Adelaide POV:
The silver burned.
It was a cold fire, seeping from the chains around my wrists and ankles, straight into my blood. Every breath was a struggle, tasting of rust and the damp stone of the dungeon. My lungs felt like they were collapsing.
My wolf whimpered, a faint echo in the back of my mind. The poison was silencing her, killing us both from the inside out.
A grating screech of metal against stone broke the silence. The heavy iron door of the dungeon swung open.
A sliver of light pierced the darkness, landing on my bare, shackled feet. I forced my head up, my vision swimming. Two figures stood silhouetted against the light.
One wore a flowing dress, its delicate fabric a cruel joke in this filthy place.
My heart clenched. I knew them.
My stepsister, Ashley Carson, and my adoptive mother, Eudora Todd.
Ashley glided into the cell, her face a perfect mask of sweet concern that didn't reach her eyes. She looked down at me, a predator admiring her trapped prey.
"Oh, sister," she cooed, her voice like honey laced with arsenic. "You look so pathetic."
I tried to lunge, a useless, desperate movement. The silver chains bit deeper into my skin, searing my flesh. A choked gasp of pain was all I could manage. My skin sizzled where the metal touched it.
Eudora remained by the door, her arms crossed. Her gaze was distant, as if she were looking at a piece of furniture she was about to discard. There was no love, no pity. Nothing.
Ashley knelt, her expensive silk dress brushing against the grimy floor. She pulled out a lace handkerchief and made a show of dabbing at a smudge of dirt on my cheek, her touch filled with revulsion.
"Don't waste your energy," she whispered, her smile widening. "Collin will be the Alpha soon. And I will be his Luna."
The words hit me harder than any physical blow. Collin. My mate. The man I was supposed to lead this pack with. It all clicked into place. The accusations of treason, the falsified evidence-it was all a lie. A stepping stone for their ambition.
"Why?" The word was a raw scrape from my throat.
Eudora finally spoke, her voice as cold and hard as the dungeon walls. "Because you were never worthy."
She stepped forward, her shadow falling over me. "Did you really think Donovan Fields adopted you out of kindness? You don't deserve the Fields name. You are not one of us."
My mind went blank. All my life, I had strived to be the perfect daughter, the perfect warrior, worthy of the family that took me in.
Eudora's words were relentless, each one a hammer blow to the foundations of my identity. "Ashley is the future of this family. You were always just a placeholder. A tool to be used and discarded."
I remembered all the years of subtle digs, the constant comparisons. "Adelaide, why can't you be more like your sister?" "Adelaide, you're too aggressive for a future Luna." It was never about making me better. It was about breaking me.
Ashley leaned in, her breath warm against my ear as she delivered the final blows. "Your brother, Burke, tried to defend you. Collin had his warrior status stripped. He's locked away in the northern cells."
My heart fractured. Burke. My loyal, protective older brother.
"And your best friend," Ashley continued, twisting the knife. "That little healer, Celena. Accused of using forbidden magic to aid your 'rebellion'. They burned her this morning."
Celena. Her bright laughter, her fierce loyalty. Gone. Turned to ash because of me. Everyone who had ever stood by me, punished for their love.
My vision began to blur at the edges. The silver was winning. My life was draining away, second by second.
Eudora bent down, her face close to mine. Her voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper, meant only for me. "Because your bloodline is tainted. It comes from a worthless, nameless Rogue."
That was it. The final piece of their cruel puzzle. The reason I was never good enough. It was a lie woven into the very fabric of my existence.
A laugh bubbled up from my chest, a broken, hideous sound. Blood trickled from the corner of my mouth. I met their eyes, my green irises no longer filled with pain or despair, but with a hatred so pure it felt like it could burn down the world.
For the first time, I saw a flicker of unease in their faces. They had wanted to break me, but they had created a monster instead.
They turned and left, their footsteps echoing in the sudden silence.
The iron door slammed shut, plunging me back into absolute darkness.
My breathing hitched, then slowed, then stopped.
But the hatred did not die. It lived. It grew. It coiled in the darkness, a promise of vengeance waiting to be born from my ashes.
