Beyond The Empty Altar, My Reign

Vera POV:

I slammed my boot down on the gas pedal, sending the heavy off-road vehicle surging forward on the treacherous, ice-slicked highway.

The rear tires lost traction, fishtailing violently toward the steel guardrail. I clamped my jaw shut, my muscles locking as I wrenched the steering wheel in the opposite direction. The heavy chassis shuddered, the tires biting into the packed snow just inches from a deadly drop. I didn't gasp. I didn't panic. Years of surviving on the razor's edge of the Vance family's psychological warfare had hardwired my brain for crisis.

A sharp hiss erupted from the dashboard. The heater sputtered, choked, and died.

The temperature inside the cabin plummeted to sub-zero within seconds. Every breath I exhaled plumed into a thick white cloud. My bare fingers, gripping the leather wheel, turned stiff and pale. Yet, beneath my freezing skin, something ancient and dormant began to stir. The marrow in my bones felt like it was catching fire. The brutal, unforgiving cold of the North wasn't killing me; it was waking up the bloodline I had kept suppressed with toxic drugs for three long years.

On the dashboard, the temperature needle dropped straight into the red zone. The engine screamed in protest, a high-pitched mechanical whine that vibrated through the floorboards. I reached down and ripped the speed limiter wire from the console. I was done playing by Southern rules.

In the rearview mirror, three massive, hulking shadows darted through the blizzard.

A violent gust of wind slammed into the side of the car, carrying the unmistakable, rancid stench of wet fur and rotting meat. Rogue wolves. My right hand instinctively released the steering wheel and dropped to the tactical dagger strapped to my thigh. It was muscle memory, forged in the blood-soaked trenches of the Northern border long before I ever wore a wedding ring.

A heavy thud rocked the roof of the SUV. The metal ceiling buckled inward with a sickening crunch. Five razor-sharp claws pierced the steel right above my head, tearing the roof open like a tin can. Freezing wind howled through the gash.

I slammed both feet onto the brake pedal.

The SUV locked up, skidding violently sideways. Physics did the rest. The rogue wolf on the roof was launched forward by the sheer momentum, tumbling over the windshield and slamming into the icy asphalt.

But the vehicle was completely out of control. The tires caught a patch of black ice, and the heavy machine slammed head-on into a massive, snow-covered boulder. The airbags deployed with an explosive bang, punching me in the chest and face. Stars exploded in my vision. My ears rang with a high-pitched whine.

I didn't have time to bleed. I kicked the warped, crumpled door open with both boots and tumbled out into the knee-deep snow. The freezing air stung my lungs, but the pain grounded me.

Three rogue wolves circled the wrecked smoking vehicle. They moved into a triangular hunting formation, trapping me in the center. Low, guttural growls rumbled in their chests, vibrating through the soles of my boots.

I didn't back away. I didn't cower. I slowly stood to my full height, rolling my shoulders. A true Alpha of the North never lowered her head to scavengers.

The lead rogue lunged. Its massive jaws snapped open, aiming straight for my throat.

I didn't shift. I didn't need to. I pivoted on my heel, sliding smoothly to the right, letting the beast's momentum carry it past me. In the same fluid motion, I flipped the tactical dagger in my grip, blade facing down.

I drove the steel deep into the side of the wolf's neck, twisting the hilt to sever the carotid artery. Boiling hot blood sprayed across my pale cheek. I didn't even blink. I had crawled through mountains of corpses just like this one.

Before the first body hit the snow, the second wolf attacked from my blind spot. Its claws raked down my back, shredding my thin Southern coat. I spun around, dropping my center of gravity, and drove my elbow straight upward into the beast's snout. The bone shattered with a wet crunch. The pure, unadulterated physical power of my awakening bloodline fueled the strike.

The wolf dropped to the snow, thrashing in agony. I stepped forward, yanked the dagger from the first wolf's neck, and plunged it straight down into the second wolf's heart. Clean. Efficient. Showing mercy to an enemy in the North was just a complicated way to commit suicide.

The third wolf halted. Its yellow eyes darted between my bloody blade and its dead packmates. It tucked its tail and spun around to flee.

I dropped to a crouch, grabbed a jagged rock the size of my fist from the exposed pavement, and hurled it with devastating force. The rock smashed directly into the fleeing wolf's hind joint. The bone snapped.

The beast collapsed, howling in pain. I walked toward it, my boots crunching rhythmically in the snow. I planted my heel firmly on the back of its neck, pinning it to the ground, and pressed the tip of my dagger against its skull. Absolute suppression.

I drove the blade down, ending the noise.

The wind howled through the desolate highway. I stood alone among the corpses, casually wiping the hot blood off my blade with a handful of fresh snow.

High above, on the edge of a jagged cliff overlooking the road, a tall, broad-shouldered figure stood perfectly still. Kaelen's golden eyes pierced through the blinding blizzard, tracking my every movement.

He inhaled slowly. Beneath the overpowering stench of rogue blood and exhaust fumes, his enhanced senses caught something else. A scent so rare it was almost a myth. The crisp, freezing bite of white plum blossoms. The unmistakable signature of the Ancient White Wolf.

Down on the road, the hairs on the back of my neck stood up. My head snapped toward the cliff. My eyes narrowed, fierce and territorial. Years of living in a hostile environment had honed my paranoia into a weapon. I trusted nothing, especially not the feeling of being watched by something far more dangerous than rogues.

The blizzard shifted, throwing a wall of white across the cliff face. There was nothing there. I frowned, my grip tightening on the hilt of my dagger.

I turned my back to the cliff and walked over to the smoking wreckage of the SUV. I popped the trunk and dragged out a heavy, black tactical backpack. It was my entire life, everything I needed to reclaim my throne. I slung it over my shoulder.

My fingers brushed against the heavy, suffocating leather collar tightly buckled around my neck—the electronic leash of a married Southern Omega. I dug my fingers under the strap, snapped the reinforced buckle, and ripped it off my throat.

I tossed it into the snowbank. The tiny red tracking light blinked twice, then went completely dark. The connection to the Thorne family's main server was dead. I knew exactly which internal wires to crush.

I tilted my head back, looking up at the bruised, iron-gray sky of the North. I took a deep, dragging breath. The freezing air burned my lungs, a sharp pain that made me feel more alive than I had in three years. The South was a suffocating greenhouse of lies. This—the bitter, biting cold—was reality.

I turned my back on the wrecked car and began to walk. I waded into the knee-deep snow, marching straight into the heart of the storm, toward the invisible border lines.

Up on the ridge, Kaelen dropped effortlessly from the canopy of a frosted pine, landing in the snow without making a single sound. He walked to the exact spot where I had been standing.

He crouched down, trailing a long, elegant finger through the cooling blood of the rogue wolf. He brought his finger to his nose and inhaled. He could read the entire fight in that single drop of blood—the lack of hesitation, the brutal efficiency, the sheer physical dominance of a woman who smelled like a fragile flower but fought like a demon.

A slow, dark smirk curved his lips. His voice was a low, gravelly hum that vibrated in the empty air. A centuries-long boredom had finally been broken.

He stood up, his golden eyes locked on my fading silhouette. He didn't rush to follow. A true apex predator always had patience.

A violent gust of wind swept across the highway, kicking up a blinding cloud of white. When the snow settled, Kaelen was gone, swallowed by the ice as if he had never existed.

I trekked through the blizzard for two grueling hours. My legs burned, but my pace never slowed. Finally, the storm parted just enough to reveal the massive, looming silhouette of a thirty-meter-high steel wall cutting across the horizon. My wall.

I stopped. My pale, cracked lips curved upward into a sharp smile.

"North, I'm back."

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