Chapter 8 Fault Lines
The first time I used my blood on purpose, it felt like stepping backward into a void.
Not falling, but opening.
Thane stood across from me in the lower training arena, where the stone ran darker and the runes carved into the floor pulsed faintly with containment magic. The space hummed, heavy with spells layered over spells.
“Focus on absence,” he said. “Not power. You erase, or it’s negation, not dominance.”
“Nothing about this place feels absent,” I said, eyeing the glowing runes.
“That’s because you’re the absence now.”
Comforting. Again.
I rolled my shoulders, breathing deep. The distant thrum of the mountain seeped through the stone beneath my bare feet. Thane had insisted, feet on the ground, skin to the weave. I still wasn’t sold on the barefoot aspect, but he was alarmingly persuasive when he looked at me like that.
“Don’t reach,” he continued. “Let it come to you.”
The bond stirred. Warm. Curious.
Terrifying.
Across the arena, Rowan and Layla stood watch with two sentinels. Every single one of them was tense.
“Why is everyone acting like I might explode?” I asked.
Thane didn’t answer immediately. His gaze dipped to my hands.
“Because if you lose control,” he said carefully, “you won’t explode. You’ll unmake.”
My breath hitched.
“Okay,” I said weakly. “Let’s maybe not do that.”
He stepped closer, slowly, so I could back away if I wanted.
I didn’t.
“The gods wield absolutes,” Thane said. “Their magic believes it’s law. You contradict it.”
I closed my eyes.
I didn’t look for magic.
I looked for silence.
For that strange hollow inside me that had felt wrong my whole life, like something missing I’d learned not to name. I leaned into it.
The runes under my feet flickered.
Stone went quiet.
I opened my eyes.
A circle around me had gone dark.
Rowan swore.
Layla’s hand went to her weapon.
Thane didn’t move, but the bond surged bright, sharp with awe and fear.
“That’s enough,” he said hoarsely.
I staggered, the hollow snapping shut like a vacuum seal. He caught me instantly, arm around my back, other hand warm against my shoulder.
“I’ve got you,” he murmured.
My knees didn’t give out.
But my resolve did.
“I did that,” I whispered.
“Yes,” he said. “And you stopped when I asked.”
His thumb brushed my arm before he remembered himself and stilled.
Choice.
Always choice.
The political strike came before lunch.
We were in the map room when Orrik burst in without knocking, and a rarity significant enough that Thane straightened instantly.
“Two border packs crossed into Stormfall territory,” Orrik said. “Claiming inspection rights.”
“They can claim the moon,” Thane snapped. “They know the treaties.”
“They’re testing her,” Orrik said bluntly, eyes flicking to me. “If Null Blood is real.”
“So we let them,” I said before thinking. “Under controlled conditions.”
The room froze.
Thane turned slowly. “No.”
“I’m already a walking target,” I said, heartbeat picking up. “Let’s stop pretending otherwise.”
The bond thrummed, uneasy, conflicted.
“This is not your decision,” Thane said, anger lacing his voice.
I lifted my chin. “You said I had a choice.”
Silence.
Then Maeven, seated quietly by the hearth, spoke. “Fault lines have already shifted, Alpha. Delaying only makes the break worse.”
Thane closed his eyes once.
“Arrangements will be made,” he said tightly.
I exhaled.
And immediately regretted it.
The meeting took place at dusk in the old stone circle, neutral ground older than any pack accords. Wolves ringed the perimeter from three factions, some barely masking aggression.
I stood at Thane’s side, fingers brushing his sleeve.
“Stay within arm’s reach,” he murmured.
“And if I don’t?”
His jaw flexed. “Then I’ll still find you.”
The rival Alpha, and a lean man with iron-gray eyes, had stepped forward.
“So,” he drawled, “the Null Blood rumor is true.”
“Demonstrate,” another demanded. “Or we assume deception.”
My stomach twisted.
A priest stepped forward.
Divine magic.
Thane’s hand tightened involuntarily.
“Alenya,” he said low. “You do not have to....”
“I know,” I whispered. “But I will.”
The priest raised both hands.
The air thickened.
A god-mark flared.
The magic struck me like a wave, and shattered.
Shredded.
Erased.
A shockwave rippled outward, knocking wolves back.
I staggered, and Thane caught me instantly.
“That’s enough,” he roared.
No one argued.
Fear had replaced skepticism.
As we left, Thane’s hands shook where they held my shoulders.
“I didn’t mean....” I started.
“I know,” he said fiercely. “That’s the problem.”
Back at Raelthorn, night swallowed the estate whole.
I stood on the balcony, shaken to my core.
Thane joined me quietly.
“You chose today,” he said. “Tomorrow it won’t be a request.”
“I don’t want to be weaponized,” I said.
“I won’t let them.”
I looked at him then, really looked.
“You can’t promise that.”
The bond pulsed, sad, warm, aching.
“No,” he admitted. “But I can promise I’ll stand between you and everything.”
I leaned into him.
Just a little.
And the fault lines inside me cracked wider.
Not breaking.
Becoming.