LOGIN
The last digit of the quarterly tax audit clicked into place, and I let out a long, shuddering breath. My neck ached, and the blue light of the laptop screen felt like it had been seared into my retinas.
“And that,” I whispered to the empty room, “is how you save a pack from insolvency.” For the last twelve months, the Luna’s office had been my sanctuary and my prison. While the other girls my age were out at the lake or shopping in the city, I was here. I had overhauled the Sandwell Pack’s trade treaties and restructured the warrior’s pension funds. But my biggest secret lay in the ledger's "Miscellaneous Revenue" column. It wasn't pack money. It was mine. My mother had died bringing me into this world, leaving behind a hole in my heart and a massive investment fund in my name. She had been a genius with numbers, setting up a trust that grew aggressively for seventeen years. When I gained access to it on my seventeenth birthday, I didn't buy jewelry or cars. I saw the crumbling infrastructure of Sandwell, saw the stress on Maxwell’s face, and I poured my inheritance into his future. I did it for the pack. But mostly, I did it for the man I thought was my destiny. The door to the office burst open, and Pamela, my only real friend in this place, practically vibrated into the room. She was clutching a silver dress bag. “Aella! Stop! Just stop!” she cried, slamming my laptop shut. “It is six o’clock. You are eighteen. The moon is rising, and you are still staring at spreadsheets!” I rubbed my eyes, a small smile tugging at my lips. “Maxwell is swamped, Pam. His father handed over the territorial disputes this morning, and I told him I’d handle the logistics so he could—” “So he could prepare your surprise!” Pamela squealed. “Aella, everyone knows. An arranged mating contract since you were fifteen, three years of dating... and today is the day the Goddess makes it official. You’re going to be his fated mate. He’s probably waiting in the Alpha’s wing right now.” My heart did a traitorous little flip. Maxwell and I had been a "sure thing" for so long that I’d almost forgotten the magic of it. I’d spent the last year making sure that when he took the crown of Sandwell, he would have a kingdom worth ruling. “Go,” Pamela urged. “Change. Look like a Luna, not a CPA.” Twenty minutes later, I emerged feeling like a different person. The silk of the dress hugged my curves, and the glow of my eighteenth year felt like a hum of power beneath my skin. Today, I could finally stop being the shadow and start being the partner. I bypassed the main hall and took the back stairs to the Alpha’s executive wing. I wanted to see his face when I told him the trade treaty was signed—and that I could finally feel my wolf stirring for him. As I approached the heavy oak doors of the Alpha’s office, I realized they were slightly ajar. “She actually did it,” a male voice laughed. It was Caleb, the Beta’s heir. “She spent her entire birthday morning fixing the Gamma’s payroll. I saw her through the window.” “She’s a machine,” Asher, the Gamma’s son, joined in. “I don’t know how you do it, Max. Does she talk about anything other than interest rates in bed?” I froze, my hand inches from the handle. My blood turned to ice. “She’s useful,” Maxwell’s voice rang out. It was cold. “My father was going to run Sandwell into the ground. Aella’s money and her obsession with ‘duty’ bought us another decade of luxury. Why would I stop her? She likes feeling important.” “But the contract, Max,” a soft, familiar voice cooed. My heart stopped. It was Amelie, my younger cousin. The girl who had cried until my father gave her my bedroom—the one with the south-facing windows—because she claimed she ‘needed the sun to function.’ “The contract is a piece of paper,” Maxwell said. I heard the unmistakable sound of a chair creaking. “The Goddess gave me my real mate two years ago, didn't she, Amelie?” “Two years of hiding,” Amelie giggled. “I’m tired of her looking at me like I’m a charity case while she pays for our vacations with her ‘investments.’ She’s so smug, Max. She thinks she’s the Queen of Sandwell just because she can do math.” “She’s the help, baby,” Maxwell muttered. “The best part? She’s so desperate for me to love her that she doesn't even realize she’s funding our honeymoon. Let her keep working. Once the transition is official, I’ll find a loophole. I’ll keep the funds, and I’ll keep you.” I stood in the hallway, the silk of my dress suddenly feeling like a shroud. Two years. While I was staying up until 3 AM fixing his mistakes, he was in my cousin’s bed. While I was using my mother’s legacy to buy new equipment for the warriors, they were laughing at my "smugness." The heat that rose in my chest wasn't the warmth of a mating bond; it was the searing, white-hot roar of a wolf that had finally seen the trap. I didn't knock. I kicked the door. The heavy oak swung back with a bang. Maxwell sat behind the mahogany desk—the desk I had polished—with Amelie draped across his lap. “A-Aella,” Maxwell stammered, pushing Amelie off him. “You’re early.” I looked at him—really looked at him—and wondered how I had ever mistaken his mediocrity for greatness. “Actually,” I said, my voice steady and terrifyingly calm. “I’m exactly on time.”Maxwell was gone. Truly gone.For a flickering second, a memory I had tried to bury surfaced. I remembered his laughter as a pup, high and bright. I remembered him rolling around in the dirt with Caleb and Jax, four children making a mess of the world. He used to help me in ways no one else dared, standing up to the older boys before he even knew what an Alpha was.But as we grew, the spark in his eyes had been snuffed out, replaced by a cold, oily smugness. When the 'Heir' title finally settled on his shoulders and he was placed in the specialized Alpha section in high school, he ceased to be the boy I grew up with. He became a stranger wearing a familiar face.Even after all the pain he’d put me through—the betrayal, the rejection, the public shaming—it was still difficult to reconcile that boy with a man capable of planning an assassination attempt on the future King.I felt my heart finally finish breaking. It wasn't a painful snap; it was the quiet, hollow sound of letting go. I
