The word Purge did not leave the room when the messenger did.
It lingered in the air like smoke after fire—thick, suffocating, impossible to ignore.
I sat rigid at the long stone table in the war chamber, my hands folded tightly in my lap as Ronan and his commanders spoke in low, urgent voices. Maps covered the table, etched with borders and markings I didn't recognize, red sigils denoting threats closing in from every direction.
"The Purge hasn't been called in over a century," one of the generals said grimly. "Last time, entire bloodlines were erased."
"Because they were afraid," another growled. "Afraid of losing control."
My stomach twisted painfully.
Ronan stood at the head of the table, arms braced against the stone, his presence commanding silence even before he spoke. "This isn't about control," he said. "It's about fear of change. And fear makes monsters of cowards."
One of the elders turned to me, his gaze sharp and assessing. "With respect, my King… she is the change they fear."
Every eye in the room shifted to me.
I straightened, lifting my chin even as my heart pounded. I refused to look away.
"I didn't ask for this," I said evenly. "But I won't apologize for existing."
A flicker of approval crossed Ronan's face—quick, almost imperceptible.
"The Purge is an alliance," Ronan continued. "Hunters, rogue packs, and traitor alphas. Their goal is simple: kill the mother before the prophecy can unfold."
The words hit harder than any blade.
Kill the mother.
I pressed a hand subtly to my abdomen, my wolf snarling low in protest. A pulse of warmth answered me—steady, reassuring, and unmistakably alive.
Three beats.
Ronan noticed.
His jaw clenched, and something dangerously protective flashed through his eyes. "They won't reach her," he said. "Not while I draw breath."
That declaration sent a ripple through the room.
"But they'll try," a commander warned. "And they'll use deception before force."
As if summoned by his words, the torches lining the walls flickered violently.
The air shifted.
Every instinct I had screamed danger.
Ronan straightened instantly. "Shield the chamber."
Too late.
The stone floor cracked with a deafening boom as a pulse of dark energy slammed into the outer barrier. The fortress shuddered, dust raining from the ceiling.
"They're testing us," someone shouted.
Ronan turned to me sharply. "Stay here."
"No," I said, rising to my feet. "You said I'd train to survive. This is part of it."
His eyes locked onto mine, intense and searching. Then he nodded once. "Then stay behind me."
We moved quickly through the corridors as alarms rang out, warriors pouring from every direction. The night outside had turned violent—clouds tearing across the sky, moonlight flashing like broken glass.
At the outer wall, chaos had erupted.
Dark figures swarmed the treeline, their scents wrong—corrupted, twisted by magic and hate. Hunters armed with silver-tipped weapons lurked among rogue wolves, moving with cruel precision.
"The barrier won't hold long," a guard yelled.
Ronan stepped forward, power rolling off him in waves. "It will."
He shifted mid-stride.
The transformation was breathtaking and terrifying all at once—bones cracking, fur bursting forth, his Lycan form towering and unstoppable. The ground trembled beneath his feet as he let out a roar that echoed across the valley.
The attackers hesitated.
Only for a moment.
Then they charged.
"Aria!" Ronan's voice boomed through the chaos. "Now!"
I didn't think.
I moved.
The training, the pain, the fear—it all fused into something sharp and focused. I shifted, my wolf bursting free with a force that stunned even me. Silver-gray fur gleamed under the moonlight as I landed beside Ronan, smaller but no less determined.
Power surged through me—not wild, not uncontrolled—but deliberate.
Guided.
I raised my head and howled.
The sound cut through the battlefield like a blade.
For a heartbeat, everything froze.
Then the ground answered.
Energy rippled outward from me, a shockwave of silver light that sent attackers stumbling back, their magic unraveling as if burned away. I felt it tear through me, fierce and consuming—but not painful.
Ronan stared at me in shock.
"You did that," he said, awe threading his voice.
"So did they," I replied, breathless. "They woke it."
The hunters regrouped quickly, fury replacing hesitation. One broke through the defensive line, charging straight toward me with a silver spear raised high.
I barely had time to react.
Ronan was there instantly, intercepting the blow with a snarl that shook the night. He tore the hunter apart with brutal efficiency, blood staining the earth.
"No one touches her," he growled, his body positioned fully in front of me now.
The bond flared violently—hot, protective, absolute.
I felt it lock into place like a shield.
The attackers retreated moments later, vanishing into the forest as suddenly as they had appeared. Silence fell slowly, broken only by labored breaths and distant thunder.
The battle was over.
For now.
Ronan shifted back, blood splattered across his armor as he turned to face me. His gaze swept over me quickly, checking for wounds.
"Are you hurt?" he demanded.
"No," I said. "But I felt them. The children."
His breath hitched.
"They reacted," I continued softly. "They're aware."
The admission changed everything.
Ronan closed the distance between us, his voice dropping low enough that only I could hear. "Then the Purge has already failed."
I frowned. "How can you be sure?"
"Because they don't hunt what they don't fear," he said. "And tonight… they learned exactly what they're facing."
I looked out at the blood-soaked ground, the shattered trees, the broken weapons.
Fear twisted in my chest—but beneath it, something else grew.
Resolve.
"They won't stop," I said.
"No," Ronan agreed. "Which means neither will we."
He held my gaze, golden eyes blazing with something fierce and unyielding. "From this moment forward, Aria… you are under my protection. Not as a guest. Not as a prisoner."
"But as what?" I asked quietly.
His answer was immediate.
"As the future they're trying to erase."
The moon broke free from the clouds, bathing us both in silver light.
And somewhere deep within me, three heartbeats echoed in perfect rhythm—
Strong.
Awake.
Waiting.
