Elara did not expect the man to introduce himself.
Most dangerous n didn’t begin with honesty. They tested the space first, asured reactions, pushed until they found an opening. Kael had relied on force. Rowan had relied on restraint. Neither of them had revealed themselves so directly at the beginning.
This man did.
He stepped closer with calm, deliberate control, as if the outco of this encounter was already sothing he had considered and accepted. His gaze t hers without hesitation, steady and composed in a way that felt almost intentional.
"My na is Adrian Vale," he said.
His voice carried no urgency, no need to impress. He spoke as if stating a simple fact, sothing that existed independently of whether she cared to acknowledge it.
That, more than anything, unsettled her.
Elara didn’t respond imdiately. Instead, she watched him—really watched him. The way he stood, the way his eyes held hers without drifting, the way his breathing remained even despite the tension that had quietly settled between them.
He seed honest.
But there was sothing beneath it.
Sothing that didn’t sit right.
After everything she had been through, especially with n, her instincts had sharpened in ways she hadn’t fully noticed until now. Kael’s possessiveness, the rejection that had followed it, Rowan’s quiet distance and the sense that he still held back truths—none of it had left her untouched.
She didn’t just listen anymore.
She looked for what was hidden underneath.
"You thought telling your na would matter?" she asked finally, her voice calm but edged with distance. "Or did you expect it to an sothing to ?"
A faint smile touched Adrian’s lips.
"I don’t expect it to matter," he replied. "But I do expect you to rember it."
There was weight in the way he said it, as though the na itself would beco important later, whether she wanted it to or not.
Elara crossed her arms, not defensively, but to ground herself.
"Then you should give a reason to. Who are you and why you are chasing in the forest?"
Adrian inclined his head slightly, as if she had just confird sothing he had already assud.
"For that," he said, "you need to understand what you’re part of. Because what you think you know... isn’t the whole picture."
Her gaze sharpened, but she didn’t interrupt him.
"Then explain it."
He paused for a mont, choosing his words carefully.
"The wolves, the packs, the Alpha system—those are only the visible layer," he said. "There is a larger structure that exists beyond them. Sothing designed to maintain balance between what you are... and everything else."
Elara frowned slightly.
"Everything else?"
"The World Governnt."
The words landed, but they didn’t settle.
"I’ve never heard of that," she said.
Adrian exhaled quietly, not surprised, but faintly disappointed.
"Of course you haven’t," he said. "They don’t teach it anymore."
There was sothing in his tone this ti, sothing closer to frustration.
"They don’t teach history the way they used to. Too much has been erased, simplified, or hidden. People live their lives thinking the world is smaller than it actually is."
Elara let out a short laugh.
"Or maybe people just don’t care," she replied. Then she tilted her head, studying him more closely. "And when you say ’they don’t teach anymore’ like that, you sound like you’re ancient."
His lips curved, and this ti the amusent reached his eyes.
"Do I?"
"You do," she said. "We’re probably the sa age. Or you’re what—five, maybe ten years older than at most?"
Adrian laughed softly, the sound brief but genuine.
"I’ll take that as a complint," he said.
Elara didn’t return the smile.
She watched him.
Carefully.
"But appearances," he continued, his tone settling again, "can be misleading."
Sothing in her chest tightened slightly.
"What does that an?"
He held her gaze.
"It ans I was human once."
The words were delivered without hesitation.
"And now?" Elara asked.
"Now I am sothing else."
Her fingers curled slightly at her sides.
"That’s vague."
"It’s precise," he replied calmly. "I am what your kind would call an Alpha. But not like the ones you know. And before that... I was trained in sothing your world has almost forgotten."
Elara didn’t look away.
"What?"
"Old magic," he said. "Disciplines that existed long before your packs structured themselves the way they do now."
He let the silence stretch just long enough.
Then added,
"A witch."
The word lingered between them.
Elara didn’t reject it.
At this point, she couldn’t.
Nothing in her life made sense without accepting that the world was far larger—and far stranger—than she had been taught to believe.
"How old are you?" she asked.
Adrian answered without hesitation.
"One hundred and eighty-seven."
The silence that followed wasn’t disbelief.
It was adjustnt.
Elara exhaled slowly, her thoughts rearranging themselves around this new reality.
"That explains the attitude," she muttered.
His faint smile returned.
"I’ve been told worse."
The atmosphere shifted again, becoming heavier, more focused.
Adrian’s gaze sharpened.
"You felt it," he said.
Elara stilled.
"What?"
"The change," he clarified. "The mont your energy awakened."
Her heartbeat faltered, just for a second.
He continued before she could respond.
"We detected it about a month ago."
The words hit with precision.
A month.
Her mind didn’t need to search. It went straight there.
The night Kael rejected her.
The night sothing inside her shattered—and sothing else took its place.
Her fingers tightened.
"That wasn’t random," Adrian said quietly. "That was you."
The truth settled deep.
"You awakened."
Elara swallowed, her voice quieter now.
"That’s when you started watching ."
Adrian didn’t deny it.
"That’s when you beca impossible to ignore."
There was no apology in his tone.
Only certainty.
"Who is ’we’?" she asked.
"The World Governnt."
The sa phrase, now heavier.
More real.
"And why are you here?"
"To assess you," he said. "To determine what you are... and what you might beco."
"And then?"
His expression didn’t change.
"We contain threats before they destabilize the balance."
Elara’s eyes darkened slightly.
"You didn’t say protect."
"No," he replied.
That answer felt more honest than anything else he had said.
"And I’m the threat," she said.
Adrian studied her for a mont.
"Potentially."
There was a pause. Then sothing shifted. Subtle, but unmistakable. His gaze changed. It lingered longer.
Held more interest than caution.
"You’re also... sothing rare," he added.
The words carried a different weight.
"And powerful."
Elara felt it then. Not in what he said. In what he didn’t. He didn’t just see her as sothing to control. He saw her as sothing he wanted.
That realization settled cold in her chest.
"So you’re here to control ," she said.
Adrian tilted his head slightly.
"That depends," he answered.
"On what?"
His eyes locked onto hers.
"On whether you can be guided... or whether you need to be controlled."
There it was. Clear, honest and dangerous.
Elara felt sothing rise inside her, sothing steady and unyielding.
"You don’t get to decide that," she said quietly.
Adrian watched her closely.
And this ti, he didn’t argue.
"That," he said, his voice softer now, "is exactly what we’re about to find out."
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