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I told myself it was strategic. A security assessnt. After the day’s chaos—Veronique’s challenge, Caesar’s unwelco intrusion—ensuring Lilith’s safety was paramount.

That’s what I told myself as I pulled up the security feed from her room.

The screen flickered to life, showing her curled on her side in the oversized bed. The iridescent wedding dress had been replaced by simple sleep clothes. Her mother’s urn sat on the nightstand within arm’s reach, and even in sleep, one hand stretched toward it.

Tactical assessnt: Emotionally compromised. Physically injured. ntally exhausted.

Veronique’s advantages: Eight years of combat training. Beta-level strength and speed. Intimate knowledge of pack fighting styles. Driven by jealousy and rage—unpredictable but motivated.

Lilith’s advantages: Unknown hybrid abilities. The mark. Desperation.

The math didn’t favor her.

My cock stirred as I watched her sleep, and I shifted uncomfortably. The sigils on my back burned—a constant reminder that my rut was closing in. Weeks away. Every mont near her made it worse, made the urge to claim, to protect, to take nearly overwhelming.

I compartntalized the arousal, filed it away. Irrelevant. My body’s reaction to her scent, her presence, the incomplete bond—all distractions from the primary objective.

She needed to survive.

"Keep lying to yourself," Zver growled. "It’s working so well."

I pulled up additional cara angles, studying her from multiple perspectives. That’s when I noticed it.

On her left wrist—a glow. Soft at first, then steadily brightening. The lunar crest pulsed with ethereal light, patterns forming and reforming like a language I couldn’t decipher.

I sat forward, imdiately pulling up archival footage. Cross-referencing previous instances. The mark had activated three tis before: during the Seer’s trial, when she’d faced her mother’s mory. When Kustav had choked her. When the blood bond had ford during our interrupted wedding.

Pattern: Extre emotional or physical stress triggered activation.

But now? She was sleeping peacefully.

I zood in, analyzing the glow’s rhythm. It pulsed in sync with her heartbeat. No—with sothing deeper. The wolf inside her? Kaia?

The mark intensified, and for three seconds, her mother’s urn glowed in response.

I replayed the footage. Enhanced it. asured the light frequency.

They were communicating.

My fingers stilled on the keyboard. Magic that transcended death. A mother’s protection extending beyond the grave. Or sothing else entirely—a ssage, a warning, a power transfer?

The Marked Hybrid. Everyone wanted her for different reasons. Kustav needed her to stabilize his pack’s failing bloodline. Caesar wanted her to soothe his bruised ego. The Concord saw her as the key to nding the Veil.

And I had claid her as a tool. A ans to an end.

Now she was becoming sothing I hadn’t anticipated: a variable I couldn’t fully calculate.

I pulled up Veronique’s training records. Reviewed her fight history. Identified patterns in her attack strategies. She favored her right side after an old shoulder injury. She was aggressive but impatient. She could be baited.

Then I pulled up what little data I had on Lilith. Psychological profile: People-pleaser. Prone to self-sacrifice. Physically untrained but surprisingly resilient. A sportsman. Had survived her family’s abuse, Caesar’s betrayal, the Seer’s trial.

Survival instinct: High.

Combat ability: Effectively zero.

Ti until duel: Three weeks.

I ran the probabilities. Without intervention, her survival rate was fourteen percent. With basic training: twenty-three percent. With intensive preparation and strategic advantages: forty-one percent.

Still not enough.

But if I could understand the mark, harness whatever power it held...

I closed the surveillance feed and stood. The decision crystallized in my mind.

Sentint wouldn’t save her. Hope wouldn’t save her. Wishing she was stronger wouldn’t make her stronger.

Only preparation would give her a chance.

I checked my watch. 2:47 AM. She’d been asleep for three hours. Not enough rest, not nearly enough after today’s emotional devastation. But rest wouldn’t save her life. Training might.

She wouldn’t like it. She’d argue she needed sleep, needed ti to process, needed gentleness after Caesar’s cruelty.

None of that mattered.

I activated the communicator on my desk, pressing the button for the guard station. Two clicks, then a voice—alert despite the hour.

"Yes, High Alpha?"

"Send a unit to the Marked Hybrid’s quarters imdiately," I said, my tone brooking no argunt. "Her training schedule has been moved up. It begins tonight."

A pause. "Sir, it’s nearly three in the morning—"

"I’m aware of the ti." I cut him off. "Take her to the Moon Temple ruins. Full escort."

Another pause, longer this ti. When the guard spoke again, his voice carried barely concealed shock. "The ruins, High Alpha? Are you certain?"

"Do I sound uncertain?"

"No, sir. We’ll retrieve her imdiately."

"One more thing." I leaned back in my chair, fingers drumming once against the armrest. The decision point. The line I was about to cross. "Put her on the parapet."

