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Maureen Laurent
Ice water slapped my face.
“Wake up, whores!”
The scream came with the next bucket. I lurched upright on the freezing stone floor, chains clinking, scrambling into line before the whip found my back again. Twenty naked, shivering girls pressed shoulder-to-shoulder in the dark. The stench of piss, blood, and terror coated the air.
I wasn’t born for this.
Once, I had silk sheets and a father who called me “little star.” Once, I had a mother’s hand on my cheek and a fiancé who swore he’d die for me.
Now I had welts that never healed and a collar burned into my throat that said PROPERTY OF THE NORTHERN DOMINION.
The overseer—a scarred wolf with a missing ear—strode down the row, boot splashing through the puddles. His gaze snagged on the blind girl two bodies to my left. Pale as bone, nineteen at most, trembling so hard her chains rattled like bells.
“You—crawling on the floor like a worm. What the fuck are you doing?”
Her voice cracked. “I-I dropped my bread, sir… I’m sorry, I’m hungry—”
“Hungry?” He laughed, low and ugly. “You’ll learn hunger here, bitch.”
He spat in her face. The glob slid down her cheek while the guards howled with laughter.
I wanted to look away. I didn’t. You learn fast: look weak and they make it worse.
“Line up for prayer,” the overseer barked. “And say it like you mean it, or I’ll skin the lot of you.”
We dropped to our knees in unison, foreheads pressed to the wet stone. The words were carved into every slave’s tongue the first night.
“Oh hail Alpha Devil Vuk, firstborn of Lucifer and Selene, flame-crowned king of the North.
May your enemies bleed.May your seed be endless.May your wrath be eternal.We are nothing. You are all.”My lips moved, but no sound came. I couldn’t breathe the words anymore. Not when every syllable tasted like damnation.
A boot kicked my ribs. “Louder, fresh meat.”
I choked the prayer out with the rest, voice raw, tasting iron and shame.
The heavy iron doors at the end of the hall groaned open.
Silence fell so fast it hurt.“Move.”
Guards herded us like cattle, chains dragging, bare feet slapping wet stone. Cold air became steam and perfume as we were shoved into the bathing chamber. Copper tubs. Boiling water. Bristled brushes that scraped skin from bone.
They stripped the last of our dignity with the dirt.
I kept my eyes down, scrubbing blood and filth from my breasts, my thighs, the welts across my back that would never heal here. The transparent gray silk they threw at us afterward clung to every curve, hiding nothing. Wet fabric stuck to my nipples, my hips, the small curls between my legs. We looked like offerings.
The blind girl slipped.
Her pale body hit the tiles hard, chains clattering. A guard laughed and kicked her ribs. She whimpered, trying to crawl away.
Something in me moved before thought. I caught her arm, hauled her up. Her fingers clutched mine, bony and freezing.
She lifted her milky eyes to my face—and froze.
Her lips parted. A voice came out that didn’t sound nineteen. Didn’t sound human.
“You carry the moon in your womb… and the flame will devour it.
He will break you on the night of the blood moon…and you will crown him with the ashes of heaven.”The words slammed into me like fists.
I dropped her arm and stumbled back, heart exploding against my ribs.
She blinked, confused, then giggled—high, broken, wrong. “S-sorry. I say stupid things sometimes. Don’t listen to me, I’m cracked in the head.” She tapped her temple and smiled like a child.
I couldn’t answer. My tongue was ash.
They marched us out.
Down torch-lit corridors that stank of lust and terror, into the auction hall.
Red velvet. Gold cages. Rich wolves in masks lounging on chaise lounges, drinks in hand, eyes hungry.
We were lined up on the block like meat.
One by one, girls were dragged forward, inspected, sold.
Fingers pried open mouths, spread thighs, tested breasts. Coins clinked. Laughter echoed.
I remembered the overseer’s whisper in the dark last night, breath hot against my ear:
“If no one buys you tonight, witch… we slaughter you at dawn. Slowly.”
My turn came too fast.
Rough hands shoved me center stage. The auctioneer yanked my head back by the hair, forced my mouth open for the crowd.
“How clean is she?” a masked voice drawled from the shadows.
The auctioneer grinned, teeth yellow. “Virgin. Untouched. Fresh from the southern packs. Still smells like innocence—if you beat it out of her fast enough.”
A ripple of dark laughter.
I squeezed my eyes shut.
Please, Moon Goddess. Anyone. Anything. Just don’t let me die here.
“Mmm. Ten million.”
The hall went still.
A different voice this time—low, amused, laced with something ancient and starving.
The chain around my throat snapped loose. Air rushed into my lungs so fast I swayed.
Sold.
The buyer stepped out of the shadows.
Tall. Cloaked in black. Silver rings on every finger. A smile sharp enough to cut souls.
He walked straight to me, unbuttoned his long coat, and draped it over my shivering shoulders. The fabric swallowed me whole, warm from his body, smelling of pine and hellfire.
His hand brushed my cheek—almost gentle.
Then he turned to the crowd, voice ringing with cruel delight.
“This one,” he announced, “will make perfect sense for the Hunt.”
The hall roared with approval.
My stomach dropped to the stone floor.
