Dawn smelled like smoke.
Not fresh fire, but old smoke, thick and bitter, crawling through the prison vents. It clung to Elara's skin, settled in her throat, and burned behind her eyes.
Execution smoke.
She lay on the stone floor, chains digging into her wrists. Her dress had a torn hem, stained dark where blood had dried. She had lost track of time and stopped praying.
Only one thing mattered now.
The sun was rising.
A bell rang above.
Once.
Her breath caught.
Footsteps followed. Slow, heavy, and measured.
Elara pushed herself up as the cell door groaned open. Torchlight flooded in, harsh and unforgiving.
"Get up," a guard said.
His voice was flat and practiced.
She stood on her own. Her legs trembled but held. She lifted her chin.
The chains were unlocked and replaced with iron cuffs. Cold metal snapped shut around her wrists. Another chain fastened to her neck.
They didn't blindfold her.
They wanted her to see.
The prison corridor was lined with wolves-guards, servants, and pack members pulled from sleep. Some stared; others turned away. One woman whispered a prayer as Ellara passed.
No one spoke to her.
The air changed as they climbed the final steps.
Open space. Cold wind.
The execution ground.
A wooden platform stood at the center, dark with old stains. Smoke drifted from the nearby pit, lazy and waiting. The crowd filled the square, shoulder to shoulder, a wall of faces.
Elara was pushed forward.
She climbed the steps on her own.
The executioner stood tall, blade resting against his shoulder. His hands were steady. His eyes didn't linger on her face.
Across the square, Alpha Silas stood among the council.
He wore black.
His posture was rigid and unmoving. His blind eyes faced forward, empty, but his head turned slightly as she reached the platform.
He smelled her.
Elara felt the bond stir, low and aching. It pressed against her ribs, warm and alive.
She looked away.
A council elder stepped forward. "Elara of the Ashen Pack," he announced. "You stand condemned for treason, deception, and endangering the Alpha."
The crowd murmured.
Elara knelt.
The wood was rough beneath her knees. She placed her hands calmly in front of her.
Her heart beat slowly.
The executioner stepped behind her.
She closed her eyes.
The blade rose.
Wind brushed her face.
A moment stretched thin and fragile.
Then...
"Stop."
The voice was quiet.
It didn't shout...It cut.
The executioner froze.
The blade didn't fall.
A ripple moved through the crowd-fear, sharp and sudden. Guards stiffened. Elders rose from their seats.
Elara opened her eyes.
A figure walked through the square.
A black cloak, with no sigil of any pack. A silver chain crossed his chest, heavy with seals Elara had never seen before.
Every wolf stepped aside as he passed.
Even the council.
He stopped at the edge of the platform and looked up at Elara.
His eyes were dark and calculating.
Then he turned slowly to Alpha Silas.
The bond flared.
Silas's jaw tightened.
"Who dares interrupt a council execution?" an elder demanded.
The man didn't look at him.
"I am the Warden of Blood Law," he said calmly. "I answer to the Crown."
Silence fell like a blade.
The elder paled.
The Warden stepped forward. "This execution is suspended."
Gasps erupted.
Elara's breath hitched.
Suspended.
Not canceled.
The Warden's gaze slid back to her. "The assassination attempt triggered a higher inquiry. The Crown has interest in this bond."
Bond.
The word echoed.
The Warden turned to the council. "You will not kill her. Not yet."
Kael bristled. "She is a traitor..."
"She is evidence," the Warden interrupted.
Cold and final.
The executioner lowered the blade.
Elara swayed as relief and terror tangled in her chest.
The Warden stepped closer. He circled her slowly, eyes sharp.
"You shared his sight," he said quietly.
Elara's heart slammed.
Gasps erupted.
Silas took a sharp step forward. "That is a lie."
The Warden smiled faintly. "Is it?"
Silas froze.
Elara felt the bond strain, pulsing like a wound torn open.
The Warden straightened. "Chain her. Return her to the lower quarters. She lives under my authority now."
The guards hesitated-then obeyed.
Chains snapped back into place.
As they dragged her away, the Warden leaned close.
His voice dropped, meant only for her.
"If you survive what comes next," he said softly, "you will wish the blade had fallen."
Elara met his gaze.
And for the first time since dawn,
She was afraid.





