of wall could be removed. "Stay close. Stay quiet. And whatever happens, don't stop running."
She pushed through first. I followed, my heart hammering so hard I thought it might burst from my chest.
Behind us, I heard a shout.
"There! I saw movement!"
Elena cursed. "Run!"
We ran.
[ARIA'S POV]
We ran like our lives depended on it.
Because they did.
Elena moved through the forest like she was part of it, ducking under branches, leaping over roots, never making a sound. I crashed behind her like a wounded elephant, snapping twigs and rustling leaves with every step.
"Shift!" Elena hissed over her shoulder. "You're faster than a wolf!"
Right. I could do that now.
I reached for my wolf, and this time the shift came easily. Painlessly. One moment I was stumbling on two legs, the next I was running on four.
The world exploded into clarity.
Every scent. Every sound. Every movement in the underbrush. My wolf form was built for this-for speed and stealth and survival.
I caught up to Elena in seconds, matching her pace. She glanced at me, her expression fierce with approval, and we ran together.
Behind us, the voices grew louder.
"She shifted!"
"I smell wolf-fresh shift!"
"This way! They're heading north!"
Of course, they could track us. They were experienced hunters. We were prey, trying desperately to become predators.
Faster, my wolf urged. We can outrun them.
But could we? I had no idea how long I could maintain this pace. My training with Elena had exhausted me. Every muscle still ached from the combat drills.
Elena suddenly veered left, away from the direction we'd been heading. I followed without question. She knew these woods. Knew how to survive.
We splashed through a shallow creek. The cold water was a shock, but Elena didn't slow down. She ran upstream for several minutes before cutting back into the forest.
"Breaks the scent trail," she panted when we finally stopped in a dense thicket. "Bought us maybe ten minutes."
I shifted back to human form, my chest heaving. "How many are there?"
"I counted at least six different voices. Maybe more." She crouched low, listening. "They're organized. Professional. Not just random pack wolves looking for reward money."
"Then who?"
"Alpha King's personal hunters, probably." Her expression darkened. "Which means they won't give up easily. And they definitely won't let you go if they catch you."
My stomach twisted with fear and anger. Daemon had sent his best after me. Not to check if I was safe. To capture me. To drag me back like a runaway possession.
He doesn't deserve us, my wolf snarled. Should have let him rot in his regret.
"We need a plan," I said, forcing my breathing to steady. "We can't just keep running blindly."
"You're right." Elena pulled out the map from her pack. "The Rogue Lands are still two days away on foot. But there's a faster route-more dangerous, but faster."
She pointed to a section of the map marked with symbols I didn't recognize. "The Ravine. It's a narrow gorge with a river running through it. Cuts travel time in half, but it's treacherous. One wrong step and you fall a hundred feet onto rocks."
"That's our better option?"
"The hunters won't follow us there. Too risky. They'll have to go around, which gives us a lead." She looked at me seriously. "But it's not easy, Aria. One slip and you're dead. No healing from that kind of fall."
I thought about the alternatives. Keep running until exhaustion made us easy prey? Try to hide and hope they don't find us?
No. Elena was right. Risk was better than certain capture.
"Let's do it," I said.
"You sure?"
"No. But I'm not going back to that pack. Ever." I met her eyes. "I'd rather die free than live in a cage."
Something fierce flashed across Elena's face. Respect, maybe. "Alright then, Moon Wolf. Let's see what you're made of."
We started moving again, this time at a more careful pace. Elena led us through the densest parts of the forest, places where the canopy was so thick that barely any light penetrated.
My new senses were a gift here. I could see in the dimness, could smell the hunters when they got close, could hear their frustrated curses when they lost our trail again.
"They're spreading out," I whispered after an hour of careful travel. "Trying to surround us."
"Smart." Elena frowned. "They're herding us. Pushing us in a specific direction."
"What direction?"
"West. Away from the Rogue Lands." She cursed under her breath. "They know where we're trying to go. They're cutting us off."
My heart sank. "So what do we do?"
"We go through them instead of around them."
I stared at her. "Are you insane?"
