LOGIN
I stood in my lingerie before the full-length mirror as the seamstress took final measurements for my custom ivory wedding gown.
"Hold still, Miss Emerson," she murmured, easing the delicate fabric over my shoulders. The back zipper hissed shut, molding the dress to my curves like a second skin. "Oh, you'll be the perfect Luna of Alpha Liam," the seamstress gasped. "In twenty years of tailoring, I've never seen a bride glow like this." A satisfied smile curved my lips as I studied my reflection. The stylist had swept my chestnut hair into an elegant cascade down my back, the ends dusting over the gown's silver-stitched train like autumn leaves on frosted silk. With the diamond tiara catching the light, I could almost believe the fairy tales - the lost princess returned to claim her fated happiness. I couldn't wait for Liam to see me so perfect. My husband-to-be, my mate. I snapped my fingers for the attendant to bring my phone. Liam should have been here thirty minutes ago. As if summoned by my irritation, the screen lit up with his caller ID. "Where are you?" My manicured thumb tapped the phone case. "The final fitting starts in—" "Avery, emergency at the office." His usually smooth baritone crackled with tension. "Can't talk now—" The call died. I stared at the darkened screen, my half-formed protest dying on my lips. Five years together, and he'd never once cut me off mid-sentence. What emergency could it be? Liam had already been the formidable Alpha of the Silver Shroud Pack, and our union would only solidify his strength. The marriage alliance had been arranged since my birth. Although I once went missing, the Goddess brought me back. Even more surprisingly, we were not just an arranged couple, but fated mates. I could never forget our first encounter. The moment our eyes met, we felt the bond. The Moon Goddess made us for each other. Everyone knew that, and both of our packs eagerly awaited our wedding. But why did I feel so restless now? I exhaled sharply, my fingers sliding to another number. My mother, Luna of the Frost veil Pack. The other person who had promised to be here today. I was only six when I was taken, but I still remember her warm scent of jasmine and snow. I had always dreamed of being back in Mom's arms, but when I finally returned at eighteen, her arm wrapped around another girl’s shoulders. "Welcome back, Avery," she smiled at me, but the warmth in her voice wasn't meant for me. "This is your sister, Riley." Riley Emerson. A replacement, adopted to soothe my mother’s grief after I went missing. Riley hadn’t just taken my place as the Mom’s daughter—she’d grown up beside Liam, becoming his closest confidante. Had I never returned, she would have been the one standing at his side today. I tried not to complain. I truly did—especially after Liam swore I was his one and only, his true love. I tried to accept Riley as a sister. But Riley… she hadn’t accepted that. To her, I was an intruder, stealing the life that should have been hers. And five years ago, she nearly ended me for it. No. I squeezed my eyes shut, forcing the memories away. Riley had been punished. Liam was mine. Our wedding was finally happening. She couldn’t hurt me anymore. Swallowing the bitterness, I dialed my mother’s number. We’d already missed so much—I wouldn't let this moment slip away either. "Mom… you’re late." The words tumbled out the second the call connected, my voice too eager, too needy. "I’m not coming to the boutique." Her reply was ice, slicing through my fragile excitement. "W-What?" My throat tightened, the weight of her rejection crashing over me. "Something came up. Don’t call again." The line went dead before I could protest. The dial tone buzzed in my ear like an angry hornet. My arm dropped limply to my side, the phone slipping from my numb fingers to land with a thud on the plush carpet. What the hell was happening? A gnawing unease curled in my chest. My wolf, Lydia, snarled in warning. Something was wrong. Without thinking, I bolted from the boutique, my wedding train forgotten. I needed to find Liam. I took the private elevator up, my reflection in the mirrored walls showing a bride-to-be with fire in her eyes. The doors hadn't fully opened on the executive floor, and I dashed out. Liam's secretary leapt up, "Miss Avery, please, he's in a private—" "Move." The single syllable dripped with warning. I'm a full-grown Alpha wolf and soon to be their Luna. They couldn't afford to piss