Sold by her father to a ruthless Alpha, wolfless Zara Quinn becomes a pawn in a war of vengeance. But beneath her quiet defiance lies a power long buried and a bond Hunter Reed refuses to accept. When fate declares her his mate, he rejects her. Yet in blood, betrayal, and battle, Zara will rise again, but this time she's not here to beg for love, but to command it, even if it means breaking destiny itself.
더 보기The wind was bitter that morning, laced with frost and silence, it was the kind of silence that clung to Zara Quinn’s skin like a second layer of shame. She stood at the edge of the Gema Pack’s northern courtyard, watching her sisters train beneath the cold light of the rising moon. Swords clashed, bodies moved in practiced rhythm, and battle cries rang out like songs of inheritance.
She didn’t belong among them. She never had. Not with her wolfless blood, not with her father’s contempt strangling her name at every turn. The others wore their heritage like armor, they were the children of Alpha Lucas Quinn, golden warriors of strength and transformation. Zara wore hers like a curse; a quiet reminder of what weakness looked like in a world ruled by dominance.
She pulled her shawl tighter around her thin frame and turned away, boots crunching across the brittle frost. Her breath misted in the air, trailing behind her like a ghost. She didn’t need to see the looks they threw when they thought she wasn’t watching.
She had grown up with the sneers of Genevieve and Sydney, the mocking laughter of her half-brother Argyle, the smug glances of the warriors who called her Lamb, the only Quinn who hadn’t shifted on her sixteenth moon.
Now eighteen, she no longer waited for her wolf to come. She’d buried that hope the same day her father locked her in the cellar for “inviting pity.” He said silence was dignity. She had learned to wear it well.
The summons came just before midday. A low-ranking guard, barely old enough to shave, approached with a bowed head and trembling fingers.
“Alpha requests your presence,” he mumbled, not meeting her eyes.
Zara said nothing, just nodded and followed. Her heart didn’t quicken. There was nothing her father could do to her that he hadn’t already done. Perhaps today she would be banished outright, exiled to the fringe lands like a Rogue. That would be a kindness. But Alpha Lucas Quinn didn’t traffic in kindness.
His chambers were warm, the air heavy with the musk of leather, firewood, and smokeleaf. He sat behind a wide desk carved from ironwood, the same desk where he once signed death warrants and arranged blood feuds over cups of black tea. Today, he didn’t offer tea. He didn’t even look at her.
“You’ll be leaving,” he said, his voice clipped, and precise. She stood in silence. Not out of defiance, but because she had no script for this. Lucas lifted a sealed envelope and slid it across the desk.
“You’ve been given to Alpha Hunter Reed of Moonsun.”
Given. Not even traded, talk more of married. Given like cattle. Her throat tightened, but her expression remained still. Her training had been in silence, enduring without flinching.
“Why?” she asked, and her voice startled both of them. It was the first word she had spoken to him in months.
Lucas finally looked up. His eyes were steel, unmoved by her question.
“Because you are the only thing I have left that he wants.” He said it like it was nothing. Like her life was worth less than the wolves who followed him into war.
“Moonsun demands blood for peace. You carry my name, even if you don’t carry my legacy. You’ll serve as proof of goodwill and a reminder of what I’ve paid.” He stood then, walking toward the window.
“You should feel honored. Most daughters die for their packs but you’re being spared.”
She couldn't answer, her limbs felt numb, heavy with the weight of what he hadn’t said. She wasn’t being spared. She was being sentenced. Hunter Reed was known across territories as a beast in a man’s skin. His father had been murdered during treaty negotiations with Gema a decade ago, and many believed Hunter had been biding his time ever since, waiting for the moment he could strike without starting a full war.
And now, taking Zara was a clever beginning, he will humiliate, and control her, the revenge will be without bloodshed but will be more painful than death. Lucas had sold her to a man who wanted nothing more than to see the Gema line burn.
By sunset, she was in chains.
The cold iron links around her wrists weren’t tight, but they didn’t need to be. The message was clear. She wasn’t a guest or a bride. She was property.
