Rachel Mercer had been unwanted her whole life. After bouncing between sixteen foster families, with no real name or sense of home, all she had left was a quiet hope that turning eighteen would bring freedom from a system that detested her. But everything changed the night she was attacked. She was thrust into Astrae Lykaon Academy, a secret institution for werewolves, where students believed she was a girl who simply returned from winter break. They don't know the truth. Only the academy's inner circle is aware that the girl she's replacing vanished without a trace. But if pretending to be her keeps her safe, she's willing to play along. Until she meets them. Five fated mates, each powerful, unpredictable, and drawn to her in ways she doesn't understand. The bond is wild and dangerous, awakening something ancient in her blood. And at the centre of it all is him: the young professor who once saved her life and now watches her like he already knows the truth. She was hunted by something ancient that should not exist Her bloodline is rare Her enemies are older than legends And Rachel stayed at Astrae Lykaon Academy under a false identity, hoping to survive. But as secrets unraveled, bloodlines awakened, one terrifying thought began to take root; What if she was never meant to survive that night? And what if she's not the impostor after all?
View MoreRACHEL
“Where is that worthless piece of shit? How could she repay me in this manner?!” My mother screamed. My heart dropped. Her hysterical voice frightened me. It always did. God, I hated my life. I knew why she was screaming. I didn't need to be told. I stared at my bloodied palm, a reminder of what had transpired in the living room. I had broken her expensive mirror, which she had gotten from Paris on her last trip. It wasn't my fault. Or it was. If I hadn't stared too long into the mirror, I could have avoided everything that happened. My life…very strange. “Rae!” Lightning streaked across the sky just as my name was called. I jumped, holding my chest as my heart raced. “Shit,” I muttered, turning to the door as it went ajar. My foster sister, Lucy, stood there with her arms folded across her chest. She tapped her foot impatiently on the ground while staring at me. She looked at the messy state of my room, before her eyes flickered to mine. “You've always been a pig. This is enough evidence for it. However, I am not here to remind you how nasty you are,” She snarled. “Mom is calling you!” “Don't ask me why she wants to see you, just know you're in a bloody deep shit,” Lucy snickered, turning her back, leaving the room. Breathing out, I began to walk to the door. “You're a mess, Rachel,” I heard a voice say as I passed by the old mirror in my room. It was the same old, creepy voice that slithered through my skull, low and guttural, layered with something inhuman and wicked. It wasn’t a first for me. I believe I was cursed. It started three years ago when I first arrived here. I heard a voice calling out to me from the mirror. I had tried my best to find what it was, but all searches had been futile and only worsened my situation. I was tired of speaking to what wasn't there. No one ever saw it. I was the weird one who saw things that weren't there. I talked to literally no one, and people never believed me when I told them what I had seen, because I was the only one who had seen it. I tried to ignore it as I always did, moving to the door, but it kept speaking. “Do you want to know why your life is this twisted? Why aren't you loved? I'll be happy to tell you.” It whispered. “Leave me alone,” I murmured. “And if I don't? You'll flip on me like you did earlier?” My hands balled into fists, and I turned to the mirror, staring at my reflection. “Who are you? What do you want from me?!” Suddenly, the voice disappeared, and the room was silent. You'd have thought I was speaking to myself if the reflection hadn't moved when I didn't. For a brief second, I heard nothing until it spoke again. “Everything. I want your life and I shall have it!” it yelled. Its voice was rough, wild, and scratchy. It made my skin crawl, and goosebumps spread all over my skin. “Then take it and leave me alone!” I snapped, the wind glided into the room from the open window, and a sharp crack sounded in the room. The mirror was broken. It wasn't as bad as the one from the living room, as that had exploded. “Rachel!” My mother screamed at the same time. “Coming!” I replied, hurrying to the door. I put my dark waist-length hair into a ponytail before leaving the room. If my calculations were correct, the Mercers’ household was