WOLFLESS: Accidentally Marked By The Devil's Son-Chapter 96: Lycan.
Chapter 96
Isabella’s vision began to splinter into shards of white and red. The "homesickness" she had felt earlier was now screaming in her.
Lucain.. she tried to whisper, but as Elena’s blackened nail sank into the center of the mark, the red lines ignited.
Isabella scream tore through, her back arched so violently that the wooden frame of the bed groaned under the pressure.
The world was no longer stone and shadow. It was a blinding white. Every nerve ending was a live wire, sparking with a pain so absolute it transcended the physical.
But through the white-out of agony, the vision were spiraling around Isabella’s head—stripping away the lies like skin from a wound.
The darkened bedroom. It wasn’t Caleb’s soft, practiced smile she saw in the playback of that vision.
The warmth in the cold. It wasn’t Caleb’s hands that had rubbed the frost from her skin; it was a scarred, calloused palms of the man she had just renounced.
The roar of protection. Every time she had felt safe, every time she had felt seen, it had been Lucian.
With effort, Isabella forced her eyes to open, her vision swimming through tears and the haze of pain. She looked past the eyeless horror of Elena and found Caleb.
He was standing just a few feet away, the orange candlelight catching the smooth, porcelain perfection of his unscarred chest.
He wasn’t moving. He wasn’t helping. He simply watched her with a blank expression. He looked at her as if she were a beautiful, breaking toy.
A surge of pure, unfiltered loathing rose in Isabella’s throat, hotter than the pain.The thought of dying like this, a second time, began to fester in Isabella’s mind with a bitterness that surpassed the burning of Elana’s magic.
In the fractured echoes of her past life, she had been hunted, a victim of a destiny she couldn’t outrun. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝚠𝚎𝚋𝗻𝗼𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝚘𝐦
But this death—this slow, agonizing dissolution—was far more humiliating. She had walked into this cage willingly.
She had looked at the man who would have burned the world to keep her breathing and called him a monster, choosing instead the polished lies of the creature standing at the foot of her bed.
He had bled for her. He had slit his own wrist for her to be stable. And she—stupid, blind, desperate Isabella—had looked into his face and called him a monster.
The weight of her own foolishness was a suffocating realization that she was throwing away a second chance that thousands of souls would have bled for.
She and Lucian hadn’t even reached the quiet parts of their story; they hadn’t experienced the soft dawns or the mundane peace of a bond fully realized.
They were ending in a crescendo of betrayal and blood, and it was her voice that had struck the final note.
The self-loathing was a cold tide, but beneath it, the nature of the agony began to shift. It was no longer just the external searing of Elena’s nail or the corrosive drip of the witch’s magic.
The white-hot intensity behind Isabella’s eyes began to condense, pulling inward toward her marrow.
The "nothingness" that had defined her existence—the hollow void where a wolf’s spirit should have been howling—suddenly felt pressurized, like a lung taking its first breath after a lifetime of drowning.
Her skeletal structure began to vibrate beneath her skin. The skin of her neck began to radiate as if something was forcing it’s way out of her.
The sensation was terrifying. Every drop of guilt she felt for Lucian, every ounce of loathing she held for Caleb’s blank stare fed the fire.
The pain was no longer something being done to her; it was something erupting from her.
Her fingers, which had been clutching the bedsheets in a death grip, began to lengthen, her nails darkening and thickening into ivory curved blades that shredded the heavy furs with a strength that shouldn’t belong to a human girl.
The heat in her chest expanded, a roar of pure energy that started at the base of her spine and raced upward, seeking the light.
It was not a normal heat, It burned like a localized sun, a fever of a soul that turned the air around the bed into a shimmering, distorted haze.
Elena, sensing the shift tried to drive her nail deeper, to finish the harvest before the tide turned but she was too late.
The moment her blackened skin brushed against Isabella’s searing pulse, a sound like iron meeting a forge hissed through the room.
Elena shrieked, a sound of genuine, physical shock, as she was forced to yank her hand back.
Her fingertips were blackened, not with her own magic, but with the char of a holy, celestial burn.
Beneath the surface of Isabella’s consciousness, the world was receding. The sounds of the room—Caleb’s heavy breathing, the crackling of the dying candles—dimmed into a muffled hum.
The self-loathing that had nearly drowned her was suddenly pushed aside by a presence that felt vast, ancient, and terrifyingly calm.
"Rest now, little one," a voice echoed within the theater of her mind. It wasn’t a human voice; "You have carried this burden long enough. Let me handle the monsters."
Isabella’s mind went blissfully dark. She didn’t feel her bones lengthen; she didn’t feel the skin of her back tear as the true beast forced its way into reality.
She was tucked away in a corner of her own soul, a passenger in her own body. On the bed, Isabella’s body gave one final twitch.
Her eyes snapped open, and the room went deathly still. The pupils were gone. In their place burned molten gold — not steady, but shifting, like liquid metal struggling to hold shape.
A thin ring of crimson pulsed around each iris, brightening and dimming in rhythm with a heartbeat that was no longer entirely human.
The temperature in the room spiked. Not with fire. Nor magic.
Something older.
Elena’s shadows recoiled first. They did not scatter dramatically, they retreated slowly, dragging themselves back along the walls as if unwilling to touch the air near the bed.
The black mist that had bound Isabella’s limbs evaporated into nothingness, unable to survive the sheer temperature of the power now pouring from the girl’s pores.
"What is this?" Caleb rasped, stumbling back, his face finally shattering into an expression of pure terror.
"What did you do?" Elena didn’t answer. For the first time since Lucian had carved the light from her face, the Eyeless Queen was truly in shock at what she was seeing.
"A Lycan?" the witch whispered, her eyeless sockets pulsing, her voice cracking as if the very word were a heresy. "No... it’s impossible. A myth? she has no bloodline, She has no spark!"
She took a step back, her legs scraping against the stone as she watched the laws of nature bend and snap.
For thousands of years, the Lycan had been nothing more than a ghost story told to frighten the supernatural world.
The first creature of the goddess, a creature of such immense, raw power that history had seen fit to bury the memory of its existence.
They were not the common wolves that roamed the forests on four legs, dependent on packs.
Isabella’s frame was no longer human. A thick, silver-white fur erupted from her skin, shimmering with the same celestial heat that had charred Elena’s fingers, edged faintly in gold where the light struck it.
Her spine lengthened, shoulders broadening, muscles tightening and reweaving as if rewritten by invisible hands. She did not rise gracefully. She dragged herself upright. Half-crouched. Half-standing.
Taller than before — perhaps six and a half feet when she straightened — but not fully bipedal. Her posture was wrong in a way that made the eye uneasy. Not wolf. Not human.
Something between. Caleb staggered back, the candlelight flickering wildly. It was a terrifying fusion of feminine grace and monstrous strength.
These were the rulers of the shifters world—fast, deadly, and entirely ruthless. They did not hunt for sport; they erased obstacles without a hint of mercy.
Elena’s shadows stayed at her side, waiting for their masters orders at the new threat. The witch reached out, her hands steady as she summoned her shadows.
The golden-red eyes of the Lycan locked onto her and there was no Isabella left in that gaze. There was no guilt, no human hesitation, and certainly no love for the "brother" who had played her for a fool.
There was only the cold, calculated intent of a predator who had finally been unleashed.






