LOGINEmma Parker needs money, and fast. Her mother’s life depends on it. When a sudden job offer promises financial stability she can’t refuse, until she meets the man behind it. Adrian Cross. Powerful. Dangerous. Irresistibly beautiful. The golden-eyed stranger who once saved her as a child and whispered a promise she never believed: I’ll find you. Now he has. And he’s offering her more than a job, he’s offering her everything. Security. Luxury. Salvation. But what he wants in return is far more dangerous than her heart. Adrian doesn’t just want loyalty. He wants possession. He wants her body, her soul, her forever. As passion ignites and secrets unravel, Emma must decide: surrender to the man who claims she was always his, or fight a desire that could consume her whole with other obstacles they must face...
View MoreFifteen years ago...
Found you, weirdo! Tyler Morrison's voice made Emma's stomach twist into knots. She looked up to see him and his two friends walking toward her, grinning like hungry wolves. Why can't they just leave me alone? Emma thought desperately, pressing herself against the brick wall. Her cheek still throbbed from where Tyler had shoved her into the fence yesterday. "Heard your daddy's a thief," Tyler said, stopping right in front of her. "My dad says you're getting kicked out of town. Finally." Emma's face burned with shame. The eviction notice was folded up in her backpack, but it felt like everyone could see it. Three days. We only have three days left, and then what? We'll be sleeping in our car again. "Please just go away," she whispered. "I didn't do anything wrong." But it doesn't matter, she thought bitterly. Nothing I say ever matters. Dad says we might have to live in a shelter. Tyler grabbed a handful of her hair and yanked hard. "Maybe we should give you something to remember us by before you disappear forever." Emma's eyes filled with tears, but she refused to let them fall. I won't cry. I won't give him the satisfaction. "Back off." Emma's head jerked up. A boy stood near the swings, maybe nine years old, with messy black hair and the most beautiful eyes she'd ever seen. They were gold - actual gold, like liquid metal in the sunlight. Who is he? Emma thought, her heart doing funny things in her chest. I've never seen him before. And why do I suddenly feel... warm? Tyler let go of her hair and turned around. "Who are you supposed to be?" "Someone who doesn't like bullies." The boy stepped closer, and Emma felt the air around them change. It got warmer, heavier, like right before a thunderstorm. "Let her go. Now." His voice sounds too deep for a kid, Emma realized, her pulse racing. And why does he smell like pine trees and something wild? "Or what?" Tyler puffed out his chest, but Emma could hear the fear creeping into his voice. The boy smiled, and it wasn't a nice smile. "Or you'll find out why smart kids run when I tell them to." Tyler threw a punch, but the boy moved so fast it was like he disappeared and reappeared somewhere else. Tyler stumbled forward and hit the ground hard, scraping his knees bloody. "What the hell" Jake, Tyler's friend, tried to grab the boy from behind, but somehow ended up flat on his back, gasping for air. Emma watched with her mouth hanging open as the third bully swung wildly and missed completely, spinning around and falling face-first into the dirt. That's not normal, Emma thought, her whole body tingling with excitement instead of fear. Kids don't move that fast. And his hands... His fingernails look razor-sharp. A low growling sound rumbled from the boy's chest, not human at all, like an angry wolf. The temperature around them spiked so hot that Emma could see steam rising from his skin. Tyler's eyes went wide with pure terror. "You're... you're not..." "Stay. Down." The boy's voice had turned rough and dangerous, and when he smiled, Emma swore she saw fangs. Actual fangs. Tyler scrambled backward on his hands and knees, whimpering. He and his friends ran across the playground like something was chasing them. What is he? Emma wondered, but weirdly, she wasn't scared. She felt... protected. Safe for the first time in months. The boy turned to her, and his eyes were still that impossible gold color. Up close, he was even more beautiful, too beautiful for a regular kid. His skin looked perfect, like he'd never had a single pimple or scrape. "You okay?" he asked, and his voice was gentle now, warm like honey. Emma nodded, not trusting herself to speak. Why does looking at him make my stomach flutter? I'm only eight. I shouldn't