Chapter 181: Chaos unfolding - The Vampire King's Pet - NovelsTime

The Vampire King's Pet

Chapter 181: Chaos unfolding

Author: Colorful_madness
updatedAt: 2025-08-27

CHAPTER 181: CHAOS UNFOLDING

It was late, and the only thing that lit up the night sky were the stars.

The moon had gone hiding, swallowed up by the thick blanket of night, but that didn’t in any way affect the eyesight of the werewolves, whose yellow‑rimmed eyes glittered in the dark like predatory lanterns. Each blink was slow, deliberate, and almost unnerving to watch, the glow shifting faintly when they turned their heads.

Jared and the three council members—Fallon, Kannedy, and Brilla—took a carriage. The polished wood of the vehicle creaked under its own weight, the faint smell of leather from the worn seats mixing with the night air. Outside, the other men he had brought with him either ran with measured, powerful strides or mounted the well‑trained horses they had brought. Hooves thudded quietly against the packed dirt road, the rhythm unbroken.

They weren’t in the slightest bit of a hurry. The pace was steady, almost unnaturally so, especially since King Jared had ordered them not to be. He sat with his broad shoulders filling much of the carriage’s interior, his head turned slightly so he could keep his eyes fixed on the council members around him. That stare—cool, sharp, and unblinking—carried a tinge of suspicion that none of them missed. He didn’t shift his gaze lightly. He studied them the way a predator studies movement in tall grass.

The three council members sat stiffly, hardly breathing, as the carriage rattled over the road. Their silence was thick with unspoken fears. They understood exactly why Jared was looking at them that way, and that understanding only scared them more. Inwardly, they began to suspect each other, every remembered glance or movement from earlier now laced with potential danger. If any one of them turned out to be a monster—if one of them decided to self‑destruct here—there would be no escape. Not for any of them.

The atmosphere inside the carriage was suffocating. Outside, the cold wind swirled across the road, but inside, the air felt heavy and stale. No one moved more than they had to. Even the smallest gesture seemed amplified in the tight space. The only sound was the steady creak and roll of the carriage wheels and the muffled thump of hooves in the distance.

After a long, tense stretch of travel, the carriage slowed, then finally stopped. The sound of boots hitting the ground came first, then the faint jingle of harnesses. One by one, they all got out, the council members moving with careful steps as if not to draw unwanted attention to themselves. Jared emerged last, his tall frame unfolding from the carriage with a slow deliberation that made the men nearest to him straighten instinctively. He swept his gaze over them—each face, each posture—taking account of the fact that no one was missing.

"Set up camps. Do not let any part of your group out of your sight! If you want to lose, you can pee in front of them!" King Jared ordered, his voice cutting through the night with a force that left no room for argument.

Not one dared to disobey. The words were harsh, but the tone behind them was harder. The command struck deeper than just discipline; it was survival. Even the women among them didn’t react with offense. Werewolves weren’t squeamish about such things. Their transformations stripped away clothing, modesty, and any illusions of privacy—exposure was simply part of their nature. In the world they lived in, survival outweighed comfort.

Immediately, arrangements began to take shape. Men moved with efficiency born of discipline, unrolling tents, staking them into the ground, checking the perimeter. But Jared didn’t move toward the tents. He stayed standing, watching—eyes sharp, arms loose but ready. It was a silent declaration: he had no intention of resting. None of the council members dared to do what he did not. They remained standing as well, glancing toward him often, as though gauging if even a moment’s reprieve might be allowed.

They all knew that the threat Jared had given earlier was not hollow. He wasn’t the sort to speak words he didn’t mean. That knowledge was a constant weight on their backs, making even their breathing measured.

Food wasn’t discussed. Eating wasn’t even a thought. They were camped at the side of the road that led directly into the dark forest—the barrier between the Vampire Kingdom and that of the Werewolves. The road itself was safe enough for now, but the forest ahead... it was a different matter. Monsters didn’t need permission to cross boundaries. They could appear at any time, in any place, without warning.

The tension was a living thing among them. Even the faintest noise or a shift in the wind drew darting glances. They all sat together in the darkness, shoulders tight, not daring to strike a match or spark a flame. Fire meant light. Light meant visibility. And Jared’s expression, grim and unyielding, was enough to kill the thought entirely. The severe lines of his face gave nothing away, but the weight of his presence silenced even the smallest whisper.

