The moon hung low and pale over the pack's stronghold, its light spilling across stone walls and empty streets. Naira moved silently, careful to avoid the watchful guards who patrolled the inner courtyard. Each step reminded her how small and exposed she had become in a place that had once been familiar. Her stomach ached from the life she carried, yet the burden of survival pressed heavier. She was not just protecting herself anymore-she carried a future, fragile but defiant.
The path led her to the Alpha's private hall. The air outside it smelled faintly of smoke and cedar. She paused for a long moment, inhaling, trying to steel herself. Every nerve screamed that she should turn back. Every instinct told her she could not afford weakness. And yet, she had no choice.
The door opened before she could knock. A tall figure stood there. The Alpha, as always, exact and composed, though there was a subtle tension in his shoulders she had never seen before.
"Naira," he said, voice calm but heavy. "Why are you here?"
"I... I need your counsel," she whispered, careful not to sound desperate. "I am under threat. My child, my father, my sister... The Luna has made her intentions clear."
He regarded her with unreadable eyes. Silence stretched between them like a drawn bow. Finally, he spoke.
"And what would you have me do?"
"Not for me," she said. "For them. She will not hesitate. And if I do nothing..." Her words trailed, swallowed by the weight of fear.
The Alpha leaned back against the wall. "You carry a dangerous child," he said slowly. "And yet, you cling to it as if it is your only armor."
"I have no armor," Naira said. "Only the truth I swear."
"You are brave," he said, almost a whisper, almost a confession. "But bravery is not enough here."
Her stomach twisted. "I do not seek your mercy," she said. "I seek only a way to survive. And if survival means I must leave... then I will."
He stared at her for a long moment. "You know leaving is not simple. The pack will notice. The Luna will notice. She will not forgive."
"I will take my chances," Naira said firmly. "I will not harm the child, and I will not harm them. But I will survive. And that is all that matters."
The Alpha's lips pressed into a line. He seemed to weigh her words, her resolve. Then he stepped aside.
"Very well," he said. "You choose your path. But remember... no one walks from the shadow of the Luna unmarked."
Naira bowed slightly, barely nodding. She left the hall before he could speak again. The walls of the stronghold closed in as she descended the corridors, yet her mind burned with resolve.
By the time she reached the old training grounds, the sun had begun to edge above the horizon, pale and weak. Her arms ached from carrying water and wood, but she ignored the exhaustion. She bent low, pressing her hands against the ground, and began her training. Every stretch, every movement, every breath reminded her of her will. Her body was fragile, yes, but her mind was sharpening, every instinct ready to react, every sense attuned to danger.
She ran along the narrow path of the valley below, each step light and controlled, though her heart pounded with the knowledge that the Luna's eyes might be upon her. She imagined the poison, the threat, the shadowed chambers where her father slept, her sister's gentle breathing. Each imagined threat fueled her legs, forced her lungs to expand, demanded her focus.
Her training was not for sport. It was for survival. It was for escape. It was for the child she carried, the child the Luna feared. She leapt over fallen logs, crouched beneath low branches, felt the chill of the river's mist against her skin. In these hours, she was not weak. She was not vulnerable. She was a shadow among shadows, moving toward a destiny that she refused to surrender.
That night, she packed what little she could carry-food for a journey, water, a knife hidden in folds of her cloak. Every possession was chosen with care, nothing unnecessary, everything to preserve the fragile hope that she could leave without bloodshed. She had memorized the guards' routines, watched the paths, calculated the hours when the Luna's attention would be elsewhere.
The first step out of the pack's lands was the hardest. Her legs shook, and her stomach tensed with both fear and anticipation. Every sound seemed amplified: the distant caw of a raven, the crack of a branch underfoot, the faint ripple of water from the river. She pressed her back to the wall, then slipped into the darkness beyond the gates.
The cold night air bit at her skin, but she did not falter. She moved like a whisper, blending into shadow, drawing every ounce of strength she had cultivated over the past days. Every step forward was a declaration: I will not be erased. I will not surrender my child. I will survive.
Behind her, the stronghold slept, unaware that one of its shadows had become a storm.
Ahead of her lay uncertain paths, dangerous forests, other packs she did not know. Yet each unknown step was freedom, each breath was defiance. She did not look back. She could not. The Luna's threat was still alive, her father's life still hung by a thread, her sister's fate uncertain. And still, Naira moved forward, carrying the weight of blood, truth, and prophecy within her.
