The cold finally claimed her.
Her knees buckled without warning, sending her crashing face-first into the snow beside the direwolf's massive paws. The adrenaline that had carried her through the hunter's attack drained away all at once, leaving behind the brutal reality of hypothermia, blood loss, and exhaustion. Her vision blurred as frost began to form on her eyelashes, and she could no longer feel her hands or feet.
The last thing she saw before darkness swallowed her whole was the direwolf's silver eyes, watching her with an intensity that seemed to burn through the growing void.
And then—starlight.
She stood in a vast expanse of night sky, suspended between worlds in a place where physics held no meaning. Stars burned like scattered diamonds against the infinite black, and beneath her feet stretched what might have been solid ground or crystallized moonlight. The aurora borealis danced overhead in ribbons of green and silver, but these were not the natural lights of her mountain home—these pulsed with conscious intelligence.
A figure emerged from the stellar radiance, stepping forward as if walking on the surface of eternity itself. She was tall and ethereal, her form shifting between solid flesh and pure starlight. Hair like spun moonbeams flowed around her shoulders, and her eyes held the depth of cosmic void—ancient beyond measure, terrible in their beauty.
The Moon Goddess. The source of all wolf magic, the divine mother who had breathed life into the first pack and blessed them with the gift of transformation.
"Daughter of winter," the goddess spoke, and her voice was the harmony of ice crystals forming and glaciers shifting. Each word resonated through Reign's very soul. "They burned away your bloodmark, stripped you of pack and name. But they could not touch what truly matters."
Reign found her voice in this impossible place, though it sounded small and mortal compared to the deity before her. "Why me? Why am I here?"
The goddess's gaze pierced through her like silver arrows, seeing past flesh and bone to examine the core of who she was. "Because when offered chains disguised as destiny, you chose freedom. Because you bled but did not break. Because you defied those who would make you small."
The burned scar on Reign's wrist began to throb, not with pain but with a strange, cold fire that seemed to answer the goddess's presence.
"They thought they destroyed your connection to the wolf within," the deity continued, stepping closer until starlight brushed against Reign's skin. "But no mortal flame can sever what I have woven. The bond of frost awaits—forged not in submission, but in blood and vengeance and the wild heart that refuses to be tamed."
Pain seared across Reign's wrist, but this was different from the agony of the bloodmark's burning. This felt like ice crystallizing in her veins, like power awakening from a long slumber. She looked down to see the blackened scar splitting open like a flower blooming in reverse, revealing pristine flesh beneath.
Silver-blue light poured from the wound, not blood but liquid starlight that crystallized into intricate frost patterns across her skin. The marks spread up her arm in delicate spirals, beautiful and alien, pulsing with each beat of her heart. Where the old bloodmark had been a simple crescent, this new mark was complex—interwoven symbols that seemed to shift and flow when she wasn't looking directly at them.
The Moon Goddess reached out with one luminous hand, her fingers trailing frost as they touched the new mark. "This is not the bond they would have forced upon you. This is the bond of the first wolves, the connection to power that predates their petty hierarchies and artificial laws."
"What does it mean?" Reign whispered, staring at the intricate patterns etched in light across her skin.
"It means," the goddess said, her voice carrying the weight of prophecy, "that when the wild calls to you, you must answer in kind. One cannot exist without the other. The white wolf is more than guardian—he is the other half of what you are meant to become."
The starlit realm began to fade around the edges, reality bleeding through like ink through water. But the goddess's final words followed her into the darkness:
"Remember, daughter of defiance—power taken is stronger than power given. Claim what is yours by right of survival."
The world shattered like breaking ice.
Reign gasped awake, her lungs burning as they pulled in air that felt thick and warm after the cosmic cold of her vision. Heat wrapped around her body—shocking after what felt like eons of freezing—and she realized she was no longer lying in the snow.
Stone surrounded her on all sides, rough-hewn walls that gleamed with a faint phosphorescent glow. A fire crackled somewhere nearby, casting dancing shadows across what was clearly a cave. But this was no ordinary shelter—the walls were veined with silver that pulsed gently, as if the mountain itself possessed a heartbeat.
And there, stretched out beside her with the casual confidence of an apex predator, lay the white direwolf.
Its massive head rested on paws the size of dinner plates, but those ancient silver eyes were alert and focused entirely on her. Steam rose gently from its coat, and she realized the warmth she felt wasn't just from the fire—the creature radiated heat like a living furnace.
Reign pushed herself up to sitting, expecting pain and weakness. Instead, she felt... different. Stronger. The hypothermia was gone, her wounds had stopped bleeding, and energy flowed through her veins like liquid silver.
She lifted her wrist with trembling fingers. The new frost-mark gleamed softly in the firelight, its intricate patterns visible even in the dim cave. As she watched, the markings pulsed once, and she felt an answering pulse from somewhere deep in her chest—not quite her heart, but something adjacent to it.
The direwolf's ears pricked forward, and it lifted its massive head. For a moment, their eyes met across the space between them, and Reign felt that strange resonance again—stronger now, like a tuning fork struck in perfect harmony.
The creature rose to its feet with fluid grace and padded closer, moving with surprising delicacy for something its size. When it was close enough to touch, it lowered its head and gently pressed its muzzle against her marked wrist.
The moment their skin made contact, the world exploded into sensation.
Pack. Bond. Wild. Ancient. Waiting.
Images flashed through her mind—not her own memories, but something older. Snow-covered peaks under starlight. The hunt. The kill. The sacred duty of guardianship passed down through generations of direwolves. And underneath it all, a sense of recognition so profound it made her breath catch.
You. Finally. Mine.
The direwolf pulled back, and the overwhelming flood of sensation faded to a manageable trickle. But the connection remained—a thread of silver light binding them together, visible only to her enhanced perception.
Reign stared at the magnificent creature before her, understanding dawning like sunrise over the mountains. This wasn't just rescue or coincidence. This was destiny made manifest, written in frost and starlight by the Moon Goddess herself.
The direwolf settled back on its haunches and tilted its head, watching her with what could only be described as satisfaction. As if it had been waiting a very long time for this moment.
"You saved me," she whispered, her voice hoarse but steady.
The creature's lips pulled back slightly—not in threat, but in what looked impossibly like a smile. And somehow, without words or pack-speech, she understood its response perfectly:
No. We saved each other.