feel like this about boys yet. "I'm Adrian," he said, crouching down in front of her. Adrian. Even his name sounded magical. "I'm Emma." "Emma," he repeated, like he was tasting her name. "Pretty." Emma's cheeks burned, but in a good way this time. She noticed his knuckles were scraped and bleeding, even though she was sure he hadn't actually hit anyone. "You're hurt," she said, pulling her little first-aid kit from her backpack. Mom always made her carry it. Adrian went completely still as she cleaned the blood from his hands. His skin was burning hot, way too hot for a normal person. He has a fever, Emma thought. He should be in bed, not fighting bullies for me. "Why are you helping me?" he asked quietly. Emma looked up at him, surprised. "Because you helped me first. And because..." She hesitated. Because touching you feels like coming home. Because I've been dreaming about golden eyes for weeks. Because you make me feel things I don't understand. "Because what?" "Because I think I was waiting for you," she whispered, then immediately felt embarrassed. God, that sounds so stupid. Something flickered across Adrian's face, surprise, pain, something deeper that made her chest tight. "No one's ever taken care of me before," he said so quietly she almost missed it. How is that possible? Emma wondered. He's the most amazing person I've ever met. Before she could lose her nerve, she reached up and brushed his messy hair away from his forehead. His skin was still fever-hot under her fingers. "Well, I will," she said firmly. "If you want me to." The smile that spread across Adrian's face was like watching the sun rise. "I'd like that. A lot." They sat together in comfortable silence while Emma finished bandaging his hands. She was hyperaware of everything - the way he smelled like wild forests, how his breathing seemed too controlled, the way other kids gave them a wide berth like they could sense something dangerous about him. I don't care if he's different, Emma decided. Different is good. Normal kids don't rescue people. "My family's moving," she said finally, the words feeling like swallowing glass. "Tomorrow night. Dad lost his job and we can't pay rent anymore." Adrian's entire body went rigid. The temperature around them spiked again, and Emma heard what sounded like a low whine coming from his throat. "Moving where?" His voice was strained. "Probably California. Mom thinks her sister might help us." Emma tried to smile, but her eyes were filled with tears. "I guess this is goodbye." "No." The word came out sharp, desperate. Adrian caught her hands in his, and his skin was so hot it almost burned. "It doesn't have to be. I'll find you." Emma's laugh was shaky. "Adrian, we're kids. How could you possibly" "I'll find you," he interrupted, his golden eyes blazing with intensity that should have been scary but somehow wasn't. "No matter how long it takes. No matter how far you go. I'll find you, Emma." The way he's looking at me..., Emma thought, her heart hammering. Like I'm the most important thing in the world. Like he'd die if I disappeared. "Promise me something," Adrian continued, his grip on her hands tightening. "Promise me you'll wait for me." "Adrian" "Promise me," he said again, and there was something almost desperate in his voice. "Promise me you won't forget. Promise me you'll wait." Emma stared into those beautiful, impossible eyes and felt something shift inside her chest, like a door opening that she hadn't known was there. "I promise," she whispered. Adrian's smile this time was wild, almost predatory. He leaned forward and pressed his lips to her forehead, and Emma gasped. His kiss burned like fever, sending heat racing through her entire body. This is wrong, she thought dimly. I'm eight. I shouldn't feel like this. I shouldn't want... But she did want to. She wanted him to never let go of her hands. She wanted to stay in this moment forever. When Adrian pulled back, his eyes were glowing so bright they looked like twin suns. "Fifteen years," he said quietly. "I'll come for you in fifteen years, Emma Parker. And when I do..." "When you do, what?" she breathed. His smile was full of secrets and promises that made her shiver. "When I do, you'll be mine. Forever." … Present Day BEEP! BEEP! BEEP! Emma jerked awake, her entire body drenched in sweat and her heart pounding like she'd been running. The dream again. Always the same dream. Golden eyes. Burning kisses. "You'll be mine forever." "God," she gasped, pressing her hands to her face. She was twenty-three now, had been having the same