The fog clung heavy over the valley that morning, curling between the trees like pale fingers. Bella Hart sat stiffly at the table, her hands folded tight in her lap to stop their trembling. The debt notice still lay before her, its crimson seal cracked open like a wound that could never be mended.
She hadn’t slept. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw silver eyes in the dark—cold, unyielding, stripping her bare with a single glance.
The world outside seemed cruelly normal. A truck rumbled distantly along the trade road. A neighbor’s dog barked. Somewhere in the distance, wolves howled their dawn call, a sound that once made her shiver but now only made her stomach turn.
Humans and wolves lived side by side in Stormfang territory. She had grown up watching warriors patrol the markets, their broad shoulders marked with the pack’s silver insignia, their presence both a shield and a threat. Wolves could shift freely, their howls echoing in the night sky while humans locked their doors and prayed not to draw attention. Cohabitation had always been fragile—a balance of power where humans endured, and wolves ruled.
Now, she was about to be bound to that world forever.
Her father stirred in his chair near the hearth, his breathing shallow. He looked more fragile in the morning light, each cough seeming to hollow him further. His hazel eyes lifted to hers, full of sorrow. “Bella,” he rasped, voice cracking. “You mustn’t do this. There has to be another way.”
“There isn’t,” she whispered. “You know there isn’t.”
The door opened without warning.
Lucian Blackthorn stepped inside as though the cottage belonged to him. And in truth, it did. Everything in Stormfang lands belonged to him.
He removed his cloak this time, tossing it across a chair. Without the heavy fur, his form was even more imposing. His black leather tunic hugged his broad chest, the silver emblem of his pack gleaming at his belt. His raven hair caught the dim light, and his scar—sharpened against the curve of his jaw—made him look more warlord than man.
His silver eyes swept the room, landing first on the parchment, then on Bella, before finally fixing on her father. “You had your chance,” he said, his voice steady, even. “Now the debt will be paid.”
Leonard Hart tried to rise, his frail body trembling. “Alpha—please. Spare her. She’s human. Your wolves will never accept her—”
Lucian cut him off with a sharp flick of his hand. “Weakness is not my concern. Stormfang does not make exceptions for frailty, whether of men or mortals.”
Bella felt her father’s shame like a blade in her own chest. She rose, her gray-green eyes flashing despite the tremor in her body. “If this is about payment, then say it plainly. What is it you want from us?”
Lucian’s gaze locked on hers, and the air thickened, charged with something she couldn’t name. His lips curved into something cruel. “You.”
The word struck harder than thunder.
Her father’s breath hitched. “No. You cannot mean—”
Lucian ignored him. He took a slow step forward, closing the space between him and Bella. “Your father’s debt is too great to repay in coin. So I will take what he values most.” His silver eyes burned into hers, leaving her unable to look away. “You will stand as my Luna.”
Her heart stuttered, her breath catching painfully in her chest. To be a human in a wolf’s household was shame enough. To be bound to their Alpha as Luna? It was unthinkable. Scandalous. Dangerous.
“Impossible,” she whispered.
Lucian’s expression didn’t shift. “Nothing is impossible when I decide it. The ceremony will be held tomorrow in Stormfang Hall.” His gaze raked over her trembling frame. “You will wear what is given to you. You will speak the vows required of you. And when it is done, you will be Luna by name, and nothing more.”
Her father broke then, tears spilling down his cheeks. “Bella, no. Don’t do this—”
Lucian’s head turned, his voice slicing through the man’s sobs. “Do you wish her blood to pay your debt instead?”
Bella’s heart pounded so hard she thought it might break her ribs. She looked at her father, at his frailty, at the cloth stained with blood in his shaking hands. Then she looked back at Lucian—merciless, certain, the storm in his silver eyes waiting for her surrender.
There was no way out.
Her voice cracked as she whispered, “I’ll do it.”
For the first time, Lucian leaned down close enough that she could feel the heat of his breath. His hand brushed the edge of the table beside her, trapping her in place though he didn’t touch her. His voice was low, dangerous, meant for her alone.
“Do not mistake this arrangement for affection,” he murmured. “You will never have my love, human. Never.”
Her throat burned, but she lifted her chin anyway, refusing to let him see her break. “Then I’ll survive without it.”
For the briefest moment, something flickered in his eyes—a spark of anger, or something darker. Then it was gone.
He straightened, pulling his cloak back over his shoulders, his voice as cold and final as a death knell. “Tomorrow. Dusk. Stormfang Hall.”
And with that, he turned and strode out into the fog.
The door slammed shut, leaving only silence behind him.
Bella stood frozen, her chest aching, her father’s sobs breaking the quiet. The fire hissed and sputtered, smoke curling like ghosts above the hearth.
Tomorrow, she would walk into the heart of Stormfang—not as a woman, not even as herself—but as a payment collected.
And Alpha Lucian Blackthorn would stand waiting to claim her.
