Chapter 25 Mary

MARY

The ridge doesn’t sleep anymore.

Even before the sun claws its way over the mountains, the air is alive with the sound of blades grinding against stone, the heavy thud of wolves testing their strength against one another, the low hum of witches whispering charms into the very earth beneath our feet.

Every corner of camp carries motion, the weight of bodies moving not in peace, but in restless readiness.

I move among them, my wolf pressed sharp against my skin, her ears pricked, her tail raised.

The air tastes of iron and pine, sweat and smoke, fear and fire.

Wolves strap leather across their chests, checking blades, their hands steady despite the shadows behind their eyes.

Witches kneel near the hearths, their hands steady in sigils drawn into ash and salt.

For once, fox and wolf move the same pace, but the air between them still crackles, distrust hot and sharp.

I stop where Kaleigh bends over a young fighter whose arm hangs limp. Blood runs from his shoulder, the scent sharp. She presses glowing hands against the wound, her face pale with concentration, sweat damp on her brow.

“Hold still,” she murmurs. The boy hisses but obeys, his breath shuddering as the glow seeps into him, the torn flesh knitting slow but sure.

“You’ve been at this since dawn,” I say.

Her lips twitch, but her eyes don’t leave her work. “Better to be tired now than too late later.”

Her words settle heavy in my chest. I move on.

Near the sparring ring, Jennifer’s voice cuts through the air, low but resonant.

Two wolves circle each other, their movements sharp, their teeth bared.

She calls out, her voice threading into their rage, her words softening sharp edges, drawing them back from bloodlust. They lower their claws, their breaths slowing, their eyes clearing.

One mutters thanks, the other nods stiffly, and both step back.

Jennifer catches my eye. “They’re tired,” she says. “Fear makes them strike too hard.”

“Then keep talking,” I reply.

She nods once, her voice already rising again, carrying calm into restless hearts.

Beyond them, Angie sits cross-legged in the snow, her hands pressed to the ground.

Wolves stand near, their shoulders tight, their jaws clenched, waiting for her word.

She whispers low, her magic seeping into the earth, the tension in their bodies easing as though the ground itself steadies them.

One drops his head, another exhales hard. For a moment, their fear fades.

But not all fades so easily.

Shouts rise near the northern ring. I move fast, pushing through bodies until I see it—two wolves squared off against one of the witches, their teeth bared, their rage sharp. The witch holds steady, her eyes glowing faint, her hands raised.

“She’s binding us,” one wolf snarls. “Slowing us.”

“She’s keeping you from tearing each other apart before you face the real enemy,” the witch snaps back.

The wolves growl louder, shoulders bunching, ready to strike.

“Enough!” My voice cracks across the air. My wolf pushes forward, her growl low, fierce, commanding. Silence drops heavy, eyes snapping to me.

I step between them, my gaze sharp on the wolves first. “You think she’s your enemy? You think her chains weigh heavier than Roman’s? If she binds you, it’s to keep you standing, not to tear you down.”

I turn to the witch, my voice steady. “And you—remember they bleed beside you. You chain them too hard, you break more than their bodies. You break the trust we’re trying to build.”

For a moment, no one moves. Then the wolves drop their eyes. The witch lowers her hands. The air shifts, tension bleeding out.

I stand tall, my chest heaving, my wolf bristling. The hall doors creak then, and Darius steps out, his presence heavy, his eyes burning. “They’re waiting.”

I know what he means.

Inside the great hall, the air is permeated with smoke and sweat, wolves filling the benches, witches standing along the walls. Maps are spread across the long table, marked with circles and lines. The murmurs fade as I step forward, the weight of every eye pressing sharp against me.

My hands tremble. My throat tightens. But my wolf presses close, her strength bleeding into me, steadying my spine.

I draw in breath and speak.

“You all know what’s coming,” I say. My voice is rough at first, but it carries. “Roman is not a shadow anymore. He is at our gates. He binds witches, he breaks foxes, he burns villages to ash. He thinks we’ll fall as we always have—scattered, scarred, divided.”

My voice grows stronger as I move, my wolf pressing harder. “But we are not divided anymore. Not tonight. Not tomorrow. Not when the fire comes. Wolves stand beside witches. Foxes beside wolves. Scars beside scars. Roman fights with fear. We fight with unity.”

A murmur rises, sharp and restless.

I lift my chin. “I know what you carry. Every one of you has lost something—family, pack, a home you’ll never see again.

You bear scars that ache when the cold sets in, wounds that never truly healed.

But scars are not weakness. Scars are proof that you endured.

That you lived when others fell. That you are still standing. ”

My hands curl into fists, my wolf howling inside me. “He wants us broken. He wants us to believe we are less. But look around you. Look at who stands at your side. Broken we may be, but broken things cut sharper. Broken things can build something new.”

Voices rumble louder, wolves slamming fists against tables, witches lifting their hands, sparks of power flickering in the air.

I push forward, my voice shaking now but strong. “When the fire comes, we don’t meet it as fractured pieces. We meet it as one. One body. One pack. One family. And no fire will ever consume that.”

The hall erupts. Wolves howl, their voices shuddering the rafters. Witches raise their hands, light spilling across the walls. The ground itself seems to shake with the sound.

And then I see him—Darius, standing near the front, his eyes locked on mine. There’s no doubt there, no anger, no shield. Just pride, sharp and fierce. He inclines his head, slow, deliberate, not as my brother guarding me, but as my equal.

My throat tightens, my wolf pressing against me, her howl rising into the storm of voices.

We are broken. But together, we rally.

And tomorrow, we rise.

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