She walked through the courtyard one last time, past her sisters, who watched with mild curiosity and thinly veiled delight, and past Argyle, who looked away the moment her gaze brushed his. None of them spoke. No goodbyes, or farewells. Just silence. Always silence.
The carriage waiting for her was black, lined with wolf hide and guarded by Moonsun warriors wearing bone armor and no expressions. One of them opened the door. The other tossed a small, rough-skin satchel at her feet, which was her little belongings. A single dress. A knife she wasn’t allowed to carry. A pendant that once belonged to her mother, long forgotten in the attic until she found it and dared to believe it still held warmth. She picked it up with trembling fingers and tucked it beneath her tunic.
As the carriage pulled away, Gema faded behind her, swallowed by mist and memory. Zara couldn't cry no matter how much she tried, her tears had dried long ago, lost in the echoes of locked cellars and shattered promises. But she did clutch the pendant tight, as if it could protect her from what lay ahead.
The journey took two days.
Through frost-covered woodlands and winding river trails, Zara barely spoke. The warriors didn’t offer food the first night. On the second, one of them tossed her a chunk of bread and a canteen.
She chewed in silence, her stomach hollow and coiling with dread. At night, she lay on the floor of the carriage, staring up at the wooden ceiling as sleep danced just out of reach. Her dreams, when they came, were filled with snarls and burning eyes.
Moonsun territory was nothing like Gema. Where Gema was stone and structure, Moonsun was shadows and snow. The stronghold loomed like a scar on the mountain's spine. Filled with dark spires, thick walls, and watchtowers lit by red flame. As the carriage rolled through the gates, wolves howled in greeting. This was the sound of power announcing itself.
Zara stepped out onto the frost-covered stones, her ankles weak from stillness and fear. The courtyard was full of warriors in black leather, women with steel-wrapped braids, and on a raised platform, the man Hunter Reed she had been given to.
He was taller than she expected. Broad shoulders, rough-cut features, and eyes the color of a dying storm. He didn’t smile or move. He just stood there and studied her the way predators studied prey, not out of hunger, but cruelly. His jaw was clenched, his arms crossed, and his scent, even from yards away, was cold.
“Bring her,” he said. And immediately, the warriors obeyed.
She was made to kneel before him. The chains were removed, but her wrists still ached. Hunter looked down at her, then turned to the crowd.
“This,” he said, “is what the Gema Alpha considers payment. A wolfless girl with no voice, no power, and no worth.” He looked at her again, his voice dropping lower.
“Let’s see what else she’s hiding.”
Zara raised her head slowly, her eyes meeting his for the first time. Something pulsed in the air between them. It was something ancient, stirring beneath their skins like an echo waiting to awaken. Hunter’s eyes narrowed, then he stepped back.
“Put her in the servant’s wing. She shouldn't sleep in my hall.”
The crowd murmured, some snickered, and Zara lowered her gaze once more.
As they led her away, one of the women, who was tall, elegant, and her eyes lined with kohl stepped into her path.
“Welcome to Moonsun,” she whispered. “Try not to bleed on my floor.”
Zara said nothing but in her chest, something weakened. But she promised herself that here wasn't her pack and she must try something new to begin.
