The air was sharp with frost that night.
The kind that seeped through skin and bones, crawling into the marrow.
Adanna stood in the center of the clearing, every muscle in her body screaming with the urge to run. She couldn't. Not when the entire pack ringed around her, their gazes like knives. Torches hissed in the wind, throwing wild shadows over the ancient stones that marked the ritual ground.
The elders watched from raised seats, their robes heavy, faces hard. No mercy in their eyes.
"You stand accused," Elder Casper's voice carried across the circle, low and booming. "Wolf-less. Weak.
A liability."
The words stung even though she'd heard them whispered a hundred times before. She clenched her fists at her sides, nails biting into skin.
"I'm not weak," she muttered, barely audible.
But Leander heard. She knew he did—because his head tilted ever so slightly, standing tall in the crowd, eyes unreadable.
Elder Sarah, the only woman among the council, leaned forward. "You have one chance, girl. Prove you are not cursed by the Moon. Tonight, under Her gaze, show us your worth."
The pack's murmurs swelled. Some laughed under their breath, others sneered.
Adanna swallowed hard. She had no wolf to call, no primal strength to rely on. All she had was herself—and a stubborn fire that refused to die.
"Begin," Elder Casper ordered.
From the shadows, three wolves padded forward. Massive, fur bristling, teeth gleaming. Not rogues—her own packmates. Chosen to test her. To break her.
Her stomach dropped.
This wasn't training. This was execution in disguise.
One of them snarled, lunging before she could think. Adanna rolled, the wolf's claws raking her shoulder instead of her throat. Pain flared hot, but she forced herself up, backing toward the stones.
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
"She won't last a minute."
"End it quick."
"Better to be rid of her."
Their voices fueled something ugly inside her. Rage. Desperation. She wasn't going to die for their amusement.
The second wolf circled, eyes glowing, growl rumbling low.
"Move, Adanna!" someone shouted from the ring. Imogen. Her friend's voice cracked with fear.
Adanna dodged again, scraping her palms raw on the ground. She grabbed a fistful of dirt, flinging it into the wolf's face as it lunged. It yelped, stumbling, giving her just enough time to kick hard at its chest.
The pack jeered, half impressed, half mocking.
Her shoulder burned, blood soaking through her tunic. Her breaths came fast, shallow. She wasn't going to outlast them—not all three.
The largest wolf stalked forward now. Dark fur, massive frame. He bared his teeth in something close to a grin.
"Show us, girl," Elder Casper called. "Show us your wolf—or die as the cursed thing you are."
The words echoed in her head, rattling her skull. Show us. Show us.
Her chest tightened. She couldn't shift. She couldn't.
The wolf lunged.
Her knees buckled, but she forced herself sideways, the claws grazing her ribs. She hit the ground hard, air knocked from her lungs. For a moment the world blurred—shouts, firelight, the smell of blood.
And then she saw him.
Leander.
He hadn't moved, hadn't flinched once during the trial. But now his eyes locked on hers, steady and sharp, like a lifeline in the chaos.
Get up.
She could almost hear it, though his lips never moved.
Get up.
Her body screamed no. But something in his gaze dragged her to her feet anyway.
The crowd roared, restless. The wolves circled again, preparing for the kill.
Adanna spat blood onto the dirt. Her voice was hoarse but loud enough to carry:
"I'm not cursed."
The pack stilled.
For a heartbeat, even the wolves seemed to hesitate.
And then the biggest one charged again, straight for her throat.
The wolf's jaws snapped inches from her throat. Adanna threw herself sideways, landing hard on her bad shoulder. White-hot pain shot down her arm, but instinct made her grab for the torch nearest the stones.
The wood was slick with pitch, flames snapping wildly. She swung it with all the strength she had left.
The wolf yelped, stumbling back, singed fur smoking. The crowd gasped, voices rising in a storm of disbelief.
"She dares use fire?"
"That's no skill, that's desperation!"
"She's fighting to live—what would you do?" another shouted.
Elder Corvin slammed his staff against the stone. "Enough! Continue!"
The three wolves regrouped, growls rumbling deep, eyes gleaming with bloodlust. They wanted her to slip, to fall, to break.
Adanna staggered to her feet, the torch shaking in her hand. Sweat and blood stung her eyes. She sucked in a ragged breath, chest heaving.
"You won't take me," she whispered to herself, voice raw.
From the crowd, someone laughed cruelly. "She'll drop dead before moonrise."
Another voice cut through, softer but firm. Imogen again. "Hold on, Adanna. Just hold on."
The smallest of the wolves darted first. Adanna twisted, fire arcing close to its face. It backed off with a hiss.
The second lunged low. She didn't think—just shoved the torch down, flames catching on its fur. It howled, rolling in the dirt.
The crowd erupted, half cheering, half cursing.
"She's cheating!"
"No wolf fights like that!"
"She's surviving."
Adanna's chest heaved, strength waning. Her knees wobbled, her arms ached from the weight of the torch. She knew she couldn't last much longer.
The biggest wolf advanced slowly now, deliberate, savoring her weakness. Its growl vibrated in her bones.
"Do it," Elder Casper barked. "Finish this farce."
The wolf sprang.
Adanna raised the torch, but her grip slipped. The fire sputtered as it hit the ground. She stumbled back, unarmed, her vision narrowing.
The wolf's claws slashed down—
—and stopped.
Not because it chose to.
Because another hand caught it.
A man stood between them, tall, broad, pale hair catching the moonlight. His grip held the wolf's paw mid-swipe, unyielding.
Leander.
Gasps tore through the circle.
"What is he doing—"
"He interferes?!"
"Blasphemy!"
The wolf snarled, snapping at him, but Leander shoved it back with one hand, his grey eyes burning.
"That's enough," his voice cut like steel.
Elder Casper's face darkened. "You dare—"
"She proved it," Leander snapped, louder this time, turning to the elders. "She stood her ground. She bled, she fought, she lived. More than half of you could say in her place."
The pack erupted in chaos. Shouts clashed with curses. Some cheered her defiance, others demanded her death.
Adanna stood frozen, chest heaving, staring at Leander's back as he shielded her.
Why?
The elders banged their staffs, struggling to restore order. Finally, Elder Sarah raised her hand. "Enough!"
Silence fell, tense and heavy.
Her eyes, sharp and unreadable, flicked between Adanna and Leander. "The trial was not won cleanly," she said slowly. "But neither was it lost."
Elder Casper sneered. "She's cursed."
"Or chosen," Sarah countered.
Murmurs rippled like fire through dry grass.
Adanna's knees finally buckled. She sank to the dirt, clutching her shoulder. Every inch of her body screamed with pain. But her heart… her heart beat with something else.
Not victory. Not safety.
But a spark.
Leander crouched beside her, his voice low enough for her alone. "You shouldn't have survived that."
Her lips trembled. "Maybe I wasn't meant to."
He studied her, unreadable as ever. Then, softer: "You're stronger than you think."
Her throat tightened. She didn't know why his words mattered, but they did. They mattered too much.
Above them, the Moon hung heavy and full, its light washing over the clearing. The trial was over. The pack divided.
But one thing was certain.
Adanna was no longer invisible.
And Leander… he had just made her a target