Sol refused to stay in the infirmary another hour. The moment the King’s back was turned to consult with the High Healer, Sol was on his feet, his jaw set in that familiar line of stubborn pride despite the paleness of his skin."I am not spending the night in a room that smells like antiseptic and defeat," he grumbled, though I could see the slight tremor in his hands as he reached for his discarded tunic.I sighed, stepping in to steady him. I hooked my arm through his, providing a solid anchor. "Fine. But you’re staying under my watch. If you start feeling even a hint of that toxin returning—nausea, dizziness, anything—you knock on my door. Promise me."Sol stopped, looking down at me, his golden eyes widening in genuine shock. A slow, devastating smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth as he leaned a fraction closer, his scent—spiced cedar and ozone—wrapping around me."Is that an open invitation for anytime I’m feeling bad, Queen? Or just a one-night-only special?"I felt the hea
The medical wing felt like a pressure cooker. Outside the soundproof glass, the Academy was a chaotic swarm of students fueled by adrenaline and rumors. Sol groaned, his muscles locking as he tried to sit up. The Silver Ace had neutralized the toxin, but his body felt like it had been shredded from the inside out. "Don't fight it," I murmured, stepping into his space. I hooked my arm under his shoulder, providing a steady anchor. I was careful to grip only his shirt, keeping my skin from touching the heat of his arm. "We don't have the luxury of waiting for you to recover. We need to move before the narrative shifts." The King watched us, his face a mask of grief and fury. He reached out as if to help, but he looked at his son and saw a warrior who needed to stand on his own. He simply nodded, his hand resting on the hilt of his sword. We emerged into the main corridor just as Marcus was trying to shove his way through a wall of students. He was a force of nature, his eyes glo
The arena was a theater of carnage. Maxwell stood on the sands, his chest heaving, his wolf pushing so hard against his skin that his eyes were a constant, unstable amber. Sol stood opposite him, calm and immovable. Before the first blow was struck, Pamela stepped onto the lower ridge of the stands. Her voice, amplified by the stone acoustics, cut through the cheering like a diamond saw. "Before this 'honor' duel begins, let’s talk about honor," Pamela shouted, pointing toward the VIP box. "I see the collar you're wearing, Amelie. But I also see the mark beneath it. Maxwell has marked you, hasn't he? Without a fated bond. Without a ceremony." A shocked gasp rippled through the heirs. "In the High Code," Pamela continued, her eyes locking onto Maxwell, "an Alpha cannot mark a chosen mate without Council approval. Aella had to undergo months of intensive tactical and psychological sessions at fifteen just to prove she could handle the Luna's burden. Amelie, did you pass those tests?
The announcement arrived via a royal scroll at breakfast: a Medieval Masquerade Gala. Attendance was mandatory for all towers. The King’s decree was clear—this wasn't just a party; it was a showcase of the hierarchy. "A group entrance," Marcus proposed, leaning back with a grin that was all sharp teeth. "Me, Pamela, Sol, and Aella. We’ll look like a goddamn conquest coming through those doors. Every Alpha in that room will be too busy staring or bowing to even breathe." "I don't mind the attention," Pamela added, her eyes gleaming. "But I think we should aim for 'terrifyingly regal' rather than just 'wealthy.' We're anticipating the stares, so we might as well give them something to be blinded by." Sol’s eyes met mine, a silent question in the golden depths. "What do you say, Queen? Ready to show them the Middle Ages weren't just about knights, but about the sovereigns who ruled them?" "I think I can manage a gown," I replied, though the thought of my high collar and the hidde
Two months had passed since the cafeteria incident, and the hierarchy of the Imperial Tower had shifted permanently. Amelie had leaned fully into her "victim" persona, limping through the halls and wearing silk scarves to hide bruises that had long since healed. She whispered to anyone who would listen about the "savage rogue," but her audience was shrinking. The other Alphas weren't stupid. They saw me in the training pits with Linus every night. They saw the way I handled the most complex economic simulations in the Sovereign Track. They didn't see a rogue; they saw a threat they couldn't calculate. Maxwell, however, was crumbling. His grades in Tactical Leadership were plummeting, and his performance in the arena was erratic. He spent his nights at the campus bars, loudly blaming his failures on "Dragon interference." He couldn't accept the simplest truth: he was a big fish from a small pond, and he was finally out of water. The midnight sessions with Linus had become the highli







