Three days had passed since I'd been relegated to the warriors' wing, three days of avoiding Austin's cold stares and Vienna's triumphant smiles. My body still ached from the months spent healing, but the physical pain paled compared to the hollow ache in my chest.
I needed food. The pack kitchen would be busy now, but I couldn't wait any longer. My stomach growled as I pushed open the door.
The conversation inside died immediately. A dozen eyes turned toward me, then quickly away. Except for Vienna's.
She sat at the center table, surrounded by a cluster of Omega females who hung on her every word. Her honey-blonde hair cascaded down her back in perfect waves, not a strand out of place. Nothing like my own tangled mess after days of avoiding reflection.
"Athena!" Vienna's voice dripped with false concern. "You look absolutely dreadful. Still recovering, I suppose?"
I ignored her, heading straight for the refrigerator. My wolf bristled beneath my skin, urging me to challenge, to fight. I tamped her down. Not yet.
"Oh, girls," Vienna continued, her voice carrying deliberately across the kitchen, "I was just discussing names for our future pups. Austin wants something strong, but I think delicate names are so much more beautiful, don't you?"
One of her followers—a young Omega named Tessa—giggled. "What about Lily? It's so feminine."
"Perfect for a little Alpha princess," Vienna agreed, placing a protective hand over her flat stomach. "Though I'm hoping for a boy first. A strong heir for the Silver Claw Pack."
The words sliced through me. Our pup—the one I'd lost—would have been born by now. I gripped the refrigerator handle until my knuckles turned white.
I grabbed a pre-made sandwich and turned to leave, but Vienna's chair scraped loudly as she stood.
"Athena, wait! I made you some herbal tea earlier." She approached with a steaming mug, her eyes wide with manufactured innocence. "You seem so... tense."
Before I could respond, she stumbled forward, the mug tipping. Hot liquid splashed across my arm and chest.
"Oh!" Vienna gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. "I'm so sorry! You bumped me!"
"I didn't touch you," I growled, wiping tea from my shirt.
"It's fine," she sniffled, tears welling in her eyes. "I know you're upset about... everything. But you can't take it out on me."
The kitchen door burst open. Austin strode in, his Alpha aura pulsing with anger. "What's happening here?"
"Alpha," Vienna whimpered, shrinking against him as he wrapped a protective arm around her shoulders. "I was just trying to be nice to Athena, and she... she shoved me."
My jaw dropped. "That's not what happened."
Austin's eyes flashed dangerously. "Enough, Athena. I've seen how you look at her when you think no one's watching."
"Look at her? I can barely stand to—"
"Silence!" His Alpha command hit me like a physical blow, forcing me back a step. "You will not threaten my mate or our future Luna. Is that understood?"
The kitchen fell silent. Even Vienna's fake sobs quieted.
"If I catch you bullying her again," Austin continued, his voice deadly quiet, "I'll strip you of your Gamma rank. We don't need warriors who can't control themselves."
He turned to Vienna, his expression softening instantly. "Let's get you back to our suite, love. You shouldn't be around such... negativity."
Our suite. The words echoed in my mind as they left, Vienna's triumphant glance over her shoulder the final twist of the knife.
---
The patrol route they assigned me later that day was a deliberate insult—a circuit usually reserved for Delta wolves, not a Gamma of my rank. The forest was thick with undergrowth, the paths poorly marked. By the time I returned, dusk had fallen.
Exhausted and filthy, I trudged toward my new quarters. A small crowd had gathered outside my door.
"What's going on?" I demanded.
Marcus, Austin's Beta, shifted uncomfortably. "A delivery for you."
On the floor sat an ornate crystal vase filled with flowers—delicate white blooms interspersed with purple petals.
"From Vienna," Marcus added reluctantly. "A peace offering."
I pushed past him, unlocking my door and kicking it open. The small room was barely large enough for a bed and dresser. I set the vase on the nightstand, my wolf suddenly alert within me.
*Danger,* she growled.
I frowned, studying the arrangement more carefully. The white flowers were innocent enough—peonies or something similar. But woven throughout were stems of purple bell-shaped blossoms I recognized immediately.
Monkshood. Wolfsbane.
My fingers trembled as I pulled one stem free, examining the distinctive petals. Not enough to kill instantly, but enough to weaken a wolf over time. Especially if consumed regularly.
Vienna wasn't just trying to humiliate me. She was trying to ensure I remained too weak to challenge her position—or to leave.
I crushed the wolfsbane between my fingers, watching purple juice stain my skin. The game had changed. This wasn't just about a mate bond anymore.
This was war.
The full moon hung heavy in the night sky, its silver light bathing the forest in an ethereal glow. Tonight was the Pack Run—a sacred tradition where we shed our human forms and gave ourselves fully to our wolves. Normally, I'd feel nothing but exhilaration as my bones shifted and my senses sharpened. Tonight, I felt only dread.
