LOGIN“Please, Julian… don’t do this to me. Not here.”
My voice was a pathetic, jagged thing, echoing through the silence of the Grand Hall. I was on my knees, the ivory silk of my dress blooming around me like a wilted lily on the cold marble. My fingers reached for the hem of his trousers, a desperate, instinctive grab for the man who had been my world only an hour ago. Julian didn’t even flinch. He didn’t look down. He simply stepped back, leaving my hand to slap against the floor. “Don’t touch me, Veda,” he said, his voice amplified by the room’s acoustics, dripping with a clinical sort of disgust. “You’re making a scene. It’s beneath the dignity of this Pack, though I suppose I shouldn't expect anything more from an Omega of your… limited caliber.” A ripple of laughter moved through the crowd. The high-ranking elites, the predators in tailored suits, the women in diamonds who had always looked through me as if I were glass. Now, they were looking. They were feasting on my ruin. “I did everything for you,” I whispered, my vision swimming. “I waited. I served. The Moon Goddess—” “The Moon Goddess made a mistake,” Julian snapped, finally looking at me. His eyes, once warm as honey, were now as hard as amber. “She gave me a mate who can barely shift, a girl who spent her life cleaning my boots. How can you lead a pack when you can barely stand on your own two feet without trembling? You aren't a Luna, Veda. You’re a liability.” Camilla stepped up onto the dais then, her hand sliding possessively into the crook of Julian’s elbow. She looked down at me, her blonde hair shimmering under the chandeliers, her face an exquisite mask of faux-pity. “Oh, Veda,” she sighed, the sound carrying a serrated edge. “It’s embarrassing. Stop begging. You look like a dog waiting for a scrap. Have a little pride, even if you have nothing else.” “You were in his bed,” I choked out, the words burning my throat. “My own sister.” The crowd gasped, but Camilla didn't blink. She leaned her head on Julian’s shoulder, looking out at the Council Elders. “Desperate lies from a discarded heart. It’s tragic, really. Her mind is clearly fracturing under the weight of her own inadequacy.” She looked at Julian, a slow, predatory light entering her eyes. She wasn’t just taking my mate; she was rewriting my existence. She leaned in, whispering something to the Elder Alaric, but she did it loudly enough for the front rows to hear. “We can’t just leave her like this,” Camilla said, her voice dripping with mock-concern. “A rejected Omega is a stain on the pack’s psyche. She’ll become a rogue, or worse, a public reminder of Julian's mistake. We need to fix this. We need to settle the blood debt.” Elder Alaric narrowed his eyes. “The Bennett family still owes a significant debt to the Enforcer Division for the border failures. The Council was going to demand land, but...” “Why take land when you can provide a service?” Camilla suggested, her smile widening into something truly serpentine. She turned her gaze toward the back of the hall, where the shadows seemed to be congregating. “My sister has always been excellent at… domestic duties. And we all know the Head of the Enforcers has been living in that cold, glass fortress of his without a consort for far too long.” The temperature in the room didn't just drop; it died. “You can’t be serious,” Julian muttered, though his eyes lit up with a cruel, intrigued spark. “Why not?” Camilla challenged, her voice rising to address the entire hall. “Veda is a Bennett. She carries the bloodline, even if she lacks the spirit. If she marries the Alpha of the Enforcers, the debt is wiped clean. Julian gets his true mate, the Pack gets its stability, and Veda… well, Veda finally gets a master who matches her temperament.” She looked back at me, her eyes screaming I won. “She belongs with the Butcher, doesn't she? The monster of the Kingsley line deserves the pack’s most broken thing.” The hall groaned as the massive, reinforced steel doors at the rear were hauled open by two guards. The sound of his boots was rhythmic, heavy, and final. Rowan Kingsley entered the hall like a storm front. He wasn't dressed in the finery of the other Alphas. He wore a black tactical shirt, the sleeves rolled up to reveal forearms corded with muscle and mapped with scars. He didn't look at the crowd. He didn't look at the Council. He walked with a terrifying, predatory grace that made the Alphas