-
Adelaide POV:
I was floating.
A strange, weightless sensation. The pain was gone. The cold of the dungeon, the burn of the silver-all of it had vanished. I looked down and saw my own body, limp and lifeless on the stone floor, the silver chains still clinging to my pale skin.
I was a ghost, tethered to this place by the sheer force of my rage.
The dungeon door screeched open again.
My former mate, Collin Pate, stepped inside. His face, usually composed and handsome, was twisted with a sick, triumphant excitement. He carried a small flask in his hand.
He saw my body and a slow, satisfied smile spread across his lips. He walked over, nudging my lifeless arm with the toe of his boot.
"Finally," he murmured, taking a swig from his flask. "No more of your defiance. No more of your 'honor'."
He began to talk to my corpse, his voice a low, gloating confession. He detailed how he'd bribed the council elders with promises of power, how he'd paid a rogue to plant false evidence in my quarters. He savored every word, reliving his victory.
"Your most loyal warriors," he sneered, "Declan, Gideon, and Marcus. They refused to bow. So loyal, even to the end. I had them executed as your co-conspirators. Their bodies are rotting in Rogue territory by now."
A silent scream ripped through my spectral form. I surged forward, trying to claw his smug face, but my hands passed right through him. I was nothing. A powerless observer.
Collin coughed, a dry, wheezing sound that always came when he was agitated. It was his asthma, a lifelong weakness he despised. A physical manifestation of the insecurity that festered beneath his polished exterior. He absently twisted the silver ring on his finger-the ring given to candidates for Alpha. He was so close to everything he'd ever wanted.
Suddenly, the air in the dungeon grew heavy.
An immense pressure descended, so powerful it felt like the stone walls themselves were groaning. It was an aura of pure, undiluted dominance.
A short, choked cry came from outside the cell, followed by a heavy thud. Then, silence.
Collin's face went pale. He felt it too. This power was ancient, terrifying. It dwarfed that of any Alpha he had ever known.
A tall figure appeared in the doorway, a black silhouette against the torchlight. He moved with a liquid grace that was utterly at odds with his intimidating presence. Each step he took seemed to shake the very ground, echoing Collin's frantic heartbeat.
My ghostly form recoiled. I could feel the raw power radiating from him, a primal force of nature that commanded respect and fear.
The man stepped into the light.
He had hair as black as a moonless night and eyes the color of molten gold. I recognized him from the pack summits, from the hushed, fearful whispers of our elders.
Kieran Ramos. The Lycan Regent. The Tyrant King of the Lycan Dominion.
Collin stumbled back, his arrogance vanishing in an instant. He bowed low, his body trembling. "Regent Ramos," he stammered. "What... what are you doing here?"
Kieran didn't even glance at him. His golden eyes were fixed on my body on the floor. His expression was unreadable, a mask of cold indifference, yet his gaze was so intense it felt like it could see right through my flesh and into my very soul.
I felt a strange prickling sensation, as if his stare was a physical touch.
He moved slowly, deliberately, and knelt beside me. He wore black leather gloves. He reached out and gently, almost reverently, lifted my chin. His touch was surprisingly light, a stark contrast to his brutal reputation.
Collin watched, his eyes wide with confusion and terror. He had no idea what was happening, and his fear was a small, satisfying thing to witness.
Kieran's gloved thumb brushed against my cold skin. For a fraction of a second, I saw his pupils contract.
He leaned closer, and his lips moved, forming words in a language I didn't understand. It was ancient, guttural, filled with a power that made the air hum.
My soul felt a bizarre, powerful pull, as if his words were a rope cast into the abyss to find me.
Then, he stood. He finally turned his attention to the quivering Collin and spoke his first words to him.
"Get rid of it," Kieran commanded, his voice a low, chilling rumble. "I don't want to see it again."
The words were dismissive, brutal. But as he turned to leave, I saw something flicker in those golden eyes-a complex, hidden emotion that he quickly masked. It wasn't pity. It was something else entirely. Something I couldn't begin to comprehend.
