CHAPTER ONE
“Did you just put chili oil on strawberries?” Daniel looked at me like I’d committed a culinary crime. I grinned, balancing the bowl in one hand as I hopped onto the kitchen counter. “It’s a thing. Sweet, spicy, tangy. Try it before you judge.” He raised a skeptical brow, the sleeves of his white shirt rolled to his elbows as he reached for a berry. “If I die, I’m haunting you.” “Don’t be dramatic.” He bit into it and paused. Then his eyes widened. “Okay, that’s… weirdly good.” I nudged his side with my knee. “Told you.” Our little apartment smelled like roasted coffee and spring rain, windows cracked open to let in the breeze. The city hummed outside—car horns, laughter, a distant siren or two. But in here? It was peace. Warm, humming, real. Daniel walked over to his laptop, pushing aside a mess of blueprints and client sketches. “Remind me again why you’re not bottling your chaos genius into a restaurant?” “Because chaos genius doesn’t pay the bills,” I said, hopping down. “But freelance recipe development does.” “You mean, sending spicy berry salad to food bloggers?” “Exactly.” He laughed, the sound soft and safe and as always it made my stomach flutter. God, I loved that sound. Three years ago, I was still scrubbing diner floors and sleeping in a hostel. Then I met Daniel—the architect who ordered tea instead of coffee and forgot his sketchbook at my booth. He smiled like the sun. He didn’t look at me like I was broken. Now? We shared a rent-controlled apartment with mismatched furniture, a two-burner stove, and a balcony full of struggling herbs. I had a job. Friends. A future. And a ring on my finger. He’d proposed last month—on a ferry ride across the bay, with city lights flickering behind him and his hands shaking. I didn’t even let him finish the speech. I said yes because he made me feel like I belonged somewhere. Like I was human. I was halfway through editing a new recipe draft when my phone buzzed. Unknown Number. I almost didn’t answer, but the call came again. With a sigh I picked it up. “Hello?” A pause. Then a voice, rough and unfamiliar came from the speakers , “Ayla Rowan?” My body went still. No one had called me that name for four years now. “…Yes?” “This is Elder Nora. From the Bloodhowl Pack.” If I wasn’t sitting down I would have staggered back a few paces. “I—why are you calling me?” “It’s Mae,” she said. “She passed last night. Peacefully.” Oh my dear goddess, “What?” “Her final wish was that you attend the burial. You were like a daughter to her.” Mae. Gods. The old wolf who made sure I had soup when I was sick. Who taught me to braid my hair and scolded me gently for stealing honey bread. The only softness I’d known in that place. That hell. “I don’t…” I cleared my throat. “I haven’t been back in years. I don’t think it’s a good idea.” “It’s tradition,” Nora said. “And respect.” “I’ll think about it,” I whispered. The line went dead. I didn’t say anything for the rest of the day. I moved through my routine like a ghost—shopping, cleaning, writing, editing—until night fell and Daniel came home. He brought Chinese takeout and kissed my forehead. I didn’t kiss him back. We sat on the couch, some random show playing in the background. He passed me the rice and I refused to touch it. “Okay,” he said eventually, voice low, “what’s going on?” I stared at the TV, words crowding my throat. Mae was dead. There’s no way I’d refuse going to pay my last respect. That woman had showed my love when I thought it was impossible to get it. “Ayla,” he said, gently this time. “Talk to me.” “I got a call today.” My voice cracked. “From someone I used to know. From… home.” His brows lifted. “You never talk about your home.” “Because it’s not a place I like remembering.” He shifted to face me. “Okay. So why now?” I exhaled, staring at my fingers. “Someone died. Mae. She raised me after my parents were killed. The pack elder called to say I should come to the burial.” “Pack?” Daniel frowned. “Like a community?” I looked at him, really looked—and knew this moment would change everything between us. And I had prayed - really wished that this day would never come - the day Daniel would discover that I wasn’t human like he thought I was. “No,” I said softly. “Like… wolves.” He blinked. “I’m sorry?” I stood up, wrapping my arms around myself. “I’m not what you think I am, Daniel.” “Okay…” “I’m not just a girl who grew up off the grid. I’m a werewolf.” He laughed. He actually laughed, like I’d cracked a bad joke. I didn’t. The silence that followed was the loudest thing I’d ever heard. “You’re serious.” “Yes.” He stood too, shaking his head like he could throw the words off. “Come on, Ayla. This isn’t funny.” “I’m not joking.” “Werewolves don’t exist.” “I exist.” He stared at me like I’d grown horns. “No. No, this is insane. You’re telling me… what? You turn into a wolf every full moon?” “That’s not how it works,” I said quietly. “We shift. By will. Not the moon. It’s—complicated. But it’s real.” Daniel took a step back. “How long have you been lying to me?” “I wasn’t lying. I was protecting you.” “From what?” “From them. From that world. From the part of me that isn’t safe.” His voice rose, sharp with disbelief. “You’re saying we’ve been engaged for a month and you never thought maybe I should know you’re not human?” “I am human, Daniel. Just not hundred percent one - and I wanted to leave it all behind. That part of me. It never brought anything but pain.” “And now you’re going back?” “I have to.” He nodded slowly, jaw tight. “Three years we have known each other and you have been hiding something like this to me? It never occurred to you to let me know that I was marrying an animal?!” His words made me flinch like it was a slap across my face but I knew I deserved it. “Daniel…” “He turned away, pacing toward the window, then back again. “I can’t do this.” “Daniel—” “I love you, Ayla. But this? This is too much. I don’t even know who you are.” I stepped forward. “I’m still me.” He looked at me—and for the first time, I saw fear in his eyes. “No, you’re not.” He took off the ring, - the promise ring I’ve gotten him after our engagement - set it gently on the coffee table, and walked to the door. