LOGINAshley Parker’s world shatters when her Alpha, Adrian Rodrigue, publicly rejects her, branding her unworthy and choosing another as his Luna. Humiliated and cast out, Ashley becomes a target for the new Luna’s jealousy-fueled assassins, barely escaping with her life. Broken but unbowed, she was taken in by a rogue Alpha who sees the fire in her soul—a strength even she didn’t know she possessed. Under her guidance, Ashley rises, transforming into a fierce and feared Luna, her silver wolf a symbol of power and defiance.
View More**Ashley's POV**
Where the fuck is that low-life bitch? A voice growled from the dining room, sharp and mean, cutting through the air like a knife. I was in the kitchen, trying to steady myself, gripping the edges of a big wooden tray loaded with steaming plates of food. My hands were shaking, and I hated it—hated how their words pierced straight through my chest, making my heart ache like it was bruised. Laughter followed, loud and cruel, echoing off the walls as I forced my feet to move, carrying the tray toward the dining room. I stepped into the room, keeping my head down, eyes glued to the floor. The plates clinked softly as I set them in front of the people sitting around the huge dining table, their voices still buzzing with mockery. I didn’t look at them. I couldn’t. If I did, I’d see their smug faces, their eyes glinting with that same old disgust they always had specially for me. I turned on my heel, quick as I could, and headed back to the kitchen to grab the rest of the dishes. My name’s Ashley, and I’m eighteen—well, almost. Two days from now, I’ll hit that milestone, but it’s not like anyone’s gonna throw me a party or anything. My parents died when I was just a kid, too young to even remember their faces. Alpha Rodrigue and his mate, Luna Aurora, took me in. Not as family, no way, but they gave me a roof over my head, a corner to sleep in. In return, I serve the pack. I cook, I clean, I fetch, I carry. I used to be okay with it—grateful, even. It was better than being out on the streets, right? But then Adrian took over. Adrian, the new alpha, is a whole different kind of problem. He’s not just the leader now; he’s a thorn in my side, a constant, exhausting pain in my ass. He’s got these two big roles—alpha of the pack and the guy who never misses a chance to make my life hell. Nobody dares talk back to him. Nobody. Though I’m not scared of him like the others and he knows it, too, and that’s why he’s always gunning for me, trying to grind me down, humiliate me every chance he gets. And his girlfriend, Katrina? She’s the worst. A walking, talking nightmare with a smile that could curdle milk. Speak of the devil—Katrina sauntered into the kitchen just as I scooped up the last of the dishes. Her perfume hit me first, too sweet, like she bathed in sugar syrup. I kept my head down, clutching the plates, and scurried past her before she could start gloating about whatever new way she’d found to make me feel small. “Moon goddess, does she ever do anything right?” someone barked from the dining room as I got closer. I bit the inside of my cheek, fighting the urge to roll my eyes so hard they’d get stuck. They always had something to complain about—my food, my speed, the way I breathed too loud for their liking. If they hate it so much, why don’t they get up and do it themselves? Just once, I’d love to see them try. But no, they sit there, picking at everything I do, while I’m stuck serving them like some kind of machine. I wanted to scream it all out, let every ugly thought spill from my mouth. But that’d be a death wish, and I’m not ready to die. All I want is to get my wolf—my eighteenth birthday’s supposed to bring her out, that inner strength every shifter gets. Once I have her, I’m gone. I’ll leave this pack, go rogue, start fresh somewhere—anywhere—where I don’t have to deal with these people. Anything’s better than being trapped here, suffocating under their glares and their words. I made it to the dining room again, setting the last plates down without looking up. Their eyes were on me, I could feel them, boring holes into my skin with that mix of hatred and pity they always threw my way. If I met their gazes, I’d probably choke on my own irritation. So I kept my head down, my jaw tight, and moved to the side of the room, standing there like a statue, waiting in case anyone needed something else. A drink, a napkin, another chance to snap at me—whatever. The thing is, I don’t even know who my parents were. Not really. I grew up in this pack, raised on stories about how they died in some brutal rogue attack when I was a baby. That’s all I’ve got—secondhand tales and a lifetime of being reminded I’m an orphan. “Be grateful,” they say. “You’re lucky we took you in.” And yeah, I am grateful, in a way. They kept me alive, gave me food and a bed. But every single day, someone’s spitting in my face—sometimes literally—because I don’t have a family. Because I’m nobody. I used to have a friend, though. Adrian. Hard to believe now, but when we were kids, we were close. We’d run through the woods, laughing, pretending we were warriors fighting off rogues. He was different then—kind, even. But that was before his dad, Alpha Rodrigue, died. Adrian was only seventeen, a year shy of when he was supposed to take over, per pack tradition. The elders didn’t care. They pushed him into the role anyway, before he’d even finished his alpha training. He changed after that. Hardened. And then there was Katrina. Katrina, the beta’s daughter, was picked as his mate, his Luna. It wasn’t like they were fated or anything—just a choice, a political move to keep the pack strong. Her brother, Lucas, stepped up as beta, and just like that, my life got worse. I went from being the kid they tolerated to the pack’s official punching bag. A certified slave, basically. It’s almost funny, the irony of it. Almost.I ran to them while my thoughts spun. The relief was