the sixteenth foster home I had been in. And I was barely seventeen. Ever since I was born, no one wanted me. I was told they barely found me, deep in the mountain, during a flood, hanging on to a branch. A kind soul had rescued me, yet never truly wanted me, and dropped me off at the orphanage. Each time I get adopted, I only get to stay briefly, at most three months, before getting sent back to the orphanage home. Why? I couldn't tell. No one would ever give me a good enough reason except that I was a bad child, and they were just incapable of loving me. To be honest, my adoptive parents weren’t the problem. About sixteen parents wouldn't lie when they were repeating the same thing. That meant I was the problem, and perhaps God didn't want me ever to find true happiness. I took the old creaky staircase one at a time. When I entered the living room, I saw my parents sitting there, waiting for me. Biting my lower lip, I let my hand linger on the stairs rail while I hesitated briefly, thinking of what to say to their question. If they decide to return me to the orphanage today, I'd plead with them to let me stay until I am eighteen. Only then could I gain my freedom from the harsh orphanage system. I didn't want to return there. It wasn't like it was any better here, as I was treated almost the same way, but I still got a few hours to myself. “I'm sorry, ma’am, I didn't mean to break your…” I trailed off, biting hard on my lower lip. How do I say it without offending her? My foster mother raised her head, her eyes stared at me up and down. I saw the disgust mar her face as she continued to look at me. My father's face had the same expression. Of course, they hated me now. The cycle was repeating itself. “Mom,” I muttered again, getting closer, putting on a forced smile. She didn't return it. The disgust still lingered. “Lucy said you called for me. I didn't hear you the first time you did, and I am sorry for the…” “I am not your mother,” she hissed, standing to her feet. My teeth sank into my lower lip, grazing it softly at her outburst. My heart clenched painfully, yet I still managed a smile. “Did I do something wrong?” I whispered, pushing back the tears burning in my eyes. “Are you asking me that?” She burst out. “You fucking broke my mirror and no, I am not even pissed one bit about that but I still am. Ever since your arrival here, it’s been one disaster after another. Furniture breaks for no reason, the neighbours avoid us like we are diseased, we lose jobs, and there are many more things I can add that you satan’s spawn had made us go through!” That shouldn't affect me. I had heard worse—the unwanted child. Satan’s instrument. The cursed evil spirit. The unfortunate orphan. Yet, her words hurt me. Maybe it was because I was hearing her sound this furious. Or perhaps because I had thought this would be the last foster home I'd be in. I mentioned that I was no better off being in the orphanage, even though I had to clean and cook until my hands were numb here. They had cleaners, but they allowed me to do the dirtiest work. Yet, my adoptive parents were nicer than the ones in the orphanage. They gave me clothes despite it being, hands down, from Lucy and almost ruined, it was still good enough to cover up my nakedness, unlike the orphanage, where I didn't have the privilege. I had three square meals, but in the orphanage, having a meal was a privilege. You get to scavenge sometimes. And I get to have my room here too. I sleep in a large room in the orphanage with other people my age. “I’m sorry, Mom…” A sharp crack sounded, and my head whipped backward. My cheek stung from where she had slapped me, and my hand raised instinctively to touch it. “I said, do not call me that!” She yelled. “It's because of you that our life is ruined. We can't even get a decent job because of you. We can't live like any normal person here. What are you? Are you some kind of curse that God sent to punish us?!” She screamed in anger. The storm intensified as if it were aware of the situation currently happening in the living room. Thunder boomed, shaking a few things around the room. “You're a secretary in the local store downtown…” “Well, not anymore, young lady!” She shouted, flinging a paper towards me. Bending, I picked up the paper with trembling hands, staring at it. She was fired from her job. It wasn't my fault. I never asked her boss to do so. I believed it was due to her incompetence because, most days, she would laze around and refuse to go to work, only giving her boss excuses. Yet, she was blaming me for that. “I packed all her things, mother. It