-
Adelaide POV:
The pull on my soul intensified. Darkness swirled at the edges of my spectral vision. I was fading, being drawn into a void from which there would be no return.
Kieran was at the door, his back to me.
With the last ounce of my fading consciousness, I gathered my hatred and flung a single thought at him, a seed of doubt I hoped would fester in the mind of a tyrant.
Their lies. Do you truly believe them?
It wasn't a prophecy. It was a parting shot. A ghost's desperate attempt to poison the well.
I saw his broad shoulders tense for a split second. A barely perceptible reaction, but it was there. He knew I was more than just a corpse on the floor.
Then, the darkness consumed me.
I was falling, tumbling through an endless, silent black.
And then I took a breath.
A ragged, desperate gasp of air flooded my lungs, sending me into a violent coughing fit. The stench of rust and cold stone vanished, replaced by something clean and warm, laced with a faint floral scent.
My eyes flew open.
Sunlight. Dazzling, golden morning light streamed through the familiar lace curtains of the bay window, spilling across my face. My vision blurred, then focused on the ceiling-a plaster dome painted with pale pink roses.
My room. My childhood bedroom in the Fields estate.
I sat up abruptly and looked down at my hands. Small, knuckles still round with youth, skin smooth and unblemished. No silver-burn scars. No purple bruising. My wrists were pale and clean, as if they'd never known iron.
I swung my legs out of bed, bare feet sinking into the soft carpet. A wave of dizziness hit me, and I staggered, gripping the bedpost. The cool brass against my palm felt real. Solid. Undeniable.
The mirror.
I rushed to the full-length mirror against the wall, like a drowning woman grasping for driftwood.
A girl stared back at me. Fourteen. Her cheeks still held the soft roundness of childhood, her forehead smooth, her lips slightly parted in that unguarded way of the young. But her eyes-no, my eyes-were not a child's. They were cold and hard, like stones steeped in winter water. No light lived in them. Only memory.
Death. Silver chains. Burned flesh.
I was alive. I had come back.
Time exploded in my mind. Today. It was today. The eve of the Summer Solstice festival. The night Ashley and Juliana had drugged my soup. The night they sent Vance Tucker to my room.
I closed my eyes, and the memories crashed over me like a breached dam. In my previous life, I'd drunk that soup, felt dizzy, and assumed I was merely tired. Then the door opened. I struggled, I screamed, but no one came. In the morning, they brought the elders-I was kneeling on the rug, my dress torn, Vance snoring beside me. My reputation fell like torn silk. Everything that followed-the humiliations, the whispered mockery, the disgust in Collin's eyes-it all began that night.
I would not let it happen again.
A faint creak from the hallway outside my door. Footsteps, trying to be silent.
They were coming.
A cold calm settled over me. The panic vanished, replaced by the sharpened instincts of a warrior who had died and come back. There would be no tears this time. No helpless victim.
My eyes scanned the room, landing on the heavy, brass lamp on my nightstand. I snatched it, its weight solid and reassuring in my hand. I moved to the side of the door, flattening myself against the wall, and held my breath.
The lock clicked from outside. Silent, practiced. The door eased open a crack, and a thick, greasy scent wafted in-stale ale, unwashed leather, and the sour musk of a man who'd been working up his courage with drink. A wet, smacking sound followed: he was licking his lips, savoring what he thought was coming.
The door swung inward, and Vance Tucker stepped through.
He filled the frame. Shoulders like slabs of butcher's meat, a neck thick as a tree stump, veined and flushed from alcohol. His face was coarse-heavy brow, small eyes set too close together, a mouth that hung slightly open, revealing yellowed teeth. He was grinning. Not the smirk of a man who liked women, but the grin of a man who liked hurting them. I knew that grin. In my past life, I'd seen it from above as he loomed over me, and I'd known there was nothing in those small eyes but appetite and cruelty.
He wore a stained linen shirt, untucked, the top buttons undone to show a mat of coarse dark hair. His hands-enormous, knobby, the nails bitten to the quick-fumbled with his belt buckle as he turned to close the door behind him.