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I can’t marry a stranger.” The door shut behind him. I stood there for a long time. Until the silence crawled into my bone, Then I sat on the floor beside the coffee table, picked up the ring, and stared at it. This was the life I built. And now it was already starting to fall apart.AYLAAfter days of being holed up inside, I couldn’t take it anymore.The bond was wrecking me. Gnawing at me. Cade had stayed away, and maybe I should’ve been grateful but all I felt was the pull. The ache. It was constant, like something in me was screaming for him. And I knew he was feeling it too. He had to be.I stood at the window, fingers rubbing the locket at my neck. Mae’s locket. Warm, comforting, like a heartbeat I didn’t understand. Something inside me was shifting slowly, painfully and it had everything to do with this bond. With my wolf. With me.“Your meal is ready, Ayla. Come eat something.”Beatrix’s voice broke the silence behind me. I didn’t turn. Just kept running my thumb along the locket’s edge, grounding myself.Beatrix has watched me. Silently. Keeping a very close eye on me. But no doubt, I'm still angry at her. Why the hell would she read my journal? “I’m going to the Palace,” I said quietly, but firmly. I stood, grabbed a shawl, and walked past her without
Human World The whiskey burned on the way down, but not as much as the memory.Ayla’s eyes haunted him, the way she looked at him that day. No guilt. No goodbye. Just silence. As if he had made some mistake she was finally correcting.Daniel set the bottle down with a quiet clink. Around the dimly lit bar, shadows shifted, men cloaked in darkness, murmuring low, silver glinting from concealed blades. This was not a place for decent men. But Daniel had long stopped being one.“She’s not yours.”The voice was smooth, female, too calm to be casual.He didn’t turn. He’d noticed her watching him since the night he went to meet them. She always sat alone, just within reach of the shadows. Dark hair like ink. Eyes far too ancient for someone so young.“She was mine before fate decided otherwise,” he muttered.“She chose you,” the woman said, seating herself beside him without invitation. “And now she’s crawling back to the wolves who broke her.”Her scent was off—neither human nor wolf. I
Cade..Something was shifting.Not in the kingdom. Not in politics. Not in the rogues—though their numbers had grown bolder. No… this shift was deeper. Personal.It was her.I hadn’t seen Ayla in days, but I felt her absence like a bruise that refused to fade.And yet, each night, my wolf grew restless. Pacing. Growling in the shadows.Even without the full bond—especially after what she tried—there was still something tethering us.I didn’t know what it was. But it made my blood itch.Riven entered my study quietly, carrying a sealed scroll. “Report from the Eastern patrols. Another rogue breach near Hollowpine.”I took the scroll but didn’t open it. “Casualties?”“None. This time. But they’re getting organized.” He hesitated, then added, “They were targeting the herbal trade routes. It’s coordinated.”Coordinated rogue attacks.A mate I couldn’t reach.And a council ready to turn on me.“How long until the Four Wing alliance meeting?” I asked.“Two days. But Galen’s already stirring
AylaThe silence in my mind had become a second skin.Days blurred. My body moved, but I felt… hollow. Not dead, not alive. Just here.No presence stirred in the place where my wolf once resided. No growl. No nudge. No comfort. It was like losing my breath and learning to live without air.I barely spoke to Beatrix. Even when she tried to keep things light, to pretend nothing had changed, I knew she could see it too—something inside me was broken.It was on one of those sleepless nights, curled in the chair by the fire, that I remembered it.The locket.Mae's locket. The one she’d left me before she died. I had tucked it into the bottom of my satchel days ago. It had always made me uneasy, like it was humming with something… old.With trembling fingers, I retrieved it from the bag and sat staring at it.Gold. Worn but intact. The surface was carved with unfamiliar symbols that shimmered faintly in the firelight. I should have opened it the day I got it. But something had always stoppe
CadeThe echo of the market still clung to my thoughts as I stood before the grand council hall—an obsidian structure nestled in the heart of the palace grounds, forged to host only the most sacred of gatherings. The Full-Wing Alpha Meeting. The last time this chamber held such tension, I was barely twenty, fresh to the throne, earning respect with every breath.Now, they waited for me again. Not to test me—but to corner me.Riven opened the doors.Four Alphas sat in silence, cloaked in power and impatience.Alpha Tim of the North Wing—arrogant and aged, his eyes cold with calculation.Alpha Maelis of the East Wing—slender, sharp, with a smile that never reached his eyes.Alpha Silas of the West—young, ambitious, always the first to sniff out weakness.And Lady Maerina, representing the South. The only one not an Alpha, but bold enough to sit like one.Elder Galen stood by the head o
Cade. An impromptu meeting had been called—again. Not because of politics or war, but because of Ayla. My mate. I had told them I would sever the bond between us. That had been nothing but empty words. I could never bring myself to do it. “The East Wing is grumbling,” Elder Galen announced, his tone sharp, gaze shifting among the others. “Perhaps if you had a Luna by your side, none of this unrest would be happening.” I didn’t respond immediately. Instead, I let the silence stretch, watching their discomfort grow. “Arrange a meeting,” I said at last, my voice low but resolute. “I want to see all representatives of the four wings.” The shock on their faces was palpable. None of them expected that. “In the next five hours,” I added. Gasps rippled through the chamber. The elders scrambled to their feet, already making urgent calls as they filed out of the room. “But Alpha,” Elder Galen protested, spinning back toward me, “the North Wing to Bloodhowl takes at least a ful