The Hunt.
Three nights from now, under the full moon, the Alpha Devil and his court released new toys into the frozen forest.
And hunted them for sport.
Some were caught and collared.
Some were caught and fucked until they broke.Some were never seen again.The man leaned in, lips grazing my ear.
“This is going to be interesting ,” he whispered. “I paid ten million for the pleasure of chasing you myself.”
He pulled back, golden eyes flashing just for a second—too bright, too predatory—then turned and strode away.
I stood frozen in his coat, heart hammering, legs trembling.
Because those eyes…
I knew those eyes.
And the man who owned them hadn’t even bid yet.
_Maureen LaurentI wake up drowning in him.The black furs are soaked with us—sex and sweat and blood—and they cling to my skin like a second, heavier shame.My thighs are sticky.My breasts ache.Between my legs feels swollen, tender, used in a way that makes heat crawl up my neck even now.The bite on my shoulder throbs with every heartbeat, a living brand that whispers his name over and over.Vuk.Vuk.Vuk.I reach for him before my eyes are even open, fingers searching the ruined bed for seven feet of scorching heat and golden eyes.Nothing.The sheets beside me are cold.My stomach caves in.I sit up too fast. The room tilts. Every muscle protests; my thighs tremble, and something warm and thick slides out of me and down the inside of my leg.His seed.Still inside me.Still leaking.Proof.I yank the fur up to my chin like it can hide me from what I let him do—what I begged him to do.The mirror across the room is shattered.The floor is littered with shredded silk and silver du
Vuk Kael Laskovic Mine.The word is a war drum in my skull.I carry her through the fortress like I’m carrying the moon itself, and every wolf between me and my chambers drops to their knees so fast their spines crack. Good. Let them break. I will break the fucking world if one more person breathes the same air as her before I’ve buried myself inside her and made sure she’ll never smell like anyone else again.The doors to my private wing explode off their hinges the second my shoulder touches them. Wood splinters. Iron screams. I don’t slow down.I kick the bedroom door shut behind us; the impact rattles the walls hard enough to shatter a mirror. I don’t care. Nothing exists except the tiny, shaking female in my arms and the scent of lunar blood and slick that is currently rewriting every law of my existence.I set her on her feet only long enough to rip the remnants of that bastard’s coat off her body. Silk tears like tissue. The collar Cassian dared put on her snaps between my fin
𝐌𝐚𝐮𝐫𝐞𝐞𝐧 La𝐮𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐭 I used to think love was gentle.My mother warned me a hundred times.“Silas Vane is a wolf with ambition in his teeth, Maureen. He will smile while he eats your heart.”I laughed. Fought her. Screamed that she didn’t understand love, that she was cruel for trying to tear me from the only boy who ever made me feel safe.The last time we argued, she was eight months heavy with my little brother, hand pressed to her belly, tears in her eyes.“One day,” she whispered, “you will remember this moment and hate yourself for not listening.”I stormed out.Three weeks later she was dead.Silas’s hands around my throat. His mother’s cold laugh. Celeste’s golden hair tangled in his fist while they planned to sell my family’s land the same night they sold my corpse.I never got to tell her she was right.I never got to say sorry.Now I’m curled on a velvet chaise in a stranger’s mansion, wearing nothing but a man’s coat and a collar that burns every time I breathe to
– Vuk Kael LaskovićI was watching three naked omegas grind against each other on my bed when the scent hit me.For three hundred and fifty years nothing has made my cock twitch. I have taken every hole offered, broken every body that begged, and still woke up cold. Tonight was supposed to be the same mindless ritual: bare tits bouncing, slick dripping on black silk, moans rehearsed to perfection. I had one hand around a traitor’s throat and the other wrapped around a glass of infernal wine, already planning which omega I’d knot first and which one I’d let bleed out after.Then it punched through the walls like divine violence.Lunar blood.Pure.Untouched.Mine.The crystal glass slipped from my fingers and shattered into a thousand glittering pieces. Wine bled across the marble like fresh slaughter.Every wolf in the room froze. The traitor at my feet pissed himself, hot urine soaking my boots. The omegas stopped mid-moan, thighs trembling, eyes wide with animal fear.I stood slowly
Maureen LaurentIce water slapped my face.“Wake up, whores!”The scream came with the next bucket. I lurched upright on the freezing stone floor, chains clinking, scrambling into line before the whip found my back again. Twenty naked, shivering girls pressed shoulder-to-shoulder in the dark. The stench of piss, blood, and terror coated the air.I wasn’t born for this.Once, I had silk sheets and a father who called me “little star.” Once, I had a mother’s hand on my cheek and a fiancé who swore he’d die for me.Now I had welts that never healed and a collar burned into my throat that said PROPERTY OF THE NORTHERN DOMINION.The overseer—a scarred wolf with a missing ear—strode down the row, boot splashing through the puddles. His gaze snagged on the blind girl two bodies to my left. Pale as bone, nineteen at most, trembling so hard her chains rattled like bells.“You—crawling on the floor like a worm. What the fuck are you doing?”Her voice cracked. “I-I dropped my bread, sir… I’m sor







