The holdout barracks smell like stale anger and weapons oil. I haven't been here since the exposure, and the difference in how my wolves look at me hits like a body blow. Some watch with expressions I can categorize: pity from wolves who think omega means fragile, new respect from wolves who remember that I hid my designation from an entire pack for most of my life, and from Halvor, a hot, confused fury that hasn't found its direction yet.
I don't give them time to settle into whatever they're feeling about what I am.
"Grimnir is coming," I say. "Not to negotiate. He wants me, and if he takes me, every wolf in this room becomes property of the Ashvald Pack. So the question isn't what you think about my designation. The question is whether you'd rather fight beside Stellan's wolves or wait here while Grimnir's wolves decide what you're worth."
"Fight beside the wolves who captured us." Halvor's voice is flat, scraped. "Fight for the beta who put us in this barracks."
"Fight for yourselves. Fight for Blackridge. Grimnir doesn't know this terrain the way you do. I designed the defensive positions using our ground, our knowledge, our tactical advantage. You'll deploy as a Blackridge unit under my command, same as it's always been." I hold Halvor's gaze. "You want to fight. I've always known that about you. I'm giving you a fight that matters."
Halvor's shoulder rolls once, testing the joint. His eyes are red-rimmed and fierce and carrying the grief of a wolf who lost his pack, his alpha, and his war counselor's secret in the space of months. The grief has been wearing fury's mask the entire time I've known him, and the mask is cracking.
"Your command," he repeats.
"My command."
The silence stretches. Behind Halvor, the holdouts stir with the first purposeful energy I've seen in them since the capture, the restless readiness of wolves who've been caged and just been told the cage door opens on a fight instead of a surrender.
Halvor straightens. He doesn't nod. He rolls his shoulders, both of them, and the motion is the physical language of a wolf squaring up for what comes next. The holdouts read the gesture the way they've always read their most volatile wolf, as a barometer for the group's direction.
Erla, standing in the doorway of the barracks, watches the entire exchange with the still, measured assessment of an elderwho has seen generations of wolves make hard choices. Her gaze meets mine as I turn to leave, and what I find in it is neither pity nor approval. It is recognition. She's watching the woman her friend raised and finding the product sufficient.
The recognition lands heavier than any praise could.
The counter-strike wolves deploy first, slipping into the northeastern timber while the light is still good enough for fast travel. I send the holdouts to their positions along the eastern flank while Torben coordinates the main defensive line along the valley corridor. The deployment takes the afternoon, and by the time every wolf is in position, the shadows are long and the mountain air holds the sharp bite of early evening.
The attack comes faster than our intelligence estimated. Grimnir doesn't wait for his deadline.
The first howl echoes through the valley while I'm at the command position on the eastern ridge, standing where the terrain gives me sight lines across the defensive corridor and the flanking positions both. Torben is below me with the main force, and even at this distance his scent carries on the updraft, alpha pheromones sharpened by the adrenaline of imminent combat. My omega catalogues every molecule of it. The heat at the base of my spine pulses in response, a low, insistent warmth that the biological clock drives regardless of the tactical situation.
I'm commanding a territorial defense while my body decides this is an excellent moment to start lubricating. My mother would have appreciated the absurdity even as she reached for a grinding stone.
The Ashvald wolves come through the northeastern passes in a formation that tells me Grimnir has competent field commanders. They move fast and coordinated, the mountain faction scouts running point, guiding them through terrain they shouldn't know but do, because the spy network gave them the routes my relay points were designed to control.
My relay points are already dark. The counter-strike force hit the staging area and communication network while Grimnir's attention was on the fortress approach, and the infrastructure that the mountain faction depends on is rubble. Grimnir's wolves are running on the last intelligence they received before the relays went silent, and that intelligence is already outdated.
The corridor funnels them exactly where I planned.
I signal the first adjustment through the runner posted below the ridge, redirecting the holdout flank to close the corridor tighter as Grimnir's lead wolves commit to the approach. The runner goes down the slope at a sprint, and within minutes the eastern flank shifts, the movement rippling through the trees like the terrain itself is contracting around the attackers.
The engagement is fast and brutal and nothing like the clinical lines I drew on Stellan's maps. Wolves in combat are primal, silvery mist swirling through the tree line as both sides transform between forms based on terrain and tactical advantage. The sound of it fills the valley: snarls and the heavy impact of bodies colliding, the sharp yelp of a wolf going down, the crack of bone and the wet tearing sound that I learned to catalog at Korren's war councils and never learned to ignore.
The alpha pheromones in the valley are thick enough to taste. Torben's and Grimnir's alpha signatures collide in the air, two competing claims saturating the same space, and my omega absorbs the flood without discrimination. A flush creeps across my chest and my skin goes sensitive enough that the rough weave of my shirt scrapes across my nipples in a way that makes me want to strip it off and howl.
I clench my jaw and send a second runner to the main line with an adjustment, pulling two of Torben's wolves from the center to reinforce the corridor's narrowest section. The biological noise and the tactical thinking occupy the same skull,and the effort of prioritizing the latter while the former tries to put me on my knees is its own kind of combat.
Halvor fights like I knew he would. The young wolf tears through Grimnir's flank with the focused brutality of a man who finally has a target for the fury that's been eating him from the inside out. He fights the way Korren's wolves were taught: no quarter, no hesitation, the grief channeled into something with teeth, and the Ashvald wolves on the receiving end of his assault discover very quickly that Blackridge wolves don't fight clean.
The mountain faction splits. I watch it happen from the ridge, the fracture running through Grimnir's local support like a crack through ice. Some fight for Grimnir without hesitation, committed to the Ashvald alpha and the future he promised them. Some falter when they recognize the Blackridge wolves facing them, former packmates who shared their fires and bled beside them before the war redrew every line that mattered. And some break entirely when the defensive plan proves that the war counselor who designed their operational doctrine is the same war counselor who just used it to build their kill zones.
I built those wolves. I built the network they're using, the tactics they're running, the operational architecture they're following. And the architecture I built is the thing tearing them apart, because I know every seam and I told the wolves holding this line exactly where to push.
The cost of that knowledge sits in my throat like ash, and I swallow it and keep commanding. The irony of the omega orchestrating a battle from a ridge while her body tries to drag her toward the nearest alpha is not lost on me. My slick has soaked through my underclothes, the omega's survival instinct reading the saturation of alpha pheromones in the valley air as imminent claiming and preparing my body accordingly.
The biology doesn't distinguish between the alpha I chose and the alpha I'd kill myself before submitting to.It just responds, indiscriminate and relentless. The strategist commanding a war has to do it while her thighs are wet and her skin burns and the omega inside her skull begs for something the Wolf Prince can't provide from the valley floor.
Grimnir reaches the defensive line at the head of his remaining wolves, and I see him for the first time.
He is massive even in human form, carrying the raw physical authority of an alpha whose power comes from dominance rather than competence. His scent reaches me on the valley's updraft, thick and aggressive, the kind of pheromone output designed to make every wolf in range submit or fight.