The pack-house had finally quietened. The bustling of seamstresses, decorators, and servants had all been trickled into silence, leaving the hallways hushed except for the occasional echo of a door closing or the distant hoot of an owl beyond the windows.
Ella stood in her borrowed room, the gown draped across the bed like looking like a beautiful accusation. Moonlight spilled through the curtains, silvering the delicate lace, and yet she couldn’t bring herself to touch it.
Her chest ached with the pressure of everything which were unspoken.
Tomorrow, she would stand before the pack and pledge herself to a man who despises her. Tomorrow, she would take the name of Luna, a title she had never sought or desired for and one she feared she would never be fit to carry.
A soft knock pulled her away from her thoughts.
Marcus stepped inside, his presence filling the room the way it always had—solid, grounding. His gray-streaked hair caught the moonlight, his shoulders square though his eyes softened when they met hers.
“You should be resting, cub,” he said, voice low but gentle.
Ella swallowed. “I can’t. Every time I close my eyes, all I see is tomorrow. Everyone staring at me. Everyone expecting me to be something I clearly I’m not.”
Marcus crossed the room and laid a hand on her shoulder. His palm was warm, grounding her against the storm inside. “You are much more than what they see or say. Don’t let them succeed into fooling you into believing otherwise.”
Tears stung at the corners of her eyes. “But I’m not a werewolf, I’m just human. I’ll never feel the bond the way they all do. And Cole—” She faltered, her throat tightening. “Cole actually hates me.”
Marcus’s jaw tightened. He didn’t speak right away, as though he’s carefully trying to weigh his words. Finally, he said, “He is young. Stubborn. Angry. But anger is not what makes whole of him. Bonds reveal truths we don’t sometimes want to face. In time, he will learn what you actually mean to him.”
Ella turned away, wrapping her arms around herself. “And what if he doesn’t? What if I spend the rest of my life chained to someone who wishes I were someone else?”
Marcus exhaled slowly. “Then you live for yourself and not for him. You have been able to survive worse, cub. Tomorrow is not the end of the road —it’s just the beginning of a fight. And if anyone can fight it and come out victorious, it is you.”
His words gave her a small spark of strength, though the fear lingered feeling heavy as a stone in her chest but she felt a bit of ease. She nodded, forcing a thin smile. “Thank you, Marcus.”
He squeezed her shoulder once more before leaving, he closed the door softly behind him.
Ella turned back to the gown. She couldn’t still bring herself to touch it.
---
Elsewhere in the pack-house, Cole paced the length of his room. He felt like a caged animal, who has been stripped of his willpower. The fire in the hearth had burned low, casting the chamber in flickering shadows, but he just couldn’t settle down. Every time he tried to, the bond tugged at him, pulling his thoughts back to his mate, Ella.
Her face rose in his mind unbidden, the way her lashes lowered when she sketched in that her damn notebook, the way she smiled at everyone no matter how cruel they were towards her. He clenched his fists, trying to banish it all, but it was like trying to tear out a root that has been rooted too deep in the soil.
This wasn’t supposed to be his fate.
He should have been free to choose. Free to love Sasha, the girl who had always been by his side for years. The girl who understood him totally, who matched his ambition, who whispered that the pack could be theirs to shape.
But instead, the Goddess had bound him to Ella. The human girl who had no wolf. The charity case.
Cole slammed his fist against the wall, the wood cracking under the force. His chest heaved with frustration. He could already foresee the look in his father’s eyes tomorrow—the smug satisfaction of an Alpha certain the bond was of a divine will.
But what about his will?
What about his choice?
The door creaked open behind him. He didn’t need to turn to know who it was.
“Pacing won’t make anything change,” Sasha said, her voice smooth, laced with a bitter edge. She stepped into the room, closing the door softly behind her. In the firelight, her green eyes gleamed, her lips curving in that practiced smile that always made his chest tighten.
“She’s not worthy of you,” Sasha whispered, stepping closer. “Everyone sees it but your father. He’s been blinded by tradition. But you and I—we know the truth. You belong with me.”
Cole closed his eyes, fighting the war inside himself. The bond to Ella tugged like a chain, but Sasha’s presence burned hot and familiar.
“I can’t stop this,” he muttered. “Not tomorrow. Not with him always watching.”
Sasha touched his arm, her nails grazing his skin. “Then we make sure tomorrow is all but a show. You don’t have to love her. You don’t have to let her in. Just stay with me, Cole. Let her wear the crown, but let me be the one who have your heart.”
Her words coiled around him like smoke, it filled the cracks in his resolve. He hated Ella for making him seem weak. He hated himself for still wanting her. And he hated Sasha for knowing exactly how to use that weakness.
“I can’t promise you forever,” he said, voice rough.
“You don’t need to,” Sasha whispered, pressing closer. “Just promise me that she’ll never truly own you.”
---
The night dragged on, heavy fears which were unspoken.
Ella lay awake in her bed, she stared at the ceiling, listening to the distant sounds of the packhouse. Somewhere, laughter drifted from the kitchen—wolves drinking and celebrating the upcoming union. She wondered if they would laugh so easily if they knew the truth: that both bride and groom dreaded the ceremony more than death itself.
She turned onto her side, pulling the blanket tight around her, but it did nothing to warm her. The bond tugged faintly at her chest, like a whisper of Cole’s emotions leaking through the cracks. She felt his turmoil, his anger, his resistance.
