The fire in the hearth burned low, its glow flickering against the cottage walls. Outside, the faint rumble of passing vehicles mixed with the distant howls of wolves patrolling the forest line. The world Bella Hart lived in was not one of fairy tales—it was modern, and it was shared. Humans and werewolves moved through the same streets, traded in the same markets, and worked in the same cities. But coexistence was not equality.
The wolves ruled.
Packs owned the land, enforced their own laws, and demanded loyalty from every human within their territories. To live in Stormfang territory was to live under the shadow of its Alpha—Lucian Blackthorn, a name spoken with both fear and reverence. Wolves might tolerate humans, might even use them as workers, healers, or merchants. But no one, not even the bravest man, forgot the balance of power. Wolves were faster, stronger, long-lived. Humans were fragile, fleeting—and often disposable.
And Isabella ‘Bella’ Hart was human.
She sat at the table in the dim cottage, her gray-green eyes fixed on the parchment in her hands. The crimson wax seal bore the snarling wolf of Stormfang Pack. The paper itself seemed to sneer at her, every line of ink a reminder of how little it took to bring a family to ruin.
Gold owed. Deadlines missed. Penalties that multiplied like weeds.
Her chestnut-brown hair slipped over her shoulder as she bent closer, her slender fingers trembling against the parchment. “No…” Her whisper cracked in the silence. “It’s too much.”
Behind her came the sound she dreaded most: a wet, rattling cough.
“Papa—” She spun in her chair, the skirt of her faded dress brushing the wooden floor as she hurried to the hearth.
Her father sat slumped in the chair closest to the fire, though its warmth barely touched him. Leonard Hart had once been a man of strength. His broad shoulders had carried timber through the town square; his steady hands had carved intricate works that wolves themselves purchased. But illness had hollowed him out. His hair, once a deep brown like hers, had turned a weary gray. His cheeks were sunken, his lips pale, his hazel eyes dulled by sickness.
He pressed a blood-speckled cloth to his mouth and tried for a smile when he saw her. “Bella,” he rasped, his voice rough as sand. “You shouldn’t be worrying over papers at this hour.”
She sank to her knees beside him, clutching his trembling hand. Her eyes burned. “I have to worry. The debts are worse than you told me.” She glanced back at the parchment on the table, her throat tightening. “Stormfang will never forgive this.”
Leonard coughed again, his body shaking. When he finally drew breath, it came shallow, strained. “Wolves don’t wait on men like me, Bella. We both knew this day would come.”
Her heart twisted. She remembered when she was a child, walking through the market and watching wolves stride among them. Taller, broader, sharper than any human, their very presence made the air hum with authority. Even then, she had understood the unspoken rule: humans endured because wolves allowed it.
She hated it.
And now, that imbalance had come crashing down on her family.
The door slammed open.
The hinges rattled, and cold air swept inside, snuffing what little warmth clung to the cottage.
Bella’s breath caught as a shadow filled the doorway.
Lucian Blackthorn.
The Alpha of Stormfang Pack.
He didn’t need an introduction. His reputation preceded him: ruthless in debt collection, merciless in battle, a man whose silver eyes were said to pierce lies before they were spoken.
Now he stood before her, tall and broad, his presence pressing against the walls of their small home. A heavy cloak of black fur draped across his shoulders, the silver clasps gleaming. Beneath it, his black leather tunic stretched over a frame that looked carved from iron, the faint outline of muscle coiled beneath the fabric.
But it was his face that stole her breath.
Sharp jaw, a scar tracing along it like a permanent reminder of violence. High cheekbones, lips set in a line of cold disdain. His hair, black as raven feathers, was brushed back though a few strands fell carelessly forward, shadowing the most striking part of him—his eyes.
Silver, gleaming like forged steel. Cold as winter. And when they locked onto her, Bella felt as though every secret, every weakness in her soul was laid bare.
Her father struggled to his feet, gripping the chair for support. “Alpha Blackthorn,” he wheezed, voice trembling with fear. “Please… I just need more time—”
Lucian raised a hand. The movement was small, but the command in it was absolute. Leonard’s words died in his throat.
