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The Cursed Wolf and the Forest Princess Novel Cover

The Cursed Wolf and the Forest Princess

The forest has always been Jackline's only home. She doesn't remember the palace she was born to, the parents who once held her, or the kingdom that cried for a stolen princess. All she knows are the crumbling stones of an abandoned castle hidden deep in the woods, the whisper of leaves, the growl of distant beasts, and the cold reality of surviving alone. By day, Jackline hunts, forages, and explores the shattered halls of the castle swallowed by ivy and moss. By night, she curls up under broken rafters and stares at the moon, wondering if anyone, anywhere, is looking for her... even though she's certain the answer is no. The world beyond the forest might as well be a myth. No one has ever come for her. No one has ever stayed. Until the wolf. One fateful day, while tracking signs of wounded prey, Jackline doesn't find a deer or a boar, but a massive black wolf sprawled in the roots of an ancient tree. Its fur is stained with blood, its breathing shallow, its silver-gray eyes blazing with pain and something disturbingly close to human awareness. Every instinct tells her to run. A cornered predator is dangerous. A wolf this big is deadly. But Jackline recognizes the loneliness in its eyes. The fear of being left to die. It mirrors the ache buried deep inside her own chest. Ignoring her fear, she uses everything the forest has taught her-herbs, makeshift bandages, secret paths-to drag the heavy creature back to her ruined castle. There, in a forgotten servant's corridor, she creates a shelter. Day after day, she cleans its wounds, grinds healing plants, and whispers calm words to a creature that could end her life in a heartbeat. The wolf snaps and growls, but it never truly harms her. Slowly, it begins to trust her. When the wolf finally stands again, strong and steady, Jackline expects it to vanish into the trees without a backward glance. Instead, it follows her. Silent as a shadow, the wolf becomes her constant companion. It pads at her side when she searches for berries, keeps watch when she sleeps, and nudges her hand when her thoughts become too dark. Jackline learns to speak her thoughts out loud-to the forest, to the castle, and to the wolf with the haunted eyes. She tells it her fears, her questions, and the strange emptiness she feels when she thinks about her past. The wolf never answers, but somehow, it feels like it understands. For the first time in her life, jackline isn't truly alone. But the forest keeps its secrets tightly wound, and this wolf is one of them. Everything changes under the full red moon. Jackline has seen full moons before: pale and silver, gentle and distant. But this one climbs into the sky like a burning ember, staining the forest in crimson light. The air grows tense and electric; the castle feels suddenly awake, like it's holding its breath. That night, the wolf could rest. It paces, muscles tight, eyes brighter than she's ever seen them. There's something wild and barely contained inside him, something both terrifying and beautiful. When jackline reaches out to soothe him, he pulls away with a look that almost breaks her-one filled with sorrow and dread, as if he has been waiting for this moment and wishing it would never come. Under the blood-red moon, the wolf begins to change. jackline can only watch as bone and muscle twist, fur ripples and sinks beneath skin, and the creature she nursed back to life reshapes into something new. Something impossible. When the transformation ends, the wolf is gone. In his place lies a young man with dark hair, pale skin marked by faint scars, and the same silver-gray eyes that once watched her from a wolf's face. He is human. And he's not. He looks at her like he's been waiting his whole life to be seen. He knows her name. From that moment, Jacline's world fractures. The young man-her wolf-reveals a truth she never imagined. He is cursed, bound to the red moon, doomed to live as a wolf most of the time and return to human form only when blood stains the sky. Hunted by men, feared by sorcerers, and rejected by both humans and beasts, he is trapped between two worlds, never fully belonging to either. But he is not the only one living in a story shaped by magic and betrayal. The wolf's curse, he explains, is tied to old magic that once protected a powerful royal bloodline. A bloodline that ruled the kingdom beyond the forest. A bloodline that vanished the day a newborn princess was stolen from her cradle and never found. The day Jackline disappeared. Piece by piece, the life she thought she knew crumbles. The ruined castle she calls home is more than a random shelter-it once housed the loyal guardians of the royal family. The forest is not just a wild, dangerous place-it's a barrier of living magic, hiding her from those who would use or destroy her. Jackline is not simply a forgotten girl who happened to survive.
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Chapter 15

CHAPTER 15 - THE DAY OF DECISION

Dawn crept into the stronghold like a slow breath - pale gold on snow, cold enough to burn. Bells rang once, low and heavy, calling council, calling soldiers, calling witnesses.

Today, Jackline would answer the claimant.

Not in war.

Not in surrender.

In choice.

And choice was more dangerous than either.

