เข้าสู่ระบบThe Northridge pack house loomed larger than anything Freya had ever seen before. The sprawling estate seemed magnificent, with shadows stretching across the stone walls as the sun fell behind the treeline. It was beautiful in a way that made her chest ache, but to Freya, it felt less like a home and more like a prison.
Beta Xavier had escorted her straight through the heavy gates and into the mansion without saying much. His presence was unnervingly calm, his steps measured as though nothing could shake him. The moment they arrived, he handed her over to the maids without so much as glancing back. The women were efficient, their faces kind but detached as they scrubbed her down, clothed her in simple linen, and ushered her into a small room on the west wing of the house. For the first time in days, Freya had a real bed and clean clothes. But the warmth that should have brought comfort only pressed on her heart like a weight. She was still someone’s property. One of the women stayed longer than the others. A nurse with soft brown eyes and an easy voice, who introduced herself simply as Samantha. Unlike the rest, she did not hurry through her work. She asked Freya if she was hurt, if she needed food, if she wanted quiet. And for reasons Freya could not understand, she almost wept at the kindness. Samantha checked her pulse, her eyes, her temperature, then finally leaned back with a small, approving nod. “You’re healthy,” she said gently. “A little underfed, but nothing, time and good meals will fix it.” It should have been good news. Instead, Freya only nodded silently, her hands fisting in her lap. Days passed. Then a week. Then two. She lived in that room as though the walls themselves were bars of a cage. She heard whispers through the hallways—the servants spoke when they thought she wasn’t listening. Some called her “the loan girl,” others “the hybrid.” A few whispered another name with hushed reverence: the breeder. Freya tried to shut it out. Tried not to let it take root. But the seed of dread was already planted. And still, she did not see him. The Alpha. She thought perhaps he would never come. That maybe he was a shadow, a myth to keep others in fear. But her father’s words came back to her, and Lycril’s, and the murmurs that grew thicker with each passing day. He was real. He was powerful. And he had bought her. On the fourteenth day, Beta Xavier returned. He filled the doorway with his tall frame, his eyes calm but unreadable. “Prepare yourself,” he said simply. “The Alpha will see you this evening.” Freya’s chest constricted. Her tongue felt thick in her mouth. “W-why now?” she asked before she could stop herself. Xavier’s lips curved into something that wasn’t quite a smile. “Because he has decided the time is right.” And with that, he left. --- When evening came, Freya felt the chill before she heard the steps. The setting sun shone through the windows, casting long streaks of red across the floorboards. Her hands trembled as she tried to steady her breathing and compose herself. She told herself she didn’t care. She told herself she would be strong. The door opened. Xavier walked in first, followed by Samantha, her face pale and drawn. And then— Him. The Alpha of Northridge. Logan. He was taller than she imagined, broad-shouldered, his movements precise and predatory. His hair was as black as a raven’s wing, his jaw sharp enough to cut. His eyes—cold, calculating, merciless. They pinned her in place, stripping her down to bone and soul with a single glance. He didn’t greet her. He didn’t even speak. He looked at her the way a man might look at a weapon or livestock. Evaluating. Measuring. Freya’s stomach twisted. Every rumor she had heard screamed inside her head. The Alpha with nine lives. The Alpha who slaughtered rogues with his bare hands. The Alpha no one dared defy. And now, the Alpha who owned her. She dropped her gaze, but not before she caught the faint curl of his lip. The silence stretched until it snapped with the arrival of the healers. Three of them entered the room, their robes marking them as the spiritual and medical guides of the pack. They bowed low to Logan before turning toward Freya. “She is the one,” one of them announced. “The hybrid.” Freya blinked, confused. “I—I don’t understand…” The oldest healer, a woman with silver hair, stepped closer. “You carry blood that is rare. Sacred. You are not just an omega, child. You are a vessel for strength that will serve this kingdom well.” Freya shook her head. “No… no, you must be mistaken. I—I don’t have a wolf. I’m nothing.” The healer reached for her hand. Freya instinctively pulled back, but the woman’s grip was surprisingly firm. She turned Freya’s palm