ログイン"Who's there?" I asked as I clutched my bag tightly against my chest, fearing something from the dark might dive towards my heart and tear it into pieces. My arms wrapped around it like it was the only thing saving me from what lurked in the shadows. My fingers dug into the fabric. I was scared. Not just scared—I was terrified. My eyes darted into the darkness, searching for something, anything. But there was nothing, just the void staring back at me.
Then it came again—that screeching sound. Like old wood dragging across stone. It echoed so loudly in the hall that my ears rang. My heart skipped a beat. I pressed the bag harder to my chest, fearing something from that darkness would leap out and rip right through me. My mind kept imagining claws, long and sharp, coming straight for my heart. My knees felt weak. My legs shook beneath me.
Then I heard it.
Footsteps.
Boots.
Heavy boots.
The sound of the heels hitting the floor, slow and deliberate. They weren’t walking fast. No. It was the kind of walking that made you feel watched. It was coming closer, step by step, like whoever it was had no reason to rush. I stepped back without thinking. One step. Then another. My back almost touched the wall.
"Who's there?" I asked again, my voice barely escaping my lips. It cracked at the end. My mouth was dry.
Then I heard it. A voice. A man’s voice. But it was not gentle. It was not kind. It sounded like mockery, like laughter that did not match joy.
"How pathetic can you be... You're asking me and running backward like a pet dog."
His voice echoed around the hall. It was cold. Flat. Sharp like ice. My heart did slow a bit because at least it was a human. I could tell. But the way he spoke—it was worse. He did not sound normal. He sounded like someone who enjoyed fear.
I swallowed and forced myself to speak again. My mother told me once, when I was little and afraid of shadows, she said, 'Pretend you are brave. Even if you are not, pretend.' She said people believe what they see. So I tried. I tried to sound tough.
"I had to take a few step back because I do not expect a human to stay in the dark side of the room. What are you trying to hide? Tell me!"
My words were bold but my lips trembled. My throat felt dry and tight. I could feel a tear escape my eye. My mother’s face came into my mind. That soft smile of hers, even when she was in pain on her hospital bed. She had held my hand and told me to always stand tall.
The voice came again. This time slower. More direct.
"Do you want to see my face?"
I jumped at the sound. It came so suddenly, like a whisper and a threat at the same time.
I hesitated. But then I said, "Yes."
There was a silence. A silence that was so thick that i could hear my own breath shaking. Then I heard the sound of footsteps again. One. Two. Three. The sound moved from the shadow. I watched with wide eyes.
Then I saw him.
He stepped into the light. The light hit his face like it had been waiting to show it. My eyes widened. My mouth opened a little. I forgot to breathe.
He was… beautiful. Not in a soft way. Not in a way that brought comfort. He was beautiful in a dangerous way. The kind of beauty that made you scared to look but unable to look away.
His eyes. Deep blue. Like oceans that held secrets. The kind of eyes that told stories without words. If you stared too long, you could fall into them and never return. His face was carved perfectly. His jaw sharp. His lips firm. But it was not just his looks. It was something more. The way he stood. The way his eyes held mine like he knew something I did not.
Then he spoke again.
His voice was calm now. Too calm.
"Why did you clutch your bag so tight on your chest?"
His words were simple. But the way he asked them made my blood freeze.
I opened my mouth to answer, but nothing came out.
He took a step closer.
"Are you hiding something in there?"