"Remember your place tonight," Austin had warned me earlier, his voice cold. "Vienna runs beside me."
Of course she did. The Future Luna, the delicate flower who'd somehow managed to claw her way into Austin's heart while I bled for his territory.
We gathered at the edge of the clearing, thirty wolves strong. I stood apart from the others, my white fur gleaming under the moonlight. Once, Austin's eyes would have sought me out, proud of the fierce warrior who stood at his side. Now, he couldn't even look at me.
"Tonight, we honor the Moon Goddess!" Austin's voice boomed across the clearing. "And we welcome our Future Luna to her first pack run with us!"
Vienna stepped forward in her human form, wearing a flowing white dress that made her look like some innocent forest nymph. "Thank you all," she said softly. "I'm so honored to be part of this tradition."
My wolf snarled within me. *She's lying. Can't you smell it?*
The run began with Austin's powerful black wolf leading the way, Vienna's smaller brown form keeping pace beside him. I took my position toward the front—a Gamma's rightful place—ignoring the whispers that followed me.
We ran for miles, our paws thundering against the earth in perfect rhythm. For a moment, I lost myself in the joy of it—the wind in my fur, the scent of pine and earth filling my lungs. Then I heard it: a cry of pain.
The pack skidded to a halt. Vienna had stumbled, rolling dramatically across the forest floor.
"She clipped me!" Vienna cried, shifting back to human form and clutching her ankle. "Athena deliberately clipped my heels!"
I froze in my wolf form, shock rippling through me. "I never—"
"Athena!" Austin's roar silenced me. His massive black wolf turned, eyes blazing with fury. "Shift. Now."
The Alpha command hit me like a physical blow. My wolf fought against it, but we both knew the consequences of defying an Alpha. Painfully, I shifted back to human form, my bones cracking and reforming as I stood naked before the entire pack.
The night air bit at my skin as I shivered, exposed and vulnerable. Someone—probably Marcus—tossed me a jacket, but Austin snatched it away.
"On your knees," he ordered, his voice deadly quiet.
The pack formed a circle around us, their eyes wide with shock. No one had ever seen Austin treat me this way—not even when I'd been newly recruited as a runaway with no pack loyalty.
"Alpha," I whispered, "I didn't touch her."
"She's lying!" Vienna sobbed, leaning against Austin's human form. He'd shifted back to comfort her, leaving me alone in my humiliation.
"I said, on your knees." His Alpha command slammed into me again.
My knees hit the dirt hard enough to bruise. The earth cold against my skin, I looked up at Vienna's triumphant face and something inside me died—the last flicker of love I'd held for Austin.
"I'm sorry," I said mechanically, the words tasting like ash in my mouth.
"Louder," Vienna demanded. "So everyone can hear your shame."
"I'm sorry," I repeated, my voice carrying across the clearing. "I'm sorry I ever believed you were worth dying for."
Austin's eyes narrowed at my tone, but he was too focused on comforting Vienna to notice the shift in me—the moment when Athena the loyal Gamma became Athena the avenging Lycan Princess.
---
Back in my room, I locked the door and leaned against it, my body shaking with rage and humiliation. The small space felt suffocating after the vastness of the forest.
"You've taken everything from me," I whispered to the empty room. "My position. My dignity. My future."
I crossed to the small dresser and pulled out the bottom drawer. Behind it was a hidden compartment—one I'd created when I first arrived at the pack, a precaution I'd never needed to use until now.
Inside lay a small, dusty comms device. Ten years old and still powered by the emergency battery I'd installed. With trembling fingers, I activated the encrypted channel.
It took three rings before he answered.
"It has been a decade, Little Star." My father's voice—deep, authoritative, and achingly familiar—filled the room.
Something inside me broke. "Dad," I whispered, my voice cracking. "I need to come home."
Silence stretched between us, filled with ten years of unspoken words.
"Where are you?" he finally asked.
"Silver Claw territory. But I can't just leave—not yet. There's something I need to finish here."
"Then finish it," he said simply. "And know that the Royal Guard stands ready to support you."
I closed my eyes, imagining the rows of silver-eyed warriors who would follow me into battle without question. "Thank you."
"Your brother sends his regards," Dad added. "And Bodhi..."
"Bodhi?" I frowned. "Is he still with the Royal Guard?"
"Commander Bodhi has never left his post," Dad replied carefully. "In fact, he's been... nearby. Keeping watch."
The revelation hit me like a physical blow. Bodhi—my childhood friend, the stoic warrior who'd always been there, even when I couldn't see him—had been watching over me all this time.
"Tell him I said hello," I whispered, a new strength filling my voice. "And tell him to get ready. The Lycan Princess is coming home—and she's bringing hell with her."