LOGIN
Lia:
I didn’t stop running.
My shoes struck dirt and gravel, lungs burning, pulse roaring in my ears as branches snapped back against my jacket. My pants were torn at the knee, streaked with mud and blood I didn’t remember earning. I hadn’t worn dresses in a long time. That version of me had died the night my father cast me out. The night where my whole life had changed.
Alphas weren’t meant to become rogues.
Yet here I was.
Hunted from every side, pushed into a darkness that I didn’t know I could survive.
The forest blurred as I pushed harder, ignoring the sharp protest in my legs. Behind me, somewhere beyond the dark, there were always footsteps. If not wolves sent by the Council, then rogues eager to cash in on my name. An Alpha-born rogue was worth more alive than dead, at least to the right people.
My own blood had decided that much.
The bond hit without warning.
It slammed into my spine, white-hot and violent, stealing the breath from my lungs. I staggered, catching myself against a tree as my vision swam.
No.
My wolf recoiled, snarling in instinctive fury, not submission. I didn’t need the pull tugging at my chest to know what it was. I’d felt bonds before, watched others kneel to them.
This one felt like a challenge.
Like war.
I turned slowly, already knowing who stood there.
Marcel Del Gardi.
The one person who always found me, and yet, always kept me alive despite his reputation.
“You know, running is not going to get you far.” He said, and I scoffed, wanting to run back. But my wolf wouldn’t allow it.
“Then follow up to that reputation of yours and end this.” I said, glaring at him.
“You and I both know that I can.” He said casually. “I am choosing not to for one reason, which you, just like me, feel.”
Even in the dark, he was unmistakable. Power rolled off him in suffocating waves, Alpha dominance honed into something sharp and merciless. This was the man sent to end conflicts the world didn’t want named. The fighter who wiped out rogue camps and never asked questions afterward.
The irony almost made me laugh.
My mate.
His gaze locked onto me, and I felt his wolf surge forward, claiming, demanding, recognizing what the world had decided to make forbidden.
“Well, then… I reject you,” I said, my voice rough but steady. “I won’t be claimed. Not by an Alpha who was meant to destroy me. Not by anyone in this world that knows nothing but death and hypocrisy.”
The bond screamed in protest. But he didn’t speak, not at first.
For the first time since I’d turned around, something flickered across his face. Surprise. Maybe disbelief. His jaw tightened, breath drawing in as if he intended to answer, perhaps to reject me back, perhaps worse. “You are being serious right now?”
“Yes, now… accept the rejection.”
“Say it formally then.” He said, taking a step toward me. “If you mean it, that is…”
“I, Lia Volkov, reject you as my mate.” I said, glaring at him.
He never got the chance to respond, though. And I never got the chance to run.
Growls rose from the trees.
Not one.
Many.
My blood went cold.
Rogues burst from the shadows, eyes wild, movements reckless with hunger and greed. One of them hit me hard from the side, claws ripping across my arm as I went down. Pain tore through me, bright and blinding. I fought back on instinct, kicking, twisting, but another shape lunged…
It never reached me.
The night suddenly turned into something that I could have never imagined.
Marcel moved like something unleashed.
I saw flashes through the pain, bodies crashing into trees, bones breaking, snarls cut off abruptly. He didn’t fight like a man protecting territory. He fought like a weapon fulfilling its purpose, every strike final, every movement devastating.
For me.
By the time the last body hit the ground, the forest had gone deathly quiet.
I tried to push myself up, wanting to run. My strength failed me, not allowing me to take one step forward.
Strong arms caught me, lifting me with effortless ease. His hold was solid, unyielding, nothing like the hesitation I’d expected.
The world tilted, darkness creeping in at the edges of my vision. “Let me go.” I whispered as he held me to his chest, his wolf meeting my own despite the informal rejection.
“You’re safe now,” he said, low and absolute, as if safety were something he could command into existence. “I’ll be sure of it, little wolf…”
I didn’t believe him.
But my body betrayed me anyway as everything went black.