"Hello, princess," he muttered, not even looking at me yet. His voice was a low rumble, thick and wet, like stones grinding under mud. "Heard you've been waiting for me."
I have, I thought, tightening my grip on the lamp. But not for what you think.
He clicked the door shut and turned, his grin widening. The moment he closed the door behind him, I moved.
I swung the lamp with all the strength my young body could muster. It connected with the back of his head with a sickening thud. The sound was deeply satisfying-wet and meaty, like a butcher's cleaver meeting a joint of beef.
He grunted, stumbling forward, completely blindsided by the attack. His hands flew up, but too late.
I didn't hesitate. I brought my knee up sharply, driving it into his soft midsection. The air left him in a wheezing gasp-a high, pathetic sound I drank in like water after a drought. This was for Celena. For Burke. For every scream I'd never been able to voice.
He doubled over. I grabbed his greasy hair, yanked his head back, and slammed the base of the lamp against his temple. Hard. Once. Twice. The second blow landed with a crack that felt like justice.
He collapsed onto the plush carpet like a felled tree, out cold. His body made a heavy, final thump against the floor. I stood over him for a moment, breathing hard, watching the slow rise and fall of his chest.
Still breathing. Lucky you.
I wanted to hit him again. My arm ached to swing just one more time, to make sure he never got up again. But I forced myself to stop. A dead man would raise questions. An unconscious one would just be confused, ashamed, and silent-especially once he realized he'd been humiliated by a fourteen-year-old girl.
I allowed myself one small satisfaction: I wiped my hands on my nightgown, as if touching him had left a stain I needed to remove. Then I dropped the lamp. It clattered softly against the rug.
There was no time to think, no time to savor the small victory. I had to get out.
I ran to the window, threw it open, and climbed out onto the trellis below. My bare feet hit the soft, manicured lawn of the estate. The grass was cool and damp with dew. I paused for just a moment, looking back at the house-the house of lies, the house of people who wanted me destroyed.
Not tonight, I thought, and the words felt like a vow. Not ever again.
I ran.
I ran from the trap. I ran from the house of lies. I ran towards the only sanctuary I knew: the deep, dark woods that bordered our territory. The trees rose before me like a wall of shadows, and I welcomed them. They were honest in their darkness-they didn't pretend to be anything other than what they were.
As I burst through the wrought-iron gates at the edge of the property, I didn't see the figure walking around the corner of the high stone wall.
I slammed into him with the force of a freight train.
We both went down in a tangle of limbs. It was like hitting a solid wall of muscle. My head spun, and for a moment, I was disoriented. Then I felt something shift beneath me-someone shifting beneath me-and instinct took over.
I scrambled back, already bracing for a fight.
I pushed myself up, shaking my head to clear it. Moonlight illuminated the scene, and I looked up into the face of the man I had collided with.
My breath caught in my throat.
It was him. Younger, his face sharper, but the aura of power was already there. And those eyes... those same, piercing, molten gold eyes.
Kieran Ramos.
He was propped up on one elbow, looking at my disheveled state-my nightgown, my bare feet, my wild hair. A frown creased his brow. His gaze swept over me like a blade, cataloging every detail: the scratches on my arms, the grass stains on my knees, the way I was breathing too fast.
I stared back at him, and I felt something strange-a pull in my chest, like a hook caught beneath my ribs. I'd felt it before. In the dungeon. When his soul reached for mine and dragged me back from the edge of oblivion.
He saved me, the thought came unbidden. Without him, I'd be nothing but ash.
I crushed the thought as quickly as it surfaced. Gratitude was a luxury I couldn't afford. He was a tyrant. A monster. Whatever he'd done, it wasn't for my benefit. It was for his own purposes-I just didn't know what they were yet.
"A prostitute from the border town?" he said, his voice a low, cold drawl. "You've got nerve."
I met his golden eyes without flinching. My chin lifted, just slightly-a small defiance, a spark of the wolf I was becoming. I said nothing. I didn't owe him an explanation. I didn't owe anyone an explanation.