me off. Swallowing hard, she moved. The oak door exploded inward under my palm. I'd thought of a lot of possibilities. Liam could be in trouble, he probably just didn't want me to worry. However, what greeted me froze the blood in my veins—Liam's broad back bent over a slender figure, their lips locked in what looked like desperate passion. The woman's manicured fingers were tangled in his hair. Then the scent hit me. Vanilla and deceit. "Riley." The name tore from my throat, and Lydia growled inside me. Time fractured. Liam whirled around, his usually perfect hair disheveled a bit. Riley—that backstabbing bitch—had the audacity to smirk at me over his shoulder. Her pink tongue darted out to lick Liam's taste from her lips. Lydia erupted. My claws shredded the doorframe as I launched forward. "YOU DARE TOUCH MY MATE?" The roar shook the glass windows. To his credit, Liam moved faster than I'd ever seen. He planted himself between us, palms raised. "Avery, wait—" "Wait?" I nearly choked on the word. "You missed our final fitting for this? After everything she's done?" My voice dropped to a deadly whisper. "Five years ago, she left me bleeding in the snow. And now you let her put her hands on you?" Liam's handsome face twisted in anguish. "It's not what you—" Riley chose that moment to whimper dramatically, pressing herself against Liam's back. "Please, Liam… she’s scaring me." Her voice trembled, but her eyes—those cold, calculating eyes —locked onto mine with quiet triumph. Lydia snarled inside me, my claws unsheathing with an audible shink. The wolf in me recognized the challenge for what it was. This bitch was playing us both. "You have three seconds to get your hands off him," I growled, my voice layered with the threat of my wolf. Liam’s jaw tightened. "Enough." His Alpha power rolled through the room, pressing against my skin like a warning. But I was no subordinate to be cowed. I was his equal. "Then choose." My words sliced through the heavy silence. "Right now. Her or me." For the first time since I’d known him, Liam hesitated. A heartbeat. Two. That was all it took. His answer was clear enough. The bond between us—the one that had hummed with certainty since the day we met—fractured. Lydia let out a wounded howl in my mind, and something inside me broke. I took a step back, my claws retracting. The fire in my veins turned to ice. "No." Liam finally moved toward me, his hand outstretched. "Avery, it’s not what you think—" "Save it." My voice was eerily calm now, the storm replaced by something far more dangerous —finality. I slid the diamond engagement ring from my finger and let it clatter onto his desk. "The wedding’s off." Riley’s breath hitched—not in distress, but in victory. Liam’s eyes darkened, his Alpha instincts flaring. "You don’t get to make that decision alone." I smirked, bitter and sharp. "I just did." Then I turned and walked out—my head high, my heart in pieces, and my wolf howling in grief. Goodbye forever, my love.To my precious readers, my supporters, my family I have found through words this message is from the deepest part of my heart.I have rewritten this appreciation post more times than I can count, because every time I try to put my gratitude into words, I realize how small words feel compared to what you have given me. Still, I will try, because you deserve to know how much you mean to me, how much your support has changed my life, and how deeply Enchanted by the Alpha exists because of you.When I started writing this book, I was not in a perfect place. I wasn’t sitting in a peaceful room with everything figured out. I was writing through exhaustion, through uncertainty, through moments where life felt heavier than I could carry. Writing was not just a hobby for me it was my escape, my therapy, my hope. It was the one place where I could breathe when everything else felt overwhelming.I never imagined that people would not only read my story but love it, support it, and invest their ti
