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Story: Blood Marked
ONE
SELENE
T he carriage jolted violently, iron wheels grinding against the uneven stones of the Veil's border road.
Selene Morwen clenched the worn leather strap above her head, bracing herself against the sharp sway, her storm-gray eyes narrowing against the swirl of mist that swallowed the world outside the thin glass window.
"Almost there, Lady Morwen," one of the Council guards muttered from the front seat, voice muffled behind the heavy veil of his hood.
Almost there.
Selene swallowed, her throat dry, her heart a hard, cold thing inside her chest.
Through the glass, the mist thickened, a living thing curling around the carriage like curious fingers.
In the far distance, jagged silhouettes loomed—ancient spires and walls half-eaten by time.
House Fenrir's citadel, the stronghold of the wolf shifters.
It rose like the bones of some dead god out of the mist.
Peace.
That's what they called this suicide mission.
Selene tugged the edge of her blood-red traveling cloak tighter around her shoulders, the velvet worn but still rich against her pale skin.
She didn't feel the chill anymore. It had sunk too deep.
Had settled somewhere between her ribs and her spine when the Human Council had summoned her and explained, in cold clipped tones, that her blood would buy a future.
"You’re perfect," they’d said.
"Not too important, not too plain. Diplomat’s daughter. Ties to the old bloodlines."
Meaning: expendable.
She was a symbol, nothing more. A lamb in a cloak, offered up to wolves and warlords in the hope they wouldn’t tear her apart.
Her fingers twisted unconsciously in the hem of her cloak, seeking the thin embroidered thread her mother had once stitched there—little stars hidden among the fabric folds. A secret she carried close to her heart.
"Selene."
The voice came from her father, sitting across from her, his figure bowed and smaller than she remembered.
Ambassador Elias Morwen had once stood tall and proud at court, a voice of reason and compromise in a sea of snarling ambition.
Now... now his shoulders hunched under invisible burdens, his once-dark hair streaked with ash-gray.
His eyes—so much like hers, stormy and watchful—held sorrow and something more bitter beneath it.
"I know you hate this," Elias said softly, as the carriage groaned to a halt. "But you are the only hope we have left."
She forced a tight smile. "I’ll try not to get eaten."
A dry bark of laughter escaped him, but it died almost instantly.
He reached forward, clasping her hands in his. His skin was warm and callused, worn from years of grasping for peace in a world that preferred knives.
"Don’t trust them, Selene. Not even the ones who smile. Especially not them."
"I know, Father."
He squeezed once, fierce, as if memorizing the feel of her. Then the door clanged open, letting in the mist and the smell of damp stone and iron.
"Go," he said hoarsely. "Before I change my mind."
Selene hesitated for one heartbeat—then stepped out into the Veil and into Aethermoor, the Court of Claws.
The mist swallowed her whole.
The world here was sharper, somehow. Every sound felt amplified—the grind of metal, the creak of leather, the low rumble of inhuman voices just beyond sight. The air tasted faintly metallic, like old blood and broken promises.
She stood tall despite the tremor running through her, her frame lean but unyielding beneath her cloak. The silk tunic and leggings she wore—styled modestly in human fashion—felt almost laughably inadequate now.
The courtyard sprawled around her in cracked flagstones and broken statues of beasts long forgotten. Massive figures moved through the mist, their golden eyes gleaming, their bodies barely restrained power. Wolves in human skin.
Selene’s breath hitched.
Every instinct screamed run.
She stood still.
Because that was what pawns did. They stood still and waited to be sacrificed.
A shadow detached from the mist.
He was taller than the others, towering, broad-shouldered, built like a blade honed for war. His ash-blond hair was cropped short, save for one rebellious lock that fell over his brow. Harsh planes defined his face—sharp jaw, high cheekbones, mouth set in a grim line.
Kael Fenrir.
Crown heir. Future Alpha.
Selene recognized him instantly from the Council’s briefing scrolls—and the weight of destiny slammed into her chest like a hammer.
Their eyes locked.
His icy blue gaze cut through her like winter wind. For a long, breathless moment, neither of them moved.
Then Kael's mouth twisted into something that wasn’t quite a smile. More like a warning.
"So," he said, his voice low and rough, "they sent a lamb after all."
The words weren’t cruel. They were simply true.
Selene lifted her chin, letting the fire under her skin burn away the fear.
"And here I thought I’d find wolves," she said coolly. "Not children playing at being monsters."
A murmur rippled through the gathered shifters—shock, amusement, maybe a touch of respect.
Kael’s gaze sharpened.
He moved closer, and she caught the scent of him—earth and rain and something wild and uncontainable.
Selene held her ground, even when her heart skittered like a trapped thing in her chest.
Kael’s head tilted, as if studying a particularly intriguing puzzle.
"You’ve got teeth, little human," he said softly, dangerously. "We’ll see how long they last."
Then he turned sharply on his heel and barked something in a language she didn’t understand. The guards—the ones in wolf pelts and black leather—closed in around her, herding her forward.
Selene walked.
Step after step into the jaws of fate.
The citadel swallowed her whole, its heavy iron gates clanging shut behind her like the closing of a tomb.
Table of Contents
- Page 1 (Reading here)
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
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- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42