"Probably." She grinned, but it was sharp and dangerous. "But think about it. They're expecting us to run away. To avoid confrontation. What if we don't?"
"You want to fight six trained hunters?"
"I want to slip past them while they're looking the wrong direction." She pulled her knife from her belt. "Create a distraction. Make them think we went one way while we actually go another."
It was crazy. Risky. Stupid.
It might actually work.
"What kind of distraction?" I asked.
Elena's grin widened. "The kind that makes them chase shadows while we walk right past them."
She explained her plan quickly. It relied on timing, luck, and my untested ability to control my Moon Wolf powers.
"Can you do it?" she asked when she finished.
I thought about the silver light that came when I was emotional. The way it had exploded during my transformation. I had no idea if I could control it deliberately.
But I'd never know unless I tried.
"Yes," I lied. "I can do it."
We split up. Elena circled east while I moved west, directly toward where we'd heard the hunters' voices.
My heart hammered so hard I was sure they'd hear it.
Through the trees, I caught glimpses of movement. Brown fur. Gray fur. Wolves in their animal forms, searching.
I crept closer, staying downwind so they couldn't scent me. Found a massive oak tree and climbed it silently, my new wolf strength making it easy.
From my perch, I could see them clearly now. Five wolves spread out in a loose formation, systematically searching every hiding spot.
Where was the sixth?
Movement to my left made me freeze. A massive black wolf stood on a boulder about thirty feet away, his nose to the air.
Sniffing for my scent.
Our eyes met.
For one heartbeat, neither of us moved.
Then he howled.
The alarm cry echoed through the forest. The other wolves' heads snapped up, turning toward us.
Now! Elena's voice shouted in my mind-wait, how could I hear her thoughts?
No time to question it. I reached for the power inside me. The silver light marked me as a Moon Wolf.
Please work. Please work. Please work.
I threw my hands up and imagined the light exploding outward. Imagined it bright as the sun, impossible to ignore.
Silver light erupted from my body like a supernova.
The forest turned to day. Every wolf within a hundred yards cried out, blinded by the sudden brilliance.
I jumped from the tree and ran.
Not away from the hunters-through them.
They were stumbling, disoriented, pawing at their eyes. I slipped past the first one easily. The second never even knew I was there.
The third one caught my scent despite his blindness. He lunged toward me, jaws snapping.
I dodged left and kept running. My wolf form would have been faster, but I needed hands to climb if we reached the ravine.
Behind me, chaos erupted. The wolves were howling, confused, crashing into each other as they tried to recover their sight.
I saw Elena ahead, waving frantically. I pushed harder, my legs burning.
We crashed through a wall of bushes together and-
The ground disappeared.
I skidded to a stop at the very edge of a cliff. Loose stones tumbled over the side, falling what looked like forever before splashing into a ribbon of river far below.
The Ravine.
"This way!" Elena grabbed my hand and pulled me along the cliff edge. "There's a path. Sort of."
Sort of wasn't encouraging.
The "path" was barely a foot wide, carved into the cliff face. Below us, the river churned white around jagged rocks. Above us, the walls of the ravine stretched up to a thin slice of sky.
One wrong step meant death.
"Stay close to the wall," Elena instructed. "Don't look down. Just focus on the next step."
Behind us, I heard the hunters recovering. Angry howls split the air.
"They're coming!" I said.
"Then we'd better move fast." Elena stepped onto the path without hesitation.
I followed, pressing my back against the rough stone wall. The path was slick with moisture. My feet, still wearing Elena's borrowed boots, struggled to find purchase.
Don't look down. Don't look down. Don't-
I looked down.
Immediately regretted it. The drop was dizzying. Fatal. One slip and I'd be broken on those rocks below.
"Eyes forward!" Elena called. "You're doing fine. Just keep moving."
I forced myself to focus on her back. On the next step. On breathing.
We made progress slowly. The path wound along the cliff face, sometimes widening to two feet, sometimes narrowing to less than one.
Behind us, the hunters reached the ravine. I heard their frustrated snarls.
"She went down there?"
"The cliff path? That's suicide!"
