Chapter three

1136 Words
Five years changed everything. The pack yard rang with the sharp crack of bone meeting bone, the sound echoing through the morning air like a challenge. Wolves stood in a wide circle, boots planted in dirt worn smooth by years of combat drills. No one spoke. No one dared. At the center of the ring stood Diana Nightshade. She rolled her shoulders once, slow and loose, dark hair pulled back in a tight braid. Sweat traced the lines of muscle earned through years of discipline and pain. Across from her lay her opponent—one of Crimson Fang’s senior warriors—flat on his back, chest heaving, staring up at the sky in stunned disbelief. “I yield,” he said finally, voice rough but respectful. Diana offered him a hand. When she pulled him to his feet, the circle erupted—not with cheers, but with the deep, thunderous sound of fists striking chests. Respect. Pure and unquestioned. Five years ago, they had turned away from her. Now, they bowed their heads when she passed. She did not smile. She did not gloat. She had not earned her place through spectacle, but through inevitability. No one trained harder than Diana. No one endured more. She fought as if every strike still carried the memory of rejection, as if weakness were a debt she could never afford to owe again. And Artemis watched—silent, vast, pleased. You have surpassed them, her wolf said quietly. Not yet, Diana answered, gaze lifting briefly toward the pack hall looming above the yard. Not the ones that matter. Inside the hall, Alpha Asher Stormrider—now often called Asher by those close to him—stood beside his chosen luna. Hazel Feywin was beautiful in a sharp, deliberate way. Her dark red gown clung to her form like a second skin, embroidered with symbols of authority and power. She wore her position the way others wore armor—tight, rigid, and always on display. Her eyes followed Diana with open irritation. “She should know her place,” Hazel murmured, fingers tightening around the armrest of the alpha’s chair. Asher did not answer immediately. His gaze lingered on Diana as she exited the training ring, warriors instinctively stepping aside to clear her path. She did not acknowledge him. She never did. “That is her place,” he said at last, voice low. “She earned it.” Hazel’s lips thinned. “She is a warrior. Not a luna. And yet they listen to her more than they do me.” Asher turned toward her then, something warning flickering in his eyes. “Respect is not commanded, Hazel. It’s given.” Hazel smiled—but it was cold. Calculating. “I am the luna,” she said softly. “And she will bend.” She tried that afternoon. Diana was summoned to the inner council chamber under the pretense of new patrol assignments. She entered alone, posture straight, expression unreadable. Hazel stood at the far end of the room, hands folded serenely before her. “Diana Nightshade,” Hazel said, her voice honeyed. “You’ve become… impressive.” Diana inclined her head. “Luna.” The title tasted neutral on her tongue—neither submissive nor disrespectful. Hazel circled slowly, heels clicking against stone. “The warriors look to you. The younger wolves imitate you. Influence like that can become dangerous if left unchecked.” Diana met her gaze calmly. “I serve the pack.” “Yes,” Hazel said, stopping directly in front of her. “But you do not serve me.” The air shifted. Hazel’s eyes glowed faintly as she reached for her luna power—the subtle pull that bent wills, softened resistance, compelled obedience. It rolled outward, invisible but heavy, pressing down like an unseen hand. Careful, Artemis warned. Diana did nothing. The power hit her like a wave breaking against a cliff. And shattered. Hazel’s breath hitched. She pushed harder, drawing deeper, veins of silver light flaring beneath her skin as she attempted to wrap Diana’s mind in command. Kneel, Hazel willed. Diana stood unmoved. Not even a tremor passed through her. The chamber fell silent. Hazel staggered back a step, shock flashing across her face before fury took its place. “What are you?” she hissed. Diana leaned forward just enough for Hazel to feel it—the pressure, the presence, the vast and ancient thing coiled beneath Diana’s skin. “I am loyal to the pack,” Diana said evenly. “But I do not bend to power taken by force.” Artemis stirred then—not fully, never fully—but enough. The moonlight filtering through the high windows brightened, silver threading through the air like living veins. Hazel gasped, clutching her chest as her power recoiled violently, as if burned. Asher stormed into the chamber seconds later. “What happened?” he demanded. Hazel turned on him, eyes blazing. “She resisted me. Completely.” Asher looked at Diana. For a moment, the years peeled away—the rejection, the bond snapping, the pain in her eyes that night. Something like regret flickered across his face. Diana met his gaze without flinching. “I did nothing,” she said. “She tried to compel me. It failed, Alpha. Maybe because I do not have a wolf” Diana said the only thing that will stop any question from Alpha Asher. Asher exhaled slowly. “You are dismissed, Diana.” She bowed her head once and left. Behind her, Hazel’s voice cracked with fury. “She is a threat.” Asher’s reply was cold. “No. She is a pillar. And you will not touch her again.” Word spread fast. By nightfall, the pack knew: the luna’s power did not work on Diana Nightshade. Some whispered fear. Others awe. The elders said nothing—but watched her with new eyes. That night, Diana stood alone at the edge of the forest, moonlight bathing her skin in silver. Artemis emerged from hiding in the back of her mind, immense and luminous. “She fears you,” Artemis said. “She should,” Diana replied quietly. Do you regret it? Artemis asked. Not leaving? Diana considered the pack—the warriors who trusted her, the young wolves who trained harder because she had shown them what was possible. “No,” she said. “This is not where I belong forever. But it is where I am needed… for now.” Artemis’s eyes gleamed. “Our true mate draws closer.” Diana closed her eyes, breathing in the cool night air. Let Hazel grasp at power she did not understand. Let Asher live with the choices he made. The moon had not forgotten Diana Nightshade. And neither had fate.
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