"I, Leila Steen of the Lycan King's Pack, rejecgt you, Lucas Lavoie, Alpha of Kingfisher Pack." "You think this stunt will win me over? You're gravely mistaken." In her past life, Leila, a Lycan princess, cast aside her pride to appease her mate, Lucas - a cold, merciless Alpha whose heart belonged to another. While Leila groveled for scraps of his affection, the entire kingdom whispered of his torrid affair with Josephine, his true love. Scorned and discarded, Lucas drained every ounce of Leila's worth, leaving her to perish in agony on an operating table. Reborn with fire in her veins, Leila vows to reclaim her destiny and sever ties with the man who shattered her. But after her bold rejection and demand for divorce, Lucas, once repulsed by her very existence, undergoes a shocking transformation, pleading for a second chance. Unmoved by his groveling, Leila turns away, her gaze fixed on a new horizon - and into the arms of Darren, Lucas' fiercest rival, whose dangerous allure promises a future forged in passion and power.
View MoreLeila
The sterile scent of antiseptic stung my nostrils, mingling with the metallic tang of my own blood. I lay on the operating table, its cold surface biting into my skin through the flimsy gown, a slab of ice beneath a dying flame.
Pain tore through me, each contraction a jagged blade twisting in my gut.
I was 27, a Lycan Princess, and yet here I was, unraveling on this frigid bed, my life seeping out in crimson rivers. The room hummed with the relentless beep of machines, a mocking pulse against my fading one.
I clenched my fists, nails digging into my palms, but the physical agony was nothing compared to the hollow ache gnawing at my soul.
With the last scraps of my strength, I reached out through the Mindlink, my mental voice a frail whisper -
"Lucas, please."
The plea trembled in the dark expanse of my mind, but it met only silence, a wall as unyielding as stone.
He had blocked me again, severed the bond that should have tethered us.
My mate, my Alpha, had cast me aside like a discarded rag. Too weak to try again, I rasped his name aloud, "Lucas," the sound barely a breath, scraping past my dry lips. The nurses flinched, their pitying eyes darting away as if my despair were contagious.
One of them, her face soft and lined with sorrow, fumbled with my phone and dialed his number.
My keen Lycan hearing caught the double ring before his voice sliced through the line, sharp and cold as a winter wind. "What is it?" he snapped.
Beyond his words, I heard the sultry wail of jazz, the clink of glasses, the murmur of careless laughter. The Royal Country Club. He was there, sprawled in luxury, no doubt with Josephine draped across him like a prize pelt. Her scent - sickly sweet, like overripe fruit - seemed to coil through the phone, taunting me. My fists tightened, the beep of the machines quickening as rage flared hot in my chest. That green-tea bitch, stealing what was mine, flaunting it for five wretched years.
"How many times have I told you not to call me?" Lucas' voice was a lash, each syllable dripping with disdain.
My heart shattered, fragments scattering like glass across the floor of my mind. The nurse's voice trembled as she spoke, "Alpha Lucas, your wife is about to die due to heavy bleeding. Please come and see her for the last time!"
A trill of laughter spilled from the receiver - Josephine's, bright and brittle as breaking crystal. "What's wrong, Luke? Who's so ignorant to call you so late?" she cooed, her mockery a needle in my raw wounds. More laughter followed, his friends' voices weaving a tapestry of indifference.
Five years I'd endured it - the whispers, the sidelong glances, the shame of being the Luna whose mate paraded his mistress openly. And now, as I bled out, childless and broken, he wouldn't even grant me a final glance.
The nurse's eyes widened, pleading, but Lucas's reply was a death knell.
"Call me when she dies," he said, his tone flat, final, a blade driven through the last thread of hope I'd clung to. The phone slipped from her hand, clattering to the floor, and I turned my face away, unable to bear her pity. What had I done to earn such hatred? The pain - physical, searing, and the deeper, soul-crushing kind - swallowed me whole. The machine's beep stretched into a long, piercing wail, and I died, hatred burning in my veins like wildfire.
Darkness folded around me, and my life flickered past in jagged shards. I saw myself as a child, the Lycan King's spoiled darling, twirling in silk dresses, my laughter ringing through the halls. Then came Lucas, his shadow falling over my college years, his presence a thrill that set my heart racing. At the full moon ball, when the mate bond snapped into place, joy had flooded me, pure and bright. But our wedding night stained that memory - his eyes, once promising love, glinted with possession, control. After that, every look he gave me was laced with disdain, every touch a claim rather than a caress. Five years of sleepless nights, of loneliness so thick it choked me, of shame I swallowed like bitter wine.
My body grew lighter, the pain fading as cold, brilliant moonlight enveloped me. I knew this rite - the Return to the moon, the werewolf's final journey. The Moonlight Goddess would judge me, cleanse my sins, and let me dissolve into eternal light. I braced for it, resigned, when a voice broke through, warm as a summer breeze. "Why are you here?"
Tears welled in my eyes, spilling over. "I couldn't win my mate's love," I choked out. "I couldn't give him a child."
The moonlight shifted, forming hands that brushed my tears away, tender as a mother's touch. "Leila, my child," the voice said, "you are too young, too sad, too angry. You should not die now."
"I hate that I lived my whole life for a heartless mate!" I cried, the words tearing free. "If I could do it again, I'd never repeat that mistake. I'd live for myself!"
A wave of light surged into me, warm and alive, flooding my cold, empty shell. "You have my blessing," the voice murmured. "Go back. Rewrite your life. This time, live for yourself."
-
The moonlight vanished, and my eyes snapped open. The air smelled of fresh linens and faint lavender, a stark contrast to the blood and antiseptic of before. I lay in a bed, soft and familiar, the Luna's chamber in Lucas' house.