No one spoke to him. No one wanted to. So they waited, each man and woman holding their spot, locked into a tense vigil until the pale fingers of dawn began to stretch across the horizon. That was when Jared finally gave the order.

Pack up.

The command was met with immediate movement. Hands rolled up tents, tied packs, checked weapons. The carriages wouldn’t be of use for the next stretch—too slow, too cumbersome. They would have to leave them behind. Instead, they mounted the horses and led the extras along, knowing they might need to abandon even these in an instant. If a forest beast appeared, the horses would be left as bait, as distraction, a necessary sacrifice.

When all was ready, Jared wasted no time. He led them straight toward the forest, repeating the same order he had given before, though this time the warning in his voice was edged sharper.

"Even under the threat of death, I expect each one of you to stick together!" His voice rolled like distant thunder, the kind that promised a storm. Before the last syllable faded, his body shifted, bones reshaping, muscles swelling as fur tore through his skin. His wolf form emerged in a blur, powerful and fast. Without hesitation, he bolted into the forest’s shadow.

One by one, they followed suit, bodies warping into their lupine forms. The strongest among them carried what little they couldn’t leave behind. Clothing was meaningless now. Their paws struck the earth in quick succession, moving fast and low. The forest’s darkness wrapped around them, a suffocating shroud that pressed in on all sides. But for once, the woods were silent. No growls. No distant howls. No rustle of something hunting.

The lack of danger only sharpened Jared’s caution. Silence in the forest didn’t mean safety—it meant uncertainty. His pace quickened, his form cutting a dark streak through the underbrush, and the others followed without breaking formation.

They crossed faster than expected. Relief came like a subtle shift in the air as the forest began to thin. Emerging on the other side, Jared slowed. His eyes scanned the group, wolf‑bright gaze sweeping over each of them. He was counting. Checking. Ensuring.

It was then his focus snagged on the last figure at the end of the group.

Without warning, Jared shifted back into human form. The transformation was seamless, but his appearance was far from human. His claws were still out, curved and deadly, more than capable of splitting bone. His hair was a wild mane, his body stripped bare of any civilized guise. The power radiating off him was primal.

The others shifted back as well, standing in their human forms. They watched silently as Jared’s attention locked onto Horess—the youngest among them. Jared moved toward him with an expression that made the air feel heavier. There was no mistaking the intent in his eyes. It was blood‑thirsty. It was anger barely restrained.

"You didn’t stick to the group!" Jared’s bark cracked like a whip. Horess flinched, the color draining from his face. His body trembled enough that it looked as if his legs might give out at any second.

"I... I..." His voice cracked, stammering as though even forming words was an impossible task under Jared’s glare. His eyes darted, searching for an ally, a savior in the crowd. None came. Slowly, almost defeated, he lowered his head.

Jared stepped close, so close that Horess could feel the alpha’s breath. Then Jared leaned in, sniffing him—long, deliberate inhales that dragged the sound out into the tense silence. His nostrils flared, but his expression didn’t change. He kept sniffing, hard, searching for something specific.

Nothing.

Jared’s frown deepened. His eyes locked onto Horess’s with a sharpness that made the younger man’s skin crawl. Killing a normal pack member carried consequences—even for an alpha. And Jared knew it.

"Alpha! He’s the weakest and slowest amongst us! He was bound to fall behind!" Falson’s voice cut in suddenly. The words were laced with urgency. He ignored the sharp looks from the other council members; this was not the time for politics. His interruption was a calculated risk.

Jared’s eyes flicked toward him, holding for a beat before he stepped back. The anger in his expression cooled slightly, though it was far from gone. Without a word, he began moving from one member of the group to the next, leaning in close to sniff each of them. His face stayed impassive, but the focus in his gaze was razor‑sharp.

None of them knew exactly what he was searching for. They only knew that whatever it was, finding it—or not finding it—could mean life or death.

Jared was looking for the scent of blood. The same faint trace he had caught earlier, in the carriage. It was his only sure method of identifying a monster in disguise. But as he moved down the line, nothing matched. One after another, he found no trace.

He was just about to give up when he stopped abruptly.

His head turned. His eyes narrowed.

In front of him stood Bavira.

Bavira—the son of Harned, his head of guards. A man who had been closer to Jared than most. And now, Jared’s gaze held something dangerous, something sharp enough to pierce through bone.

It was the look of a predator deciding if it was time to kill.

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