SERAPHINA’S POV
“Sera! Where the hell are you?”
It felt like an eternity had passed before Judy’s voice rang through the trees, ragged and sharp with worry.
Another echoed after it—Roxy, more irritated than worried. “If you went and froze your ass off out here, I swear—”
“I’m here!” I called, voice cracking.
My throat still burned, and I wasn’t sure if the tightness in my chest came from lingering panic or the wave of emotions that surged when I heard Alina.
My legs wobbled as I scrambled down the ridge, breath fogging thick in the frigid air. Every step, every handhold, felt like clawing out of my own grave.
By the time I reached the others’ flashlights flickering weakly between the trees, my arms trembled from the firewood load I had regathered.
Most of it had gotten too wet to be much use in a fire, and I cursed myself for ultimately letting my teammates down.
Judy nearly tackled me. “Gods above, Sera—you had me thinking—” She broke off, eyes flicking to the bloodied scrapes on my palms, the wood cradled against me like a life buoy.
“What happened?”
“I’m fine,” I lied, forcing a shaky smile. “Just took longer than expected.”
Roxy crossed her arms. “And what was that longer route, through the underworld? You look like you saw a ghost.”
I held my tongue. I couldn’t tell them about the bear without telling them how I’d escaped—and that meant revealing Alina’s existence.
Not yet.
“Let’s get this wood burning before you all turn into ice sculptures, hmm?” I said, starting the walk back to the cave.
“Yeah,” Judy agreed. She reached out and took some of the wood from me. “Finn and Talia aren’t doing too good.”
I winced. “How bad?”
She and Roxy exchanged a look that knotted guilt and worry in my stomach.
“Let’s just hurry,” Roxy muttered.
The journey back to the cave was shorter than I remembered, and I was grateful for it. All the way back, I stayed alert, my gaze darting through the trees for any sign of the bear.
But thankfully, we reached the others without incident.
“Fuck,” I whispered.
Finn and Talia were tangled together. Their skin had paled to an icy blue, and I couldn’t tell whose violent tremors were running through whom.
I’d dallied too long; if we didn’t warm them soon, the cold would take them before morning.
We immediately set to work, and in no time, a fire crackled to life inside the cave, flames licking hungrily at the wood I’d stacked.
Smoke curled toward the rocky ceiling, where it slipped into unseen vents as the light bathed us in a fragile glow.
But fragile was the word—because even pressed close to the flames, Finn and Talia’s violent shovers barely subsided.
Their bodies shook in jerks, like puppets with frayed strings. Judy rubbed Talia’s hands between hers, muttering words I couldn’t hear.
Roxy threw up her arms. “This is insane. Lucian had to know Omegas wouldn’t survive this setup. What the fuck was he thinking? Making us fight frostbite instead of finding a talisman?”
The crack of her voice struck a chord. Because a part of me had wondered the same.
“Roxy,” Judy snapped, “don’t start.”
“Don’t start? Look at them!” Roxy pointed at Talia, then Finn. “We’re supposed to be proving worthiness, not crawling into shallow graves! You really think this wasn’t stacked against us from the start?”
Silence. Her words echoed off the cave walls.
I clenched my hands into fists in my lap. “That’s enough, Roxy.”
Her head whipped toward me, defiant. “Tell me I’m wrong, Alpha-born. Tell me you don’t see it too.”
I met her glare with a steadiness I didn’t feel. “I see my teammates freezing. And right now, arguing isn’t going to keep them alive. Remember the first challenge? Remember how we felt invincible while the stronger wolves were brought to their knees by the mist? I didn’t hear you complaining then.”
Roxy’s mouth opened, then closed. She muttered something under her breath but turned away.
“Everything in these Trials is for a reason,” I added quietly. “Trust that.” At least that was what I was trying to do.
That was when Alina stirred inside me, her voice brushing against the edges of my mind like velvet. ‘Deeper in the cave, Sera. There’s something there that can help.’
My breath caught. ‘What?’
‘Fruit. Hard and small, clinging to vines. They’ve been placed here for you. For wolves who can’t withstand the cold the way you can. Find them.’
I didn’t hesitate. Judy and Roxy frowned up at me as I shot to my feet. “Stay here. Keep the fire fed.”
I grabbed my backpack. “I’ll be right back.”
“Seriously?”
“Again?”
I nodded. “I’m not going out this time, I’m going in.”
Roxy arched a brow. “And that’s supposed to be better?”
I crossed my arms. “Would you rather freeze to death?”
Roxy turned back to the fire. “Have fun.”
Judy shot me a wary glance, and I returned it with a confident smile before I turned and headed deeper into the cave.
It narrowed as I pushed deeper, the walls glittering faintly with ice-crusted veins of stone. My breath echoed back at me, the sound unnervingly loud.

‘Cold-resistant fruit,’ Alina murmured. ‘Bitter, but their heat lingers once eaten. Enough to keep your teammates alive.’

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