Tina, my maid, stood beside me, her voice cutting through the haze. "Luna, tonight Alpha Lucas will take you to the auction. Please choose a dress that suits you."
I stared at her, then at the room - the carved wood, the drapes, the layout unchanged from five years ago. My gaze darted to the mirror. My face was younger, unlined, my body whole and strong.
I pinched my leg, the sharp sting grounding me. It hurt. It was real. I was reborn, tears of disbelief and gratitude pooling in my eyes.
Damn, I'm back.
LeilaMy glass of water sweated in my hand, the chill of it seeping into my skin, a fleeting distraction from the man who stared at me.Then, Josephine stumbled in behind the waiter, a wreckage of a girl, her presence a jagged tear in the room's polished facade. She was in a perfect mess. Her eyes were swollen, red as raw meat, brimming with tears that glistened like broken glass. Her hair hung in greasy knots, a snarl of chaos framing her face, and her dress was a tattered rag, one sleeve ripped loose, flapping like a wounded bird. Two long scratches raked her legs, the skin puckered and pink, weeping just enough to stain the floor."What happened?" Lucas's voice cut through the haze, sharp with worry, his chair scraping back as he stood. In my past life, he'd swallowed her every lie, her every whimper, like a pup lapping at poisoned milk. I'd thought this time he'd grown claws, a spine, something to shield him from her games. But there he was, the same fool, e
LeilaThe restaurant, Fori di Cesare, sprawled along the Waterfront of Nulford City like a gilded beast, its opulence a claw around my throat. Crystal chandeliers dripped from the vaulted ceilings, scattering light across marble floors so polished they reflected the glitterati of the Kingdom—men in suits sharp as knives, women draped in silks that whispered wealth.The air reeked of truffle oil and old money, thick with the hum of cultured voices and the clink of crystal glasses. I sat in the most coveted viewing seat, a throne of velvet that overlooked the shimmering expanse of water, a bread stick crumbling between my fingers. My phone glowed in my lap, an endless scroll of meaningless faces and hollow updates - distractions from the itch of impatience crawling up my spine.Lucas was late again. Josephine, that leech with her painted lips and grasping hands, had probably sunk her talons into him. He'd invited me to this lunch, dragged me into this circus
LeilaNona stood at the top of the stairs, her shadow long and unyielding. Her cane tapped each step as she descended, a slow, deliberate beat. Her eyes, sharp as shattered glass, pinned Josephine. "Well?" she pressed.Josephine stammered, cheeks blazing. "I—I didn't mean it like that, Nona."Nona's lip curled. "Save your breath. You're a guest here. Act like it. And call me Grand-Mère, like all the Omegas do in my pack."I sipped my coffee, the bitterness coating my tongue. Josephine squirmed, and I almost pitied her. Almost. Then I remembered her games, her sly little grabs at what was mine. No, she'd earned this and the look on her face was priceless.Lucas strode in, tension rolling off him.He looked surprised to see Josephine here, especially dressing up like that.He frowned and walked all the way next to Nona, kissed her forehead and said, "Nona, please. Josephine's here at my invitation. Sorry that I forgot about
LeilaThe floor beneath my feet trembled. A faint shiver at first, like a whisper of something wrong, then a roar that clawed up through the soles of my boots. Lucas and Darren grabbed my arms, their fingers digging into my flesh - Lucas's grip iron, Darren's desperate. We ran. The stairs buckled under us, steps cracking like dry bones, splintering into dust. A monstrous rumble chased me, a sound so deep it rattled my teeth.I didn't look back. Couldn't. Fear stitched my eyes forward, my breath ragged in my throat.They dragged me out as the building gave up its ghost. The crash was deafening - stone and steel screaming as they collapsed into a heap of ruin. Dust exploded around us, a choking fog that clawed at my lungs. I coughed, doubled over, hands braced on my knees. My chest burned.Before I could steady myself, Lucas' arm hooked around my waist, hard and possessive, and he threw me into the car. My body hit the seat with a thud. The leather smelled
DarrenLucas was coming at me, all snarls and fists, a mad dog let off his chain.I didn't give a damn about him or his bruised ego. Leila was somewhere in this crumbling heap of a building, surrounded by bombs, and every second I wasted on this bastard was a second she might not have.His arm swung wide, aiming for my jaw. I caught it mid-air, twisted it hard, and threw him over my shoulder like a sack of grain. He hit the ground with a grunt, dust kicking up around him, but I didn't stick around to watch him squirm. I bolted for the entrance, the darkness swallowing me whole as I crossed the threshold.Cassius' voice chased me, sharp and panicked. "Are you crazy?! There are bombs everywhere! You step on one, you're dead!"Zion's shout followed, thinner, desperate. "The bombs buried on each floor are marked in red! Be careful!"I didn't turn back. I couldn't afford to waste a second. Leila was on the tenth floor, and I'd claw my way through
DarrenI slouched in the passenger seat, staring through the tinted window at the skeletal remains of Nulford City's Sullepoint Avenue project house. The night swallowed it whole, leaving beams and crumbling concrete to claw at the sky. This place was a festering wound - abandoned by one bankrupt fool, then another, passed around a dozen times like a cheap whore no one could afford to keep. A mess too tangled to fix, it suited filth like Zion perfectly.Cassius' fingers tightened on the wheel, his voice a low growl. "That coward Zion actually dared to stand us up?! He's really asking for it!"I squinted into the dark, the emptiness pressing against my skull. I shook my head. Zion was a rat - squeaking, scurrying, but toothless unless you let him bite.Cassius shot me a glance, his eyes glinting like wet blades. "Could he have left without us?"I shook my head, slow and deliberate. "He doesn't have the guts." The silence stretched, thick and suffocating, until the faint rumble of an en
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