My hand slapped Lina's cheek hard. The loud crack echoed in the quiet room. A thin line of red appeared on her mouth. "Hmm," I thought, a quiet hum in my chest. "That's how I like it."Seeing her flinch, the quick pain in her big eyes, made me feel a strange thrill. How dare a human girl, a nobody, not listen to me? The nerve of her. The sheer rudeness. Since I couldn't have my own fated mate alive with me, since that terrible fate stuck to me like a rotting cloth, every single girl, every weak female, should pay for it. They were all part of the cruel joke played on me. A curse, a bad twist of fate, put on me because of them, because they even existed.Lina lay on the floor, like a crumpled mess of cream silk and lost innocence. It was a sad sight. Her tears started to fall, hot and fast, making clear paths through the dust on the marble floor. But even as tears streamed down, her eyes, full of a raw, deep hurt, never left mine. A tiny spark, maybe defiance or shock, still stayed in
Kade's POV No, sire… I have my right,” Lina said softly.Her voice wasn’t shaking, but there was something in it that just got under my skin. It wasn’t loud or bold, but it had this quiet strength that made me clench my teeth. I hate voices like that. Too calm. Too sure. They always hide something—something sharp, something stubborn. And I couldn’t stand it.She wasn’t crying. She wasn’t yelling. She wasn’t even begging like the others usually did.She just stood there, looking straight at me with those wide brown eyes. Not blinking. Not backing down. Like she really believed she had a right. Like she thought her little voice mattered in my house.I didn’t say anything right away. I just stood there, still, letting her words echo in the room. They hung in the air like a bad smell. My fingers slowly tightened around the neck of the wine bottle in my hand. I wasn’t drinking again—it wasn’t about that. I just liked how cold it felt. Heavy. Solid. I liked the idea that it could break. Th
Lina's POV “Sire…” I whispered, my voice barely louder than a breath. It sounded strange coming out of my mouth. Like I was saying a word that didn’t belong to me.I couldn’t move. My feet were stuck to the cold, shiny marble floor. The chill sank through the thin soles of my borrowed shoes and crawled up my legs. My hands stayed stiff at my sides, fingers clenched into fists so tight I could feel my nails digging into my palms. My heart thumped in my chest, not from nerves or excitement, but from fear. A quiet, sick fear that twisted in my stomach like a snake curling up inside me.What were they asking me to do?I just got here yesterday. Everything had happened so fast, I hadn’t even had time to think. I came here because I needed the job. I needed money for my family back in the small town. I thought I’d be cleaning, running errands—not standing here like some object for them to look at. The thought made my skin crawl.I tried to take a step forward, but something heavy sat in my
"Thank you, sire," Lina said in a small, shaky voice. She kept her head down, staring at the marble floor like it might open up and swallow her. Her fingers fidgeted with the soft, strange fabric of the cream-colored dress. She tried to smooth it out, even though there were no real wrinkles. It just didn’t feel right. The dress was too tight, too unfamiliar—like it didn’t belong to her. Like she didn’t belong in it.She couldn’t breathe properly. Her chest felt tight, like something heavy sat on it. And the hall was too big, too quiet. Every step she’d taken into this place had felt wrong. Now she stood in the middle of it, feeling small. Alone. Like every single person was looking at her, judging her. But the only person she truly wanted to hear from was Kade but hadn’t said a word.She didn’t dare lift her head. But she could feel his eyes on her. His silence was louder than anything else in the room. She felt it pressing down on her, heavier than stone. He had promised he would tal
"This is how I wanted it! You don’t give me orders!"Alpha Kade’s voice rang out like thunder as he slammed his wine glass down on the table. The glass shattered instantly, the sound sharp and loud in the giant hall. Wine sprayed across the table, dark red and thick, like blood pooling on polished wood. The pieces of glass sparkle everywhere, tiny shards flying in all directions.Jamil flinched. Jamil is one of his trusted friends with wealth, his trusted wolf His hand lifted halfway, like he was about to block something—even though nothing hit him. But he didn’t step back. He stood still, his face tense. His usual calm and sharp eyes were filled with a mix of fear and stubbornness.“I’m not ordering you, Alpha Kade,” Jamil said quietly. His voice was steady, but there was a hint of a tremble underneath. “I’m just saying… this isn’t right. It’s not how things should be done. This isn't how we planned it all along”Before he could say more, Kade cut him off. But not with a shout. His v
Fear danced in Lina's eyes as she stood frozen in front of the dusty mirror fixed awkwardly on the bathroom wall. Her fingers trembled as they clutched the edge of the porcelain sink. The cold porcelain bit into her skin, but she hardly noticed. Her reflection stared back at her, soaked and shivering, a girl who didn’t look like herself anymore. Her wet hair clung to her cheeks, her lips pale, her skin ghostly.She blinked fast. She didn’t want to cry. But her heart was beating too fast. It pounded so loudly, she could hear it in her ears, like a war drum. Every breath she took felt like it would choke her.This wasn’t what she signed up for. She came here to clean. That’s what her father told her. Clean the floors, wash the windows, scrub the sinks. That was the job. She was supposed to be invisible, just a worker blending in with the background. Not this. Not this strange nightmare. Not this creepy silence filled with things unsaid.She looked at the dress on the wooden chair. It wa