"The Alpha King wants her alive. We can't follow on that path-if she falls, we lose her."
"Go around. We'll cut them off on the other side."
Relief flooded through me. Elena's plan had worked. They weren't following.
"Did you hear that?" I called Elena. "They're going around!"
"I heard. But we're not safe yet. This path gets worse before it gets better."
Worse? How could it possibly get-
The path ended.
Just... ended.
Twenty feet ahead, the carved trail stopped at a gap in the cliff face. On the other side, maybe six feet away, the path continued.
Six feet across open air. With a hundred-foot drop below.
"Please tell me there's another way," I said.
Elena stared at the gap. "There's not."
"We can't jump that. If we miss-"
"We won't miss." She turned to face me. "You're a Moon Wolf, Aria. You're stronger and faster than normal wolves. You can make this jump easily."
"You don't know that."
"I do. I've seen you move. You just don't trust yourself yet." She stepped back as far as the narrow path allowed. "Watch."
Before I could protest, she ran forward and leaped.
For one horrible moment, she was airborne. Suspended over nothing but death.
Then she landed on the other side, stumbling slightly but catching herself.
She turned and grinned at me. "See? Easy."
"That was not easy!" My voice came out higher than intended.
"Your turn, Moon Wolf. Don't think about it. Just run and jump."
I stared at the gap. At the rocks below. At certain death if I miscalculated even slightly.
We can do this, my wolf said. Trust me. Trust us.
I took a deep breath.
Took another.
Stepped back as far as I could on the narrow path.
"Don't think!" Elena called. "Just jump!"
I ran forward.
Three steps and I reached the edge.
I jumped.
The world slowed down. I was flying. Falling. Suspended between life and death.
For one perfect moment, I felt absolutely free.
Then my feet hit solid ground, and I was rolling, tumbling, scrambling away from the edge.
"You did it!" Elena pulled me up, laughing. "I knew you could!"
My hands were shaking. My heart felt like it might explode. But I'd done it.
I'd survived.
We continued along the path, more confident now. The worst was behind us.
Or so I thought.
We'd been walking for maybe twenty minutes when Elena suddenly stopped.
"What?" I asked. "What's wrong?"
She pointed ahead. My enhanced vision picked out what had made her freeze.
The path ahead had collapsed. A massive section was just... gone. Leaving a gap of at least fifteen feet.
Too far to jump.
"There has to be another way," I said.
Elena shook her head slowly. "This is the only path through the ravine. If we go back, the hunters will find us. If we try to climb up or down..." She looked at the sheer cliff face. "We'd never make it."
We were trapped.
Behind us, the path we'd come from. In front of us, an impossible gap.
Below us, certain death.
"Now what?" I asked.
Elena was staring at the gap with an expression I didn't like. "I have an idea. But you're going to hate it."
"What is it?"
She turned to me. "You're a Moon Wolf. You have powers beyond normal wolves. That light you created back there-that was just instinct. Imagine what you could do if you really tried."
"What are you saying?"
"I'm saying maybe you can fly."
I stared at her. "That's insane."
"Is it? Moon Wolves were descended from the Moon Goddess herself. Who knows what you're capable of?"
"I can't fly, Elena. That's not-"
A howl echoed from somewhere above us. Then another. And another.
The hunters had found another way down into the ravine.
They were coming.
"We're out of time," Elena said. "Either you find a way across that gap, or we both die here."
I looked at the gap. At the drop. At the impossible distance.
Then I looked at Elena, who'd saved my life. Who'd helped me when she had no reason to.
I couldn't let her die because of me.
"Okay," I said. "Okay. I'll try."
I stepped to the very edge and looked across. Fifteen feet. Might as well be fifteen miles.
I closed my eyes and reached for my power. The silver light that lived inside me.
Please, I begged the Moon Goddess. Please help me. I don't know what I'm doing, but I need to save us both.
The power answered.
Silver light began to glow around my hands. My arms. My entire body.
I opened my eyes and looked at Elena. "Hold on to me."
"What?"
"Just do it!"
She grabbed my arm. The light expanded to cover her, too.
