LOGIN
Sienna woke up to blood on the sheets.
The hotel room was silent, but her ears rang with panic. Her head throbbed. Her skin burned. She was cold and hot at once. Her mouth tasted like metal. Something was wrong. Something was very wrong.
She sat up, slowly, trembling and froze. A man was lying beside her. Not just any man but the Alpha King of Northcrest.
Naked and sleeping, completely at ease. His big chest was moving in and out steadily. His rib cage was scarred from down the side way. His head was averted a little from her and he had a fixed face.
Sienna looked down at herself. Her white anniversary dress was on the floor, torn. Her thighs bore marks she didn’t remember earning. Her wrists were bruised, lightly, but real.
She wasn’t a virgin anymore. She has been married to her mate, Zane for over a year now and he had never for once made love to her. Someone made love to her last night and it was not her husband who did it. It was a stranger, someone she had never met before.
She felt sick, and then grabbed the bedsheet and covered it around herself and crawled off the bed like a bed that was on fire. She needed air. She needed to scream. She needed to remember.
What happened? And then, like ice water to the face, memory returned—
---
Earlier that night.
Zane, her husband, had sent her a message: “Wear the white dress. Room 808. Don’t be late.”
It was their first wedding anniversary. A full year of being married to a man who hadn’t so much as kissed her properly. He was cold, distant and controlling. But tonight felt different.
He even added: “Be ready for a real celebration.”
Sienna had smiled like a fool, spent four hours getting ready, done her hair twice, and picked the silver heels he once said made her look “like someone who belonged to an Alpha.”
She believed this night would change everything. She believed he’d finally see her as more than a contract wife.
She was wrong.
---
She had arrived at Room 808, nervous and breathless. There, in his black shirt unbuttoned, was Zane waiting. It was not possible to read his face. Cold as always but focused.
“You’re late,” he said, taking the clutch from her hand.
“Only ten minutes,” she laughed awkwardly. “I—”
“Drink this.”
A glass of red wine was already poured. She hesitated.
Zane’s gaze hardened. “It’s just wine, Sienna. Don’t ruin tonight too.”
She drank it. Midway through the glass, her sight became hazy. The room spun. Her body felt hot. Too hot.
“I—I don’t feel very well,” she said, attempting to grasp the table's edge.
Zane smiled faintly. Then he stood, picked up his phone, and walked to the door.
“I’m going to the restroom. Don’t go anywhere.”
That was the last thing she remembered.
Until now.
---
Memory fades away….
Back in the hotel bed. Sienna’s fingers dug into the wall as she tried to stand. Her legs trembled beneath her. What had Zane done? Why would he drug her? Why the Alpha King? What game was this?
She turned toward the man again. He stirred and opened his eyes. They were keen, and silver and as cold as snow.
Once he blinked, and then his eyes concentrated on her as though she were the prey to a predatory awakening. “what are you still doing here," he said quietly, in a voice that was low and rough. “I thought you would have been away by sunrise.”
Sienna’s lips trembled. “Why... Why are you here? I didn’t— I don’t even know your name.”
He sat up, not bothering to cover himself. “You said my name enough times last night.”
“That’s impossible. I don’t know you—”
“Then maybe you weren’t calling me. Maybe you were calling him.”
The door suddenly slammed open. It was Zane, and behind him was Renna. His younger sister.
The woman Ryder was supposed to mark today. The woman who had always looked at Sienna like something she stepped on.
“Sienna,” Zane said slowly, with a smile so sharp it could cut bone. “I see you’ve met your real mate.”
Sienna’s face was drained of color. “No. This isn’t what you think Zane, this isn’t what it looks like—”
“Oh, it’s exactly what it looks like,” Renna snapped, her arms crossed, eyes glittering. “You’re pathetic. You couldn’t keep your own husband, so you climbed into the bed of my future mate? In my marking suite?!”
“What?” Sienna’s voice cracked.
Ryder, the Alpha King, stood slowly behind her, silent, watching.
Renna stepped forward. “You thought this was a love story? No, sweetheart. This was a setup. You’re the sacrifice. The shame. The lesson. And when the council hears what you did? You’ll be ruined.”
Zane tossed a file onto the bed. “Oh and by the way? You signed the divorce papers last week, remember? They just went through.”
“I never signed—” Sienna’s voice faltered.
“You did.” Zane grinned. “In your drugged haze. Your name, your signature, and your inheritance transferred to me.”
Renna picked up the sheet, waved it mockingly. “Look, Sienna. Your last name isn’t even yours anymore. You’re nothing.”
Sienna stepped back, shaking her head.
Ryder’s voice cut through the air like thunder: “Enough.”
All eyes turned to him.
His voice was firm. Cold. But unreadable. “I will proceed with the marking ceremony. As planned.”
Sienna’s knees almost gave way. “No,” she whispered. “You know this isn’t right. You know what they did—”
“I know what the world saw,” Ryder said. “And I will not risk my crown for a woman I never chose.”
The guards stepped in behind him.
Renna turned to leave. “Get dressed, Sienna. You’ll still be attending the ceremony. Not as my brother's mate... but as a maid.”
The door slammed behind them.
And Sienna stood alone in a hotel room filled with betrayal, bruises, and blood, knowing that the worst day of her life... was just getting started.
