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FIRST, INTRODUCTION

Author: KBORA
last update publish date: 2026-05-30 23:03:37

“Deaf, and dumb… I don't know why the beta didn’t just throw someone like you in a cage and leave you to rot.”

The words struck my back like knives, but I didn’t flinch. I’d long learned that showing pain only fed the hunger in my packmates’ eyes.

I bent my head lower, scrubbing the wooden floor of the training hall until my knuckles stung raw. My silence wasn’t stubbornness; it was all I had. Even if I wanted to shout, to curse, to tell them I wasn’t useless, I couldn’t. My voice had never existed.

Mute. Broken. Cursed.

That’s what they whispered.

That’s what I was.

I remembered once asking my mother why I had been born this way. Why the Goddess had chosen silence for me. Her answer still cut deeper than any claw could.

“I don’t know, Amanda. Why is anyone born the way they are?” she had said, eyes cold, tone dismissive. For a moment, I had believed she hated me. Perhaps she did.

My father, however… he had been my shield. A Beta of the Nightfang Pack, respected and feared. He had refused when the elders advised him to smother me as an infant, to rid the pack of a cursed child. He had looked at me as though I was still worth keeping.

But his love, too, was heavy—expectant. And my mother’s? If it existed at all, it was brittle, ready to shatter.

A boot nudged the bucket beside me, spilling soapy water across the floor. Laughter echoed around the hall.

“Look at her, the Beta’s little defect. Can’t talk, can’t fight, can’t even clean properly,” another voice jeered.

The heat rose to my cheeks, but I kept my head bowed. My hands moved faster, scrubbing the puddle even as the dirty water seeped into my skirt. My wolf whimpered in the back of my mind, but I hushed her. If I let her rise, if I lost control, I would only prove them right—that I was unstable.

“Maybe we should test how much pain she can take before she squeals... That's if she can.” A hand tangled in my hair, yanking my head back while the rest laughed loudly at me. My throat locked as I stared into the sneer of one of the older boys. His eyes glittered with cruelty.

I opened my mouth, but only silence came. My fingers clawed at his wrist, desperate, but my lack of words was the victory he wanted.

Before I knew what was going on, something cold and slimy slid down my neck. I gasped and flinched, my hands flying to my collar. Raw egg dripped onto my sweater, the yolk sliding down my chest.

Laughter erupted.

“Well, would you look at that,” Mara, the alpha’s niece, smirked. “Even her clothes are cursed.”

Two more pack girls flanked her, their eyes glittering with mean delight. One of them shoved me hard, and I stumbled against the basin, the icy water splashing over my front.

“Say something,” Mara taunted. “Oh, right. You can’t.”

“Pathetic,” the older boy spat, shoving me down. The thud echoed as my knees hit the wooden boards. My skin burned, but worse was the helplessness that flooded me. I wanted to scream for help. I wanted to roar. But no sound left my lips.

The laughter trailed after them as they left me crumpled on the floor.

For a long moment, I stayed there, chest heaving, vision blurred. Then, as always, I picked myself up. My silence had become my armor. But tonight, it felt like a coffin.

By the time I returned home, the pack house smelled of roasted meat and spices. My stomach clenched, but not from hunger. I dreaded what waited beyond the kitchen door more than I dreaded my tormentors.

Mother.

She stood by the hearth, apron tied neatly around her waist, knife flashing as it cut through vegetables. Her hair was pinned perfectly, not a strand out of place. She was always beautiful, always composed. And always colder than the night sky.

“You’re late,” she said, not turning. Her voice was smooth, practiced, like honey masking poison. “Do you enjoy making me wait for you to be useful?”

I signed quickly with trembling fingers: I had chores at the training hall.

Her eyes flicked to me, narrowing. “Chores,” she repeated, tasting the word as if it were bitter. “What good is a daughter who scrubs floors like a servant? I should have birthed a warrior, or at least someone who could speak.”

The words pierced deeper because they came from her. My throat tightened as I signed again: I do my best.

Her lips curled. “Your best?” She slammed the knife down onto the wooden block, the sound sharp as thunder. “Your best is nothing, Amanda. Nothing!”

I froze, my hands hanging mid-air. The sting behind my eyes grew heavy, but I refused to cry before her. Crying only gave her more proof that I was weak.

“You shame me,” she continued, turning fully toward me now. “The others whisper about you, about me. Do you think I don’t hear them? The Beta’s mate bore a cursed, useless child. Do you think I enjoy living with that?”

My chest ached. The urge to sign my truth—to tell her that I hadn’t chosen this, that I had never asked to be mute—rose like fire in me. My hands lifted, shaky, spelling the words with desperation: I didn’t choose this. I didn’t ask to be born this way.

For a moment, her face flickered. Almost soft. Almost human. But then it hardened again.

“Maybe the Moon Goddess should have taken you that night,” she said coldly. “Instead of letting you linger as a burden.”

The words hit harder than the bullying at the training hall. Those were strangers’ cruelty. This was a mother’s rejection.

Before I could reply, the front door creaked open. Heavy footsteps echoed through the hall.

Father.

His scent—pine, steel, and leather—washed over me before he appeared. His broad shoulders filled the doorway, his expression stern yet warm when his eyes landed on me.

“Amanda,” he said, voice rough but steady. “You’re home.”

I gave a small nod, relief flooding me like a balm.

His gaze flicked between me and my mother, tension thick in the air. He sighed, rubbing a hand over his beard. “Enough. She’s had enough for one day.”

Mother’s mouth pressed into a thin line, but she said nothing.