Silence. Complete, stunned silence.

"High Alpha—" The guard’s voice cracked slightly. "The parapet at the Moon Temple is over two hundred feet—"

"I know exactly how high it is." My voice dropped to sothing colder, more dangerous. "And I know what I’m asking. Put her on the parapet. Have two guards stationed within reach, but do not interfere unless she’s about to fall. She needs to stay there until I arrive."

"Sir, with all due respect, she’s human—mostly human. That kind of height, in the dark, after everything today—"

"Which is precisely why we’re doing this." I stood, already reaching for my coat. "The mark activates under extre stress. We have three weeks to understand it, to help her access whatever power it holds. Three weeks before Veronique tears her apart."

I could hear whispered conversation on the other end. Multiple voices, all questioning my judgnt.

"The duel trials won’t be gentle," I continued, cutting through their murmuring. "The chase will be through hostile terrain. The combat will be brutal. If she freezes from fear of heights on a parapet, she’ll die in the actual duel. Better she learns to master that fear now, in a controlled environnt."

"Controlled," the guard repeated, disbelief evident.

"You have your orders. Execute them." I severed the connection before he could protest further.

>"The parapet," Zver said, sothing almost like approval in his tone. "Brutal. Effective. She’ll hate you for it.

"She can hate after she survives." I pulled up the security feed one last ti, watching her sleep for three more seconds. morizing the peace on her face before I shattered it.

Then I grabbed my keys and headed for the door.

The Moon Temple ruins sat at the highest point of my territory. Ancient stone, crumbling towers, and a parapet that overlooked a sheer drop into darkness. It was where we tested new wolves, where we sent those who needed to confront their most primal fears.

And now, where I would force Lilith to find the power sleeping inside her.

Because fourteen percent wasn’t good enough.

And I would do whatever was necessary—whatever she hated for—to improve those odds.

---

🌙𝐋𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐡

Cold.

That was my first conscious thought as I surfaced from sleep. Not the gentle cool of air conditioning, but biting, vicious cold that seeped through my clothes and into my bones.

My second thought was: *hard*.

I wasn’t in bed anymore. The soft mattress had been replaced by rough stone that dug into my hip, my shoulder, my cheek. I shifted, and pain lanced through my already-injured hip.

My eyes flew open.

Stone. Ancient, weathered stone stretched beneath . Above, a sky full of stars I didn’t recognize, obscured partially by crumbling pillars that reached toward the heavens like skeletal fingers.

I inhaled sharply, and the air attacked my lungs—thin, frigid, wrong. Too high. The air was too thin.

*Where—?*

I pushed myself up on trembling arms, and that’s when I saw it.

Edge.

I was three feet from an edge.

My stomach dropped as I scrambled backward, my hands scraping against stone, until my back hit sothing solid. A pillar. I wrapped my arms around it, pressing my face against the cold surface as my heart hamred against my ribs.

"No, no, no," I whispered.

>"Lilith." Kaia’s voice, urgent in my mind. "Breathe. You need to breathe."

But I couldn’t. Because now that I was awake, now that my eyes had adjusted to the darkness, I could see where I was.

A parapet. Narrow, maybe six feet wide. And on three sides—

I forced myself to look.

Nothing. Just darkness and the distant, barely visible ground so far below that my vision swam.

Two hundred feet. Maybe more.

"Oh God." My voice cracked. "Oh God, oh God—"

"Mistress." A voice from behind , calm and professional. "Please don’t panic. You’re perfectly safe."

I whirled, still clutching the pillar. Two guards stood about ten feet away, positioned between and what looked like the only way off this nightmare—a narrow stone bridge connecting this parapet to the main structure.

"Safe?" The word ca out as a strangled laugh. "You—did you bring here? While I was *sleeping*?"

The guards exchanged glances. The older one spoke carefully. "High Alpha’s orders, Mistress. Your training begins tonight."

"Training?" I looked around wildly at the crumbling ruins, the sheer drop, the impossible height. "What kind of training—"

And then it hit .

Vladimir did this.

Vladimir ordered them to take from my bed, to bring to this place, to put on this parapet in the middle of the night after everything—after Caesar, after the wedding disaster, after I’d finally, *finally* felt like I could breathe—

The betrayal was a physical thing, sharp and hot in my chest.

"The High Alpha will arrive shortly," the guard continued. "Until then, you’re to remain here."

"Remain—" I looked at the edge again, bile rising in my throat. "I can’t—I have acrophobia. I’m terrified of heights, I—"

"That’s precisely the point, Mistress."

The words landed like a slap.

The wind picked up, and I pressed harder against the pillar, my nails digging into ancient stone.

This was Vladimir’s version of training. This was his solution to my survival rate.

Terror. Darkness. Isolation on a crumbling parapet hundreds of feet in the air.

My mark began to burn.

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