upward, staring at the lines as though reading scripture. Then she chuckled softly, almost in awe. “She’s truly the one. But her potential is buried deep. Even we cannot yet measure its full extent.” Freya’s heart raced. “What are you talking about?” But no one answered her. Logan’s cold eyes never left her face. He turned slightly toward Samantha. His voice, when it came, was low and sharp. “Is she prepared to conceive?” The words hit Freya like a blow. She stared at him, uncomprehending. Surely she had misheard. Samantha stiffened, her lips parting as though to argue. “Alpha… She's still so young. Barely twenty. Perhaps some time—” Logan’s gaze sliced through her. “I asked a question.” Samantha’s voice faltered. Her eyes darted to Freya, wide with silent apology. “Y-yes, Alpha. She… she is ready.” Freya felt a knot form in her throat. She stared at Samantha then back at the Alpha. Ready? Conceive? Her hands shook as the blood drained from her face. Logan gave one final, cold look before turning toward the door. It was too much. Too fast. Too cruel of him to leave just like that without an explanation. Freya’s trembling voice broke the silence. “W-wait.” Everyone froze. Xavier’s head snapped toward her in warning, Samantha’s hand twitched as if to hush her. But Freya’s words tumbled out, fragile but unstoppable. “What do you mean… conceive? I—I was told I’d be working here. That’s why I’m here, isn’t it?” Logan stopped at the threshold. Slowly, deliberately, he turned back. His eyes locked on hers, colder than the winter wind. “I do not entertain questions,” he said flatly. “But for the sake of clarity, I will allow Xavier to answer you.” The Beta stepped forward. His expression remained calm, but his words fell heavy as stone. “Your father owed the Northridge pack a great debt. He could not repay it. To settle his dues, he offered you.” Freya’s chest tightened. “No…” Xavier’s voice remained even. “Not only that. He collected additional coins, selling your future to the Alpha. And the healers confirmed what we had long suspected and wanted—that your bloodline is valuable. That you would serve this kingdom not as a worker… but as the Alpha’s breeder. You will bear his heirs.” The words tore through her. “No…” Freya’s whisper broke into a sob. “No, that’s not true. He—he wouldn’t—” But deep down, she knew. Her father had looked at her as nothing more than a burden, a mouth to feed, a tool to trade. Her knees buckled, but she forced herself upright, clutching at her chest. “A breeder?” she choked. “I’m not—I’m not some animal you can breed. I’m barely twenty. I’m—I’m just a girl—” Her pleas cracked into raw, broken sobs. “This isn’t fair! Please… please don’t do this to me.” The room was silent except for her cries. Logan’s expression didn’t flicker. He looked at her as though her tears meant nothing. As though she were not a person, but a duty to be fulfilled. “You are in Northridge now,” he said coldly. “And in my kingdom, I do not tolerate weakness or disobedience. You will do what is required. That is all.” And without another word, he left. The door shut behind him with a finality that crushed what little air remained in Freya’s lungs. She sank to the floor, shaking, her hands pressed to her mouth to smother her sobs. Samantha knelt beside her, whispering words of comfort she could barely hear. But nothing could soften the truth. She wasn’t a guest. She wasn’t even a servant. She was a property. And her body was no longer hers but the Alpha's.The silence that fell over the inner hall was heavy and suffocating, a vacuum left by the sudden departure of the two brothers.Freya felt the panic surge through her, a cold, tightening knot in her chest. She couldn't breathe. Her fingers dug into Samantha's hand, seeking an anchor, and she felt the gentle, reassuring rub in return.“It’s okay, Freya. We’ll go to the room. Just leave them for a while,” Samantha whispered, her gaze sweeping the tense hall.Xavier and Theodore, however, were not moving. They remained flanking the archway, rigid and alert. Their presence was a physical barrier, a silent promise that should Kia attempt anything—an escape, a grab, or a fight—they were ready. They were the kingdom’s shield, and their simmering tension was a reflection of the unspoken fear shared by everyone present: that the peace they had cultivated was about to shatter.Freya nodded numbly, letting Samantha guide her away from the watchful eyes of the council and the worried pack members
