LOGINOn the night of her eighteenth birthday, Zara Ashlen expected to be chosen. Instead, Damon Wells the Alpha she was fated to love rejected her in front of the entire pack. No reason. No apology. Just cold, certain words that tore the bond from her chest and left her with nothing. So she ran. Five years later, Zara has built a quiet life far from pack territory. A job. An apartment. A daughter she would burn the world down to protect. She doesn't think about the bond anymore. She doesn't think about Damon. She almost believes she's free. Then the summons arrives a mandatory pack summit she cannot refuse and Zara is dragged back into the world she escaped. But something is different this time. Something ancient and unstoppable stirs the moment she walks into that room. And it has nothing to do with Damon. Kael Drevon is the Lycan King. Ruthless. Untouchable. A man who has never once failed to take what he wants. He has spent years waiting for a mate the bond refused to show him. Until now. Until her. Zara has no intention of belonging to another Alpha not after what the last one cost her. But Kael didn't build a kingdom by accepting no. And the closer he gets, the more she realizes her daughter's rare blood has made them both a target. Running once saved her life. This time, her only chance at survival might be the King she's desperately trying to resist.
View MoreThe bonfire was supposed to be a celebration.
Every wolf in the Ashlen pack had gathered under the open sky, their laughter rising with the smoke, their cups raised in my honor. Eighteen years old. Mate reveal night. The one thing every she-wolf had dreamed of since she was old enough to understand what a mate meant. I had dreamed of it too. For years, I had imagined this moment. The warmth of recognition. The pull of the bond snapping into place like a key finding its lock. I'd imagined his face my mate's face softening when he saw me. Like I was the answer to something he hadn't known he was asking. I had not imagined this. The fire crackled at the center of the clearing, throwing gold light across two hundred faces I had known my entire life. Elders in their ceremonial cloaks. Warriors with arms folded and expressions carved from stone. Pups peering through the legs of adults, too young to understand the ritual but old enough to feel its weight. And Damon Wells standing at the edge of the fire, looking at me like I was a problem he'd already solved. He was beautiful the way a knife is beautiful. All hard angles and cold authority, Alpha power rolling off him in waves that made the younger wolves unconsciously step back. Dark hair. Jaw like it had been cut from something unyielding. Eyes the color of storm clouds grey and depthless and completely unreadable. Our eyes met across the fire. And I felt it. The pull. It started in my chest a warmth so sudden and so complete that my breath caught. Like a door I hadn't known existed had swung open inside me, flooding every room with light. My wolf stirred, pressing forward, recognizing something ancient and inevitable. Mate, she whispered. Mate. The word bloomed in my chest like something sacred. I felt my lips part. Felt the sting behind my eyes that I refused to let become tears happy tears, overwhelmed tears, the kind you cry when something you've wanted your whole life finally arrives. Damon's expression didn't change. He stepped forward. The crowd parted for him the way water parts for stone automatic, instinctive, without thought. His footsteps were unhurried. He stopped three feet from me, close enough that I could smell the pine and iron scent of him, close enough that my wolf practically howled with want. He looked at me for a long moment. Then he smiled. It was the worst kind of smile the one that meant he had already made a decision. The one that meant this moment, for him, was not a revelation. It was a verdict. "I, Damon Wells, Alpha of the Ashlen Pack" his voice rang out across the clearing, clear and cold and final, "reject you, Zara Ashlen, as my mate." The fire kept burning. Nobody moved. The warmth in my chest that sacred, blooming warmth collapsed inward like a building losing its foundation. The pain that replaced it was physical. Actual and physical, a tearing sensation behind my ribs that knocked the air from my lungs and buckled my knees. I didn't fall. I refused to fall. I locked my legs. Pressed my nails into my palms until the bite of it gave me something to hold onto. Lifted my chin and kept my eyes on his, because I would not give him the satisfaction of watching me crumble. "Say it back," he said quietly. Just for me now. "Complete the rejection, Zara. Make it clean." Make it clean. Like I was a wound he wanted to close. Something shifted in me then. Something that had nothing to do with my wolf and everything to do with the girl who had grown up on the edges of this pack half-human, half-wolf, not quite enough of either. The girl who had been tolerated, never celebrated. Accepted, never chosen. I had spent eighteen years waiting to be chosen. I looked at Damon Wells his beautiful, cold, certain face and I felt the warmth finish dying. What replaced it wasn't grief. It was something quieter and more permanent. I opened my mouth. "I, Zara Ashlen" my voice came out steadier than I had any right to, "accept your rejection, Damon Wells. And I reject you in return." A murmur moved through the crowd like wind through grass. Damon's eyes flickered. Something crossed his face too fast for me to name, gone before I could hold it. Then it was smooth again. Unreadable again. "It's done," he said. He turned away. Just like that. He turned away, and the crowd absorbed him, and the fire kept burning, and two hundred wolves stood in silence watching me stand in the wreckage of something I had never even gotten to hold. I turned and walked into the dark. Nobody followed me. I made it to the tree line before my legs finally gave. I caught myself against the rough bark of an oak, pressing my forehead to it, breathing in shallow pulls until the world stopped tilting. The sounds of the bonfire drifted through the trees laughter resuming, music starting again, life continuing as if nothing of consequence had occurred. Maybe for them, nothing had. I slid down the trunk until I was sitting on the cold ground, knees pulled to my chest, staring at nothing. My chest ached with a dull, bone-deep throb where the bond had been where it had almost been. Like a phantom limb. Like the memory of warmth. Why? The question sat in my throat, too raw to speak aloud. I had