LOGINNova Greyveil was born to lead her pack, and to prove it, she beat every fighter her father threw at her, only to be told her future is a marriage deal she never agreed to: Marry the Alpha King. So she rejected him and disappeared. Disguised as “Ash Darvin", she sneaks into Vordrak Academy, a ruthless all-male training ground where alphas are built, broken, and buried. One slip means exposure. Exposure means death. She thought surviving Vordrak would be the hard part. Then she meets Caden Voss. Cold. Precise. Dangerous. The academy’s strongest fighter and the only one who keeps looking at her like he can see straight through the mask she’s wearing and to top it off, he is her roommate. The longer she stays, the harder it gets to hide. Not just her identity, but what his presence is doing to her. Because in Vordrak, secrets don’t stay hidden. And neither does desire.
View MoreNOVA
The scissors were cold.
Nova grabbed her ponytail, pressed the blade against it, and cut. Clean. Fast. She didn't watch the hair fall. Watching it fall meant letting it mean something, and she was done letting things mean something they weren't allowed to mean.
She grabbed the binding cloth off the edge of the sink, pressed it flat across her chest, wrapped it tight, and tucked the end. Her ribs compressed under the pull of it. Good. She needed that. Something physical to focus on instead of replaying the look her father had given her three days ago in front of every wolf in the Greyveil Pack.
Not anger. Not even disappointment.
Nothing.
Like she'd handed him a report he already knew the conclusion to.
She stared at the face in the cracked mirror above the basin. Jaw sharper with the hair gone. Eyes the same pale grey as they'd always been. Her mother's eyes, people used to say, and then stop talking, as if the observation hurt them.
Daughter and heir of Alpha Casen Greyveil. That title should mean something.
She picked up the small dark vial from the sink ledge. Cass had pressed it into her palm last night without a word, which meant she'd already decided to help before Nova had finished explaining. That was Cass. Disagreed loudly, helped quietly.
Nova tipped two drops onto her wrists, her throat, and the hollow behind each ear. The scent bloomed for a half second, something green and faintly bitter, then disappeared entirely. She inhaled. Nothing. She smelt like an empty room.
Perfect.
She pulled on the loose grey training shirt, shoved her feet into worn boots, picked up the single bag she'd packed, and took one last look at the mirror.
The girl who'd stood in that training yard three days ago and dropped seven men into the dirt was gone. The woman, whose father had waved off away like a fly, was gone.
What stood in their place was a lean, flat-chested, short-haired freshman with nothing to lose and a name that belonged to no pack in the region.
"Ash Darvin," she said out loud. Her voice hit the tile and came back steady. "That's all I am."
She walked out and didn't look back.
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Three days ago.
The Greyveil training ground had smelt like wet dirt and blood and the specific sweat of men who believed they were going to win.
Nova had fought all seven of them based on her father's terms for her to be worthy of Alpha. Beat every challenger he named, and she'd take her place as heir. No back doors, no exceptions. A straight line between effort and result, which was the only kind of deal she'd ever trusted.
Roen came first. Twice her weight, five years older, and so certain of the outcome that he hadn't even set his feet properly before she moved. She put him down in ninety seconds. Callum went next. Then the three younger males her father threw in together because he thought the odds were funny.
They weren't funny for long.
She fought methodically, moving through each one the way her mother had taught her before the sickness took her. Don't fight angrily. Angry wolves make noise. Quiet wolves win. By the fifth fight, her body had gone somewhere mechanical and cool and was just handling it.
Then came Garrett. Her father's actual favourite, the one he'd been saving for last. Built like he'd been constructed rather than born, with a jaw like a closed door and hands that could probably crack stone. He was good. She'd give him that. He broke her first hold and her second and got her on the ground once, and she felt that in her teeth for a full ten seconds before she was back on her feet.
Fourth attempt. She got behind him, locked his arm at the wrong angle, and drove him face-first into the dirt with her knee between his shoulder blades.
The training ground went silent.
Nova stood up. Her knuckles were split. Her lip was bleeding. She turned to face her father.
Alpha Casen of the Greyveil Pack stood at the edge of the yard with his arms folded and his face arranged into the expression she'd spent twenty-two years trying to crack open. Senior wolves flanked him on both sides. Garrett's father stood to his left, jaw tight.
"I won," Nova said. "Every challenger you named. I'm your heir."
Her father looked at her for a long moment.
Then he unfolded his arms and turned to address the yard.
"I'm naming Garrett's bloodline as successor." He said it like he was reading a schedule. "My daughter will marry the Alpha King and seal our alliance with the Crown Pack."
The silence in the yard changed; you could hear a pin drop.
Nova's hands went still at her sides.
"I beat every man you put in front of me," she said. Her voice didn't shake. She was proud of that. "That was the deal."
"There was no deal." He still hadn't looked at her. "You'll serve this pack the way women always have, just like your mother did, no exception, through a strategic marriage. That's where your value sits."
Something moved through her chest. Not anger. Anger, she knew how to manage. This was older and quieter and had her mother's face on it.
Her mother, Selene, who should have been Alpha of the Duskfen Pack. Whose father had given her title away to her brother and married her off to Casen Greyveil instead. Who'd spent twenty years in a house that treated her like furniture until the illness found her, and even then, lying in that bed with her hands getting cold and her breath coming short, she'd grabbed Nova's fingers hard enough to bruise.