The council gathered before sunrise - firelight flickering across tense faces. Caelan stood in full armor, Elara strapped daggers across her ribs, Lyrena held a staff glowing faintly like frost light. Arion stood near Jackline - shoulders steady, gaze outward, unreadable but alert.

Jackline inhaled deeply, the weight of eyes across the hall pressing like stone.

"This is not a battle for steel," she said.

"It is a battle for direction."

Elara nodded once, fierce.

Caelan's jaw set.

Lyrena's fingers curled around her staff, as if stabilizing something within herself.

Terin - pale, young, brave - whispered:

"What if the claimant refuses peace?"

jackline answered without false comfort.

"Then we protect the people. But we offer peace first."

Arion's voice followed - calm, low:

"And we offer strength second."

Together - balance and edge.

Jackline rode out at noon.

Not with the army.

With the council.

With choice.

Across the Field of White

The claimant's forces waited beyond the riverbank - banners coiled green and gold like a living serpent. Not yet in battle lines, but prepared for them. Soldiers murmured, horses stamped frost from the ground.

He stood at the front - tall, composed, sunlight in his armor.

Jackline dismounted alone.

The council behind her, close but not overshadowing. Arion descended last - presence like quiet thunder, silver catching in daylight like warning and promise both.

This time, the claimant smiled openly.

"You came sooner than three weeks."

Jackline met his gaze evenly.

"You moved sooner than three."

He inclined his head - acknowledging an unspoken truth.

"We test each other," he said. "Not with swords - yet."

Arion stepped forward half-pace, voice steady:

"Then let the test be honest."

The claimant studied him - respect not disguised.

"You are different from rumor."

Arion held his stare.

"So is she."

The assembled forces murmured - murmurs of curiosity, not fear. Not yet.

Jackline raised her voice so frost carried it clearly:

"We stand here not to divide the kingdom - but to decide how to shape it."

The claimant's expression sharpened with interest.

"Then give shape."

Jackline drew breath.

Not for peace alone.

For sovereignty with an open hand.

"We form one council, not bound by birth or banner. One ruler does not command alone - decisions made by table, not throne."

He considered - the slightest tremor of calculation beneath calm.

Jackline continued:

"We unify armies under shared defense, not conquest. We build schools, granaries, magic-laws protecting rather than chaining. I will not be queen of fear - and you will not inherit his shadow."

Silence rippled.

Wind shifted snow into glitter across steel.

The claimant's eyes narrowed - not hostile, assessing.

"You propose structure, not crown."

"I propose the future," Jackline said.

A pause like a held heartbeat.

Then-

He stepped closer, voice lower:

"And who leads this council you build?"

She answered clearly.

"No one leads alone."

Another silence - deeper.

Then a voice rose behind the claimant - older, bitter:

"Compromise is weakness!"

A soldier stepped forward, eyes blazing with zeal. He pointed his blade toward Jackline.

"No throne without dominion! No queen without obedience!"

Before the claimant could speak, Arion moved forward - calm but unmistakably firm.

"Obedience builds chains," he said. "Choice builds kingdoms."

The soldier spat,

"You are a wolf-curse. Abomination!"

Arion's silver flared - not rage, restraint forged into strength.

Jackline stepped between them with a voice like unsheathed clarity:

"If the kingdom fears transformation, then let it see strength without domination."

The claimant raised a hand - forestalling escalation.

His command was quiet - but forceful:

"Stand down."

Reluctantly, the soldier stepped back - but hate did not leave his eyes.

The moment didn't break the peace.

It cracked it.

Thin fissure beneath snow.

The Turning Blade of Diplomacy

The claimant spoke again - slower.

"You offer equality at risk of disorder. You offer shared power at risk of stalemate."

Jackline nodded.

Truth acknowledged.

He stepped closer - almost within reach.

"And yet... I see something the old kings never had."

His voice softened - low, intent:

"You offer responsibility instead of right."

Arion inhaled quietly - sensing a shift.

Not hostility.

Interest.

Possibility.

The claimant extended a hand once more - not for surrender, not for dominance -

for trial.

"We test your model," he said. "One season. One council, shared rule. If kingdom thrives - unity stands."

Jackline's heart hammered - because this was the opening she needed.

A chance to prove.

Not just promise.

And yet - risk.

A season was short.

Failure meant collapse.

Arion murmured beside her - only she heard:

"Choose what builds tomorrow - not what quiets today."

Jackline raised her chin - spine straight, voice ringing across two armies:

"We accept."

Gasps rippled across the field.

The claimant's hand tightened around hers - once, firm.

One season.

One council.

Peace - by test.

