Harper POV:
The Lycan King stepped into the moonlight, a shadow detaching itself from the darkness.
He had scars running down his arms like jagged maps of violence, and his eyes were a piercing, electric blue. He smelled of ozone, cracked stone, and ancient pine forests.
"The Ritual of Oblivion," Casey Long said, looking at the crude carvings on the altar. "It will strip you bare. It will hurt more than the silver."
"Pain and I are well acquainted," I said, my voice hollow. I stood naked in the ruins, but I felt no shame. Only purpose.
Casey took off his heavy cloak and wrapped it around me. The warmth was shocking against the night air.
"Why help me?" I asked.
"Because the Moon Goddess screamed when your pup died," he said simply. "I heard Her echo in my own bones. And because I detest those who prey on the weak."
He gestured for me to lie on the stone altar. The stone was ice cold against my back, biting into my skin.
"This requires blood," Casey said. He extended a claw, sharp as a razor, and sliced his own palm. Then he held it over me. "Drink. Lycan blood will sustain you when your mind tries to shatter."
I drank. The blood tasted like copper and liquid fire. It burned down my throat, igniting my dormant wolf like a match thrown into gasoline.
"Focus on the bond," Casey commanded. "Visualize it."
I closed my eyes. I saw the thick, golden rope connecting my chest to the Stark Pack. To Eli. It pulsed with a sickly, rotten light.
Casey placed his hands on my temples. "I will act as the blade. You must be the executioner."
He began to chant in a language that sounded like grinding stones deep beneath the earth.
The pain hit instantly. It wasn't just physical. It was as if someone had reached into my chest and grabbed my soul with a hooked hand.
"PULL!" Casey roared.
I pulled. I visualized grabbing that golden rope and ripping it away.
*Eli smiling at our wedding.*
Rip.
The memory dissolved into gray smoke.
*Eli holding me when my father died.*
Rip.
Gone.
*Leo’s first steps.*
I screamed, my back arching off the stone. "No! Not that one!"
"You must!" Casey’s voice was strained, grating against the wind. Sweat beaded on his forehead. "If you keep even a single strand, the infection remains! Let it go, Harper!"
Tears streamed from my eyes, hot and fast. *I love you, Leo. I’m doing this for you.*
I let go.
*Leo’s laugh.*
Rip.
*Leo’s face.*
Snap.
The golden rope shattered.
The backlash was catastrophic. A shockwave of energy exploded from my body, throwing dust into the air. The stone altar cracked beneath me.
My back arched, my bones grinding and reshaping with sickening crunches.
"The White Wolf," Casey whispered, a rare note of awe in his voice.
I felt my biology boiling, rewriting itself. The dormant wolf inside me wasn't just waking up; she was being reborn. Her fur was turning white as snow. Her eyes, violet.
The pain faded into a dull thrumming.
My mind was a white room. Empty. Pristine. Quiet.
The agonizing grief? Gone.
The crushing betrayal? Gone.
The face of the man who hurt me? I couldn't see it. I couldn't recall the shape of his jaw or the color of his eyes.
I blinked, staring up at the mossy ceiling.
"Who am I?" I whispered.
Casey leaned over me. His face was gentle now, the fierce warrior gone. He brushed a strand of hair from my forehead.
"You are Harper," he said softly. "And you are free."
"Harper," I tested the name. It felt right, like a key turning in a lock. "And who are you?"
"I am Casey," he said. "I am your friend. And I am going to teach you how to be the most dangerous thing on this earth."
"What is that?"
He smiled, revealing sharp canines. "A survivor."
Harper POV:
Waking up was like surfacing from the crushing depths of a midnight ocean. The air was crisp, stinging my lungs in the best way possible. I was lying in a bed—a real bed, with soft linens that smelled of cedar and rain.
I sat up. My body felt... different. Not just lighter, but hummed with a dormant voltage. I looked at my hands. My skin was pale, almost glowing with an iridescent sheen, and my nails looked hard enough to tear through bark.