in the room instinctively baring their throats. He stopped ten feet from the dais. The air around him felt ionized, thick with the scent of rain, gunpowder, and old, lethal power. His face was a masterpiece of granite; harsh jawline, a slight shadow of stubble, and eyes the color of a winter sea. He was the man who handled the things the Pack didn't want to see. The man who lived in the High-Rise District, surrounded by shadows and the smell of blood. “Rowan,” Elder Alaric said, his voice uncharacteristically thin. “You’ve heard the suggestion?” Rowan didn't answer immediately. He let his gaze sweep over Julian, who actually took a half-step back, and then over Camilla. Finally, his eyes dropped to me. I was a mess. My ivory dress was stained from the floor, my hair was falling out of its pins, and my face was wet with the salt of my own humiliation. I looked like a victim. I felt like a corpse. “The suggestion,” Rowan began, his voice a low, gravelly vibration that I felt in my marrow, “is that I take Julian’s leftovers to pay off a debt of gold and land.” Julian found his voice, though it sounded forced. “It’s a fair trade, Uncle. She’s an Omega. She’s quiet. She knows how to serve. I’m sure she’ll fit right in with your… lifestyle.” Rowan finally moved. He ascended the stairs of the dais, his presence expanding until he seemed to swallow the light. He stopped directly in front of me. I held my breath, my heart hammering so hard it felt like it would burst through my ribs. I had heard the stories. Rowan didn't keep weak things. He broke them. He threw them away. He reached down. I flinched, closing my eyes, waiting for the shove, the rejection, or the hand that would drag me out of the hall like a dog.My heart slammed a violent, erratic rhythm against my ribs as the cold winter-mint scent grew suffocatingly thick, instantly drowning out the distant, comforting frequency of Rowan’s rain and ash. The hair on the nape of my neck stood up as the shadow on the marble floorboards elongated, rushing toward my silhouette with a reckless, silent speed.I didn't cower. I didn't whimper. The liberating confidence I had built at Rowan’s left hand flared to life, and I whirled around, my heels clicking sharply against the stone as I locked my eyes onto the darkness of the archway."Julian," I breathed out, my voice a dead, flat wire.He lunged out of the shadows of the third pillar, his golden alpha eyes completely blown out into an unhinged, wild desperation. His tailored royal coat was torn at the shoulder, his face bloodless and dripping with a cold sweat that smelled of raw copper and pure panic. He didn't speak. He didn't offer a pathetic apology. The stalking escalated into an attempted
I stood in the library gallery, organizing a stack of newly ratified sector registries. My fingers were warm, completely relaxed as I handled the heavy parchment."You're not wearing your defensive posture today, little wolf," Rowan’s deep voice rumbled from the arched doorway, a low, gravelly vibration that instantly sent a wave of liquid heat straight down my spine.I turned to see him leaning against the stone frame, his massive, muscular frame draped in a soft black linen shirt that was unbuttoned at the throat. He had completely shed the unyielding armor of the Supreme Warlord. His slate-grey eyes had softened into a rich, molten silver fire, his nostrils flaring slightly as he took a deep, testing breath of the rich vanilla sweetness flooding my scent."There's no perimeter to defend today, Alpha," I whispered, a breathless smile playing at the corners of my lips as he closed the gap between us in two slow, heavy strides.He didn't grab my waist with his usual territorial finali
Veda’s POV The gentle, domestic tranquility of the master suite vanished before the morning fog could even lift from the coastal cliffs. I woke to the metallic click of heavy tactical bolts sliding into place, the low, frantic hum of electronic scanners echoing through the dressing room arches, and a suffocating, dense cloud of rain and ash that made my inner wolf instantly brace for a collision.When I stepped out into the grand gallery, the change was terrifyingly absolute.Enforcer sentries in black carbon-fiber armor stood at three-foot intervals along the private corridors, their high-frequency rifles drawn across their chests, their scents dripping with an intense, sharp adrenaline. Marcus’s scouts had completely locked down the eastern terrace doors, nailing thick titanium reinforcement plates over the glass that had only yesterday let in the pale winter sunlight."Veda, stay within the interior perimeter," Lila muttered as she stepped into the hallway, her usual playful beta
