LOGINSage sat on the floor of Kade’s bedroom with her back against the wall. She stared at her hands like they belonged to someone else.
She could still taste blood in her mouth even though she scrubbed her teeth until her gums bled. The hunter’s blood, the same man she killed by biting his throat as a wolf. Her wolf was awake now and restless under her skin like something alive trying to claw its way out. Fifteen years she kept it buried with pills and meditation, now it was free and hungry and she didn’t know how to put it back. The bedroom door was locked from the outside. Kade had not come in since his men brought her back from the warehouse three nights ago. Food came in from outside the door twice a day but she barely touched it. She could hear him sometimes in the living room pacing back and forth until late into the night. The mate bond hurt worse than anything she had ever felt. Like someone was taking a hammer to her ribs from the inside. Headaches that made her vision blur. She felt drawn to him, and his refusal was slowly destroying her. She knew he had seen her markings and he recognized them. The white fur with black lightning strikes that marked her as her father’s daughter. The same markings that had been on the wolf who killed his father when he was eight years old. She had known this day would come eventually and there was no way to hide what she was forever. But she had hoped for more time, maybe the mate bond would be strong enough that he would listen when she tried to explain. Instead he wouldn’t even look at her. The fourth morning the door opened but it was not Kade. Marcus stood there with two guards behind him looking at her like she was something nasty he stepped on. “Get up,” he said. Sage pushed herself to her feet. Her legs were shaky from not eating. “Where is Kade?” “The Alpha has decided you are too dangerous to keep in his home.” Marcus smiled and it was the ugliest thing she had ever seen. “You’re being moved to holding cells until he decides what to do with you.” “I want to talk to him.” “He does not want to talk to you.” Marcus nodded to the enforcers. “Take her.” They grabbed her arms before she could react. She tried to fight but they were full wolves and stronger than her. They dragged her out of the penthouse and into the elevator, down to the parking garage and threw her in the back of a van. The drive took twenty minutes. They stopped at a building she had never seen before three blocks from the penthouse. Plain concrete with no windows. They dragged her inside and down the stairs into a basement. The cells were small concrete rooms with silver bars across the front. The silver burned when it touched her skin. They pushed her into one and locked it. Marcus stood outside the bars watching her. “Kade’s done with you. When he finishes handling the hunter situation he will decide if you live or die.” “You are lying,” Sage said. “Kade wouldn’t…” “Kade would do anything to protect this pack. And you are a threat.” Marcus leaned closer. “You are the daughter of the rogue who murdered his father. Did you really think he would keep you around after finding out?” He left before she could answer. Sage sank to the floor. The cell was freezing. No blankets nor a bed. Just concrete. She heard voices from the nearby cells. Other wolves imprisoned down here. She crawled to the bars carefully avoiding the silver. “Hello?” she called. “Who is that?” A male voice answered from two cells down. “Sage. Sage Monroe.” “The Alpha’s mate?” The voice sounded surprised. “What are you doing down here?” “Marcus said Kade ordered me to be moved down here, he said I’m too dangerous.” Someone laughed bitterly from another cell. “Marcus has been saying a lot of things lately. Most of them are lies.” “Who are you?” Sage asked. “I’m Cole, I’ve been down here for two weeks.” He coughed and it sounded wet. “Marcus arrested me for questioning his authority. Which apparently means disagreeing with him about anything.” “There are others,” a female voice said. “Twelve of us in total. All arrested on false charges over the past month.” Sage felt her stomach drop. “Kade does not know about this?” “Kade has been distracted,” Cole said. “Marcus has been using that in arresting anyone loyal to the Alpha while Kade deals with the hunter attacks.” “And now he has you,” the female said. “The Alpha’s mate. That is a power move.” Sage pressed her forehead against the cold concrete. “He is going to challenge Kade. Isn’t he.” “Soon,” Cole agreed. “Maybe within days. He had been building support. Turning younger wolves against Kade. Saying the Alpha is weak for choosing a human mate.” “I’m not human.” “They don’t know that. And now with your bloodline revealed?” Cole coughed again. “Marcus is telling everyone you are a traitor. That you manipulated Kade from the start.” The female spoke again. “If Marcus challenges Kade while the pack is divided like this, he might actually win.” Sage closed her eyes. She had gotten Kade into this mess by hiding what she was. Now Marcus was using it to destroy him. She had to get out of here and warn Kade about what Marcus was doing. But the silver bars made it impossible to shift and she was too weak to break free. “Has anyone tried to escape?” she asked. “One guy tried last week,” Cole said. “Marcus caught him, beat him so bad that he died two days later.” Sage looked at the silver bars, at the concrete walls, the tiny cell that would be her grave if Marcus had his way. She had survived fifteen years running from her father’s legacy. She had built a life helping people. She had found a mate even if he hated her now. She wasn’t going to die in a basement because some power-hungry Beta wanted a crown. She just had to figure out how to get out.Kade stared at the computer screen in his office until the footage blurred together and