MasukThe sound of the door opening nearly sent me into cardiac arrest. My heart jumped to my throat, and I almost screamed—until I realized it was just the women again.
Only this time, they weren't empty-handed. Each carried something—a tray stacked with the richest food I’d ever seen, and several glossy boxes tied with gold ribbons. The smell of roasted meat and fresh bread hit me, warm and buttery, so real it made my stomach twist painfully. But did I look like I had an appetite right now? “Your Majesty,” the eldest woman said softly, setting the tray on the table. “We’ve brought your meal, and your nightgowns. You are to choose one for tonight.” “Nightgowns?” I repeated, blinking. “For what?” Her eyes flicked to the others before meeting mine again. “For the King,” she said. “You’ll be meeting him tonight. Did you forget already?” My stomach dropped. “Meeting him?” My voice cracked. “As in—tonight? Like tonight tonight?” “Yes, my Queen. We’ll help you prepare when it’s time.” Prepare. As if I were some offering being dressed for sacrifice. Before I could say another word, they bowed low and slipped out of the room, silent as ghosts. I stared at the boxes. Then at the food. My brain screamed don’t eat it. But my stomach growled loud enough to echo. I sighed. “Fine. If this is a dream, at least it’s a dream with nice food.” The first bite hit my tongue, and I nearly moaned. Whatever this was—chicken? heaven?—it melted in my mouth. I didn’t realize how hungry I was until I was scraping the plate clean. And then, like the idiot I apparently was, I turned to the boxes. The first one popped open with a click—and I froze. Inside was silk. Black, thin, and scandalous enough to make a stripper blush. My face burned. “What the actual hell is this?” I opened the second box. Worse. The third—don’t even ask. By the fifth, I was staring at a pile of lace and regret. They expected me to wear this… for a man who hates his queen? I kicked the boxes off the bed and flopped backward, staring at the ceiling. “This is insane. Completely insane.” I didn’t know when I drifted off, but the next thing I heard was a knock. I shot upright, breath catching. “Come in,” I said, trying to sound brave. The women entered again, the eldest speaking first. “It’s time, my Queen.” My throat went dry. “Time for what?” “To prepare you,” she said simply. My heart pounded so hard I thought it might burst. I stumbled to my feet, my mind spinning. I wanted to run, scream, anything—but instead, I found myself walking to the bathroom as they instructed. The moment the water hit my skin, I wished I could drown in it. The steam filled the air, warm and heavy, and I pressed my hands to my face. This was really happening. My first time. With a stranger. A king who didn’t even want me. I wanted to cry—but no. No. I was Hazel Truman. And Hazel Truman did not cower. When I stepped out, they were waiting with towels, perfume, and lotions that smelled like money. Their hands worked fast—rubbing oil into my skin, twisting my hair into something soft and elegant. Every second felt heavier, like I was being wrapped in fear. “Perfect,” the eldest woman whispered as she tied the sash of my robe. “You look beautiful, my Queen. The King won’t be able to resist you.” I forced a smile. “Yeah. What a joy.” They didn’t catch the sarcasm—or pretended not to. When they finally led me through the hallways, I tried to focus on breathing. The palace was even larger than I expected, with endless corridors. The scent of burning candles and fresh roses filled the air. My heart thudded in time with my footsteps. Then we stopped. Before me stood two tall brown doors—each carved with the head of a wolf. Its eyes seemed to glint in the dim light, almost alive. “The King is waiting,” the eldest said quietly. The guards stepped forward and pushed the doors open. My pulse roared in my ears. I swallowed hard and stepped inside. The doors shut behind me with a deep, echoing thud. The room was dim—candles flickered in corners, casting golden shadows over the walls. The air smelled like roses and something darker I couldn’t name. Then I saw him. A tall man stood by the window, his back to me. Bare from the waist up. Only dark pants hung low on his hips. His hands rested in his pockets, shoulders broad and tense, muscles shifting with every breath. For a moment, I just… stared. The air between us was thick—like even the silence had weight. Then, slowly, he turned. And my world tilted. The breath left my lungs in one violent rush. My body went still, completely frozen. Because standing there—bathed in candlelight, eyes sharp and familiar—was a face I knew. A face I could never mistake. My voice came out in a whisper, barely audible. “Professor…Nicholas?”Hazel’s POV I shot upright in bed with a scream still lodged in my throat. My heart was trying to punch its way out of my chest. Sweat soaked the back of my nightgown. My hair stuck to my neck. For a second I didn’t know where I was—cliff, falling, black water rushing up—then the familiar ceiling of my room came into focus. Just a dream. Just a dream. The door burst open. Two of my female warriors rushed in—eyes scanning every corner like they expected an assassin hiding in the shadows. “My queen!” the taller one barked. “Are you alright?” I pressed a shaking hand to my chest. “I’m fine,” I managed. My voice sounded thin. “It was…nothing. A nightmare.” They exchanged a quick look—concern still sharp on their faces—but they bowed and backed out quietly, closing the door with a soft click. I sat there, knees pulled to my chest, breathing hard through my nose. That hadn’t felt like a dream. It felt real. Too real. The cold wind on my face. The hard shove on my back. The w