The forest was alive with tension. Moonlight filtered through the bare branches, casting jagged shadows across the frost-covered ground. Avery stood in the center of the clearing, breath steady, Lydia coiled tightly beneath her ribs, her senses sharpened to every sound, every movement.Across from her, Liam’s eyes glimmered like molten steel, unblinking, unyielding. Every step he took carried the weight of vengeance and obsession alike. Behind him, Riley’s fists were clenched, her jaw tight, fury radiating from her like fire. And Madison—silent, commanding, resolute—stood at the edge of the clearing, her presence a tether of truth against Avery’s chaos.Avery’s lips curved in a slow, sharp smile. “You think you’ve cornered me,” she said, voice smooth, teasing, dangerous. “You think the truth, your righteous fury, your love and loyalty… can touch me.”Liam moved closer, each footfall precise, deliberate. “You’ve destroyed everything, Avery,” he said, voice low, edged with a dangerous c
The forest held its breath as Madison emerged from the shadows, the moonlight catching the sharp lines of her face, the intensity of her gaze slicing through the darkness like a blade. Avery froze mid-step, senses flaring. She had been careful, cautious, but this presence—this authority—made her instincts scream louder than ever before.“Enough, Avery,” Madison said, her voice low, unwavering, commanding the silence around them. Every word pressed into Avery like the weight of iron. “It’s time someone told you the truth.”Avery’s lips curved into a small, knowing smile. “Truth? My, Madison… you make it sound so final, so serious. Do tell me—what truth is that?” she asked, voice smooth, teasing, though every muscle beneath her skin was coiled and alert.Madison’s eyes darkened, filled with fire and something more—pain, betrayal, determination. She stepped forward deliberately, her gaze locking onto Avery’s. “You are not and never were a daughter of Benjamin. You never were his child. A
The forest had shifted again, though no one could have noticed except Avery. Every shadow, every twisted root, every hollow of ice-covered earth had been memorized, mapped, and turned to her advantage. She moved like a phantom, silent, deliberate, a shadow among shadows, each step calculated to lead her hunters exactly where she wanted.She paused briefly in a narrow clearing, her breath puffing white in the frigid air, Lydia coiling tightly in her chest, a reminder of the raw power beneath her skin. Avery’s lips curved into a small, cruel smile. Liam was close—too close—and Riley was relentless. Yet both of them were walking right into the web she had spun.A branch snapped to her right, a soft echo in the night. Avery froze, every muscle taut. Liam. She could feel him before she saw him, his presence like a stone pressing into her chest. His breath came slower now, measured, almost teasing in its patience. He had not yet lost control—he never did—but she could sense the tension buil
The forest swallowed the moonlight as Avery ran.Branches whipped past her face, tearing at her sleeves, snapping under her feet as she sprinted between the towering pines. Her breath came out in sharp bursts, cold enough to sting her lungs, but she didn’t slow. She couldn’t. Not tonight. Not with the weight of Marcus’s blood still clinging to her thoughts like a curse she could never wash away.She didn’t look back.Looking back meant hesitation.Hesitation meant death.But even without turning, she felt it—felt him—closing in from the shadows behind her.Liam.Alive. Breathing. Hunting.And this time, he wasn’t confused, or wounded, or in denial of what she’d done.He knew.He knew everything.And he wanted her.Not with the desperate devotion he’d once tried to hide, not with the twisted tenderness that had always made Avery’s skin crawl—No.This time Liam wanted her for revenge.Leaves crackled behind her—steady, rhythmic, determined. Not rushing. Not flustered.Tracking.Avery’s
The night was unnaturally quiet when Avery struck.Marcus never expected it—the betrayal, the shift in her eyes, the calmness in her voice when she finally stepped out of the shadows of their temporary hideout. Hours earlier, he had held her, kissed her forehead, promised her they would escape the chaos together. He believed her when she said she only needed time to heal, to think. He believed everything she whispered, because she knew exactly how to make him believe.That was her greatest strength.Her greatest curse.Avery’s steps were soft as she walked behind him, watching the slow rise and fall of his shoulders as he crouched beside the dying fire. He had been awake for nights, making sure no threat came near them. He never realized the true threat had been beside him all along.Her fingers curled at her sides.He wanted to save me, she thought. But I was never meant to be saved.Marcus sensed something too late. He turned slightly, eyes narrowing. “Avery? You’re awake—”Her powe