“Stormfang grants no mercy twice,” Lucian said. His voice was calm, low, yet it filled the room like thunder. He glanced at the parchment on the table, then back at the frail man before him. “Your time is over. You’ve failed to pay what you owe. Stormfang does not forget… and it does not forgive.”
Bella’s heart pounded in her ears. She pushed to her feet, her hands trembling but her chin lifting. “Please,” she said, stepping between Lucian and her father. Her voice quivered, but her gray-green eyes held steady. “We’ll find a way. Just give us more time.”
Lucian’s gaze shifted to her fully. He studied her as though she were an object—fragile, unworthy of notice, yet standing in his way. The scrutiny made her skin prickle, but she refused to look away.
Her patched dress clung to her slender frame, her chestnut hair spilling forward around her pale face. She knew she looked like nothing beside him—he, a wolf carved of shadow and steel; she, a human trembling in her own home. But she would not bow.
Lucian’s eyes narrowed, and for a fleeting second, something flickered in them—a flash of curiosity? Irritation? She couldn’t tell. Then it was gone.
“There is,” he said at last, his tone deliberate, “another way.”
Bella’s stomach twisted. She forced the words out. “What way?”
The fire crackled weakly. Her father’s wheezing breaths filled the silence.
Lucian’s silver eyes pinned her like prey. “You.”
The word cracked through the air like a blade.
Her father staggered forward, his face blanching. “No. She’s human, Alpha. She won’t survive among wolves—”
Lucian didn’t even look at him. His gaze remained locked on Bella, cold and certain.
“You will take your father’s place,” he said. “You will belong to Stormfang. Bound to me.”
The world tilted beneath her feet. She had heard whispers of humans taken into packs before—servants, workers, concubines. But to stand at the Alpha’s side? To be his Luna? It was unthinkable.
Her father’s hand clutched at her arm, shaking violently. “Bella, no. I won’t let you—better they take me than—”
“They will take you both,” Lucian cut in, his voice quiet, but heavy with truth. His presence filled the room, pressing down until Bella could scarcely breathe. “Stormfang collects its debts in coin… or in blood. Choose.”
Her chest heaved. Her gaze swept from her father—frail, broken, clinging to life—to Lucian Blackthorn, carved from storm and shadow, waiting for her surrender.
There was no choice.
Bella’s throat closed, but she forced the words out, her chin lifting though her heart trembled. “I’ll do it.”
Her voice cracked, but the words rang clear in the silence.
For the first time, Lucian’s lips curved. Not into a smile—nothing warm touched his expression. It was satisfaction, cruel and final.
“Good,” he said, his voice as sharp as frost.
He turned, his cloak sweeping as he strode back to the door. At the threshold, he paused, his silver eyes glinting in the dying firelight.
“Tomorrow,” he said, his voice a vow carved in stone. “I’ll return for my claim.”
The door slammed shut behind him.
Silence settled again, broken only by her father’s quiet sobs. Bella stood unmoving, her heart pounding, her body cold despite the fire.
For the first time in her life, Isabella Hart felt truly trapped.
Tomorrow, she would walk into Stormfang Pack—not as a guest, not as a woman—but as a debt paid in flesh.
And Alpha Lucian Blackthorn would be there to collect.