Bella’s POVThe panic was a live thing in my chest, sharp-clawed and desperate, raking from the inside out.I forced it down. Forced myself to breathe shallow and steady, to keep the sound of air moving in and out of me quieter than the rattling of the chains. Fear, if I let it rule me, would turn me into exactly what Lilith wanted—a trembling little human waiting to be broken.So I studied.So I listened.The dungeon had its own language if I stayed still enough to hear it.A steady drip of water echoed from somewhere far away, slow and rhythmic: one, two, three, pause, repeat. If I ever lost the thread of time, I could count by the drops. To my left, boots scuffed the stone at intervals. The guard there dragged his foot slightly on the third step each time—an old injury, maybe, or just habit. To my right, another man cleared his throat every so often, a phlegmy sound that spoke of boredom. He cracked his knuckles between stretches of silence.Two of them, then. At least two I could
Bella’s POVThe world came back in pieces.Cold first—stone biting through thin fabric, seeping into my skin like water through cracks. Then the ache in my arms, shoulders stretched cruelly above my head. My wrists burned, raw under iron shackles that clinked with every twitch.Then sound—water dripping steadily somewhere beyond sight. A chain scraping as I shifted. Breathing that wasn’t mine, low and steady, patient as a predator.When my eyes opened, darkness swam before them. Torchlight guttered in brackets along a wall, too far for warmth, only enough to sketch jagged shadows across damp stone.And in those shadows, a shape I knew too well.Lilith.She lounged in a carved chair like it was a throne, crimson silk pooling around her legs, dark hair tumbling down her shoulders. Her pale fingers toyed lazily with the hilt of a dagger resting against her thigh. Her icy-blue eyes gleamed in the firelight as her mouth curved into a smile sharp enough to bleed.“Finally awake.”I swallowe
Bella’s POVThe fog pressed thicker than usual that night, curling against the windows like smoke searching for a way inside. I sat at my desk, thread between my fingers, shawl draped across my shoulders. The small lamp threw a pale circle of light over the worn wood, but everything beyond it felt smudged and waiting.Mae had warned me to bar the shutters. I had. I’d barred the door too. Still, unease slithered under the cracks. I kept glancing at the corner where Lucian’s coat still hung from the night I’d mended it, as if the fabric itself might bristle at danger before I did.I told myself I was safe. I told myself Kael’s words were only meant to frighten me into returning. But deep down, my bones knew otherwise. The city no longer felt like mine.A sound snapped me alert.Not the groan of pipes. Not the shuffle of a drunk in the lane. A deliberate scrape, like metal dragged across stone.My breath caught.I rose quietly, candle flame trembling with me, and crossed to the window. T
Bella’s POVThe candle had burned itself into a puddle by the time I finally rose from the chair. My back ached, my eyes felt bruised from holding tears too long, and Kael’s words still circled like wolves scenting weakness: Decide soon. Because others already have.I tucked the shawl around my shoulders and stood at the window. The street outside was dark, shuttered tight, fog draping the stones like burial cloth. Somewhere beyond the wharf, gulls wheeled sleepless, their cries thin against the tide. The city was never silent, but tonight it felt watchful.And I felt caged in a place I had chosen for its freedom.By morning, routine tried to smooth me over. The café’s bell rang and Mae bustled in, setting her basket on the counter with a grunt. “Market’s gone dear again,” she muttered, pulling out a string of onions. “War’s always blamed. Never mind there hasn’t been a proper war in years.”Her words barely reached me. I tied my apron, moved to the shelves, began filling jars without
Lilith’s POVThe night was her confidante.It slipped down the mountain slopes and pooled like black wine across the valley, filling every hollow and clinging to every tree. Fog crawled with it, wrapping the world in a shroud that felt less like weather and more like waiting.Lilith Duskbane welcomed it.She always had.The road to Magnus’s stronghold wound like a serpent through the forest. Torches burned at intervals along the path, their flames choking on damp air, doing little more than sketching out how deep the shadows went. Her crimson cloak dragged over mud and leaves, the hood low, concealing the sharp line of her mouth.Behind her, a handful of loyalists followed—wolves who still bent knee to her even after Stormfang had thrown her in the dungeons for a year. They were lean and hungry now, eyes glinting, more shade than flesh. Desperation made for obedience. And obedience made for tools.At the final turn, the trees gave way to a clearing. Stone walls rose from the earth like
Bella’s POVThe needle slipped from my fingers. I blinked down at the thread pooling in my lap, realized I had been staring at the tiny rip in Lucian’s coat for far too long without moving. The candle beside me had burned low, its flame leaning against the stub of wax. The room was quiet—too quiet.I told myself to sleep. I told myself not to wait for footfalls on the roof, not to listen for the scrape of claws on slate. But waiting had become habit, the silence stretched taut as string, and my chest ached with a restless thrum that wasn’t mine.A knock startled me.Not Lucian’s fist—it wasn’t the kind of blow that rattled wood and ribs alike. This one was measured, deliberate, three taps against the door as if the caller had weighed whether I’d open.My heart leapt anyway.I rose, shawl tight around my shoulders, and set my ear to the door. “Who is it?”A pause. Then a low voice I knew. “Kael.”The Beta. He had first found me only weeks ago after the rogues—and I was surprised he’d s