Chapter 1
Wolf Unleashed
POV: Adelina McKenna
I always thought pain had a limit.
A ceiling.
A point where your body just gives up and lets the darkness take you. Where screaming doesn’t matter anymore, because your mind detaches floating above the agony like some merciful ghost waiting to be released.
But no one tells you that your first shift into a wolf breaks that rule.
My mother tried to warn me. She’d seen it once before, in the parking lot of a run-down gas station outside of Ashland. A rogue had collapsed screaming, his bones twisting like they were being pulled by puppet strings. The whole shift took less than a minute.
Mine took hours.
And no one was there.
Just me, the full moon, and the betrayal of my own body.
It began with the itching.
A deep, crawling itch under my skin, like static electricity was building between muscle and bone. I was walking home from a night shift at the diner double apron, grease stains on my sneakers, exhausted to my core.
Then suddenly, I couldn’t breathe.
Not like a little wheeze or a gasp. No. It was like the air had been vacuumed out of my lungs, and all I could do was drop to my knees on the side of the highway, clutching my ribs as fire clawed its way up my spine.
I remember the sound I made. A wounded-animal kind of cry. Not human.
Something in me howled back.
Then came the bones.
They don’t gently bend or ease into place like some romantic shifter movie would have you believe. They crack. They break. They rearrange like an avalanche happening inside your skin. My fingernails split as claws pushed through. My jaw snapped sideways. I screamed until my throat was raw.
And still no release. No shift.
Just agony.
I must have blacked out more than once. When I opened my eyes, I was face down in the grass, my body halfway there. My spine arched in an impossible curve. My skin tore and knitted back together, only to tear again. It was like being birthed through your own body. Every nerve ending was a live wire.
Then it stopped.
And I stood—not on two legs, but four.
Everything was different.
The night was no longer just shadows and stars. I saw the heat of a rabbit in the bushes before it even moved. I heard the heartbeat of a deer grazing nearly a mile away. I smelled oil and rubber from a car that had passed over the asphalt fifteen minutes earlier.
But more than that—I felt everything.
I felt the moon. Like a lover. Like a mother. Like a call I never knew I had been waiting to answer.
Run, it whispered.
So I did.
I ran until my legs burned and my lungs ached—not from pain, but from joy. My paws thundered across the forest floor. Branches whipped past me. Wind sang in my ears. I felt free. No apron, no greasy hairnet, no bills stacked on the kitchen table.
Just the wolf. Wild and unashamed.
But freedom doesn't last.
It never does.
When the sun started to rise, the shift ended as brutally as it began.
One moment I was a queen of the night.
The next, I was naked, shivering, curled under a pine tree and covered in dirt and blood. My blood. I don’t even know where half the cuts came from. Maybe the forest. Maybe my own body turning inside out again.
I remember crawling back toward the road. My hands my real hands scraping across rocks. Every breath was shallow and aching. By the time I reached the shoulder, the morning commuters had started.
No one stopped.
Who would?
Naked girl, looking like she crawled out of a warzone. Probably some cracked-out runaway, they thought. Junkie, maybe.
But one car did stop.
A black SUV with tinted windows.
It didn’t belong in our town. That car screamed money. Aspen kind of money. And when the passenger door opened, and a man in a gray suit stepped out with mirrored sunglasses and the kind of posture you can’t buy at Walmart, I knew deep in my bones that this wasn’t a coincidence.
He handed me a blanket. Said my name like it was already his. “Adelina McKenna?”
I didn’t have the strength to answer.
“You’re being summoned.”
It took three hours for me to warm up enough to ask him what the hell that meant.
He didn’t say much. Just handed me a sealed envelope with a wax sigil I didn’t recognize and returned to the driver's seat.
I opened it with shaking fingers.
TO: ADELINE MCKENNA
You are hereby summoned to Aspen, Colorado, under Order 7 of the Werewolf Accord. Your presence is required within 72 hours to undergo confirmation of the mate bond by the Silver Fang Pack.
Fated Pairing Identified: Alpha Daxon Reyes.
Failure to comply will be seen as forfeiture of status, protection, and pack claim.
Council of Bloodlines, Reyes Dynamics
I read it five times.
My hands trembled. Not from cold. From something worse.
Mate bond?
Alpha?
Daxon freaking Reyes?
I’d seen his face before on Forbes magazine covers, news headlines, tech conferences. Billionaire wolf
. Pack prince. CEO of Reyes Dynamics. He looked like something chiseled from ancient marble and cursed to rule alone.
That was the man they were claiming was my mate?
Me
. Adelina McKenna. The girl who barely scraped together rent. Who hadn't even known she was a wolf until twelve hours ago.