a physical force, overwhelming the exhaustion and the fear. I didn’t run with grace; I stumbled, propelled by the desperate, raw need to confirm this impossible reality. The ground beneath my feet was soft and yielding, a stark contrast to the cold, hard stone of the forgotten hall, yet my mind refused to trust the sensation. Nothing made sense. The shift had been too complete, too absolute. It shattered all my comprehension of time and space. Was it an illusion? Or is this an illusion? I couldn't distinguish between the nightmare and the miracle. Was the ancient chamber the dream, or was this sun-dappled clearing, this sudden, impossible reunion, merely the final, cruel layer of the villain’s magic? A brief, deceptive calm before the true terror began? I hugged my mother to be sure they were real. I didn't reach for her with a gentle embrace; I crashed into her, my arms closing around her with desperate, consuming force, burying
His body whipped around in a swift motion, so fast it was less a physical turning and more a shift in the air itself. The blind, channeling emptiness that had possessed him vanished, replaced by a terrible, immediate lucidity. The failure of the ritual had ripped him out of his trance, forcing him back into the cold, strategic cruelty of his own mind. His body was tense, coils of uncontrolled, angry power radiating off him in hot, suffocating waves. And his eyes landed directly on me. I was no longer pretending to look ahead. The necessity of the disguise had crumbled with the bowl. I dropped the vacant stare, allowing the fire of my defiance, the sheer, blazing fury of the dragon-awakening, to show. I was looking back at him now as his scowl deepened. The raw, predatory rage that distorted his features was chilling, an expression of absolute hatred toward the one small human who dared to ruin his millennia-in-the-making plan. His eyes had returned back to their black, hollow, soul
As he walked close to me, the dark energy exuding from him seemed to intensify as it wrapped around me, almost making me choke. It was a cold, thick pressure, like being submerged in freezing water, and it pressed against my throat, making it nearly impossible to draw a quiet breath. The malevolence was suffocating, a silent promise of agonizing control. This was his raw power, unchecked and focused, preparing to bind me. My internal dragon, Aliya, remained a silent, fiery core, an immense pressure holding the darkness at bay but not yet fighting it. He stopped few inches from me and handed me the knife. The silence between us was profound, broken only by the rhythmic, low-level chanting of the cloaked figures. The dagger, slick with the blood of my parents and my sister, felt icy and heavy in my hand. I could feel the residual heat of their bodies on the hilt, a terrifying intimacy of shared sacrifice. I didn't dare meet his eyes. To look into those sightless white orbs would be to
“Am I the only one self-aware then?” I asked, the internal question crisp and urgent, a frantic need for inventory and tactical assessment. If I was the only one awake, the burden of action fell entirely on me. If others were aware, even partially, the chance of success multiplied exponentially. Aliya’s reply was instant, a calming flow of information into my racing mind. “Mother is awake and aware, but she's weak.” The knowledge that Mother, was conscious was a surge of relief, immediately tempered by the fact of her exhaustion. She was fighting the magical restraints, but only just. “She could easily break free with her dragon, but that will put the rest of you in danger since she wouldn't be able to protect you all.” Aliya explained the brutal calculation. Mother breaking free meant a desperate, immediate fight for her own life, but it would leave Father, Silvia, and me completely exposed to the ensuing chaos and the wrath of the enemy leader. She had chosen the more difficult pa
“We're going to get out of this alive, do you understand?” The voice said, the gentle tone now overlaid with an unwavering, quiet strength that brooked no argument. It wasn't a question of ability, but a declarative statement of intent, a vow of survival. The certainty in the internal voice was the most powerful medicine against the consuming terror that had paralyzed me moments before. And I almost cried at the reassurance and the way it said it. The lump in my throat tightened, a sudden, unexpected swell of desperate hope threatening to dissolve the fragile wall of anger I had constructed. It had been months since I heard a voice speak with such absolute confidence about my future, a voice that treated survival not as a wish, but as a foregone conclusion. The sensation was profoundly destabilizing—a deep, ancient sense of being truly protected, a feeling I hadn't known since I was the little girl running through the fire. “How?” I asked, the internal query thin and strained, the o
They were alive. That was the only word I could cling to, the only fragile truth holding back the total collapse of my sanity. Silvia was pale, unconscious, her usually fierce face slack with exhaustion and a deep, unnatural stillness. She was being supported by two cloaked figures, her body limp between them. And Mother—Thalindra. She looked exactly as she did when she went limp in the vision, but now she was real, her head resting against the shoulder of her captor, her features bruised and utterly defeated. Father—Alessandro. He was awake, and the sight of him was the most agonizing of all. He was battered, his clothes torn, blood staining his massive shoulders, but his eyes were open, fixed on the figure on the throne with an expression of absolute hatred and despair. He was straining against the grips of his captors, his powerful muscles twitching uselessly, clearly weakened by some form of magical restraint. His gaze flicked to me, a momentary widening of the eyes, a brief,
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