Somewhere along the darkened forest trail, she paused to rest, listening to the night. The wind whispered between the trees. The stars burned cold and indifferent above. But inside her, a fire had ignited. A fire the Luna could not touch, a fire that would not be extinguished by threats or shadows.
By dawn, she had reached the edge of the first border. The pack's land fell behind her, silent and indifferent. Ahead lay uncertainty-but also the first taste of freedom. She pressed her hands to her stomach, whispered a promise to the child, and stepped into the unknown.
They will not erase me, she thought. They will not erase us.
And somewhere in the distance, a shadow moved, watching but it was not the Luna. Not yet.
Naira did not scream when the pain started.
She was already tired of screaming in this world.
The first pain came like a sharp fire inside her stomach. She bent forward and held her belly with both hands. The night air was cold, but sweat covered her face. Her feet were dirty. Her dress was torn. She had been walking for hours.
The woods were dark. The trees stood like silent guards. Above her, the moon shone like a pale eye watching her suffer.
"So this is where you want me to give birth," she whispered.
Her legs shook. Another pain came, stronger than the first. She almost fell, but she held onto a tree trunk.
"I can't go back," she said to herself. "I can't let them take you."
Her father's words echoed in her head.
Hide it. Kill it in silence.
Her sister's crying voice followed.
They will kill you if they find out.
The Luna's threat was worse.
Remove that child or your family dies.
Naira pressed her hand against her stomach. The baby kicked inside her, as if saying, I am here.
"No," she whispered. "You will live."
She looked up at the moon.
"Moon Goddess," she said with a weak voice, "if you can hear me... please help me."
The wind moved through the trees.
Her legs gave way, and she sank to her knees. The ground was wet with leaves and dirt. The pain came again, sharp and heavy.
"Not yet," she cried softly. "Not yet, please..."
But her body did not listen.
She pulled out the small cloth she had tied around her waist. It was the only thing she brought. No food. No water. Only this cloth and the child in her belly.
"I will protect you," she whispered to the unborn baby. "They call you cursed. They call you stone. But it was me. It was always me."
Tears fell down her face.
"It was my shame. Not yours."
Another pain hit her, stronger than before. She cried out this time. Her hands clawed at the ground.
The moonlight touched her face.
She closed her eyes.
"Moon Goddess," she whispered again, "you give life... don't let this one die."
Far away, in the pack land, torches moved. Her father and sisters searched the roads. They did not know she had gone into the forbidden woods.
She had left a small note under her sleeping mat.
Do not follow me. If you love me, let me go.
The pain grew heavier.
Her breath came out in broken gasps.
She pushed herself up and leaned against a fallen tree. Her dress was soaked with sweat. Her hair stuck to her face.
"Please," she whispered. "Just let me see the child once."
The wind stopped.
The forest became quiet.
Then a strange light touched the leaves. Not sunlight. Not fire.
Moonlight.
The moon above seemed closer than before.
Naira felt warmth on her skin.
Her tears fell freely now.
"Is this the prophecy?" she asked the night. "Is this where I die?"
Her body bent forward as the final pain came.
She screamed.
Not loud.
Not wild.
Just broken.
Her hands shook as she pushed. Her vision blurred. The pain was fire and stone inside her.
"I can do this," she whispered. "For you... I can do this..."
The sound that followed was small.
A cry.
Thin.
Weak.
But alive.
Her body fell back against the tree. Her chest rose and fell fast.
In her arms lay the child.
A girl.
Small and warm.
Her skin glowed softly under the moonlight.
Naira stared at her.
"You are... beautiful," she whispered.
The child opened her eyes.
Silver eyes.
Like the moon.
Naira gasped.
"No..." she whispered. "So it's true..."
The prophecy.
A child born of shame will shake the thrones of wolves.
Her hands trembled as she held the baby closer.
"I'm sorry," she whispered. "I'm sorry they hate you before you even breathe."
The baby made a soft sound and closed her eyes again.
Naira felt something wrong inside her.
Cold.
Heavy.
Her strength faded fast.
She looked up at the moon again.
"Moon Goddess... take care of her."
Her voice shook.
"Give her a pack that won't beat her. Give her hands that won't throw her away."
Her vision darkened at the edges.
"Let her live... even if I don't."
Footsteps sounded far away.
Or maybe it was only her mind.
She pulled the cloth around the baby and laid her gently on the ground, between two tree roots where the wind could not touch her.
She kissed the child's forehead.
"My moon," she whispered. "My sin. My gift."
Her body slid down the tree.
Her eyes closed.
The forest breathed.
The moon shone.
And somewhere, the Moon Goddess watched.
The child cried once.
Then silence followed.