Don't let them do this to you. Don't let them shelf you. You're more than what he says. Promise me, Nova. Promise me you'll fight and take your rightful place as Alpha of this pack when the time comes.
Nova had promised.
"If you won't give me what I earned," she said quietly, "I'll go get it somewhere else."
Her father waved a hand. Dismissal. Like swatting something small.
She walked back to the house, packed one bag, and called Cass.
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"Tell me you're not actually going to do this."
Cass was already pulling jars down from her shelves when she said it. Her back was to the door, her dark hair loose, her bare feet on the cold cottage floor. She always worked barefoot. Said shoes interrupted her connection to the earth, and Nova had stopped arguing with things that couldn't be argued with.
"Vordrak Academy," Cass said. A jar landed on the worktable harder than necessary. "All-male training ground. Northern territory. Takes in the best young alphas from every major bloodline and turns them into great Alphas. You know what they do to people who don't belong there."
"I know."
"A female in the middle of that," Cass turned around. Her eyes were doing the thing where they went very still and very direct. "Your scent alone will get you found in twenty minutes."
"That's why I'm here."
Cass stared at her for a long moment. Then she exhaled through her nose and went back to the shelves.
The vial she produced was dark glass, small enough to hide in a closed fist. She set it on the table between them.
"Full mask. You'll read as male, packless, and unmated. No one will smell through it as long as you hold your human form." She paused. "If you shift, even partway, it burns off. Your natural scent comes through the moment your wolf breaks the skin. I can't fix that."
"I won't shift."
"If you're cornered —"
"I won't shift." Nova held her gaze. "I'll find another way."
Cass pressed her lips together. She pushed the vial across the table.
"Be careful," she said. "Please."
Nova took the vial, tucked it into her front pocket, and picked up her bag.
At the door, she stopped and looked around at her home for the last time.
"Call me Ash," she said. "Ash Darvin. If anyone asks."
She heard Cass sit down heavily behind her.
She didn't look back and was never coming back, as the girl called Nova had died.
NOVAThe shower was the first good thing in two days.Hot water, real pressure, nobody needing anything from her. She stood under it with her eyes closed and let it run over the cut on her lip and the bruise building along her left shoulder and told herself she'd earned this ten minutes.The problem was that the ten minutes kept filling up with things she hadn't invited.His weight.That was what kept coming back. Not the technique, not the footwork, not even the part where she'd dropped him in front of sixty witnesses. Just the moment after. Ground under her spine and his body across her chest, and that face close enough that she could see the exact grain of his jaw. The way he'd looked at her mouth. The half second where neither of them moved, and the whole training ground ceased to exist.She pressed her palm flat against the tile.Stop.Her wolf had been loud since the training ground. Continuously, relentlessly loud.He's our mate.I know.He smells like —I know what he smells l
CADENHe stopped holding back.That was the decision. Simple. Final. Ash wanted a real fight, and Caden was done being careful about it.He came in fast and low and felt Ash read it and adjust, and they hit each other in the middle of the ground with enough force that the watching wolves went audibly sharp all at once. Back and forth across the dirt, neither of them clean, neither of them giving anything free. Ash was quick in a way that kept surprising him, kept finding angles that shouldn't have been there, and moved like someone who'd learnt to fight in spaces where losing wasn't an option.Caden liked that. He didn't want to like it.He went for the finish on the next opening and came in too hard from the right. Ash moved to counter, but her boot caught a wet patch of dirt, and she lost her footing.Caden caught her jacket before she hit the ground.Momentum did the rest.They went down together, hard and fast; he got his arm out in time to take the impact, and they rolled once an
CADENHe'd seen nerve before.Vordrak attracted it. Every intake had at least one wolf who mistook audacity for ability, who confused being unafraid with being ready. They lasted about four minutes in a real trial before the ground taught them the difference.He'd watched Ash Darvin drop two opponents in under three minutes combined and call his name across a silent training ground without blinking.That wasn't nerves.He didn't have a word for it yet."Voss." Drax looked at him across the ground. Not asking permission. Checking his read.Caden uncrossed his arms and walked forward.Behind him, the trainees broke into sound all at once, sixty wolves recalculating everything they thought they knew about the morning."He's lost his mind." Someone to his left said."Challenging Voss on day two. Who does that?""Thirty seconds. Maybe less than that; that is what I give him before Voss finishes him. Someone laughed."Caden stopped in the centre of the ground and looked at the wolf standing
NOVAThe training ground was bigger than it looked from the gates.She'd clocked it yesterday on the walk over, but standing in it now, in full uniform, shoulder to shoulder with sixty other wolves lined up in formation across the packed dirt, it felt different. The space pressed back. Old ground. The kind that had absorbed enough blood and sweat over enough years that it had its own smell now, something mineral and layered underneath the cold morning air.Every trainee stood straight. No talking. Sixty sets of eyes forward, sixty wolves reading the same room the same way – that particular stillness of predators who've been told to wait.Nova stood in line and kept her face flat and her breathing even and told her wolf, again, to stay down.The man who walked out to the centre of the ground wasn't large. Average height, lean, somewhere in his forties, with close-cropped grey at his temples and the unhurried walk of someone who'd never once needed to prove anything by arriving quickly.












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