LOGINFor centuries, werewolves and vampires have slaughtered each other in an endless war. Alpha King Ronan Voss and Vampire King Elias Nightshade are bitter enemies until a fated mate bond explodes between them on the battlefield. Trapped by blood and moon, they hate each other with every breath yet can't resist the raw, savage hunger that pulls them into secret, brutal nights of claiming and lust. As their own people cry for total destruction and an ancient evil stirs, the two kings must decide: cling to duty and legacy, or surrender to the dangerous passion that could save or doom everything they rule. Dark, steamy, and forbidden, an enemies to lovers tale of power, prejudice, and primal need.
View MoreThe Grand Hall of Eldridge Keep smelled of pine smoke, roasted venison, and too many wolves pressed into one glittering space. Crystal chandeliers hung low from the vaulted ceiling, their light catching on gold filigree and the occasional flash of a bared fang when someone laughed too sharply. Every year it was the same: the Mate Ball, thrown under the full moon when the old magic ran hottest through their veins. Unmated wolves from every pack in the realm gathered here, dressed in silks and leathers, hoping the goddess would finally grant them the one scent that would lock their souls in place.
Alpha King Ronan Voss stood on the raised dais like a statue carved from storm clouds. Tall, broad shouldered, black hair streaked with premature silver at the temples, he wore the deep crimson of his house over a black tunic that strained across his chest. A simple circlet of moon forged iron rested on his brow. No one dared meet his gaze for long. They knew better. Five years. Five fucking years since the last ball where he had walked these same floors with any real hope. The goddess had taken his first mate in the wars, torn apart by vampire claws while Ronan was three days’ ride away putting down a border rebellion. Since then, the bond hunger had gnawed at him like a half healed wound. Tonight he had circled the hall three times, slowly, deliberately, letting every unmated wolf near him. Nothing. Not even a flicker. Just the usual cloying mix of fear, ambition, and desperate lust from those who thought bedding the king might elevate their bloodline. He kept his face impassive, the same cold mask he wore when ordering executions or signing treaties in blood. A king did not show weakness. Not when half the packs were already whispering that the goddess had cursed him for the blood on his hands. “Another fine gathering, Your Majesty,” came a smooth voice at his left. Lord Kael, one of the eastern alphas, lifted a goblet in mock salute. His daughter stood beside him in a gown the color of fresh blood, eyes downcast in what was supposed to pass for modesty. “The packs are honored by your presence.” Ronan’s lip curled just enough to show a hint of teeth. “Spare me the courtly shit, Kael. If your girl’s scent had stirred anything in me, you’d already be on your knees thanking the moon.” Kael paled but recovered with a tight laugh. The girl flushed crimson and melted back into the crowd. Ronan almost felt sorry for her. Almost. He descended the steps, boots ringing against marble, and the sea of bodies parted without being asked. Music swelled from the string quartet in the corner, old lunar hymns that made the wolf inside his skin itch to run. He caught fragments of conversation as he moved. “…heard the Nightshade bastard reinforced the Obsidian Ridge…” “…three villages burned last month…” “…if the king doesn’t find a mate soon, the succession...” Ronan’s jaw tightened. He snatched a goblet from a passing servant and drained it in one pull. The wine was strong, spiced, but it did nothing to drown the hollow ache beneath his ribs. Every unmated female who dared approach offered the same thing: lowered eyes, bared throats, hopeful smiles. Their scents washed over him, sweet, earthy, floral, sharp but none of them *fit*. None of them sang in his blood. By the time the moon had climbed high enough to spill silver light through the tall arched windows, the disappointment sat like lead in his gut. He climbed back onto the dais and raised one hand. The music died instantly. “The hour grows late,” he said, voice low but carrying to every corner of the hall. “Enjoy what remains of the night. The goddess may yet bless some of you.” Murmurs rippled outward. Relief from those who had failed. Envy from those still hoping. Ronan turned away before anyone could offer hollow condolences. He was halfway down the side corridor that led to his private chambers when heavy footsteps approached from behind. Captain Garrick, his most trusted guard and one of the few wolves who didn’t flinch in his presence, fell into step. The older male’s face was grim, jaw set like he’d bitten into something rotten. Ronan didn’t slow. “Speak.” Garrick leaned in close, voice barely a breath. “Ravens from the western border, sire. Three of them. The vampires have crossed the river in force. Their king, Elias Nightshade himself is leading the vanguard. They’ve already taken Silver Hollow. The scouts say… they’re not raiding this time. It looks like a full push.” Ronan stopped so abruptly that Garrick nearly collided with his back. The