I stepped off the edge.
[ARIA'S POV]
We fell.
For one terrible, endless second, we plummeted toward the rocks below. Elena's scream pierced the air. My stomach lurched into my throat. Wind whipped my hair back.
This was it. This was how I died.
Then the silver light caught us.
It wasn't flying-not exactly. More like falling in slow motion. The light wrapped around us like wings, slowing our descent, guiding us across the gap toward the other side.
Yes! my wolf howled triumphantly. We're doing it!
Elena's scream cut off abruptly. "Aria! You're-we're-"
"Don't let go!" I shouted over the wind.
The light pulsed brighter. I felt power draining from me with each second, like someone had opened a tap and my energy was pouring out. But we were moving. Floating. Crossing the impossible distance.
We were almost there. Just a few more feet.
The light flickered.
"No, no, no!" I gritted my teeth, trying to hold onto the power. But I was exhausted. I'd used too much already with the blinding light, the running, the jump. I had nothing left.
The light died.
We dropped.
I twisted in midair, throwing Elena toward the path with everything I had. She hit the stone hard but safely, rolling away from the edge.
I wasn't so lucky.
My hands caught the lip of the path. My body slammed into the cliff face, knocking the air from my lungs. My fingers scrambled for purchase on the rough stone.
One hand slipped.
I hung by my fingertips, dangling over a hundred-foot drop.
"Aria!" Elena lunged for me, grabbing my wrist with both hands. "I've got you! Hold on!"
But her position was bad. She was on her stomach, half-hanging over the edge herself. If I tried to pull myself up, I'd drag her down with me.
"Let go," I gasped. "You'll fall-"
"Shut up!" She pulled with all her strength. "I'm not letting you die! Pull yourself up!"
I tried. My free hand found a crack in the stone. I pulled, my muscles screaming. Inch by agonizing inch, I climbed.
Elena grabbed my other arm. Together, we hauled me over the edge.
I collapsed onto the path, gasping and shaking. That was too close. Way too close.
"You did it," Elena panted beside me. "You actually flew. Sort of."
"I fell with style," I corrected, my voice hoarse.
She laughed, slightly hysterical. "That too."
A howl echoed from behind us. Closer than before.
"They're in the ravine," Elena said, her laughter dying. "We need to move."
I pushed myself up on trembling arms. Every muscle in my body protested. The power drain had left me weak and dizzy. "I don't know if I can-"
"You can. You have to." She pulled me to my feet. "Come on. The path widens ahead. We're almost through."
Almost. I could do almost.
We stumbled forward. Elena was right-the path did widen, becoming a proper trail instead of a death trap. The cliff walls began to slope outward, the ravine opening up.
Behind us, the howls grew more distant. They'd reached the collapsed section. They couldn't follow. Not without going back and around.
We'd bought ourselves time.
The ravine finally opened into a rocky valley. We scrambled down the last section of path and collapsed in the shade of a massive boulder.
I'd never been so exhausted in my life. The transformation, the training, the chase, the power drain-it all crashed down on me at once.
"Rest," Elena said, though she looked just as wrecked as I felt. "Just for a few minutes. Then we keep moving."
I closed my eyes. Just for a minute. That's all I needed.
Voices jerked me awake.
Male voices. Close. Too close.
Elena's hand clamped over my mouth. Her eyes were wide with warning. She pointed.
Three men stood about fifty feet away, just beyond our boulder. They weren't in wolf form. They wore leather armor and carried weapons-silver knives, crossbows, and nets.
Hunters. Professional ones.
"The Alpha King's offering a territory for whoever brings her in," one said. He was massive, scarred, with cold eyes. "Alive, preferably. But he'll settle for proof of death if necessary."
My blood turned to ice.
"You think she survived the ravine?" Another hunter asked. This one was younger, nervous.
"Maybe. Maybe not." The scarred man knelt, examining the ground. "But we cover this exit anyway. If she made it through, she'll come this way."
"And if she didn't?"
"Then someone else collects the reward." He stood, his expression hard. "But I didn't spend six years tracking rogues to lose out on the biggest bounty in a decade. We wait. She'll come."