Lia:The pain didn’t come in waves anymore.I couldn’t even describe how it burned through every vein that I had in me.It came like something breaking through me.I couldn’t think. I couldn’t see clearly. The chamber blurred into torchlight and shadows and voices that sounded far away, even though they were right beside me.My body wasn’t mine, It was pressure, and it felt like it was splitting open.“Lia.”Marcel’s voice dragged me back from somewhere deep and dark.His hands were on my face, rough and shaking. I felt the tremor in them. He was trying to steady me, but he was trembling too.“I’m here,” he said, and his voice was hoarse. “I’m right here. Don’t look anywhere else. Just look at me. I am going to need you to breathe.”Another contraction ripped through me and I screamed, it wasn’t controlled. It wasn’t graceful. It was raw, torn out of my throat as my body arched against him.He caught me, one arm braced behind my back, the other gripping my hand. I squeezed his so tigh
Marcel:The moment I stepped into that chamber, the world narrowed.And everything in me seemed to stop completely.Smoke clung to my skin. Blood dried stiff across my hands. But none of it mattered.I saw my mother first.Stabbed, holding herself upright as she tried to fight something that I knew she didn’t want to admit.And then I saw Lia.Bent forward, water at her feet, her face pale with effort as another contraction tore through her.For half a second, I couldn’t move.“Marcel…” Lia gasped.I crossed the distance to her instinctively, but she grabbed my arm before I could even touch her.“Go,” she said through clenched teeth. “Luna Isobel, please…”Another wave of pain hit her and she sucked in a sharp breath, fighting it, squeezing my arm instinctively, as if hoisting herself through the pain.“Help her,” she whispered urgently. “Please. Please go to her.”Aria was already at her side, steady hands on her shoulders.“I’ve got her,” Aria said firmly, looking at me in a way tha
Lia:The footsteps stopped outside the door.“Lia, you are going to stay out of this.” Luna Isobel said, looking at me. I wanted to argue, but I also knew that right now was not the time to do this. “Everyone will protect you. No matter what the cost might be, you are going to protect her and the Alpha’s heirs.”For one second, the room held its breath, no one responded to Luna Isobel, but they reacted upon it.Then the door burst inward so hard it slammed against the stone wall.Elara stood there, and though others stood in front of me, she looked at me, a small smirk forming on her lips as if she was winning this.Smoke drifted in behind her, curling around her shoulders. Her hair was loose, wild around her face. And behind her, rogues.Not confused.Not panicked.Certain.For a split second, we just stared at each other.Then everything broke.“Attack.” Was the only thing that Elara said, smirking as she did.“Get behind me!” Aria snapped. “All of you attack back and don’t stop no
Marcel:We reached the outer gates far sooner than Katherine had planned.I saw it in her face.Shock.Pure, unmasked shock.She stood in the courtyard near the shattered west arch, smoke curling behind her like a crown of ruin. Rogues still clashed with our guards, but the line had already begun to break. The fire roared high along the wing she’d chosen, my mother’s wing.She hadn’t expected me back this fast.“Impossible,” she breathed when she saw me stride through the smoke. “You shouldn’t be back so soon.”Dominic was at my side, blood on his jaw, eyes colder than I had ever seen them.“You miscalculated,” he said calmly. “And it seems to me that you thought that you could take us for fools. Your little toy, Nathan, I believe, he is dead.”Katherine recovered quickly, raising an amused eyebrow.Her lips curled into something bitter and triumphant. “No. I adapted. And whether or not that happened… well, it doesn’t change the facts. Nathan was nothing more than a distraction, but n
Aria:By the time we reached the lower chamber, the air in the tunnel had turned damp and close, it wasn’t suffocating, but thick enough that every breath reminded you we were underground.It wasn’t the birthing chamber.That was further in.This was a holding room, stone walls, old benches carved from the rock, lantern hooks along the sides. A place meant for women and children during siege, not for delivery. But we couldn’t care at this point, as long we were safe, then it didn’t matter where we were.Most of the consorts were already there, some pale, some shaking.They all looked up when we entered.Relief washed over their faces at the sight of Luna Isobel, and then shifted to alarm when they saw Lia. She was still breathing heavily, and I knew that she was still far into the contractions, but it didn’t mean that it wouldn’t coming soon.“You need to breathe, Lia.” Maria urged gently.“She’s in labor,” one of them whispered.“Early,” I corrected. “But not active. We are going to
Elara:From the upper balcony of the east tower, the pack looked like it was bleeding.Flames climbed the west wing in hungry streaks, devouring curtains, beams, years of history. Smoke rolled upward in thick waves, dark against the night sky. Shouts echoed below, orders, panic, metal clashing.It was chaos.Beautiful chaos.Katherine stood beside me, arms folded neatly across her chest, watching the destruction like she was observing a lesson unfold exactly as planned.“You see?” she said softly. “All it takes is one fracture. Just a little fire for them to scramble and the right time when he is not even here to protect her.”I didn’t answer.My eyes searched the movement below, guards scrambling, servants rushing water lines, rebels blending into the confusion.But she wasn’t there.“And yet, the one person who I want dead is not even here.” I muttered, knowing well that her presence was the one thing that I needed right now. “She is the reason behind all of this.”“She might be, bu







