Chapter 27 Three years had passed since the Vale Pack was drenched in blood, but no marble polish nor gilded chandelier could wash away the memory of how it had once howled with carnage. To others, the manor gleamed now, bright, refined, untouchable. To me, it still breathed the iron tang of every drop that had been spilled. The walls whispered, and the soil beneath the gardens. still pulsed with the bones of the fallen. Tonight, however, the estate lived again in the throes of a masquerade. Golden candelabras burned like ritual fire, crystal chandeliers trembled as if alive, and a symphony of strings wove through the marble halls like the breath of something ancient. Masks of black and gold disguised faces, but not fear. No one dared wear white. White belonged to the dead, to the ghosts I buried with claw and fang, and to the wolves who had defied me and been ground into silence. The twins flanked me, Ken and Kurt. Taller now, leaner, honed into the princes I raised them to be. Their wildness had tempered, not vanished; it had simply grown teeth, sharpened under discipline. They wore tailored black suits threaded with silver insignia, the Vale crest etched at their cuffs. When they moved, their gait carried the echo of wolf-born predators caged in human skin. They kissed my hand before we descended the staircase, not as children bowing to a mother, but as heirs saluting their Alpha. Kurt's eyes, sharp as a hawk yet burning with the wolf's amber glow beneath the mask, skimmed the masquerade. His voice was low, predatory. "Ma. The man by the fountain watches too long. Do you want me to silence him?" I glanced toward the figure. He turned his head quickly, feigning indifference, but his pulse was loud enough I could hear it if I strained. "Let him stare," I answered, my tone a velvet snarl. "Sheep always look at wolves before they kneel. He'll bow, or he'll bleed." Ken leaned in close, his voice softer, though his breath carried the quiet rumble of a restrained growl. "Alpha Magnus would have loved this." And 1 faltered. Just for a moment. Because maybe he would have. My father had died six months prior. Quietly. Without fire or blood. A slow withering in the Vale pack hospital, his heart finally conceded after decades of rule. I buried him myself, beneath the northern olive tree, the same one where I shifted for the first time under his watch, where his own claws once scarred the bark in ritual. His casket was lined in gold, sealed forever. I gave no speech. None was needed. The silence of wolves is heavier than words. He left this world knowing his bloodline endured. Not simply endured, ascended. That is more than most Alphas ever carry into death. Damien's hand brushed the small of my back as we glided through the masquerade crowd. He wore midnight black, no mask, never needing to hide what he was. Wolf, warrior, husband. Alive. Whole. And mine. Chapter 26 3/3 19 1% 6:54 pm A The whispers swirled around us, claims that we had married in a chapel beneath a bleeding moon, vows sealed not with rings but with bites. They said Ram had stood as witness, that Edrick had wept when we spoke the ancient oaths of our kind. Let them whisper. Truth belonged to me, not them. And every night since, when Damien pressed his lips to the scar above my collarbone, the scar his fangs left when he bound me as his equal, not his bride, I knew what survival truly tasted like. It was not ash. Not sugar. Not fire. It was steel. After the final toast, when the music had dulled into embers of laughter and soft steps, I slipped onto the balcony overlooking the gardens. The moon hung low, waxing full, swollen with promise. My empire throbbed beneath me, every stone humming with the blood and fur it had witnessed. For the first time in years, I allowed myself to be still. Damien joined me, his stride a silent echo of power. His voice was softer than I expected. 'You didn't dance tonight." kept my gaze on the moon. "I've danced enough in my lifetime. My bones remember every hythm." He pressed something into my palm. Cold. Weighty. I looked down to see a crown. Black steel, forged thin and cruel. Light enough to wear as though it were nothing, sharp enough to cut the flesh of anyone foolish enough to touch it. 'Put it on," he said. didn't hesitate. When I turned, I saw them, the twins dancing with careful grace, leading young she-wolves with hands steady as the pistols I once trained them to wield. Ram and Edrick stood at the edges, glasses of whiskey untouched in their hands, watching with silent pride. A single nod from me, and the musicians obeyed. The violins shifted, dark, haunting, beautiful. Damien pulled me to the floor. No spotlight. No audience. Just shadows, the rhythm of wolves, and the legacy of fire. And as I moved with him, claw and fang hidden beneath silk and steel, I knew: it wasn't bullets that saved me. Not blades. Not armies. Not even vengeance. It was discipline. It was bloodline. It was knowing, without doubt or hesitation, exactly what I was. I buried enemies beneath my claws. Forgave sons in the silence of the grave. Broke curses that bound my blood. Rebuilt an empire brick by brick, soul by soul, howl by howl. And so, tonight, beneath the black chandelier and the heavy moon, I reminded the world of one truth that would outlast every dynasty carved by man: A pack does not die when its Alpha falls. It rises when the daughter sharpens her crown of iron and bares her teeth to the sky. And the world would remember me, not as the last Vale, Chapter 27 212 50 28 6:54 pm but as the first Queen of Wolves. E.N.D 370 5093 Chanter 27