For nearly a year, Lilith Duskbane had languished in Stormfang’s dungeon.The stone had been cold, damp, and merciless. Rats skittered through the shadows, and her breath clouded against the iron bars when winter crept into the mountain keep. Silver cuffs bit into her wrists until the skin blistered, raw and red. Her lips cracked. Her body thinned.But her pride never bent.She was a Duskbane—noble-born, moon-blessed, heir to a bloodline that had outlasted kings. Chains could bruise her flesh, but they could not tarnish her name.And her family had not forgotten her.Every moon cycle, an emissary arrived— uncles, brothers, cousins cloaked in furs, their voices echoing through Stormfang’s council chamber. They brought petitions stamped with Duskbane seals, each written in fine calligraphy, each dripping with fury and entitlement.“It is beneath us,” one thundered, his fist striking the table. “To chain a daughter of the Duskbane line like a common criminal.”“She has paid enough,” ano
Stormfang had never known silence like this.The packhouse stood heavy beneath a slate-gray sky, the wind sweeping through its stone corridors like a living thing. Wolves shifted uneasily in the courtyards, their ears flicking, their gazes sliding toward the borders. The air itself seemed restless, carrying the bite of winter even though snow had not yet fallen.At the heart of it all, their Alpha paced like a caged beast.Lucian Blackthorn stood on the balcony of his chamber, his tall frame rigid, his hands braced against the stone rail as he stared into the forest beyond. His raven hair hung loose around his face, damp with sweat despite the cold. His silver eyes, usually sharp and unreadable, gleamed now with something wilder, more dangerous—an edge that made even seasoned warriors hesitate to meet his gaze.Below, the wolves kept their distance. They heard him at night. They saw what the absence of one human girl had done.The Alpha was unraveling.It had begun the night Bella fle
The journey was a blur of cold roads and restless miles.Two days after stumbling into the little town, Bella pressed onward, carrying nothing but the clothes on her back and the ache in her chest. She bartered what little jewelry she had left—a simple locket her mother once gave her—for a seat in a wagon headed east. The ride was long, the air sharp with winter, and each jolt of the wheels sent pain lancing through her blistered feet.But she didn’t complain. She couldn’t risk speaking much.When the driver, a kindly man with thick hands and tired eyes, asked her name, she hesitated a fraction too long before murmuring, “Isla.” It wasn’t her true name, but the syllables rolled easily enough from her tongue. A name without history. A name without Stormfang.The countryside shifted slowly as the miles passed. Forest gave way to open plains, dotted with farms where smoke rose from distant chimneys. By the time the wagon neared the outskirts of a human city, the sun was setting, painting
The forest swallowed her whole.Bella ran until her lungs burned, until each breath was a ragged cry she dared not let out, until her torn gown clung heavy with dirt and blood. Branches whipped against her skin, leaving scratches across her arms and shoulders, and still she pushed on, her bare feet pounding the frozen earth. Each step sent fire through the torn flesh of her soles, but she did not stop. She could not.Behind her, the howls had echoed through the trees.Lucian’s howl.It was not the sound of command nor of triumph, but a raw, desperate cry that had rattled her bones even as she forced herself further into the darkness. Her chest had ached at the sound, her heart stumbling as if to answer, but she bit down hard on her lip until she tasted blood and kept running.He would not have her. Not anymore.The moon hung low above the treetops, its pale glow glimmering faintly on the frost-tipped leaves. Shadows stretched long across her path, wolves’ shapes in her mind even when
The night swallowed her whole.The forest loomed black and endless, its branches clawing at the sky, its roots clawing at her feet. Bella stumbled forward, her gown torn at the hem, streaked with dirt and blood. The cold bit into her skin, sharp as teeth, but she did not stop. Could not.Her lungs burned with every ragged breath. Her chest heaved, her throat raw from the sobs she had tried to smother. Her bare feet struck earth and stone, skin splitting, blood slicking the leaves. Still, she ran.The packhouse was far behind her now, its towering walls shrinking into memory. But the image burned hotter, crueler than any chase: Lilith’s robe slipping from her shoulder, Lucian’s bare chest, their closeness.The sight she could not unsee.Her gray-green eyes blurred with tears as she pressed a trembling hand against her chest. The bond seared there, cruel and mocking. She had once thought it might save her, tether her to something stronger than herself. Instead, it chained her to agony.
The dungeon smelled of rust and blood.Torchlight flickered against damp stone, throwing jagged shadows across the walls. Chains rattled with every movement, echoing like whispers in the stale air.Lilith sat bound in the center of the cell, iron links coiled around her wrists and ankles. Her crimson robe had slipped from one shoulder, the bruises at her throat vivid against pale skin where Lucian’s hand had gripped her. Yet her icy blue eyes gleamed with triumph.Lucian stood before her, tall and immovable, his silver gaze blazing with a fury that lit the chamber brighter than any flame. His coat hung open, the scars on his chest catching the torchlight, his fists curled tight at his sides.“Speak,” he commanded, his voice a snarl. “What did you hope to gain?”Lilith tilted her head, her lips curving into a smile that did not reach her eyes. “Isn’t it obvious, Lucian?”His wolf surged inside him, claws raking, demanding blood. Tear her apart. She hurt what is ours.Lucian leaned clos