But peace built on edge.

One Council, Two Visions

The first meeting of the unified council took place in the stronghold's great hall - not beneath banners of conquest, but at a long circular table brought from storage and set where the throne once dominated.

No head of the table.

No seat is elevated above another.

Every chair is equal.

A new symbol - fragile as early ice.

Jackline sat beside Arion, Lyrena to her left, Caelan further around, Elara opposite. The claimant arrived with three chosen advisors: a strategist with calculating eyes, a soft-spoken archivist, and the same bitter soldier who had raised steel on the snowy field.

His presence was not forgotten.

Whispers threaded the room like thin smoke.

Jackline opened the meeting not with command, but clarity.

"We gather to build a structure no king could burn. Our goal is not to rule, but to achieve stability. Our loyalty is not to blood - but to people."

The claimant nodded - measured, listening.

But the bitterness seated to his right muttered:

"You cannot build strength with softness."

Jackline met his gaze directly.

"Softness is not weakness. Cruelty is not strength. We choose balance - not domination."

The soldier's jaw tightened. His resentment did not dim.

Arion's presence beside Jackline steadied the table's atmosphere. He sat silent, but his calm radiated groundedness like stone beneath a river. No aggression - only readiness.

Lyrena spoke next, staff resting lightly at her side.

"We must redefine magic law. No citizen should be bound for ability alone. Regulation - not fear - builds trust."

Surprise flickered across the claimant's strategist.

"You propose freedom for mages?"

"Freedom with accountability," Lyrena corrected.

"The kind that prevents another sorcerer-king."

Caelan leaned forward.

"And restructure military command. No more armies swearing to crowns - only to the defense of land and people."

Jackline nodded.

Elara continued the chain of reform:

"Justice must be transparent. Crimes judged by council, not monarch alone."

Each idea built upon the last - a structure forming, not in stone, but in understanding.

And then the claimant spoke - calm, measured.

"You propose government shared. But shared power is slow. What if emergency demands swift action?"

Jackline answered without hesitation.

"Then temporary authority is granted by council vote - not assumed by birthright or threat."

Debate sharpened - but did not break.

This was progress.

Not victory.

But beginning.

Strength Seen, Fear Stirred

During the break, soldiers mingled with the claimant's guard in the courtyard. Conversations were cautious, curious. Some exchanged training techniques. Others measured distance like a battleground.

Arion moved through them like a tide between rocks - observed, studied, weighed.

A group of soldiers approached cautiously.

"You fought the king," one said. "Cursed. Bound. And now-free?"

Arion answered without embellishment.

"I am learning myself. Just as this kingdom is."

No dramatization. No claim of superiority.

Just truth.

It disarmed them.

But not everyone softened.

The same bitter soldier - now named Calder by others - watched Arion with hard eyes, speaking loud enough to carry:

"Wolf or man - both break reins."

Arion did not respond.

He didn't have to.

Others did.

A younger guard turned sharply toward Calder.

"No. Chains break because you hold them."

Murmurs followed.

Not unanimous.

But dividing sentiment.

Whisper of Betrayal

Evening settled when the council adjourned. Jackline remained in the hall, reviewing notes by firelight. Arion joined quietly - a presence like a steady heartbeat at her side.

Before either spoke, Elara entered - sword at hip, eyes sharp.

"We found something strange," she said, in a lowered voice. "Supply ledgers are missing pages. Stored near spellbinding materials."

Jackline stiffened.

"A second spy?"

Elara nodded once.

"Or one who never left."

Footsteps echoed down the corridor - faint, hurried.

Jackline, Arion, and Elara followed the sound into the old archive hall. Papers were scattered across the floor. Ink still wet on the desk. Someone fled moments before.

A cloak brushed through the doorway at the far end -

grey, fast, vanishing into shadow.

Deeper than a stable hand.

More intentional.

Jackline's pulse hardened.

"We don't root out dissent - we expose it and address the cause. But sabotage..."

Her voice sharpened.

"Sabotage is something else."

Arion's voice was low as thunder before break:

"And it's already inside."

Not paranoia.

Recognition.

The claimant's alliance had not brought war through the gates.

It brought infiltration.

And one misplaced trust could shatter everything.

Saboteur in the Hall of Beginnings

Night weighed heavily over the stronghold.

Torches flickered against stone like restless thought, smoke curling toward vaulted ceilings. Guards paced, boots soft against cold floor, eyes sharper than before. Trust no longer flowed freely - it moved cautiously, measured like rationed breath.