And it terrified her.
Because no matter how much he hated her, part of her heart still longed for him.
She closed her eyes, whispering into the darkness: “Please help me, let me survive this.”
The moonlight spilled across her bed, cold and unyielding, it felt as if the Goddess herself were listening— but she was refusing to answer.
(Sasha’s POV)The pack-house hummed with the usual chaos of morning activities, boots clattering down the stairs, laughter and arguments spilling through the halls, the sharp scent of bacon wafting from the kitchen. Sasha walked through it like a queen surveying her kingdom, her head held high, her lips curved in a poised, practiced smile. Wolves dipped their heads in greeting, some bowing lower than necessary, eager for her approval.She rewarded them with a cool nod, her heart thrumming with satisfaction. This was how it‘s supposed to be. Her at the center, her at the crown, her steps carving the path that the pack followed. Not Ella. Never should it be Ella.And yet, the whispers were beginning. She heard them at the corners of conversations, they were questions about fate, about the human girl who bore the mate bond with Cole. Small murmurs now, but murmurs had a way of growing, of solidifying into loyalty if not smothered.Sasha would not let them grow.She started with her i
(Sasha’s POV)Sasha leaned against the railing of the pack house balcony, her fingers drumming an impatient rhythm against the polished wood. Below her, the courtyard bustled with activity, wolves carrying tools, younger pups darting in and out of training yards, the air thick with the scent of sweat and pine. But Sasha’s eyes weren’t on them, instead they were fixed on Ella.The little human moved through the courtyard with a basket balanced on her hip. Despite the whispers circling all around her like smoke, her steps were still steady. Normally, Sasha would have smirked, she would have expected to see her flinch, shrink, or even disappear into herself the way she had always done. But this morning… something was clearly different.Ella didn’t falter or cower.Instead she carried herself with her head held up high, when the whispers became sharp, her gaze remained calm. She didn’t fight back, she didn’t bite back— at least not exactly—but she didn’t cower either.Sasha grip on th
(Ella’s POV)The pale light of dawn crept across the cabin floor, spilling warmth where Ella’s sketchbook still lay tucked beneath her pillow. She lay awake, staring at the beams of light, while listening to the hush of the waking forest. Her whispered vow from the night before still lingered in her chest, it was fragile but still alive: Even if he never chooses me, I refuse to falter, I will still stand my ground.That was enough to give her enough strength to rise.She dressed with deliberate care, she braided her hair back neatly, she pulled on boots, and tried smoothing the front of her simple dress. In routine, there was power, in making the chose to face the day instead of hiding from it. She had spent too many mornings curled up in shadows, but she wouldn’t do that today. But not anymore.When she stepped outside, the air was crisp and sweet, the sky was still tinged with pale gray. She made her way toward the mess hall, her pace were steady, her shoulders squared. The usual
(Ella’s POV)The morning broke with a thin veil of mist curling between the trees, softening the edges of the world. Ella sat on the edge of her bed, her blanket wrapped around her shoulders, she watched the pale light seep through the cabin window. Her body begged her for more rest, but her mind refused to take the luxury. Sleep had become a fragile thing, easily disturbed by the heavy weight pressing on her chest each night—the mate bond’s silent pull, the murmur of whispers that never truly left her.So she reached towards her sketchbook. The pencil scratched faintly against the page, sketching petals and stems with careful strokes. There were wildflowers again, their roots stretching longer than before, they twisted so deep into the soil. Once, Her hand had trembled, but she had manage to keep it steady, pressing harder until the lines were all bold and dark. If she could not control the bond, or Cole, or the cruel mouths of the pack, then this is what she could definitely contr
(Cole’s POV)Like ash, the taste of whiskey clung unto my tongue. With my face pressed against the edge of the mattress, I rose up with my head pounding so hard that it felt like a drumbeat inside my skull. With every breathe I took, my stomach rolled. For just a moment, I couldn’t move, I refused to take another breathe. I didn’t dare to remember.But memory has a cruel way of forcing itself through cracks.Her name. Her voice. A whisper through the wood of her door.“Cole?”I squeezed my eyes shut, a groan tearing out of me. I hadn’t gone inside. I hadn’t touched her. But I had wanted to. God, I really wanted to. Last night, the bond has burned so hot, it urge me to cross that line again. It was only with the faintest shred of willpower and the burn of liquor in my gut that had been the only thing to keep him away.I stared at the ceiling beams while I rolled onto my back. The cabin smelled faintly of smoke and stale drink. My knuckles ached raw from pounding them against the
(Ella’s POV)Against the cabin walls, the night pressed heavy, although the silence had never felt so loud. Under the thin quilt, her eyes were fixed on the shadows that stretched across the ceiling. Something gnawed at the edges of her awareness, there was a pulse just beyond the door, like the echo of a heartbeat that wasn’t hers.Before her mind would accept it, her body was already aware of the mate bond humming, it was restless, insistent. She sat upright, clutching the quilt close to her chest. For a fleeting moment she thought about opening the door, about stepping into the unknown tugging at her, but her fingers refused to move. What was ahead was something she wasn’t ready to face.The feeling still lingered on, Cole’s presence was as heavy as a presence leaning against the wood, before it faded like smoke on the wind.Her chest tightened, though she pressed her palms against her knees, willing her breath steady. It wasn’t fair. None of this was fair.By the time dawn c