The door opened. The towering man from the temple walked in, holding a tray of food. Casey.
"Eat," he said, setting the tray down on the nightstand. "Your body burned through a hibernation's worth of calories last night."
I devoured the eggs and toast with a feral intensity. I hadn't realized how hollowed out I was until the first bite hit my tongue.
"Where are we?" I asked, wiping crumbs from my lip.
"The Long Pack," Casey said, sitting in a chair opposite me. "My home. Now, yours."
"I don't remember anything before the temple," I said, searching the corridors of my mind. There were holes. Vast, empty spaces where people and memories should be. I knew I had a past, but it was like looking at a book with the pages torn out.
"That is the price of the ritual," Casey said softly. "But the skills remain. You know how to fight?"
"No," I said instinctively. Then I paused. My fingers curled into fists, the knuckles cracking with lethal precision. A phantom map of pressure points and strike zones flashed behind my eyes. "Actually... I think I know how to kill."
Casey grinned, a sharp, predatory expression. "Good. Because training starts in an hour."
The next few weeks were a blur of sweat, blood, and bruising collisions. Casey didn't treat me like a broken doll or a fragile amnesiac. He treated me like a warrior who needed to remember her own strength.
We sparred in the training ring under the midday sun. He was a Lycan, faster and stronger than any wolf, but I had something else. A humming static under my skin that grew louder with every blow.
"Stop thinking!" Casey shouted as he lunged at me, his speed blurring into a shadow. "Let it go! Use your aura!"
I didn't know what he meant, but my instinct screamed at me to survive. I didn't just block; I pushed *out* with my mind, shoving the static outward like a physical limb.
A wave of white energy erupted from me with the force of a cannon blast. Casey slammed into an invisible wall and flew backward, landing on his back in the dirt ten feet away.
The entire training yard went silent. The other Lycan warriors stared, their jaws slack.
Casey sat up, wiping a trickle of blood from his lip. He wasn't angry. He was laughing.
"A White Wolf," he said, standing up and dusting off his pants. "The legends are true. You have the blood of the Moon Goddess herself."
That night, we sat by the fire, the crackling logs the only sound in the quiet dark. The connection between us was growing. It wasn't the frantic, desperate pull I vaguely remembered feeling in the shadows of my past. This was a slow burn. A steady warmth, anchoring me to the earth.
"Why are you so good to me?" I asked, watching the flames dance.
Casey looked at me, his blue eyes intense and reflecting the firelight. "Because my wolf recognizes yours. Not as a possession. But as an equal."
He reached out his hand. I hesitated, my heart hammering against my ribs, then placed mine in his.
Sparks flew. Not painful shocks, but an electric hum, like warm champagne bubbles moving up my arm and settling deep in my chest.
"Second Chance Mate," he whispered, his voice rough with emotion.
My heart skipped a beat. "Is that... even possible?"
"The Moon Goddess corrects her mistakes," Casey said. He brought my hand to his lips and kissed my knuckles, his stubble grazing my skin. "I will wait for you, Harper. Until your memory heals, or until you decide you don't need it. I am yours."
I felt a tear slide down my cheek. For the first time since I woke up in this strange new life, I felt safe.
"I think," I said softly, intertwining our fingers, "I would like to try."
Six months passed. I rose through the ranks, not because of Casey's favor, but because I could flatten any warrior in the ring. The Pack no longer looked at me with suspicion; they bowed with respect. They called me the White Luna.
One afternoon, a messenger arrived from the Council, breathless and smelling of road dust.
"Alpha Long," the messenger bowed low. "The annual Alpha Summit is next week. All Packs must attend."
Casey looked at me, concern tightening the corners of his eyes. "We don't have to go. It might trigger... things."
I stood tall, my white hair cascading down my back like a silken cape. I felt a cold resolve harden in my chest. I didn't know who I used to be, but I knew I wasn't hiding anymore.
"We go," I said, my voice leaving no room for argument. "Let them see what we are."