Jackline stood in the council chamber long after others retired, studying missing pages from supply ledgers. Someone had stolen them to hide the movement of resources - food, steel, spell-binding dust. Not for personal gain.

For preparation.

For disruption.

Arion stood near the window behind her, watching snowfall slip like feathers across the courtyard. His posture looked calm, but Jackline recognized the stillness of a predator assessing threat unseen.

"We are being watched," he said quietly.

Jackline did not question it.

"Then we must draw them into open sight."

Arion stepped closer to the table.

"They move through shadows because shadow protects them."

He met her gaze.

"We remove protection, we reveal intent."

jackline breathed out - slow, resolute.

"Then tomorrow, we hold a feast in the great hall. All council present. All guards are mixed. No factions separated."

Elara, who had lingered near the column base unnoticed, stepped forward.

"And saboteur will have to show face - either to blend or to strike."

Caelan and Lyrena entered moments later, called by whispered summons. No secret stayed long within these walls tonight.

Lyrena spoke first - voice taut but grounded.

"We cannot accuse without truth. Fear spreads fast. If we hunt shadows instead of criminals, we become the king we replaced."

jackline nodded deeply.

"This council must survive doubt without burning trust. We will not rule through paranoia."

Caelan crossed his arms.

"But we won't ignore danger."

Balance and edge.

Again.

Always.

Feast Under Suspicion

By evening, torches lined the banquet hall, long tables laden with bread, roasted root vegetables, sliced venison, and spiced cider steaming like thaw. Music played - soft at first, warming as bodies filled the room.

Jackline entered with the council at her side - Arion behind her, not as guard but anchor.

The claimant arrived moments after, cloak emerald, expression unreadable. His commanders flanked him, including Calder - eyes like flint striking spark.

Villagers, soldiers, advisors - all mingled. Uneasy but curious. Newness held tension, but also possibility.

jackline raised a cup.

"Tonight, we share a table instead of walls. Speak to each other - not about each other."

A murmur of agreement - some sincere, some forced.

But the connection began.

Slow. Fragile.

Arion moved through the hall like a silver-thread presence - approached by soldiers who braved questions, by children staring wide-eyed, by elders who studied him like history rewritten.

He didn't shrink from any gaze.

He offered calm instead of teeth.

But Calder watched him like a wolf watches a stag - what he saw as a threat, not a transformation.

The Attempt

The night softened - cider warming tongues, conversation weaving past old barriers. Even claimant and jackline spoke quietly beside the brazier - neither yielding, neither hostile.

Then -

A glint.

A hand too quick.

Arion saw it first - silver flaring beneath his skin like instinct climbing spine.

A figure near the servants' table - hood low, sleeve marked with faint serpent thread. A vial lifted subtly. Powder glimmered green inside.

Spell-binding dust.

Thrown into the open air, it would cripple every mage - including Lyrena - and sow panic enough to break the alliance beyond repair.

Arion moved as an arrow loosed.

Silent. Precise.

He crossed the hall in a blur - not full wolf, not full man - something between. His hand seized the saboteur's wrist just as the vial left his fingers.

Spell-dust scattered.

Arion twisted sharply - vial shattered in his grasp, dust falling harmlessly at his feet.

Gasps cut through music like a blade.

Guards surged. Elara sprinted. Caelan drew steel.

The saboteur cried out, hood falling back.

Not serpent-faction.

Not a villager.

A council scribe.

One of Jackline's own.

jackline crossed the hall with a voice like fire cutting cold:

"Stop - no one strike."

Silence froze the air thick.

Arion still held the saboteur's wrist - not breaking, holding. His eyes glowed faint silver - fierce restraint, not rage.

jackline faced the scribe.

Not ruler to traitor - leader to citizen gone astray.

"Why betray the peace you sit beneath?"

Tears welled - anger and sorrow mixed.

"I lost family in the King's war," he spat. "And now you sit with another rising king beside you!"

He pointed at the claimant - hatred sharp.

"I would see no more crowns!"

Calder bristled - hand on hilt.

The claimant lifted one hand - halting bloodshed.

jackline stepped forward - steady.

"No crown stands here. Only council."

She touched Arion's arm lightly.

He released the scribe.

Slowly.

Purposefully.

"We judge action, not fear," she declared. "This will be trial - not execution."

Gasps - of relief, outrage, surprise.

Jackline looked to the claimant - meeting his eyes directly.

"This is what shared rule means: not reaction, but justice."

His gaze held hers - unreadable, impressed, challenged.

He nodded once.

"One season. One test. One chance."

Arion stood beside her - silent strength, steady presence.

The room exhaled - peace shaken, but not broken.

Not tonight.

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