he had to blink to clear his vision.He had been watching the warehouse ambush for six hours straight. Playing it again over and over again. Focusing on different parts each time.The hunters dropping from the ceiling. The silver bullets. The wolfsbane gas. His wolves going down. The chaos and blood and screaming.And Marcus standing at the back doing nothing.Kade had watched that part at least twenty times now. His Beta was just standing there while a hunter ran past him. Not fighting. Not helping. Just watching.He played it again.Marcus turned his head when the hunter passed. Made eye contact. The hunter nodded and kept running.They knew each other.Kade held the mouse so hard that the plastic cracked.His Beta was working with the hunters. Had to be. Nothing else made sense.But he needed more than footage that could be interpreted in different ways. He needed proof that could not be argued
Sage sat on the floor of Kade’s bedroom with her back against the wall. She stared at her hands like they belonged to someone else.She could still taste blood in her mouth even though she scrubbed her teeth until her gums bled. The hunter’s blood, the same man she killed by biting his throat as a wolf.Her wolf was awake now and restless under her skin like something alive trying to claw its way out. Fifteen years she kept it buried with pills and meditation, now it was free and hungry and she didn’t know how to put it back.The bedroom door was locked from the outside. Kade had not come in since his men brought her back from the warehouse three nights ago. Food came in from outside the door twice a day but she barely touched it. She could hear him sometimes in the living room pacing back and forth until late into the night.The mate bond hurt worse than anything she had ever felt. Like someone was taking a hammer to her ribs from the inside. Headaches that made her vision blur.
Kade was on the phone when Sage walked into his office that evening and from the look on his face she knew something had changed.“Where?” he said into the phone. “Fine. Midnight. Bring everyone.” He hung up and reached for his jacket.“What happened?” Sage asked.“I got intel on the wolfsbane. It’s moving through Crescent Pack territory.” He checked his gun and slid it into a holster she had not noticed before. “I’m meeting their Alpha tonight.”“I’m coming with you.”“No.” He did not even look at her.“I’m a doctor. If someone gets hurt…”“You’re staying here where it’s safe.” He finally met her eyes. “Marcus will be here. You’ll be fine.”“Marcus hates me.”“He won’t touch you again.” Kade headed for the door. “I will be back in a few hours.”She waited until she heard the elevator doors close, then grabbed her medical bag and car keys. If he thought she was going to sit in the penthouse while people might be dying, he didn’t know her at all.She followed his car from a distance, t
Sage woke up confused for a moment trying to remember where she was and then she remembered the contract.Kade had been there before she fell asleep but he was gone now, which made Sage feel relieved because she did not know how to talk to him in daylight.She got up and found a robe, then went to the kitchen hoping coffee would help her brain start working again.Marcus was already there leaning on the counter with a mug in his hand. “Morning,” she said and went straight for the coffee maker.“You do not belong here.” His voice was flat and cold.She poured coffee and tried to ignore him. “Kade seems to think I do.”“Kade’s making a mistake.” Marcus set his mug down.“You’re human. Weak. You can’t shift, can’t fight. What happens when enemies come? Are you going to hide behind him like a coward?”“I’m a doctor.” She turned to face him. “I save lives. That is what I do.”“You are a burden.” He moved closer in a way that it made her heart speed up. “Everyone knows it. Half the pack t
The car Kade sent arrived at eleven and Sage was grateful because her hands were shaking too badly for her to even think of driving.The driver did not ask about the bruise on her face or why she was carrying a duffel bag at this hour, he just drove quietly till they reached the edge of the city.He guided Sage to a private elevator that opened directly into a penthouse, and when she stepped out Kade was standing by the window watching the city.Kade turned when he heard Sage’s steps toward him and his eyes went straight to her face.First to the bruise that was spreading across her cheekbone and the cut in her lip that she had tried to clean but still looked terrible.“Who did that?”“Loan sharks.” She placed her bag on the floor. “Apparently Thomas owed more than just you. They want twenty thousand by the end of the week.”“How badly did those touts hurt you?” He moved toward her in three long steps and held her face, turning it toward the light so he could see the damage better.
MATE CONTRACTThe words sat at the top of the page in bold letters like they were perfectly normal, like people signed contracts to become someone’s mate every day of the week. Below that were terms and conditions laid out in neat paragraphs.Party A (Kade Blackwood) and Party B (Sage Monroe) agree to enter a mate bond for a period of one (1) year. Party B will live in Party A’s residence and present as Party A’s mate at all pack functions. In exchange, Party B’s debt of $500,000 will be cleared in full.She read it again to make sure she was not imagining things. Then she started laughing, the kind of laugh that comes out when something is so ridiculous and your brain cannot process it any other way.A mate contract. He wanted to buy her like she was some kind of commodity, like he could just write up paperwork and own another person for a year.She crushed the paper in her hand and threw it across as it bounced off the wall and landed in the trash can.Then she poured herself a gl







