Chapter One — The Girl Who Burned Bridges
The city never slept, not even when the moon was high and full, casting silvery light over the glittering glass towers of Crescent City. Neon signs buzzed. Taxi horns echoed. Humans hurried down sidewalks with coffee in one hand and stress in the other. Somewhere, music thumped from a club basement. And inside a tiny, too-warm coffee shop tucked between a bookstore and a vape lounge, Riley Hart was pretending not to exist.
She’d gotten good at that. Blending in. Staying just enough under the radar to avoid triggering supernatural senses, but not so off-grid that it raised red flags. She poured lattes, snarked at hipsters, and listened to old punk rock through one AirPod while she cleaned the espresso machine with the kind of focus usually reserved for brain surgery.
Her shift ended in six minutes. Not that she was counting.
“Excuse me, miss? This isn’t almond milk.”
Riley didn’t even turn around. “It’s not?”
“No. I can taste the difference. This is oat.”
“You poor, brave soul,” she said flatly, looking up. “How will you survive?”
The customer—a man with a man bun and a vintage camera around his neck—looked offended. “You don’t have to be rude.”
“You don’t have to be dramatic. But here we are.”
He left in a huff. Riley smirked and returned to wiping the counter. There were worse jobs than being a barista. At least here, she wasn’t surrounded by pack wolves judging her for breathing too loud or failing to bow every time an Alpha strutted by.
Here, she was just another face in the crowd. Another nobody in the human world.
Exactly how she liked it.
Until the screaming started.
It was sharp and sudden—childish and panicked. Riley’s ears perked up before her brain could register what was happening. Then she saw it: a little boy sprinting toward the street, chasing a bright red ball. A car was speeding down the road, its headlights bouncing off wet asphalt.
Everything slowed.
Her wolf surged beneath her skin.
No.
Not here. Not now. Not in front of people.
But instinct screamed louder than reason.
She was out the door and across the sidewalk in a blink, not thinking, not hesitating. The little boy froze in the middle of the road, too scared to move. Riley lunged, grabbed him by the waist, and twisted midair. The car clipped her shoulder. Pain exploded in her side. She rolled, shielding the boy with her body.
People screamed again—this time at her.
She looked up, heart pounding, chest heaving. Her hand—
Claws.
Her eyes—
Wolf gold.
A man across the street had his phone out. Recording.
The world tilted.
“Shit,” Riley breathed.
Someone was shouting at her, asking if she was okay. The boy was crying. The car had skidded to a stop. But all she could hear was the crackling inside her skull, the voice she hadn’t heard in years.
You blew it. Again.
She ran.
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Riley didn’t stop running until she hit the edge of the river, the one that split the city in half like a knife wound. Her shoulder throbbed, but she kept moving. She ditched her apron in a dumpster. Ripped off her name tag and threw it into the water. Her hands were shaking.
Someone had seen.
No, everyone had seen.
Humans couldn’t tell the difference between a shifter and some random mutant. But the video—if it spread online, if the supernatural networks caught wind—she’d be flagged. And worse?
The local pack would come knocking.
She hadn’t survived this long by being careless. She’d lived off the grid for five years. No pack. No connections. No loyalty. Just survival.
Now she’d broken the most sacred law of all.
Don’t shift in front of humans.
She sat on a bench near the docks and pressed her fists to her forehead. The city skyline glittered in the dark like broken stars. Somewhere behind her, a dog barked. Somewhere above her, a predator was watching.
She felt him before she saw him.
The air went still.
Then a voice—deep, amused, and just a little smug—cut through the night.
“You know, for a rogue, you really suck at staying hidden.”
Riley stood slowly. Turned.
And came face-to-face with the one person she’d hoped never to meet.
Jaxon Vale.
The future Alpha of Crescent City’s most powerful werewolf pack. The son of that Vale. The kind of wolf who had power running in his blood and arrogance in his bones. He leaned against a lamppost like he owned the city and looked her over with the infuriating calm of someone who’d already decided she wasn’t a threat.
He was tall, dark-haired, with just a hint of five-o’clock shadow and a smug smile that made her itch to punch him.
“Get lost, Vale,” she growled.
He asked. “That’s no way to greet your new babysitter.”
Her eyes narrowed. “I don’t need a babysitter.”
“No, but you do need protection. And an alibi. And probably a better disguise. The video’s already circulating on pack channels. Congrats—you’re famous.”
Riley’s stomach twisted.
He stepped closer. Not threatening, exactly. But his presence filled the space like heat. “You shifted in public. That makes you pack business now.”
“I’m not part of your damn pack.”
“You are now.”
She scoffed. “Not a chance.”
“Afraid you don’t get a say. Pack law trumps your lone-wolf pride.” He shrugged. “Unless you’d prefer to be handed over to the Supernatural Council for trial. I hear their dungeons are lovely this time of year.”
Riley stared at him. Then laughed bitterly. “You’re enjoying this.”
“A little,” he admitted. “But mostly, I’m wondering what a marked rogue is doing back in my city.”
Her blood ran cold.
He knew.
Or at least suspected.
Riley’s fingers curled into fists. “Stay away from me.”
Jaxon’s smirk faded, just slightly. “Too late for that.”
He pulled a silver emblem from his jacket — the official seal of the Crescent City Alpha. “You’re coming with me, Hart. Whether you like it or not.”
She stared at the symbol, then at the man holding it.
Jaxon Vale. Her worst nightmare wrapped in a tailored jacket and Alpha swagger.