Chapter 16The Hunters Break ThroughPOV: Adelina McKennaThey came on the seventh night.I should have sensed them sooner.But I’d been too busy listening to the fire.Since the Flamebranding, my wolf had barely slept.She moved beneath my skin like lightning looking for a strike. The burn on my shoulder hummed even at rest, feeding a warmth through my chest that no wind could chill. I could feel the change in my blood thicker, brighter, aware.Oya had taught me to listen for shifts in the mountain.The way birds went quiet.The way branches bent not with the wind, but in warning.So when the owls fell silent, when the fog hugged the earth a little too tight…I knew.They were close.I stood at the edge of the ridge outside Oya’s den, boots planted in snow, eyes narrowed at the dark pines below.They moved like they belonged here.But they didn’t.Their scent was wrong. Too clean. Metal and chemical beneath the natural musk of wolf. Enforcers from Silver Fang, enhanced with scent blo
Chapter 15Marked by FlamePOV: Adelina McKennaThere’s a moment just before your world changes when everything goes quiet.A silence that’s not just soundless but sacred.A breath before the howl.A stillness before the burn.I stood in the center of the stone circle, the blood still warm on my palm, dripping down the ancient altar stone. The mountains around me seemed to hold their breath, the air thick with something that shimmered on my skin like static and prophecy.The flame wolves spirit echoes of Matrons past circled me slowly. Four of them. One white, one black, one silver, and one glowing like embers.None spoke. They didn’t need to.I felt them.Their memories pressed into my bones. Their grief. Their rage. Their power.And their promise.I had called to them.And they had answered.Mama Oya stood at the edge of the circle, arms crossed, her breath fogging in the chill morning air. She was calm but I could see it in her eyes.This was not ceremonial.This was real.“You’ve
Chapter 14Oya the WisePOV: Adelina McKennaMama Oya didn’t speak of the Moon Matrons often.She mentioned them in fragments. Names whispered into wind. Battles buried in bone. But never a full truth. Never the whole story.Not until the fire burned blue.That’s how I knew something had changed.On the sixth night, after days of brutal training and sleepless hours spent watching the tree line for Silver Fang patrols, I returned to the den to find the flame dancing with indigo light, casting strange shadows across the walls.Oya was already seated on the floor, legs crossed, eyes closed. The scent of herbs and ash filled the space.When I stepped inside, she opened her eyes.“They’re ready,” she said simply.“Who?”She pointed to the fire.“Your mothers.”I knelt across from her without question.Something in the air demanded reverence.Oya pulled a small bowl of water from her side and placed it between us. She held her fingers over the flame until smoke curled around her wrist, then
Chapter 13 Into the MountainsPOV: Adelina McKennaThe mountains don’t care who you are.Not your name. Not your title. Not even the blood in your veins.They’ll either break you.Or build you.And sometimes, they do both.Mama Oya woke me before sunrise the next morning, pulling aside the heavy curtain in the den with a sharp snap that made my entire body flinch.“No more sleep,” she said. “You’ve been sleeping your whole life.”I groaned, pulling the blanket tighter around my shoulders. My ribs still ached from the fall I’d taken before finding the ruins. My muscles screamed from running two days through the backcountry. I was half-starved and barely able to shift.She didn’t care.“Come. Outside. Now.”I dragged myself to my feet, shoved my arms through the sleeves of my coat, and followed her up the winding stairwell to the ruined cabin above.The snow had melted under the morning sun, but frost still coated the beams and blackened earth. In the light, I could see the old foundat
Chapter 12 Running Through AshesPOV: Adelina McKennaThere’s a clarity that comes with being hunted.A certain stillness inside the storm.Your instincts sharpen. Time slows. The voice in your head silences, replaced by breath, by pulse, by the thrum of survival in your bones.And mine was singing.The moment I crossed into Appalachian territory deep into the Blue Ridge Mountains I felt it: that shift in the world’s skin. The trees grew older here. The air carried weight, not just from altitude, but from memory.These woods weren’t empty.They remembered.And they watched.I’d been running for two days.Nights were the worst. Not because of the cold though it sliced through my coat like it didn’t exist but because that was when the wolves came closest.Silver Fang trackers.I could hear them sometimes. Feel them in the distance. Two males, one female. Low-ranked, likely enforcers sent not to kill outright, but to corner, to capture.They weren’t here for mercy.They were here for si
Chapter 11Caleb’s MercyPOV: Adelina McKennaThere’s a kind of pain that burns too deep for tears.The kind that hollows you out, silences your scream, and leaves you standing in a body that doesn’t feel like yours anymore.That’s where I was.Three hours after Daxon Reyes severed our bond in front of the entire Silver Fang Pack.Three hours after I watched the man fate tied me to turn his back and walk away like I’d never mattered.Like I’d never even existed.The pain was still there, radiating from my chest like a wound that wouldn’t clot. My wolf was silent, withdrawn, coiled deep inside me. I couldn’t feel her the way I had before. Not fully.The bond wasn’t just broken.It was torn out.And the hole it left behind wasn’t just emotional. It was spiritual.I couldn’t shift. Could barely breathe.But I could hear.And what I heard now just outside my door changed everything.“…she’s still in her room?”A gruff male voice. I didn’t recognize it.“Yes,” a second voice said. Maren. C