The moment the stranger’s voice sliced through the hall, Freya’s body stiffened. The slow, deliberate clap echoed off the high stone walls, and every wolf in the chamber froze. Conversations died mid-sentence, laughter collapsed into silence, and even the music faltered as though the strings themselves refused to play.Freya turned her head, her heart thundering against her ribs, and her eyes landed on him.The intruder strode through the archway with a casual arrogance that made her skin crawl. His dark hair fell in loose waves around a sharp face, his smirk pulling tight over lips that seemed carved for mockery. But it wasn’t his appearance alone that stilled the crowd—it was the familiarity etched into his features. He carried the same proud jawline as Logan, the same piercing eyes, though his gaze carried no warmth. Where Logan’s presence commanded respect, his own radiated disruption, a tainted reflection of what an Alpha could be.Gasps rippled through the hall.Logan stood at o
Since the day Logan brought the dress, Freya’s thoughts had been restless. Every time she walked past the spot where it hung — perfectly draped on the carved oak stand — her chest tightened. It was more than fabric; it was a question she couldn’t answer. Why had Logan given it to her? Why now?The memory of Avy’s words clung to her like a second skin: “Alpha Logan said you should wear it on the night of the full moon and meet him in the council hall.”Three days. Three days of sleepless nights, of pretending to be calm around Samantha, and of pushing away the ghost of Daniel’s smile when it tried to creep into her heart. She had made peace with the fact that her human life was gone, but peace did not erase the scars.Now, the night of the full moon has arrived.Freya sat on the wooden stool in Samantha’s room, her fingers clenched together tightly in her lap. Samantha stood behind her, weaving flowers into her long hair, humming softly. The fragrance of fresh blossoms mixed with the f
Freya was seated on the edge of Samantha’s wide oak bed, her fingers absently tugging at the loose threads of the blanket beneath her. The room smelled faintly of lavender and warm firewood from the hearth, comforting in its simplicity. She and Samantha had been talking — though in truth, it was more Samantha doing the talking while Freya half-listened, her mind circling the words Logan had spoken earlier.“…and then of course, the kitchen omegas spilled nearly half the stew before dinner could even begin,” Samantha was saying, rolling her eyes dramatically. “It’s a wonder anyone here survives with the chaos that happens behind the scenes.”Freya let out a small laugh, though her heart wasn’t fully in it. She wanted to focus, to enjoy the sisterly comfort of Samantha’s chatter, but her mind refused to settle. The memory of Logan’s gaze earlier, the weight in his voice when he had hinted at “something he needed to tell her,” lingered like smoke.Before she could chase the thought furth
Freya didn’t say a word because she knew deep down that what Samantha had told her was true. No matter how hard she wished otherwise, every syllable rang with a brutal honesty she couldn’t escape. She only lowered herself onto the bed, curling into herself as if the softness beneath her could swallow her pain. Samantha stayed close, but there was nothing more to say.The following days blurred together. Each morning Freya woke up with the same weight on her chest, a heavy reminder that the human world was no longer hers. She had carried the fantasy stubbornly for months, believing that somehow she would slip away, that somehow she would return to streets where no one knew her name, where no destiny pressed against her shoulders. But the reality was merciless.The door to her old life was gone.So she forced herself to accept it. Piece by piece, she trained her mind to let go. It wasn’t easy—sometimes she would wake in the night, hands clutching the sheets, heart aching for the laughte
The days after the attack dragged were filled with fear. Everyone was at alert, trying to sense if there was danger still lurking around. They knew Lucia could strike any time soon, so they need to be on the safe side. The guards patrolled ceaselessly, torches burning through the night, yet the fear lingered stronger. People whispered that she would return — tonight, tomorrow, perhaps even now.Logan carried that dread heavier than anyone else. Though he moved through the halls with his usual command, inside he felt the echo of his weakness. His body had not fully recovered from the draining strike; his chest still ached when he breathed too deeply, his hands trembled when anger surged. And worse than his injuries was the truth — he had faced something greater than himself, and he had failed.Lucia would come again. Of that, he had no doubt. And when she did, if the kingdom was not ready, Northridge would fall.So he summoned Freya.When she entered his chambers, hesitation was seen