could only fit into a backpack. I made sure to leave my old clothes behind. Now let's see how she's going to survive.” Lucy said, tossing a brown backpack on the ground before me. She walked over to me, holding the strap of the dress I wore. “And this belongs to me. You can't wear it anywhere.” She yanked it, and it ripped from the shoulder, down to my chest area. Thank goodness I was wearing a sports bra. “No, please, mother. You can't send me out in the storm.” I rushed to her to grip her hand, but she pulled away. “I told you to stop calling me that. I didn't birth you. And if you refuse to go, I am going to drag you out myself!” She declared. I didn't get a chance to keep pleading with her as she pounced on me, gripped me by my hair, and began to drag me to the door, yelling at Lucy to pick up my dirty backpack. The wind screeched, lightning lit up the room in a flash of white, almost blinding me. We had barely reached the door when it exploded inward, every window in the house shattered in a single breath. “What the hell?” My mother exclaimed, letting my hair go. The wind howled through the room, as if it had a voice of its own, and the candles, lights from chandeliers, floor lamps, and even table lamps died. A figure stood in the doorway. It wasn't human. It was too huge to be one. I couldn't tell. It was massive, hunched, coated in mottled fur that shimmered silver-black. Its claws scraped the floor as it proceeded towards us. Mom screamed. Dad, who had been quiet since I stepped into here, swore and fell back. Lucy shrieked, ducking behind the couch. While me? I couldn't move. I stood rooted to the spot, afraid. The creature stood in front of me. It didn't move to anyone else. Only me. Its eyes glowed gold. “Eat her. Take her.” Lucy screamed from behind the couch. “She's the freak here. She brought this upon us. She's a fucking monster!” The creature must have heard her plea as it raised its huge hand, and it landed on me. Pain detonated behind my eyes. I screamed, my knees buckling, and I dropped to the floor, wrapping my arms around myself as agony ripped me open from the inside. The monster picked me from the floor and flung me across the room. My back slammed hard on the wall, and I could hear a bone or two breaking from the impact. My vision blurred as dizziness washed over me. It was going to kill me, but right now, dying was better than being alive. This life was too cruel for me to keep living. I felt myself being picked for the third time, and once again tossed around like some dirty laundry. This time, I didn’t feel pain. The only thing I could think of was death. I was dying. No, falling. That was what it felt like. “Ivy!” I heard an unfamiliar voice. Sharp and loud. I hit the ground hard with a thud, gasping. My eyes flew open. Pain shot through me almost immediately as I twisted around, frantically searching for the monster. But I found none. Instead, I was in a room that didn't look like mine. Clean sheets tangled around me: a warm bed, a high ceiling, golden light filtering through unfamiliar windows. And a woman. She had a warm smile on her face as she stepped closer to me. “Welcome back to Astrae Lykaon Academy for young, promising wolves, Ivy Sawyer.”JAXON“Don't you dare lay a hand on my mate. Get away from her!”Mate?!I sucked in a deep breath, staring at him with wide eyes. It felt like I had been punched in the gut. I swallowed, taking a step back as Noah tossed his head back, growling in pain, Ivy still in his arms like a prized possession he couldn't let go of.“What is going on?” Grace whispered, coming up behind me.I couldn't precisely say what was happening because I had no idea myself. I knew about second-chance mates because I had gotten one, which was Ivy. However, that should happen if you lost one or both of you rejected each other. Most of the time, it was even impossible to find someone else. I had seen people in similar situations, and they remained single all their lives. It wasn't because they chose to be single, but because they were never given a chance to mate again. As cruel as that may sound, it was that way in the werewolf world.Yet, never for once had I heard of this happening. Ivy hadn't entirely reje