They were setting up a camp. Right in our path.
Elena and I locked eyes. We couldn't go back-the hunters from before would be coming around the long way. We couldn't go forward-these three were blocking the exit.
We were trapped.
Elena pointed up. At the cliff walls surrounding the valley. They weren't as sheer as the ravine, but they were steep. Dangerous.
It was our only option.
We waited until the hunters were distracted, setting up their tents. Then we moved, silent as shadows, toward the eastern wall.
The climb was brutal. My arms still trembled from hanging off that cliff edge. Every handhold felt like it might crumble. Every foothold threatened to give way.
But we climbed.
Ten feet. Twenty. Thirty.
We were almost to the top when I heard it.
"There! On the cliff!"
The young hunter had spotted us.
"Shoot them!" the scarred man roared.
An arrow whistled past my head, so close I felt the wind of its passage.
"Climb!" Elena screamed. "Faster!"
Another arrow. This one hit the stone inches from my hand, sending shrapnel into my face.
I climbed faster than I thought possible. My hands were bleeding. My muscles burned. But I didn't stop.
We reached the top just as a third arrow embedded itself in the stone where my foot had been a second before.
We rolled over the edge and ran.
The valley gave way to forest again. Thick, dark, wild. We plunged into it without hesitation.
"They'll follow," Elena panted as we ran. "They know we came this way."
"How far to the Rogue Lands?"
"Half a day. Maybe less if we push hard."
Half a day. We could make that. We had to make that.
We ran for hours. The sun moved across the sky. My body moved on pure adrenaline and desperation.
Every sound made us jump. Every shadow could be a hunter. Every snapping twig could be our death.
But slowly, the forest began to change. The trees grew wider, older. The air felt different. Wilder. Free.
"We're close," Elena whispered. "I can feel it. The Rogue Lands have a different energy. Can you feel it?"
I could. Something in the air made my wolf stir with interest instead of fear.
We pushed through a wall of thorny bushes and-
Stopped.
A line of wolves stood before us. Ten of them. All in human form. All armed.
They didn't look like pack wolves. Their clothes were mismatched, scavenged. Their weapons were crude but effective. And their eyes... their eyes held the hard look of survivors.
Rogues.
A man stepped forward from the line. He was massive-taller than Daemon, broader, with black hair tied back and a scar running from his temple to his jaw. His eyes were amber and sharp.
"Well," he said, his voice deep and commanding. "What do we have here?"
Elena stepped forward, hands raised in peace. "We seek sanctuary. Asylum in the Rogue Lands."
The man's eyes moved from Elena to me. His gaze lingered on my face. My hair. Something flickered in his expression.
"You're the Moon Wolf," he said flatly.
My heart sank. Even here, my reputation preceded me.
"I am," I said, lifting my chin. "And I'm being hunted by the Alpha King's men. They're probably minutes behind us."
"I know." His expression didn't change. "We've been watching the hunters circle our borders for days. Wondering what they wanted so badly."
"And now you know," I said. "Will you give me up to them?"
He studied me for a long moment. Behind him, the other rogues watched silently, waiting for his decision.
"That depends," he finally said. "On whether you're worth the war that sheltering you will bring to our doorstep."
"I don't want war. I just want freedom."
"Freedom isn't free, girl. Especially not for someone like you." He crossed his arms. "The Alpha King wants you badly. Badly enough to threaten every rogue settlement in the territory. Badly enough to promise territories and titles to whoever delivers you."
My chest tightened. "Then I'll leave. I won't bring danger to-"
"I didn't say we'd turn you away."
Hope flared. "You'll help us?"
"I didn't say that either." His amber eyes were unreadable. "I said it depends. The Rogue Lands operate differently from pack territories. We don't take anyone in just because they're running from something. Everyone here earns their place."
"How?" I asked.
"You prove your worth. Show us you're more than just a pretty legend. Show us you can contribute. Survive. Fight." He stepped closer. "And most importantly, show us you're willing to stand with us when the Alpha King inevitably comes looking for you."
