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The True Alpha of Lupine (Seraphina and Ronan) novel Chapter 52

Chapter 52 When The Mountain Opens

SERAPHINA

The mountain?” one of the Alphas muttered, frowning at the looming terrain ahead. All of us stood at the base of the jagged ridge, having been brought here by the Alpha instructors for the team trial. No wonder it had taken nearly twelve hours to reach this place.

Even from the foot of the mountain, the wind was colder–crisper, biting against skin and clothing alike. Around me, the other Alphas looked tense. Some were stiff with anticipation, others crackled with adrenaline. But then there was the group I was part of four Alphas who looked like they’d strolled into a picnic rather than a trial that could end our futures.

Finn was casually chewing gum like he was wandering through a garden, entirely unbothered. Asher had his hands tucked in his pockets, humming a tune that somehow sounded like a haunted lullaby–only the Goddess knew why. Dante had earphones in his ears, and I couldn’t even begin to understand how he’d smuggled those in when electronics were strictly banned at the Academy. Then there was Ronan–leaning back slightly, exhaling smoke from a cigarette like it was just another Tuesday, not a violation of at least three Academy rules, Cigarettes, alcohol, or the use of any kind of drug was forbidden.

And me? I clenched my fists tightly at my sides.

While they looked like they didn’t have a care in the world, I was brimming with unease–not due to the trial itself, but of the fact that they were my team. If I were alone, I could move freely. I could take risks, shift if I had to. But now? Now everything was tangled and complicated.

Alpha Gideon strode forward, his dark cloak trailing behind him like smoke dancing from fire. His voice boomed across the clearing.

“Everyone, stand in your teams!”

His sharp gaze swept across the crowd and lingered on us–me, Ronan, Dante, Finn, and Asher for a beat longer than the others. I noticed for the first time that there were eleven groups in total. Fifty–five Alphas remained.

The energy in the air shifted, tension pulled taut like à bowstring.

Alpha Gideon’s voice cut through the wind. “As you’ve probably guessed, this is a team trial. But unlike anything before… you will be told nothing about it. No rules. No maps. No briefings. Nothing.”

u’ve faced

The murmur of confusion rippled through the groups. I wasn’t immune to the unease.

He continued, eyes sharp as steel. “Because in the real world, danger doesn’t come with a handbook. It doesn’t announce itself. It arrives suddenly, shifts shapely, and wrecks every plan you thought was solid. Only those who can adapt–together-

make it out.”

He paced slowly in front of us, every step purposeful.

This trial is about more than just strength. It will test your instincts, your leadership, your trust in one another, Especially when nothing makes sense.”

Then he stopped, facing us all again. “This is not an individual challenge. If one of you falls, the whole team falls. If one fails, everyone fails. If one of you makes a mistake, your teammates will pay the price

I felt my breath catch. My pulse skipped. This wasn’t a test. It was a trap with teamwork as the primary weapon.

Alpha Hugo stepped forward “We’re not here to see how strong you are alone. We’re here to test how far you’ll go to keep one another alive. One death means failure for all”

That was when Alpha Jude delivered the final blow

The team that returns last, or returns with a missing or dead member, will be disqualified from the Academy

Silence fell like a blade

It wasn’t just a challenge anymore. It was a warning Our futures were in each other’s hands.

“Hal” Alpha Jude added, “the team that returns first, with all team members alive, will turn the entire leaderboard upside

11:50 AM PP

Chapter 52 When The Mountain Opens

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meant by flipping the leaderboard, but I wanted it. Whatever it was, I wanted it.

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Alpha Gideon raised his arm and pointed toward the mist–veiled wilderness beyond the mountain ridge. Then let the trial begin.”

A chilling bowl echoed somewhere in the distance–sharp, long, and unnatural.

The Alphas exploded into motion, each team surging forward toward the wild unknown.

Except ours.

I glanced left. Finn and Dante.

Then right Asher and Ronan.

Not a single one of them moved. Not a single one even looked at each other. There was no unity here, no bond. Just silent hostility, cold rivalry, and mutual disinterest. This wasn’t a team.

It was a disaster in the making

And I was right in the middle of it.

Steeling myself, I took a deep breach and stepped forward, heading toward the mountain alone. I wouldn’t be the last to move. Not today.

Seconds later, I heard footsteps crunching behind me. I turned my head just slightly, and saw all four of them following.

I pressed my lips into a thin line, gaze locked onto the fog ahead as I started running and all four of my teammates matched my pace as we finally entered into the darkness.

This wasn’t just a trial.

Up ahead, sharp movement caught my eye. But when we reached ahead no group was there, it was as if they had disappeared. There was only a torch in a tree.

“There is something in that branch,” Finn pointed at the tree.

Tucked between the branches of an old pine was a scroll. Dante stepped forward and pulled it free.

As he unrolled it, a pen shimmered into existence beside the parchment, hovering mid–air before falling into his hand.

His voice was even as he read aloud:

What?” Asher frowned and my eyes widened.

“It does not seem like an empty threat,” Ronan murmured, his eyes going to the shining pen

A strange pressige tightened in the air the moment he finished. The scroll pulsed faintly with golden light, and the pent shimmered ominously

Silvice stretched between us like a blade.

muttered, glancing around. “We don’t even know what the next trial is. How are we supposed to choose a leader for it!” My heart thudded. The tute wasn’t just a prompt, it was a trap. “Choosing the wrong leader could cost us everything.” I stated

at no one refused either.

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