JAXON“The last thing I ever thought you'd announce is us getting married. I mean, we've been together for a long time, and you never brought that up. When I do, you seem to get mad at me or even find a way to evade it. What changed?” Grace questioned as she stepped into the office after me.She walked up to me as I slipped out of my jacket, taking it from me. I watched as she hung it on the coat rack before coming to stand in front of the desk.“I am genuinely curious, although I am excited,” she beamed, her eyes twinkling. I guessed I had done the right thing. And even though I didn't like Grace in the way she might like me, I love it when she smiles. It gave me a sense of accomplishment.I had rejected Ivy and even made an announcement I had thought was impossible, believing that would make me stop thinking about her. I had thought it would ease my pain and give her a sense of protection. Still, why did I feel this overwhelming pain? The one that had intensified since we stepped in
RACHELI returned to the hall with Noah. After resting for a brief moment, I felt fine again, and there was nothing much to do in the room. Clara and Ruby left as they didn't see me having any health challenge, and staying with Noah in the awkward silence was weird.“Are you sure it's okay to be here? Dancing isn't really a big deal to me if that's what you're worried about. In fact, I hate it.” Noah murmured as he held my waist while we swayed to the slow music playing.How could he hate dancing yet be so good at it? I should be the one hating because I was very awful, even in the waltz that looked the easiest.I looked up at him in time to see the worry that crossed his face. I sent him a little smile before resting my head on his shoulder. “I'm fine.”It was the truth. Even though I was still trying to understand what had happened earlier, I didn't think it had anything to do with dancing.Noah said nothing. I guessed he believed me. I find it cute that he was worried about my well
JAXON‘It's because of you she's in pain. It's because of you. I hate the fact that I am your wolf!’ Ajax growled in my head as I walked away from the room Ivy was in.‘Why would you do that? You failed once, and you blew a second chance that was given to you. How miserable do you intend to make us feel?!’Maybe far more miserable than when I found Alicia choking on her blood, hanging on a thin thread between life and death, pleading for me to end her misery. The pleas and her tears still haunt me to date.‘Answer me!’“It's for the best,” I murmured, ignoring the girls who stood frozen in place with eyes wide with admiration as I walked past them.“He's so handsome,” They squealed, making me roll my eyes.‘It's nothing for the best. It's for your selfish reason.’ Ajax retorted.“Agreed,” I answered, nodding. If that were what being selfish was all about, I'd be selfish then.The mate bond, I felt it for the second time after her death. I had vowed to Alicia on her grave never to ackn
RACHELPain.It started as a pinch at my side. The type I often felt when I lay in my iron bunk bed at the orphanage home, thinking how it would be nice to have a family who'd love me for who I was. A family who wouldn't return me just at the slightest convenience, and those who wouldn't stare at me like I was some kind of bad omen that would soon befall them.The pinch turned into an ache. It was ignorable. I had done that many times. Seeing Lucy say nasty things about me to our parents, which wasn't true, yet they'd believe her. Knowing that Lucy, who was also a foster child, was given preference over me, yet I wasn't wanted.The ache lasted only for a brief second as I felt a sharp stab in my heart, gut, and all over my body. I gasped, falling over.Noah’s hands tightened around my waist, and he leaned in so I could rest my body on his as he swirled me with an expertise I had only taken a brief moment to admire before the pain overtook me.“Do you want to sit down?” He whispered in
JAXON“Professor Jaxon!” Ivy exclaimed, I saw the relief coursing through her.I heard the argument from the start.I never wanted to interfere. It was too much of a hassle butting into a lover's conversation. Or maybe it was jealousy. I had felt it even though it was subtle. The tightness in my chest and the rage that almost overtook me. Ivy had fucked Elijah. I could barely get the words said out of my head now.I didn't care about the fact that she was no longer a virgin. Half the girls in this school weren't virgins anyway. But I couldn't understand why she'd have slept with Elijah. That dickhead.I hated him. My hate for him should have propelled me to save Ivy, but I tended to avoid anything that had to do with him.Elijah was three years younger than I was. He was the school's golden boy. The co-captain of the football team and Grace's younger brother. That makes him one of the High Council's sons. His father was an alpha. He was going to be an alpha, too. He had his life alrea
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