The Journey

Dawn came too soon.

I barely slept. Not that I expected to—not when I was surrounded by wolves who would rather see me dead, not when every shadow felt like it carried the rogue leader's promise.

The hunt has only just begun.

The words gnawed at me as I sat near the dying embers of the fire, watching the wolves prepare for the journey ahead. Weapons were checked, horses saddled, supplies loaded onto packs. Despite the attack last night, they moved with an ease that spoke of experience. This was their world—violence and bloodshed didn't rattle them.

I, on the other hand, had to pretend my hands weren't still itching for a weapon I could actually trust.

"You look nervous, little hunter."

I turned my head slightly to find Cian crouching beside me, tying a leather strap around his wrist. His golden eyes were bright, too alert for someone who had spent half the night fighting.

"I don't get nervous."

His lips twitched like he found that amusing. "Right. That's why you've been sitting here gripping that dagger like it's the only thing keeping you alive."

I hadn't realized how tightly I was holding it. I forced my fingers to relax, slipping the blade into the sheath I'd stolen from one of their dead.

"Are we leaving or what?" I asked, standing.

Cian's smirk deepened, but he didn't push. "Mount up," he called to the others. "We ride for the Alpha's territory."

That sent a ripple through the group. Conversations hushed, expressions sharpened. The playful energy that had lingered despite the battle faded into something heavier.

They weren't just taking me back to their Alpha.

They were taking me back to *him*.

To Zain.

The journey started in silence.

The morning air was crisp, the scent of pine thick as we rode through the dense woods. The wolves didn't speak to me, though I felt their stares every time I shifted in the saddle. Wolf ran beside my horse, his large form weaving effortlessly between the trees. He was the only comfort I had.

Hours passed. The sun climbed higher, and the unease in my gut grew with it.

I knew about the Demon Alpha's lands. Every hunter did. It was a vast, untouchable fortress, nestled between mountains and rivers, nearly impossible to breach. He ruled it with an iron grip, feared by even his own kind.

And I was being delivered to his doorstep like a gift.

Or a challenge.

A sharp whistle cut through the air, snapping me from my thoughts.

Cian reined his horse in, scanning the horizon. "We're close."

My fingers curled around the reins. My throat felt tight.

No turning back now.

Selene pulled up beside me, grinning. "Excited?"

I exhaled slowly. "Oh, thrilled."

She chuckled. "Don't worry, little hunter. If he doesn't kill you right away, I'm sure he'll find plenty of ways to make your stay… entertaining."

I didn't answer.

Because I had a feeling she was right.

After riding over an hour or more, Wolf whimpered beside me, his body pressing closer to my leg, and I felt it—the shift in the air.

Dark. Heavy. Suffocating.

It wasn't just my nerves.

The atmosphere itself had changed, turning thick with something almost tangible. A weight pressing down on my chest.

I wasn't the only one who felt it.

The wolves straightened in their saddles, their playful ease vanishing. Even Selene, who had spent the last hour taunting me, fell silent, her smirk flickering for the first time.

The horses sensed it, too. My own mount hesitated, nostrils flaring, muscles tensing beneath me.

Something was ahead.

Something powerful.

Cian pulled his horse to a stop at the crest of a hill, and as the others followed suit, I saw it.

The Demon Alpha's territory.

Nestled between towering mountains, the land stretched endlessly before us, its beauty laced with undeniable danger. The massive stone fortress loomed in the distance, dark and unyielding, its banners rippling in the wind like silent warnings.

A kingdom of wolves.

A kingdom ruled by him.

A shiver trailed down my spine, but I forced my face to remain unreadable.

Don't show fear. Don't show weakness.

But as a deep, resonant howl echoed from the fortress—low, commanding, undeniably him—I knew one thing for certain.

I wasn't ready for this.

The land ahead was covered in tall, dark walls, looming like silent sentinels against the gray sky. Beyond them, the trees stood twisted and bare, their gnarled branches reaching out like skeletal fingers—a haunting resemblance to the eerie illustrations in a book I had once read as a child.

Back then, the stories had been nothing more than nightmares confined to the pages of an old, worn novel.

Now, I was riding straight into one.

The air itself felt heavier, thick with the scent of earth, pine, and something wilder beneath it. A land untouched by humanity. A land ruled by beasts.

Cian's horse shifted beside mine, his golden eyes flicking toward me with unreadable intent. "Getting cold feet, little hunter?"

I clenched my jaw, forcing my grip on the reins to steady. "Hardly."

He chuckled, but there was something dark in the sound. "Good. Because turning back isn't an option."

I didn't need him to tell me that.

Because as we passed beneath the shadow of the walls, as the fortress loomed ever closer, I already knew the truth.

I had stepped into the wolves' den.

And there was no way out.

The gates groaned open, the sound heavy and unwelcoming. Beyond them, the fortress stretched wide and vast, a kingdom built of stone and shadow. The air smelled of damp earth, pine, and something richer—something primal.

The moment we crossed inside, the eyes of the pack were on me.

Dozens of wolves—some in human form, some still in their monstrous shapes—watched in silence as we rode through. Their stares weren't just curious. They were hungry.

Cian dismounted first, his movements fluid and unbothered. He tossed the reins to a waiting wolf, barely sparing them a glance before turning to me. "Get down."

I hesitated, keeping my back straight, my expression cold. I wouldn't let them see the way my pulse pounded beneath my skin.

Cian must have sensed it anyway, because his smirk deepened. "Need help, little hunter?"

I ignored him, swinging my leg over the saddle and landing lightly on my feet. Wolf stayed close, his body brushing against mine, his presence a silent promise of protection—or, at the very least, of company in my inevitable demise.

I expected the wolves to sneer, to mock, to close in on me with bared teeth and taunting grins.

But they didn't.

They only watched.

Still. Waiting.

Because they knew something I didn't.

The atmosphere was charged with a tension that hadn't been there before, a thick, pressing weight in the air. A storm gathering in the distance.

Then—

A howl split the silence.

Low. Deep.

Commanding.

And suddenly, every wolf in the courtyard dropped to one knee.

My breath caught.

Not out of fear.

But because I knew, without seeing him, who was standing behind me.

The one I had been training to kill.

The one I had sworn to destroy.

Alpha Zain.