Father stepped closer, resting a heavy hand on my shoulder. His touch was grounding, solid. “You’re growing, Amanda. And soon, the world will not care for your silence or your struggles. It will demand strength.” His eyes locked on mine, unyielding. “That is why, starting next moon, you will be sent to the warriors’ camp.”

My heart stilled. The warriors’ camp.

I had dreamed of it, feared it, both in equal measure. A place where only the strong survived. Where blood and sweat carved destiny.

My fingers trembled as I signed, Me?

“Yes, you,” he said firmly. “It’s time you proved yourself, Amanda. To them. To me. To the Goddess.”

The room seemed to tilt around me, my mother’s silence sharp, my father’s words heavier than stone. Warriors’ camp. No voice. No allies. No mercy.

And yet… deep inside, my wolf stirred. For the first time that day, she didn’t whimper. She growled.

Maybe, just maybe, this was the beginning.

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  • THE ALPHA'S FATED MUTE   THE SILENT MATE

    Yesterday was over and it was another day.Another day for me to experience a new bout of humiliation.Pain blooms across my ribs with every breath, a dull throb that mocks me long after the sparring ring has cleared. My knees ache from the fall, my pride aches worse.The other trainees laugh as they file out, their voices sharp as knives.“Beta’s daughter? More like Beta’s disgrace.”“She can’t even stand without wobbling.”“Maybe she should stick to mixing herbs instead of fighting.”Each word cuts deeper than the bruises. I bite my tongue until I taste iron, forcing myself not to flinch, not to let them see how their laughter tears me apart.I will not cry. I’ve shed enough tears in secret.“Again.”The instructor’s voice snaps across the yard. Sergei, his silver eyes cold, throws a wooden staff at my feet. It clatters against the dirt.“I said again, Amanda.”My fingers tremble as I reach for the staff. My legs shake when I stand. Every bone in my body screams for rest, but I squa

  • THE ALPHA'S FATED MUTE   Warrior's Camp

    The first morning in the warrior’s camp was nothing like I could have ever imagined.The sun had barely risen when the sharp blast of a horn jolted me awake. I scrambled from my bunk, my heart pounding, only to be shoved aside by another trainee rushing past. My heart flew t my throat and it tightened, but no sound could escape of course, since my voice, as always, locked away.“Move, mute!” one of the girls hissed, shoving her again as they lined up outside. Laughter followed, low and cruel, and Amanda bit her lip hard enough to taste blood. Even here, she wasn't free from her bullies. She thought to herself, and her wolf growled in defiance at the back of her mind.A towering figure strode forward, his presence alone silencing the whispers. His hair was dark, cropped close, and his eyes—steel gray—cut through the line like blades.“Sergei Volkov,” someone muttered under their breath. “The General of Hell.”Amanda swallowed.“Line up straight,” he barked, his voice like thunder. “You

  • THE ALPHA'S FATED MUTE   LEAVING HOME

    The night was restless. I tossed and turned in my bed, staring up at the faint cracks in the ceiling where the moonlight slipped through. My father’s words echoed in my mind.Warrior’s camp.The phrase alone was heavy enough to press against my chest like a stone. I wasn’t foolish; I knew what was going on there. Grueling training. Brutality masked as discipline. Wolves are fighting to prove their worth, their strength, their right to stand among the pack’s elite.What place did a mute girl have in a place like that?My hands clenched against the thin blanket. I wanted to scream, but the only sound that left my lips was the silence I had known my entire life.By dawn, the house was already awake. I could hear the muffled clatter of pots from the kitchen, the low hum of my mother’s voice. She always hummed when she cooked—something sweet on the surface but sharp when you listened too closely, like she hummed to keep from saying what she truly thought.I stepped inside quietly. She look

  • THE ALPHA'S FATED MUTE   FIRST, INTRODUCTION

    “Deaf, and dumb… I don't know why the beta didn’t just throw someone like you in a cage and leave you to rot.”The words struck my back like knives, but I didn’t flinch. I’d long learned that showing pain only fed the hunger in my packmates’ eyes.I bent my head lower, scrubbing the wooden floor of the training hall until my knuckles stung raw. My silence wasn’t stubbornness; it was all I had. Even if I wanted to shout, to curse, to tell them I wasn’t useless, I couldn’t. My voice had never existed.Mute. Broken. Cursed.That’s what they whispered.That’s what I was.I remembered once asking my mother why I had been born this way. Why the Goddess had chosen silence for me. Her answer still cut deeper than any claw could.“I don’t know, Amanda. Why is anyone born the way they are?” she had said, eyes cold, tone dismissive. For a moment, I had believed she hated me. Perhaps she did.My father, however… he had been my shield. A Beta of the Nightfang Pack, respected and feared. He had ref

  • THE ALPHA'S FATED MUTE   PROLOGUE

    “Run, Amanda!”My father’s voice tore through the night like a thunderclap.I tried.Goddess, I tried.But my legs betrayed me.The old injury that had plagued me for months burned with every step, sending sharp pain shooting through my body. My limp slowed me down, turning every stride into a struggle. Behind me, screams echoed across the battlefield, mixing with the clash of steel and the snarls of wolves.The Academy of the Moon was burning.Flames climbed the stone walls that had once felt untouchable. Smoke darkened the sky, swallowing the stars above.I stumbled over a fallen branch and nearly crashed to the ground.My chest heaved.My vision blurred.The scent of blood was everywhere.Blood.Death.Decay.The smell was so strong it coated my tongue.I forced myself forward.Just a little farther.Just a little more.My father appeared ahead of me, his clothes torn and stained crimson. The sight alone made my heart stop.I had never seen my father look that afraid.Not once.Not

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