Rowan’s POV The raw friction of her small hands locking behind my neck sent a violent shockwave straight to the primitive core of my wolf. For forty years, my survival had depended on maintaining a cold, clinical perimeter around my impulses, but the sweet heat of her mouth devouring mine completely incinerated the last of my discipline. The midnight-black void swallowed my vision, my large hands tangling ruthlessly in her long, dark hair as I lifted her entirely off the Persian rug, trapping her fragile frame against the hard oak of the bedpost."Veda," I growled low against her lips, the word a ragged, desperate wire of pure, unadulterated necessity."Don't stop, Rowan," she whispered, her voice a breathless, liquid thread as she arched her lower body into my mass, her vanilla sweetness blooming with a deep, frantic receptivity that drove my senses into an absolute frenzy. "Let the machine break."I didn't answer with words. The forbidden, intense chemistry between our souls deton
Even as the quiet domestic peace of yesterday dissolved back into the rigid, high-stakes choreography of the summit, the image of that future hung behind my eyelids like a permanent, golden brand. I could still feel the warm, phantom weight of Rowan’s massive arms wrapping around my waist, the phantom scent of rain and ash clinging to the fibers of my ivory wool gown.I stood in the sun-drenched lower gallery, my fingers blindly tracing the edge of a mahogany side table."You're tracking the floorboards again, Veda," Lila’s voice sliced through the silence, making my heart take a sudden, frantic leap against my ribs.She walked into the corridor carrying a stack of revised border manifests, her sharp beta scent laced with a sudden, highly observant amusement. She stopped three feet away, her dark eyes narrowing as she tracked the subtle, frantic flush rising on my cheeks and the high, open collar of my dress that left the bruised violet punctures of Rowan’s mating mark completely expo
er water slammed against the high glass windows of the master suite, blurring the pine trees and the distant harbor grid into a dull smudge. The coastal fog had crawled up the cliffs, wrapping the stone pillars in a freezing shroud. Inside, the world was completely silent, the high stakes of the High Council Summit locked away behind the double oak doors down in the reception pavilions.I sat curled up on the oversized velvet sofa near the hearth, wrapped in a plush, dark wool blanket that smelled entirely of my husband.The room was saturated in a thick, comforting cloud of rain and ash, the sharp wildfire edge of Rowan’s aura completely dialed back into a rich, soothing hum. For the first time since I had fled the Palace, my pulse wasn't hammering a frantic, erratic rhythm against my ribs. There were no ledger manifests to cross-reference, no traditionalist lords trying to test my perimeter, and no royal decrees waiting for a signature.It was just a quiet domestic chapter, a stolen
Rowan’s POV Affection from a woman who had every reason to hate me was a dangerous, toxic drug.I sat at the dark mahogany desk in the island estate’s study, the morning sun cutting through the high arched windows in sharp, blinding blades of gold. The encrypted tactical console in front of me wa
“I don’t know what I’m supposed to feel around you anymore.”The words left my throat as a frayed, breathless whisper, dissolving into the dark, quiet space of the master suite.Rowan didn't move. He remained kneeling between my thighs, his large, calloused hands resting heavily on my knees, their
Rowan’s POV The low, persistent vibration of the train tracking through the mountain pass had became the background rhythm to my impending undoing.I sat in the dim light of the master parlor, a glass of untouched bourbon held loosely between my fingers. The dark amber liquid reflected the green a
I watched the gray expanse of the city lines dissolve into a blur of endless white mist as the private Enforcer train car cut through the mountain pass.The carriage was a fortress on tracks, reinforced steel plates disguised behind dark mahogany paneling, thick velvet curtains, and the faint, unde







