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Luna Aurora novel (Alpha Fenrir) novel Chapter 347

Chapter 347

Elyra’s forces limped through the dense forest, the night shrouding them in an oppressive silence. Every step was heavy, every breath labored. The aftermath of the ambush at Riverstone weighed on them all, and Elyra could feel the despair in their ranks like a tangible thing.

Cassian supported an injured warrior, his face grim and streaked with dirt. “We lost too many,” he muttered, not looking at Elyra. His words cut deeper than any wound, but she said nothing. She couldn’t.

Selene walked beside her, her silver hair dimmed by soot and blood. “You need rest,” she said softly. “You’ve pushed yourself too far.”

Elyra didn’t respond, clutching the shard tightly in her hand. Its faint glow pulsed unevenly, as though it shared her exhaustion. The ambush replayed in her mind—the explosion of light and shadow, Dain’s haunting words, and the look in his eyes just before he disappeared.

You’re a fool. You can’t save them. You can’t save me.

Her chest ached, but it wasn’t just from the fight. It was the realization that Dain was slipping further from her grasp, and she didn’t know how to pull him back.

As they reached the safety of a hidden glade, the group collapsed into uneasy rest. Cassian began tending to the injured, his movements sharp with frustration. Selene leaned against a tree, her eyes scanning the dark horizon.

Elyra sat apart from them, staring at the shard in her hand. Its once brilliant light was now dull, the surface cracked like fractured glass. She felt its weight, not just in her palm but in her soul.

“You’re thinking too much,” Fenrir’s gruff voice broke the silence.

She looked up to see him standing over her, his arms crossed and his golden eyes hard.

“How could I not?” she said quietly.

He crouched beside her, his gaze unwavering. “He’s not the boy you remember, Elyra. He’s becoming something else—something you might not be able to bring back.”

Elyra’s throat tightened. “You think I don’t know that?”

“I don’t think you accept it,” Fenrir countered. “You’re clinging to the idea of saving him because it’s easier than admitting he might already be gone.”

His words hit her like a blow, and she looked away, unable to meet his piercing gaze.

“You don’t understand,” she whispered. “He’s my brother. We’re bound by something stronger than this… this shadow.”

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