A shimmer distorted the air before me, and the scent of starlight and ancient earth filled my lungs. The translucent form of an old man in a star-dusted robe solidified. Theron the Unseen. My mentor. My jailer. My only family.
His voice wasn't spoken; it echoed directly in my mind, ancient and heavy with concern. *"Dravon. The world beyond this barrier is a cesspool of greed and deceit. You must suppress all of it-your power, your aura, your very presence."*
I gave a slow nod, my jaw tight.
Inside my head, my wolf-a beast of shadow and rage, a true Lycan-let out a guttural snarl. It hated the idea of hiding, of cowering.
Theron's ethereal hand extended. Twenty flowers materialized in the air, their petals seemingly withered, yet they pulsed with the faint, bloody light of a captured moon. They looked dead, but I could feel the pure, raw power humming within them.
*"These are Blood Moonflowers,"* Theron's voice explained. *"A bride price for your fated mate. A testament to your sincerity."*
I reached out, my calloused fingers brushing against the impossibly soft petals as I took them. They felt like solidified moonlight.
*"Remember,"* Theron warned, his form wavering slightly. *"Your existence is a secret of the Vale. Until you find the cure for the curse, you are nothing more than a rogue wolf seeking shelter."*
My wolf roared in my mind. *We are a King! Not a coward!*
*For now, we must be what they expect,* I countered, silencing him with a will of iron. *To survive, we endure.*
Theron's image began to fade, his final words a soft whisper carried on the wind. *"The Silver Ridge Pack. Your destiny awaits you there. Do not fail the Goddess's guidance."*
Then he was gone.
I rose to my full height, the Blood Moonflowers held securely in one hand. I took a deep breath, and then I did the one thing my every instinct screamed against. I reached inside myself, grabbing the raging inferno of my power and smothering it, banking the flames until only a pilot light remained. The sun became a candle. The ocean became a stream.
I took a single step forward, passing through the invisible barrier.
The world changed. The magical scent of the Vale's flora was instantly replaced by the mundane smell of damp soil and decaying leaves. The air was thinner, less alive.
The moment my foot touched the soil of the outer world, a wave of silent terror rippled through the forest. For ten miles in every direction, animals of all sizes-deer, bears, rabbits-flattened themselves to the ground, trembling uncontrollably. They didn't see me, but they felt a god had just stepped into their midst.
Hundreds of miles away, the Alpha of the Ironclaw Clan was in the middle of a council meeting. He shot to his feet, his chair clattering to the floor, his terrified gaze fixed in the direction of the Vale. "That power... who is that?"
Even further, in the territory of the Stonefang Clan, Alpha Alaric Stonefang paused in his training, his head snapping up. A deep, wary frown creased his brow as the wave of pressure washed over him and then vanished as quickly as it had come.
I paid them no mind. I closed my eyes, shutting out the world and focusing on the thread the Goddess had woven into my blood. A guide. A scent.
It was there, faint but unmistakable. The smell of morning dew on a newly bloomed white rose. It was so pure, so clean, that for a moment, the serpent of my curse grew quiet, soothed.
My wolf stirred, a low, possessive rumble in my chest.
*Mine.*
I opened my eyes. A flicker of gold ignited in their black depths. I had my direction. My body blurred, becoming little more than a shadow as I shot through the dense forest, leaving only the rustle of leaves in my wake.
At that same moment, on the training grounds of the Silver Ridge Pack, Elara Silvermoon effortlessly threw a warrior twice her size to the ground. The assembled pack members erupted in cheers. She lifted her chin, a smug, superior smile on her perfect face, basking in their adoration.
In a forgotten corner of the grounds, sitting on a low stone step, Seraphina Silvermoon scribbled notes in a worn leather journal. Her gaze was sharp, cataloging the tactical flaws in the warrior's stance. Her lame leg kept her from the fight, but it had given her a perspective no one else possessed.
Neither of them had any idea that their world was about to be broken open.