Elena moved to my side. "She's worth it. I've seen what she can do."
"Have you now?" His gaze didn't leave my face. "Then let's test that."
He gestured, and two wolves stepped forward from the line. Both large. Both armed. Both were looking at me like I was prey.
"A trial," the man said. "You fight them both. Survive ten minutes without submitting, and we grant you sanctuary."
"She's exhausted," Elena protested. "She's been running for two days, barely eating, barely sleeping-"
"Then she'll be tired. Like we all do. Like we all have." His expression was carved from stone. "Life in the Rogue Lands isn't easy. If she can't handle this, she won't survive here anyway."
I looked at the two wolves. They were fresh. Rested. Armed.
I was exhausted, drained, and injured.
Ten minutes against them might as well be forever.
But what choice did I have?
"Fine," I said. "I'll do it."
Elena grabbed my arm. "Aria, you don't have to-"
"Yes, I do." I met her eyes. "This is the only way."
The man smiled. It wasn't a kind smile. "Good answer. What's your name, Moon Wolf?"
"Aria. Aria Winters."
"Well, Aria Winters." He stepped back. "My name is Theron. I lead this settlement. And I'm about to find out if you're worth all the trouble you're bringing to our doorstep."
He gestured to the two wolves. "Begin whenever you're ready."
The wolves advanced.
I had no weapons. No energy reserves. Nothing but my exhausted body and my untested powers.
We can do this, my wolf said, but even she sounded uncertain.
The first wolf lunged.
I dodged left, barely. His fist whistled past my head.
The second one came from behind. I felt the attack more than saw it, spinning away just in time.
They were fast. Trained. Working together to corner me.
I needed an advantage. Needed something they didn't expect.
The first wolf attacked again. This time I didn't dodge.
I caught his arm and used his momentum to throw him into the second wolf. They crashed together, stumbling.
I'd bought myself three seconds. Maybe.
Silver light began to glow around my hands.
"She's using Moon Wolf powers!" someone in the crowd shouted.
"Is that allowed?" another voice asked.
"Everything's allowed," Theron called out. "As long as she stays on her feet."
The wolves recovered and came at me together this time. Coordinated. One high, one low.
I released the light in a burst, blinding them both.
But I'd used the last of my reserves. My vision swam. My legs buckled.
The wolves recovered faster than I expected. Still partially blind, they attacked on instinct.
I felt a fist connect with my ribs. Pain exploded through my side.
Another hit caught my shoulder, spinning me around.
I fell to my knees.
The crowd murmured. How long had it been? Five minutes? Six?
Not long enough.
Get up, my wolf snarled. GET UP!
The wolves advanced for the finishing blow.
I looked up at them. At Theron, watching emotionlessly. At Elena with tears in her eyes.
I thought about everything I'd survived. The rejection. The transformation. The forest. The ravine.
I'd come too far to fail now.
I pushed myself to my feet.
The wolves attacked.
This time, I let my wolf take over completely.
The world sharpened. Time seemed to slow. I could see every movement before they made it.
I ducked under the first punch. Stepped inside the second wolf's guard. Used my smaller size to my advantage, moving too fast for them to follow.
A knee to the first wolf's stomach. An elbow to the second's face.
They were stronger, but I was faster. Desperate. Fighting for my freedom.
For my life.
We exchanged blows. I took as many as I gave. My lip split. My eye swelled. But I stayed on my feet.
The crowd had gone silent. Even Theron was watching with something like interest now.
How much time had passed? Eight minutes? Nine?
The first wolf caught me with a solid punch to the jaw. Stars exploded across my vision. I stumbled.
The second wolf moved in for the kill.
Elena's voice cut through the haze. "Time!"
The wolves stopped instantly.
I stood there swaying, blood dripping from my mouth, barely conscious.
But standing.
Theron stepped forward. His expression was unreadable. "Ten minutes. You survived."
I wanted to say something defiant. Something strong.
Instead, my legs gave out.
The last thing I saw before darkness claimed me was Theron nodding to his wolves.
"Get her to the healer. She's earned her place."
Then nothing.