The clearing was sacred ground, a place where the moonlight filtered through the ancient trees to dapple the forest floor in silver. Tonight, it was filled with a silent, seething mass of werewolves. They stood in their human forms, a sea of somber faces representing every pack that bowed to the authority of the White Wolf. The air was thick with the scent of grief, pine, and the sharp, metallic tang of promised violence.
Skye stood at the front, next to her father. She felt small and impossibly human amidst the powerful, muscular bodies that surrounded them. In her hands, she clutched her mother's diary so tightly the leather imprint was seared into her palm. Before them, on a bier woven from willow branches and night-blooming jasmine, lay Garrick Kaida.
She looked peaceful, as if merely sleeping after one of her adventures. But nothing could erase the cold, waxy pallor of death, or the memory of the brutal wound that had been carefully hidden by her burial shroud.
Dane Garrick stepped forward. When he spoke, his voice was not the roar of an Alpha, but the raw, broken rasp of a grieving husband. It carried through the clearing, landing on every heart.
"They called her human," he began, his grey eyes sweeping over the crowd. "They said she was weak. Fragile. An outsider." He paused, his jaw working. "But she was the strongest of us all. She did not need claws or fangs to have courage. She did not need the moon's call to have loyalty. Her heart… her human heart… held more love, more strength, than any beast I have ever known."
Skye's tears fell silently, dripping onto the cover of the diary. Her father spoke of their first meeting, of picnics under the full moon, of her mother learning their traditions with a fearless joy, of the way she had united the pack not through fear, but through kindness.
"And she was taken from us," Dane's voice hardened, the grief sharpening into a blade. "Not in a fair fight. Not in an honorable challenge. She was murdered. Slaughtered by a coward who preys on the peaceful, who forces his will upon others, who seeks to drown our world in blood!"
A low, unified growl rippled through the crowd. Eyes of amber, blue, and yellow began to glow with feral light.
"The Red Demon, Damon Clawson, believes strength is only in conquest," Dane roared, his own Alpha power radiating out, feeding the rage of his people. "He believes our way is weakness. I say he is wrong! I say our strength is in our unity! Our strength is in our love for each other! And we will show him the true meaning of strength when we tear his empire down!"
The clearing erupted. Howls of agreement and vengeance shattered the night's silence. Fists were raised. The pact was made.
Skye watched, her heart pounding with a sickening rhythm. This was it. The point of no return. Her father was leading them all to a slaughter, draped in the noble banner of revenge. She looked down at the diary, at her mother's elegant script describing the myth of the Golden Wolf, the Mega Alpha who would bring balance. A myth of unity, not annihilation.
As the crowd's fervor began to subside, a massive Alpha from the Timber Ridge pack stepped forward. "We stand with you, Dane. We will fight. But their numbers are great. Their forced conversions make them a horde. When do we strike?"
Dane's eyes burned with a fanatical fire. "We attack when they are at their weakest. During the day. On the coming full moon. We march at night and strike at dawn."
"It is a gamble with all our lives," the Timber Ridge Alpha said gravely.
"We either win," Dane declared, his voice echoing with finality, "or we die trying."
The atmosphere in the Red Pack's stronghold was a stark contrast. It wasn't grief that filled the air, but arrogant anticipation. Damon Clawson held court in a cavern deep beneath the earth, the walls scarred from countless training sessions.
Derek stood before him, the bruises from his beating a lurid purple and blue on his skin. But the physical pain was nothing compared to the shattered wreckage inside him. The image of Skye's face, contorted in hatred, was burned behind his eyelids. The sound of the slamming door echoed in his soul.
"The White Wolf gathers his allies," one of the scouts reported, kneeling. "They mourn their human Luna."
Damon laughed, a sound like falling rocks. "Let them mourn. Let them fester in their weakness. Their grief will make them slow. Their 'honor' will make them predictable." He turned his burning gaze to Derek. "You see, boy? This is what sentiment earns you. A grave and a pointless war."
Something in Derek snapped. The careful control he always maintained around his father shattered.
"You killed a human woman," Derek said, his voice dangerously low.
The cavern went silent.
Damon's head tilted. "I killed the White Wolf's mate. A symbol of his pack."
"She. Was. Human." Derek took a step forward, his own fists clenching. "She had no part in this war. She had no claws to defend herself. You butchered an innocent. For what? A warning?"
Damon stood, his immense height casting a terrifying shadow over Derek. "I did it to show him his weakness! To show him that everything he loves, I can destroy! There are no 'innocents' in a war for supremacy, you fool! There is only strength and the absence of it!"
"You call that strength?" Derek shot back, the words he'd held back for years finally pouring out. "Murdering a defenseless woman? It's cowardice! It's the act of a monster!"
The backhanded blow from his father was so fast Derek didn't see it coming. It connected with his jaw with a crack that echoed through the cavern, sending him sprawling to the stone floor. Blood filled his mouth.
Damon loomed over him, his eyes blazing with pure fury. "I see the human world has made you soft. It has filled your head with pity." He leaned down, his voice a venomous whisper. "That human girl… you've developed feelings for her. I can smell it on you. The stink of sentiment."
Derek pushed himself up, wiping blood from his lip. He looked his father dead in the eye, no longer the subordinate son, but a challenger.
"She is Kaida's daughter," Derek stated, watching the revelation dawn on his father's face. "The woman you murdered was her mother."
A flicker of surprise, then cold calculation, crossed Damon's features. "Is that so? How… poetic." A cruel smile spread across his face. "Then you will have a front-row seat when we crush her pack. You will help me capture her father. And when I am done with him, perhaps I will let you have the girl. A spoil of war, to do with as you please. It will be the final lesson in shedding your weakness."
The words were a violation, a desecration of everything he felt for Skye. Rage, white-hot and absolute, consumed him. A growl ripped from Derek's throat, so deep and feral it didn't sound human. His body trembled with the effort to not shift, to not attack his own father.
He saw it then, with utter clarity. His father's path led only to death and darkness. There was no honor here. No future. Only an endless cycle of bloodshed.
"I will never be you," Derek snarled, his voice thick with contempt.
He turned his back on his father, on the pack, on his birthright, and walked out of the cavern.
Damon's laughter followed him. "Run, then, you coward! Where will you go? Back to the humans? They will never accept what you are! You are a Clawson! Your blood is Red! There is no other path for you!"
But Derek kept walking. He didn't know where he was going. He only knew he had to get away. He had to find a new path, even if it led straight into oblivion.
Because the path he was on had already led him to destroy the only good thing that had ever happened to him.