never been Damon's favorite. Had never been anyone's favorite. But I had thought I had believed, with every naive piece of me that the Moon Goddess didn't make mistakes. That a mate bond meant something. That being chosen by the universe, if not by people, would be enough. I was so foolish. A twig snapped somewhere behind me. I turned sharply, wolf instincts surging but it was only Mira. My best friend, her face pale and her dark eyes glassy with something between fury and grief, picking her way through the underbrush with her heels in her hand. She sat down beside me without a word. For a long moment, neither of us spoke. "He had no reason," she finally said. Not a question. "No." I leaned my head back against the oak. "He just didn't want me." "Then he's an idiot." Her voice cracked slightly on the last word. "Zara, he's a complete" "Don't." I shook my head. "I don't want to be angry tonight. I just want to" I stopped. Breathed. "I just want to figure out what comes next." Mira was quiet for a moment. Then she reached over and took my hand, threading her fingers through mine and squeezing hard. "You could leave," she said softly. I looked at her. "I mean it." Her jaw was set, the way it got when she'd already thought something through and made up her mind. "You don't owe this pack anything. You never did. You could leave tonight, Zara. Start somewhere else. Start clean." The idea should have felt impossible. Instead, sitting in the cold dark with the ache of rejection still fresh in my chest, it felt like the first honest thing anyone had said to me all night. I looked up through the canopy at the scatter of stars overhead. Somewhere above them, if the old stories were true, the Moon Goddess was watching. Weaving her threads. Moving her pieces. I wondered if she was watching now. If she felt anything at all about the mess she'd made of mine. Leave, something whispered inside me. Not my wolf something older. Something that had been waiting a long time to be listened to. Leave. And don't look back. I squeezed Mira's hand. "Okay," I said quietly. I left before sunrise. I didn't know then what I was walking toward. I didn't know about the Lycan King three territories away who had spent years searching for a mate the bond refused to reveal. I didn't know about the power sleeping in my blood the kind that made old wolves go quiet and powerful men take notice. I didn't know that leaving would save my life. Or that five years later, something far more dangerous than Damon Wells would find me and unlike Damon, he would not let me go.He replied at 6:47 in the morning.I know because I checked my phone the moment I woke up, which I told myself was habit and not anticipation. The email was sitting at the top of my inbox from the same Crown administrative address I had sent to the night before.Short. Just like mine.I'm glad you did.Four words back. Clean and simple, with nothing extra attached no pressure, no follow-up question, no attempt to push through the small opening I had given him. Just acknowledgment. Just presence.I put the phone face-down on the nightstand and lay there staring at the ceiling for a long moment.Then I got up and made coffee and burned the toast and told myself the warmth in my chest was just the morning.Isla noticed immediately.She noticed everything it was both her greatest quality and her most inconvenient one. She watched me move around the kitchen with those steady grey eyes and said nothing for a full two minutes, which for Isla was practically a record."You're humming," she sa
The envelope arrived on a Wednesday.No return address. No pack seal. Just my name in clean, precise handwriting on heavy cream paper that smelled faintly of pine and something older something that made my wolf lift her head before I had even broken the seal.I stood at the kitchen counter and told myself to put it down.I opened it instead.Zara,I told you I would find you. I meant it as a promise, not a threat. I want you to know the difference.The Crown's legal team has filed the bloodline assessment paperwork. Isla is protected under Crown jurisdiction until the assessment is complete. Damon cannot touch that. Whatever else you decide, that part is already done.I'm not writing to pressure you. I'm writing because I said I'd give you space and I'm trying to do that honestly. Space doesn't mean silence. It means I'm not standing at your door.Not yet.KI read it twice.Then I folded it carefully and put it in the drawer beneath the kitchen counter, under the takeout menus and th
Home smelled like flowers and old wood and the particular quiet of a life that belonged entirely to me.I stood in the doorway of our apartment for a moment before stepping inside a habit I had developed without meaning to, this brief pause on the threshold where I let the familiar wrap around me like something earned. The small living room with its secondhand couch and Isla's drawings taped to the wall in uneven rows. The kitchen where I burned eggs three times a week. The window above the sink that looked out onto the street where normal people with normal problems walked their dogs in the early morning.Creston. My city. My life.Isla pushed past me and went immediately to check that her stuffed animals had survived our absence, conducting a rapid census with the focused efficiency of a general assessing troops after a campaign. Apparently everyone had made it. She announced this with satisfaction and disappeared into her room.I dropped our bag by the door and sat down on the couc
Morning came grey and cold.I was already dressed when Isla woke up, sitting at the narrow desk with my hands wrapped around a cup of tea that had gone lukewarm an hour ago. I had watched the sky outside the window move from black to deep blue to the flat, reluctant grey of a dawn that wasn't sure it wanted to arrive.I had made a decision somewhere in the middle of it."You didn't sleep," Isla said from the bed. Not an accusation. An observation, delivered with the matter-of-fact accuracy she applied to most things."I slept a little."She studied me with her grey eyes. "You're worried.""I'm thinking.""That's the same face."I looked at my four-year-old daughter and felt the particular helpless love that came with raising someone who was smarter than the situation required. "Eat your fruit," I said. "We have somewhere to be."The council chambers were on the ground floor of the main pack house a smaller room than the summit hall, lined with dark wood panels and the accumulated weig






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