dream for months, and it still left her aching and restless and wanting things she couldn't name. 6:30 AM. Time for another day in hell. Emma dragged herself out of bed and immediately stubbed her toe on the overflowing pile of medical bills on her floor. "Fuck!" she hissed, hopping on one foot. Mom's chemo: $3,000. Emergency room visit: $1,500. Prescription medications: $800. I'm drowning, she thought desperately, staring at the numbers that never seemed to get smaller no matter how many jobs she worked. I'm actually drowning, and no one cares. Her phone buzzed with a text from her mom: Sweetie, the hospital called. They need another payment by Friday or they're stopping treatment. I'm so sorry. Emma's hands started shaking. Friday. That's four days. Four days to find three thousand dollars or Mom dies. She's going to die, and it's going to be my fault because I can't save her. Tears started streaming down Emma's face before she could stop them. She slumped against the wall and let herself cry for exactly thirty seconds - that's all she could afford. Stop it, she told herself fiercely. Crying doesn't pay bills. Get up. Go to work. Figure it out. She was washing her face when her phone rang. Unknown number. "Hello?" she answered, her voice still thick from crying. "Emma Parker? This is Jessica from Premier Staffing. I have an urgent placement for you." Emma's pulse quickened. "What kind of placement?" "Personal assistant to a CEO. Cross Industries. The pay is... well, it's two hundred thousand a year." Emma nearly dropped the phone. "I'm sorry, what?" "Two hundred thousand. Plus benefits. Plus housing allowance. The CEO needs someone immediately - like, interview-today immediately. Are you available?" Two hundred thousand dollars. Emma's knees went weak. That's... that's everything. Mom's treatment, the bills, maybe even a real apartment. "Yes," she said quickly. "Yes, I'm available." "Perfect. The interview is at 9 AM sharp. Cross Industries, downtown. Fiftieth floor. Ask for Adrian Cross." The phone line went dead, but Emma barely noticed. Something weird was happening to her body - her skin felt too hot, too tight, and there was a strange humming in her ears. Adrian Cross. Why does that name... Emma looked in the bathroom mirror and froze. For just a second, just one impossible second, her reflection looked different. Her eyes weren't their usual brown. They were gold. Bright, blazing gold. What the fuck? Emma blinked hard, and her eyes were brown again. Normal. Humans. I'm losing my mind, she thought, but her hands were still shaking. Too much stress. Too little sleep. Too much desperation. But deep in her chest, something was waking up. Something that had been sleeping for fifteen years. Adrian Cross. Why do I feel like I know that name? Why does it feel like... like coming home? Emma stared at her reflection and whispered the words that had been echoing in her dreams: "Fifteen years." Today. It's been exactly fifteen years since the dream started. Fifteen years since... "No," Emma said out loud. "Dreams aren't real. Golden-eyed boys don't keep impossible promises." But what if they do? What if he kept his promise? What if Adrian Cross is... Emma's phone buzzed with another text, this one from an unknown number: I told you I'd find you, Emma. See you at 9. Emma's legs gave out. She slid down the bathroom wall, staring at the message, her heart hammering so hard she thought it might explode. He found me. He actually found me. Oh God. What have I gotten myself into?Emma walked into the Cross Industries conference room Thursday morning carrying a stack of progress reports from all five partnership project sites. Two weeks into implementation, she was managing everything from shift scheduling disputes to equipment sharing protocols, and for the first time since becoming Luna, she felt completely in her element.This is what I was meant to do, Emma thought, spreading the reports across the conference table. Not formal hearings or legal arguments, but practical problem-solving that makes things work for everyone.Adrian entered with his morning coffee and a smile that had become familiar over the past weeks, pride mixed with slight amazement at Emma's transformation."How are the partnership metrics looking?" he asked, settling into the chair beside her."Better than projected in most areas," Emma said, opening the first report. "The Eastside site has achieved full integration of mixed crews. The Northside devel