Zara stepped out into the garden, her legs still stiff from the sparring test. The night air was sharp, biting at the cuts along her arms and the bruises along her ribs, but she didn’t stop. She moved through the winding paths with purpose, listening to the distant howl of wolves beyond the fortress walls. Each step brought her closer to Ma Erene’s small clearing at the edge of the training yard. The old woman was already there, kneeling beside a circle of stones, her hands busy tying herbs into small bundles that smelled of smoke and something wild Zara couldn’t name.“You’re late,” Ma Erene said without looking up, her voice rough like dry leaves rubbing together. Zara knelt on the cold stone beside her, brushing at the dirt on her knees. “I am not late,” she muttered, and the older woman’s gray eyes finally met hers. They were sharp, unreadable, and full of expectation. “You think that matters,” Ma Erene said, tapping the edge of a bundle with her gnarled staff. “What matters i
It was another bad day, as Zara knew that the only way to be out of that caged quarter was to become a member of the pack. But that isn't easy to be, because she's just a property.And if she isn't a member, it won't be possible to like that quarter which makes her training with ma Erena impossible.So she did the unthinkable. She went to the training master and told him that she was ready to become a member…. Which indirectly means a servant and not a property, a gift from a rival.And that was how they ended up in the sparring ring that was already soaked with blood by the time they dragged her to it. The earth was dark with sweat and bruises, grooved with claw marks and footprints of those who had come before her, strong, fast, and trained. Zara was none of those things. Her bare feet sank into the dirt as she was shoved forward, her arms stiff from yesterday’s scrubbing, her back aching from the stone she slept on. Above her, the morning sun bled through a gray sky, casting long
The days bled into one another like ink on soaked parchment, colorless, murky, indistinct. Zara has been given her daily task, and after her second day, she started with the job.So just like today, she scrubbed until her fingers turned stiff, and her knees ached from crawling on the stone floor. Her body had learned to move very fast within these few days. The training pit was the worst of all places, the scent of sweat, and blood soaked into the walls and floor. From morning until late noon, the warriors howled and slammed into each other like beasts in heat, growling dominance, marking territory, living violence. But Zara was not permitted inside the pit. Her place was around it, always barefoot, and she stayed quiet, brushing dirt from the floor as if her effort would wipe away the blood stains. No one looked at him because they already known what she was. A forgotten offering, a shameful gift from a lesser pack. A symbol of surrender, and not a soul.The sun burned harshly tha
The great hall was alive with warmth and sound, everything that Zara’s insides were not. Fire roared the twin hearths that flanked the long wooden room, casting firelight on the walls, but it did nothing to thaw the cold pit lodged in her stomach. Laughter echoed across vaulted beams, tankards clinked, and meat sizzled on platters carried by servants too exhausted to meet anyone’s gaze. The scent of roasted venison and spiced mead hung thick in the air, making her stomach twist not with hunger, but with dread. She stood at the edge of the room like a statue draped in shadow, her hands pressed to her sides, and her head bowed just enough to appear respectful without seeming broken. She didn’t look for him but she could feel Hunter’s presence like a storm cloud overhead, brimming with power, unmoved by his surroundings, and watching like a lion targeting a zebra.When the Alpha finally stepped into the hall, silence followed like a curtain falling. Every eye turned. Hunter didn’t bask
The morning after her arrival was colder than the night before not in temperature, but in treatment. The thin cot they'd tossed her onto in the servants’ quarters offered no warmth, only a sliver of moldy hay and a damp wool blanket that barely reached her knees. She hadn’t slept. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw the look in Hunter’s golden gaze, that soulless void that had stripped her bare in front of a pack of strangers. By dawn, the sharp sound of boots on stone signaled her summons. A female servant, mute and hollow-eyed jerked her upright and dressed her without a word, shoving Zara’s arms into a rough brown dress with seams that scratched her skin. Her hair was barely combed. Her face was left unwashed. They wanted her seen like this, they wanted her exposed.They led her through winding halls of gray stone and bitter silence until the corridor widened into a vast, open arena packed with wolves, some in human form, some only half-shifted, their eyes gleaming and claws
The wind was bitter that morning, laced with frost and silence, it was the kind of silence that clung to Zara Quinn’s skin like a second layer of shame. She stood at the edge of the Gema Pack’s northern courtyard, watching her sisters train beneath the cold light of the rising moon. Swords clashed, bodies moved in practiced rhythm, and battle cries rang out like songs of inheritance. She didn’t belong among them. She never had. Not with her wolfless blood, not with her father’s contempt strangling her name at every turn. The others wore their heritage like armor, they were the children of Alpha Lucas Quinn, golden warriors of strength and transformation. Zara wore hers like a curse; a quiet reminder of what weakness looked like in a world ruled by dominance.She pulled her shawl tighter around her thin frame and turned away, boots crunching across the brittle frost. Her breath misted in the air, trailing behind her like a ghost. She didn’t need to see the looks they threw when they t
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