And just like that, everything she’d been running from came crashing back.
Chapter 18 – The First PackRiley couldn’t breathe.The walls of the underground chamber felt like they were closing in, swallowing her whole. She blinked at Ezekiel, her fingers digging into the sleeve of Jaxon’s coat as if it were the only thing tethering her to reality.“You’re wrong,” she whispered. “I’m not a breach. I’m not some… key to a portal or ancient curse or whatever this is.”Ezekiel didn’t flinch. “You can deny it. You can even run. But the old blood knows you. And it calls to you.”“Stop speaking in riddles!” she snapped, startling even herself.He tilted his head. “Then let me speak plain. The First Pack were not born of flesh and bone as we are. They were creatures of shadow and instinct—pure will shaped by hunger and rage. The world could not contain them. So, they were sealed behind the Veil, where mirrors are windows and memory is currency.”Vin muttered under his breath. “Seriously, this dude needs therapy.”Ezekiel continued. “The Lazarus Project was never about
Chapter 17 – BreachThe fire still smoldered when they drove away from the cold storage facility, city lights blinking in the distance like a civilization oblivious to the war waging in its shadows.Riley sat in the back seat, knees drawn to her chest, her reflection flickering in the car window.She couldn’t shake Lorne’s voice from her head."It’s not because of what you’ll reveal, Riley. It’s because of what you’ll awaken."“What the hell does that even mean?” she muttered under her breath.Vincent glanced at her through the rearview mirror. “You said something?”She didn’t answer. Instead, she turned her gaze to Jaxon, sitting in the passenger seat. His jaw was tight, his hands clenched. He hadn’t said a word since the explosion. His silence worried her more than his anger ever had.When they arrived back at the safehouse—a worn brownstone deep in the West District—Jaxon walked inside without waiting. Vincent lingered, watching Riley with uncharacteristic hesitation.“You okay?”
Chapter 16 – Smoke and SurveillanceThe cold storage plant was exactly what nightmares were made of.A gray box of decay on the outskirts of the city, draped in fog, sitting on a slab of forgotten industrial ruin. Rust clung to the building like a second skin. Every window was either boarded up or broken. And the chain-link fence surrounding it had a large, gaping hole—like something had clawed its way in.Or out.Riley stared at the building from the car, arms crossed over her chest.“You sure about this?” Vincent asked from the driver’s seat, his usual smirk replaced with something more serious.“No,” she said truthfully. “But we have to go in.”Jaxon checked the safety on his tranq-loaded pistol. “This isn’t just recon anymore. We take what we can and destroy the rest.”“Copy that,” Vincent muttered, handing her a flashlight and an earpiece.Jaxon gave Riley a glance, that silent you okay? kind of look he’d mastered over the past few days.She nodded once. “Let’s finish this.”They
Chapter 15 – A Name in the FireThe car ride back from Club Eclipse was silent.Not the comfortable kind.The what-the-hell-were-you-thinking kind.Jaxon’s fingers were locked around the steering wheel, knuckles white. His jaw was clenched so tightly Riley could see the tension crawling along his throat. The soft hum of the city lights passed by in blurs, but her eyes never left the windshield.She knew the silence was about to break.And when it did, it shattered.“You could’ve gotten yourself killed!” Jaxon snapped, slamming the door shut behind them once they arrived at the apartment. “Do you have any idea what that was?!”“I was improvising,” Riley replied, pulling off her heels and tossing them aside. “It worked. He took the bait.”“You improvised in front of a man who designed a serum to rip our kind from the moon! A man who tortured your sister! That’s not brave, Riley—it’s suicidal.”She spun toward him, fury lighting her eyes. “You think I don’t know that?! Every time I breat
Chapter 14 – Welcome to Club EclipseIf hell had a dancefloor, it would look exactly like Club Eclipse.From the outside, the building was just another steel-and-glass high-rise tucked away in the financial district—no signs, no lines, no music bleeding through the doors. But the moment Riley stepped past the velvet-rope illusion spell and into the elevator, her stomach dropped.The club wasn’t on any official floor. The button was unmarked.The descent felt endless.Jaxon stood beside her, sharp in a tailored black suit that looked like it had been stitched straight from shadows. His hair was slicked back, jaw freshly shaven, his amber eyes watchful. Riley barely recognized him.She, on the other hand, had been transformed by Mara’s glamours. Her leather jacket was replaced by a crimson silk dress that shimmered like blood under moonlight. Her dark curls were tamed into soft waves, and silver shadow lined her eyes.Even with the protective sigils etched into their skin, she felt expo
Chapter 13 – Rumors in the UndergroundThere were places in the city even the boldest werewolves didn’t go without backup. The Underground was one of them.Technically, it was a collection of decommissioned subway tunnels beneath the East District—abandoned decades ago after a chemical spill scared off the humans. But in the shifter world, it had a different name: No-Man’s Packland.Riley had only been there once before. That night ended with a broken rib and a threat scrawled on the back of her jacket in blood.So, naturally, she was going back.“I still don’t like this,” Jaxon muttered as he locked the SUV and scanned the shadowed stairwell leading down into the darkness. “We’re walking into a den of outlaws and rogues. Half of them would sell their own mates for a bottle of wolfsbane.”Riley zipped up her jacket. “Good thing I don’t trust anyone.”“That’s not a good thing.”She smirked, stepping into the gloom. “Depends on who you ask.”The air grew colder as they descended, stale