Hazel’s POV I couldn’t sleep. I kept turning over in bed, flipping the pillow, pulling the blanket up to my chin, then kicking it off again because it suddenly felt suffocating. Every time I closed my eyes, my heart gave this weird little jump—like it was trying to climb out of my chest. Restless. Uneasy. Like something bad was waiting just outside the door and I could feel it breathing. I groaned and rolled onto my back, staring up at the dark canopy above the bed. This was ridiculous. I shouldn’t be lying here wide awake, stomach in knots, thinking about Nicholas. Nicholas—of all people. The same man who’d spent three years parading his mistress in front of me like it was a hobby. The same man who’d looked at me like I was invisible until today, when he suddenly decided to act like I mattered. I pressed the heels of my hands against my eyes. No. Nope. Not going there. I wasn’t worried about him. I wasn’t. I threw the blanket off completely and stood up. The marble floor
Nicholas’s POVI stepped out of the shower, water still dripping from my hair and running down my back. The steam in the bathroom clung to the mirrors, blurring everything into a hazy fog. I grabbed a towel from the rack and wrapped it around my waist, letting out a long breath. The hot water had done nothing to wash away the tension knotted in my shoulders. If anything, it had given me too much time to think—about the vial sitting locked in a safe, about Hazel’s mark on my neck, about how everything was unraveling faster than I could control.I wiped a hand across the mirror, clearing a streak of fog, and stared at my reflection. The bite mark was still there—fresh, raised, a perfect crescent of teeth that made my wolf preen every time I looked at it. But the man staring back? He looked tired. Worn down. Like three years of lies had carved lines into my face that no amount of kingly power could erase.I was reaching for my shirt when the door to my chambers burst open.I froze.Foot
Hazel’s POVI stood on the balcony overlooking the palace grounds, arms folded tight across my chest like I could hold everything inside if I squeezed hard enough. The late afternoon sun was making everywhere glow gold, but despite the beauty and calm of the place, my mind was spinning too fast.Dimitri stood beside me—quiet, solid, arms crossed the same way mine were. He hadn’t said much since the incident that happened at the training field. The silence between us wasn’t awkward anymore. It was comfortable. Like he knew I needed space to think.I finally broke it.“Dimitri,” I said, keeping my voice low, “I think Nicholas and his beta are hiding something.”He turned his head just enough to look at me. “What makes you say that?”I leaned my elbows on the stone railing. “I was in Nicholas’s room earlier and Marco suddenly barged in. He was out of breath, eyes wild, and he shouted something about finding ‘the missing segment’ and how Nicholas could finally ‘tell the queen the truth.’”
Nicholas’s POVI stared at the vial in my hand like it might bite me.Pink liquid caught the sunlight and threw tiny sparks across my fingers. It looked harmless. Pretty, even. Like something a child would collect in a jar and call magic.But it wasn’t magic.It was a gamble.Three years of searching—three years of marriage with Hazel thinking I hate her—and now this tiny bottle was supposed to fix everything?I didn’t trust it.“I don’t know,” I said quietly. My voice sounded hollow even to my own ears. “This feels too easy.”Marco leaned against the bookshelf, arms crossed, watching me carefully.“We’ve been looking for this segment for three years,” I went on. “Dead ends. False leads. Empty vaults. And now it just… shows up? One day I’m holding her through the heat, the next you walk in with the answer in your pocket? I don’t even know how I feel.”Marco nodded slowly. “You’re scared.”I laughed—short, bitter. “Terrified.”He didn’t laugh back.“You have to tell her,” he said gentl
Nicholas’s POVThe room went so quiet I could hear my own heartbeat slamming against my ribs.Marco stood frozen—eyes wide, face pale, like he’d just walked into a lion’s den and realized he was dinner.I wasn’t sure I’d heard him right.Did he just say he found the missing segment?The same missing segment we’d hunted for three years. The missing piece that could explain how to keep Hazel safe—how to keep her alive. The one thing that could finally let me stop lying to her. Stop hurting her. Stop pretending I didn’t love her more than my own life.Three years. Three fucking years of dead ends, ransacked libraries and sleepless nights.Hazel was still pressed against me—her wrist caught in my hand, her body warm and trembling just enough for me to feel it. I could smell her—vanilla, salt, the faint trace of last night’s heat still clinging to her skin. I could feel her confusion spiking. Sharp. Curious. Angry.She pulled away suddenly—yanking her wrist free like my touch burned.Her e







