Chapter Nine: The Death Den Opens
The journey to Blackmoor takes most of the day.
At first, the land looks familiar enough, rolling stretches of forest, narrow roads worn down by generations of travel, the occasional watchtower rising from the trees like a silent sentinel.
But the farther we go, the more the air changes. It grows sharper, heavier sohow, carrying a scent that isn’t just pine and earth, but iron and smoke buried deep beneath it.
The carriage rarely stops. When it does, it’s brief. Guards rotate. Horses are changed. No one speaks to unless necessary.
I watch the world through the small window, morizing what I can, because instinct tells this isn’t a place you leave easily once you arrive.
By late afternoon, the land begins to rise. Jagged black stone begins breaking through the soil like bone, the forest thinning into harsh dark-leafed growth that looks like it learned to survive by cutting first.
Elara rides beside the carriage for part of the journey, her presence a quiet constant. When she does speak, it’s practical.
"We’re nearing Blackmoor Hold," she tells at one point, her gaze fixed ahead. "The Alpha’s territory."
Blackmoor.
The na settles uncomfortably in my chest.
"It’s... large," I say, as the first glimpse of it appears between the cliffs.
The fortress isn’t built to impress. It’s built to endure.
Black stone walls rise straight out of the mountain itself, fused seamlessly with the rock as if the land had grown armor.
Towers sit at uneven heights, not decorative, but strategic. Every angle feels calculated. Every shadow looks like it belongs there.
This place doesn’t feel welcoming at all; it feels like sothing that watches instead.
The gates open without ceremony. No horns. No announcent. Just iron grinding against stone as we pass through, swallowed whole.
Inside, the territory unfolds in layers.
Training grounds carved into the mountainside. Barracks built low and solid. Wolves everywhere, soldiers, guards, pack mbers, moving with quiet efficiency.
Conversations die as we pass. Eyes lift. Assess. Linger for half a second too long before snapping away.
They don’t look surprised to see arrive, only surprised that I’m still alive.
One woman standing near the training yard watches the carriage with sothing darker than curiosity.
Pity.
I feel it in the way their gazes slide over , not curious, not reverent.
Elara notices my stillness. "Keep your head level," she murmurs without looking at . "They read weakness quickly here."
I straighten instinctively.
The carriage stops deep within the inner keep. Kael is already there when I step down, armor dark against the stone, expression unreadable. He doesn’t touch . Doesn’t offer a hand.
He simply turns and walks, and I follow.
They guide through corridors that twist and narrow, then open suddenly into wide halls with high ceilings and no warmth to them. Everything here feels permanent. Nothing feels personal.
When we stop, it’s before a set of massive doors etched with the Blackmoor crest.
"These are your chambers," Elara says. "The Alpha’s as well."
Kael pushes the doors open and steps aside, allowing to enter first.
The room is expansive, furnished richly but sparingly. A massive bed dominates the space. A hearth sits cold against the far wall. There are windows, but they’re narrow, designed for light, not escape.
Kael closes the doors behind us.
"You’ll stay here tonight," he says, voice even. "Rest. Tomorrow will be... full."
That’s it. No reassurance. No warning.
I nod. "Understood."
He studies for a mont longer, sothing unreadable passing through his eyes, then turns away.
Elara reappears not long after with maids I don’t recognize. The routine resus with unnerving familiarity. The bath is drawn. The steam rises. I don’t fight it. I don’t freeze this ti either.
Elara helps more than she watches. Adjusts the water temperature. Hands a cloth when my fingers tremble just enough to give away.
When I’m clean, she dresses herself.
The nightgown is soft, black silk trimd with silver. The Blackmoor crest is stitched over my heart, subtle but unmistakable.
Luna.
The word Luna feels heavier than it should when I see it reflected back at .
"You should rest," Elara says quietly. "The Alpha will return later."
I hesitate. "Elara... why do they look at like that?"
She pauses only a fraction of a second. "Because this place rembers."
That’s all she says before leaving.
Kael returns after nightfall.
I feel him before I hear him. The bond tightens, pulling insistently, a low heat spreading through my chest before my mind can intervene.
He stops just inside the room, gaze locking onto .
"You should be sleeping," he says.
"I wasn’t tired," I reply.
Silence stretches between us, thick and charged.
The bond tightens suddenly, sharp and insistent.
His jaw hardens like he feels it too. He crosses the room in three strides.
His mouth is on mine before I can speak, the kiss deep and urgent, not gentle, not exploratory. His hands slide up my sides, firm, possessive, anchoring to him as if the world outside this room doesn’t exist.
I don’t resist.
I shouldn’t want this. I know that. But the bond doesn’t care about reason. It cares about closeness. Heat. Relief.
His hand cups my breast, thumb brushing slowly, deliberately, and my breath stutters into his mouth before I can stop it.
He groans softly, pressing his forehead to mine, like he’s fighting himself.
"Enough," he mutters, though his body doesn’t agree.
I try to pull away, but he pulls back against him.
"You had a duty to fulfill " he said into my mouth, more like finding excuses for himself not to stop
A sharp, final knock sounds at the door.
"The elders are waiting, Alpha."
Kael exhales slowly and steps back, jaw tight.
"I have business to attend to," he says. "Stay here."
Then he’s gone.
The room feels colder without him.
I lie awake for a long ti, staring at the ceiling, listening to the fortress breathe.
A knock sounds again, softer this ti.
"Yes?" I call.
A maid enters, carrying a tray. Not Elara.
"The Alpha sent this," she says, setting it down. "It will help you relax."
My gaze drops to the cup. Steam curls upward.
I should probably ask why Kael didn’t bring it himself, or why he sent this maid instead of Elara.
But exhaustion dulls my instincts. The bond is still humming from his touch, distracting .
"Where is Elara?" I ask.
The maid’s eyes flick away. "Elara was... called away."
Unease prickles at the base of my spine, but exhaustion weighs heavier. I lift the cup and sip.
The taste is wrong.
Bitter. Sharp.
Heat flares in my throat, then my chest. I cough once, hard—
The cup slips from my fingers. Shatters.
Pain explodes through , white-hot, tearing from the inside out.
I gasp, falling to my knees. Sothing hot and copper-tasting floods my mouth.
I cough again, and blood sprays across the stone, dark and wet.
More cos. Too much.
The world tilts violently, my vision blurring as another cough tears out of , more blood following.
The realization hits too late: poison.
My knees hit the floor as another violent cough tears through , more blood spilling across the stone while the room tilts sharply and darkness begins to flood my vision.
So this is how the death den welcos its Luna.
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