name "Nightshade" sent a bolt of pure hatred through him, hot and familiar. For centuries that cursed bloodline had slaughtered his kind. And now the bastard dared strike while the packs were gathered here, distracted by balls and mating dances? A growl built low in Ronan’s chest, deep enough that the torches along the wall flickered. His claws pricked against his palms. But beneath the rage, something else stirred, an uneasy, impossible flicker he couldn’t name. Like the ghost of a scent he’d never caught. He crushed it before it could take shape. “Call the war council,” Ronan said, voice like grinding stone. “We ride before dawn.” Garrick nodded once and melted back into the shadows. Ronan stood alone in the corridor a moment longer, the distant music from the hall now sounding like a dirge. Five years of waiting. Five years of emptiness. And now this. The wolf inside him howled for blood, for vengeance, for something he didn’t yet understand. He turned toward the armory instead of his chambers, crimson cloak flaring behind him like spilled blood under the moonlight. The war had come to his doorstep on the night the moon should have brought him peace. And Alpha King Ronan Voss was going to paint the battlefield red.The witch arrived at the Obsidian Palace just as the last light bled from the sky. She was old, older than most vampires cared to remember, with milky white eyes that saw more than any sighted person ever could. Her name was rarely spoken aloud, most just called her the Seer. Two of Elias’s guards escorted her through the winding halls, but she moved like she already knew every twist and turn, gnarled staff tapping against the black marble floor. Elias waited on the throne, fingers drumming restlessly. He hadn’t told anyone why he summoned her. Not even Lucian. The bond still pulled at him, low and constant, like a bruise he couldn’t stop pressing. When the witch finally stepped into the throne room, she stopped a few feet from the dais and tilted her head, blind eyes fixed somewhere near his chest. “You called for answers about the fire in your blood,” she rasped before Elias could open his mouth. Her voice carried that dry, certain weight that made lesser men sweat. “The bond. The
Ronan tossed in the massive bed, sheets tangled around his hips like chains. Sleep had finally dragged him under after hours of pacing and snarling at shadows, but it brought no peace. In the dream he was back in the mud of the battlefield, only this time there was no war around them. Just the two of them.Elias was underneath him again, but the vampire’s eyes weren’t full of hate. They burned with the same raw hunger Ronan felt twisting in his own gut. Pale hands gripped Ronan’s shoulders, claws digging in just enough to sting. Ronan growled low and ground his hips down, cock sliding hard and hot against Elias’s thigh. The vampire arched up to meet him, mouth open in a silent snarl that turned into a moan when Ronan bit down on the side of his neck. Not enough to kill. Just enough to claim. Blood, hot and sweet, flooded his tongue while Elias’s hand fisted in his hair and pulled him closer.“Fuck you,” Elias hissed in the dream, but his legs spread wider, letting Ronan settle between
The Obsidian Throne Room was quiet except for the soft crackle of black candles and the occasional drip of wax onto marble. Elias Nightshade lounged in the massive chair carved from volcanic glass and bone, one leg draped lazily over the armrest, a crystal goblet of blood wine balanced on his fingers. The liquid inside swirled slow and dark, spiced with something older than most of his court could remember. To anyone who didn’t know him, he would have looked like a king at ease, beautiful in that deadly way vampires were, midnight hair falling loose around sharp cheekbones, crimson eyes half lidded, lips stained red.The people who actually lived in Nightshade Palace knew better.No one spoke. The servants moved like ghosts, refilling his goblet when it ran low, clearing away the empty decanter without being asked. His generals had tried giving reports earlier and been met with nothing but silence and a cold stare that sent them backing out of the room. Even his personal guard, Lucian
Dawn had barely bled across the sky when Ronan’s forces slammed into the vampire lines like a hammer made of teeth and fury. The western border was a mess of muddy fields and shattered tree lines, the ground already slick with blood. He rode at the head in wolf form for the first charge, a massive black beast with silver scars cutting through his fur, roaring loud enough to shake the leaves from the dying oaks. Behind him, hundreds of werewolves howled in answer, some shifted, some still on horseback with axes and silver edged blades ready.The vampires had come in strength. Too much strength for a simple raid. Ronan’s blood boiled at the thought. Elias Nightshade was here. The bastard never showed his face unless he meant to carve something permanent into Ronan’s territory.The clash was immediate and ugly. Fangs met claws. Spells of blood and shadow ripped through the air alongside the wet sounds of bodies being torn open. Ronan barreled straight through a knot of undead soldiers, j






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.