“Is that him?” a young voice whispered from somewhere along the valley’s edge, but Ryder didn’t turn. He didn’t hear the packs gathering. He didn’t see the shadows forming a wide crescent around the field. He heard only the fading echo of her voice inside him, soft enough to break him, strong enough to guide him.He walked forward, slow steps over dew-coated grass that shimmered in the early light. The world seemed painted in silver and gold, every color too bright, too gentle, as if reality was trying to offer comfort he had no idea how to accept. He felt the warmth of the sun on his skin , a warmth he hadn’t known in years , but it didn’t reach the parts of him that mattered.“Ryder,” an elder murmured from the crowd, voice filled with awe and confusion. “He’s alive.”He didn’t answer. His gaze was fixed on the horizon, as if her voice might be waiting just beyond it. Wind curved around him in soft spirals, brushing his arms, his shoulders, the back of his neck. He knew that touch.
“Where is she?” Ryder’s voice croaked into the cold morning air before he even understood he was awake. The sound didn’t feel like it came from his throat. It felt torn out of him, dragged up from some depth he hadn’t visited in years.He opened his eyes slowly, cautiously, as if the world might collapse the second he looked at it. Above him stretched a pale sky washed in the colors of first light , soft gold bleeding into silver, and silver fading into the faintest blue. For a moment he simply blinked, confused, trying to gather himself. The last thing he remembered was the unbearable pull of the shadow realm, Sienna’s name struggling to stay on his tongue as everything inside him cracked apart.Now… dew coated his hair. Grass cushioned his back. Warmth touched his skin, unfamiliar and startling. He sat up sharply, breath catching. The warmth didn’t disappear. It stayed. Steady. Gentle. Real.His chest rose and fell with a rhythm that felt newly born.He touched his heart with trembl
“Ryder, get up,” Sienna whispered urgently, her hands sliding beneath his arms as she tried to pull him onto his feet. “We can’t stay here.”“I’m trying,” he muttered, his voice weak but determined, forcing his legs beneath him even as they trembled like they no longer belonged to him. “Just… give me a second.”“We don’t have a second.” She glanced over her shoulder, heart pounding so hard she felt the beat in her teeth. The place where Lunaris had vanished still crackled with residual light, like the very air feared to settle. “She’ll come back. Or worse, something she sent will.”Ryder exhaled a shaky breath, gripping her shoulder not because he needed balance but because he needed her closeness. “Where are we going?”“The old Moon Temple,” she said without hesitation. “It’s the only place she won’t destroy outright. She still needs what’s buried beneath it.”Ryder huffed a laugh as they stumbled into the tree line, his arm slung over her shoulders. “You mean that ruin you dragged m
The Goddess Marks Them Both“Don’t move,” Ryder warned, his voice ragged as he pressed a shaking hand to the tree beside him. “She’s here.”Sienna froze mid-step, her breath sharp in her chest. The night around them, previously silent except for the distant rustling of wind across the ruined temple grounds, seemed to tighten. The air condensed, thick like cold smoke, then shifted with purpose. Every torch flame bent toward a single point behind them.“Ryder,” she whispered, unable to keep the quake from her voice, “don’t look back.”“I already did.” His jaw locked. “Too late.”Light exploded across the abandoned clearing, violent, blinding, a burst of moonfire that clawed the shadows off every stone. Sienna instinctively shielded her face, but Ryder didn’t. He stood exposed beneath the storm of radiance, breath torn from him as if the light fed on his pounding heart.Lunaris stepped from the radiance as if it were the fabric of her robes, her presence so massive it crushed the air int
“Open the gate,” Sienna ordered the moonlit corridor itself, her voice steady as steel though her pulse trembled beneath her skin. “I know you hear me. You’ve always heard me.”The torches along the walls dimmed as if exhaling, their flames bending toward her, and the air thickened with the unmistakable presence of something old, ancient enough to remember the first kings. The stone beneath her feet vibrated, humming like a heartbeat awakening after centuries of silence. It wasn’t the first time the Citadel had shifted around her, but tonight it felt deliberate. Sentient. Expectant.She stepped forward.The corridor stretched ahead, then twisted, doors vanishing, arches melting into silver vapors, walls folding into themselves. The castle obeyed her, guiding her toward the hidden exit reserved for chosen vessels of the goddess. Sienna didn’t look back. There was nothing behind her she couldn’t leave, except memories, and she carried those like wounds.“You shouldn’t go alone,” a voice
“I heard him again,” Sienna whispered into the dim chamber, her voice barely carrying beyond the archway where moonlight pooled like liquid silver. “You can tell me I’m imagining it, but I know his voice. I know when the world bends.”The High Seer, ancient and thin as parchment, didn’t lift her eyes from the scroll she was unrolling. Her fingers trembled not from age, but from fear she didn’t dare name out loud. “Your Majesty,” she murmured, “the dead do not call to the living. Not after this many years. Not after what happened at the gate.”Sienna stepped closer, the hem of her gown whispering over marble as if the floor recognized her and shifted to meet her steps. Her expression held no anger, only a quiet certainty that unnerved even those who served her most loyally. “Ryder has never been dead,” she said softly. “He was taken, not lost.”The Seer finally looked up, and the flickering torches reflected in her milky eyes. “You rule with grace, but your heart clings to a spirit tha







