THE TRIPLET ALPHAS ARE HERS
Chapter 102: Seren’s First Hunt
The moon hung low and heavy over the palace when Seren stepped into the courtyard, her bare feet silent on the cold stone. Around her, three wolves waited in the silver light.
Aeron stood apart, his grey coat the colour of winter storms. His eyes, amber and ancient, watched her with the same intensity he brought to council chambers. Beside him, Kael paced in restless circles, his dark fur almost black against the shadows, muscles rippling with barely contained energy. Theron lay stretched across the flagstones, his russet coat gleaming, tail wagging once in greeting.
They had asked her to join them. Not as a queen, a diplomat or a curiosity. But as a pack.
Seren closed her eyes and reached for the shift.
The transformation had become easier over the months since the battle. No longer the agonizing tear of bones and sinew, but a willing surrender. She let her human form fall away like a cloak, felt her spine lengthen, her senses bloom open. When she opened her eyes again, the world was fire and perfume.
Scents she had never noticed flooded her: the moss growing between courtyard stones, the lingering smoke from kitchen fires, the sharp musk of her mates. Kael smelled of earth and steel. Theron carried something sweeter, like honey and clover. Aeron was pine and ice, clean and distant until you drew close enough to feel the warmth beneath.
She lifted her muzzle and tasted the wind.
*Ready?* Aeron’s voice came through the bond, silent but unmistakable.
Seren answered by bounding past him into the forest.
The trees swallowed them within moments. Moonlight filtered through the canopy, painting the forest floor in patterns of silver and black. Seren ran without thought, her paws finding purchase on leaf litter and exposed roots, her lungs drinking the cold air in great gulps.
Kael matched her pace easily, his shoulder brushing hers as they wove between ancient oaks. *Left,* he sent, and she veered without questioning, avoiding a fallen log that would have tripped her. *Good.*
Theron flanked her right, close enough that she felt his warmth, far enough that she had room to run. He said nothing through the bond, but his presence was a steady hum of approval, of joy shared and multiplied.
Ahead, Aeron led them deeper into the forest, his grey form a ghost among the shadows. He chose their path with the same precision he brought to everything, picking routes that challenged without exhausting, that tested without breaking.
They ran for what felt like hours but could have been minutes. Time moved differently when the only measure was the rhythm of four sets of paws and the synchronized beat of four hearts.
Seren had never understood why Kael spent so much time in wolf form. Now she knows better. This was not an escape from humanity. This was a return to something older, something truer. The wolf did not worry about treaties or rebellions or whether the council would accept a transformed queen. The wolf simply *was meant to be.*
Aeron slowed, and the pack slowed with him.
*There,* he sent, and Seren caught the scent: deer. A small herd, maybe half a dozen, bedded down in a clearing ahead. The wind carried their warmth, their heartbeat, their complete ignorance of the predators who had found them.
*Your first hunt,* Kael sent, and the challenge in his voice was affectionate. *You choose. Take them together or pick one?*
Seren considered. The old her, a servant, the servant who had never raised her voice, would have said none. Let them live. But the wolf in her recognized the truth: this was not cruelty. This was the cycle. The deer would live and die regardless. The question was whether their deaths would feed her pack.
*Together,* she decided. *We take one together.*
*Good,* Aeron sent, and approval warmed her from within.
The hunt was nothing like battle. 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚
Battle was chaos and terror, the desperate scramble to survive. This was choreography. They moved as one organism, four wolves flowing through the underbrush with a harmony that felt like destiny. Kael circled left, Theron right, while Aeron and Seren approached from downwind.
The deer never knew what hit them.
Seren’s prey was a young buck, still growing into his antlers. He saw her at the last moment, eyes wide and white, and tried to flee. But Kael was already behind him, turning him back toward Seren. Theron cut off the escape to the right. Aeron closed from the left.
And Seren leaped.
Her jaws closed on the buck’s throat, and the world narrowed to the hot pulse of blood and the desperate struggle of hooves against earth. She held on through instinct; through muscle memory she had never learned but somehow possessed. The buck stumbled, fell, and went still.
She released and stepped back, breathing hard.
*Well done.*
Aeron’s praise was quiet but genuine. He approached the kill and touched his nose to hers in a gesture that felt almost like a kiss. Kael came next, his tongue swiping across her muzzle, cleaning blood she had not realized was there. Theron circled them both, his tail high, his joy a bright flame through the bond.
*We feast on this,* Kael announced, and tore into the buck’s flank.
The pack ate together, tearing meat from bone with teeth designed for exactly this purpose. Seren discovered she was ravenous, hungrier than she could remember being in human form. The meat was warm and rich, and the bond hummed with shared satisfaction as they fed.
When they finished, they left the carcass for the forest to reclaim and found a stream to drink from. The water was cold and clean, and Seren lapped at it until her belly was full and her tongue was numb.
*How do you feel?* Theron asked, settling beside her on the bank.
Seren considered the question. Her paws were sore. Her jaw ached from the unfamiliar work of killing. There was blood drying in her fur and mud caked between her toes.
She had never felt more alive.
*Free,* she sent back, and the word carried more than she could have said in any human language. *I feel free.*
Aeron pressed his shoulder against hers. *This is what we wanted you to understand. Not the politics or the power. This.* He gazed out at the forest, silver in the moonlight. *The pack. The run. The hunt. This is what we are when no one is watching.*
*I know,* Seren sent. *I finally know.*
They ran again before returning to the palace, slower this time, savouring. The moon began its descent toward dawn, and the forest shifted from silver to grey to the first blush of rose.
Kael found a hilltop where the trees parted, and they stood together watching the sun rise. Four wolves silhouetted against the coming light, their breath misting in the cold morning air.
*We should do this more often,* Theron sent, and for once there was no trace of his usual mockery. Just sincerity, raw and unguarded.
*Every week,* Kael agreed.
*Every chance we get,* Aeron amended, and Seren felt his rare smile through the bond.
She looked at her pack, her mates, her home. The servant girl who had once hidden in shadows would never have believed this moment. The human woman who had feared wolves would never have understood it.
But the wolf queen who stood on this hilltop understood perfectly.
*Let’s go home,* she sent.
They ran together into the rising sun.
Back in the palace, Seren shifted back to human form in the privacy of their chambers. The triplets followed, and Theron immediately wrapped her in a warm robe while Kael stoked the fire.
Aeron poured her tea with hands that still bore traces of the hunt, crescents of dried blood beneath his fingernails. He handed her the cup without comment, but his eyes held hers for a long moment.
"Thank you," Seren said softly. "For taking me."
"You are our mate," Aeron replied. "Our pack. There was never a question of whether you would hunt with us. Only when."
Kael dropped onto the couch beside her, pulling her feet into his lap. "You did well. Better than well. Some wolves never learn to coordinate like that."
"I had good teachers."
Theron settled on her other side, his arm draping across her shoulders. "She’s being modest. I felt her through the bond during the kill. She wasn’t afraid. She was *present.* That’s rare."
Seren leaned into him, exhausted and exhilarated and more content than she had words for. "Can we go again tomorrow?"
The triplets exchanged glances. Then all three of them laughed, the sound warm and strange and wonderful.
"Tomorrow," Kael promised.
And Seren smiled, because she finally understood what they had always known. The crown, the politics, the constant battle for survival: those were duties. But this was *life.* The pack, the run, the hunt.
She was a wolf. She was home, and was free.