Emma stood outside the Eastside construction site Monday morning, watching mixed crews of Cross Pack and Northern Territory Coalition workers setting up for another day of building. Three days after the pack meeting, the partnership agreements were already showing visible results and visible challenges.Integration is harder than negotiation, Emma thought, observing the distinct groups that had formed naturally along pack lines despite her hopes for immediate collaboration.Rebecca approached from the equipment staging area, looking frustrated. "Luna, we have a problem."We have a problem. Emma felt her stomach clench. They were only three days into implementation, and issues were already arising."What's going on?""The Northside Pack electrical crew is insisting on using their own safety protocols instead of our site standards," Rebecca explained. "They claim our procedures don't account for werewolf strength and reflexes."The
Emma stood at the front of Adrian's downtown apartment Saturday evening, looking out at forty-three pack members who had gathered to hear about the Regional Council hearing results. The energy in the room was different from her first pack meeting as Luna, there was curiosity mixed with concern, support tinged with questions she wasn't sure she wanted to answer.They all know about the conditions, Emma thought, touching the Luna pendant beneath her blouse for confidence. They know the Council didn't trust me to handle regional matters alone."Thank you all for coming on short notice," Emma began, her voice carrying clearly through the packed living room. "I know there's been a lot of speculation about yesterday's hearing, so I want to give you the complete picture, both the victories and the challenges."Both victories and challenges. Emma had decided that honesty was the only approach that would maintain pack trust."First, the
Emma sat in the penthouse living room Saturday morning, staring at the newspaper coverage of yesterday's Regional Council hearing. The headline read: "Young Luna's Partnership Proposals Win Conditional Victory," and the article spent equal time describing her innovative solutions and her "momentary confusion under pressure."Momentary confusion under pressure. Emma winced at seeing her freeze-up described in print for the entire supernatural community to read."The coverage isn't that bad," Adrian said gently, setting down a cup of coffee beside her on the couch."It's not that good either," Emma replied, folding the newspaper so she couldn't see the headline anymore. "Everyone who reads this will know that Cross Pack's Luna can't handle formal questioning."Can't handle formal questioning. Emma felt the shame of yesterday's performance settling over her like a gray cloud.Adrian sat beside her, close enough that
Emma sat in the Regional Council building's waiting area, staring at her hands and replaying every moment of her freeze-up during the hearing. The hour-long recess felt like the longest sixty minutes of her life.I choked, Emma thought miserably. When Luna Wells asked the most important question of the entire hearing, I completely blanked out in front of everyone."Emma," Adrian said gently from the chair beside her, "stop beating yourself up. You recovered and gave a strong answer.""After freezing like a deer in headlights," Emma replied quietly. "Sarah was right, I proved I can't handle pressure when it matters most."Can't handle pressure. Emma felt the sting of Sarah's words all over again.Patricia leaned forward from her chair across from them. "Emma, every Luna has moments like that. What matters is how you handle them, and you handled it with grace."Handled it with grace. Emma wanted to bel
Emma stood outside the Regional Pack Council building Friday morning, her hand unconsciously touching the Luna pendant beneath her navy blazer. The building looked like a courthouse crossed with a corporate headquarters, all stone and glass designed to intimidate anyone who entered.This is it, Emma thought, taking a deep breath of the crisp morning air. No more preparation. No more practice sessions. Just me, Sarah Blackwood, and five pack leaders who will decide our fate.Adrian squeezed her hand gently. "Remember, you don't have to be perfect in there. You just have to be yourself."Just be yourself. Emma nodded, though her stomach was churning with nerves."Time to go," Patricia said, checking her watch. "The hearing starts in ten minutes."Emma walked through the building's imposing entrance, her heels clicking on marble floors that echoed with the weight of decades of pack politics. The hallways were lined w
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