LOGINThe neutral summit grounds sat in a desolate, forgotten valley where the borders of the two packs collided. A massive pavilion of black iron and heavy canvas had been erected over the frozen earth, snapping violently in the biting northern wind. Inside, a long stone table split the room in two, acting as a stark barrier between peace and total annihilation.
Evangeline stood just behind Silas’s left shoulder, a silent ghost shrouded in white lace. The silver-root poison was a heavy, numbing weight in her veins, dulling the sharp edge of her terror into a muted, foggy haze. Beneath the dense bridal veil, her breathing was shallow. She could see only the blurred outlines of the room, the flickering torches, and the tense, rigid backs of the Ironwood enforcers who stood with their hands clamped tightly on the hilts of their blades. "They are late," Silas rumbled, his voice low and vibrating with irritation. He adjusted the heavy fur collar of his cloak, though his posture remained dominating. Beside him, Victoria leaned against the shadows of the pavilion wall, her arms crossed, watching the entrance with a sharp, expectant glint in her eyes. Suddenly, the heavy canvas flaps of the pavilion were thrown open, and the temperature in the room plummeted. But it wasn't just the winter wind that made Eva shiver. It was the sudden, suffocating pressure that flooded the space. Alpha Torin had arrived. Eva couldn’t see him clearly through the lace, but she could feel him. The sheer force of his Alpha aura was staggering—raw, untamed, and crackling with the scent of crushed pine needles, winter frost, and a dark, terrifying undercurrent of ozone. He didn't just walk into the room; he commanded the air within it. Behind him marched four massive Midnight Pack warriors, their faces scarred and expressionless, moving with the terrifying synchronization of apex predators. "Silas," a voice barked. It was deep, gravelly, and carried the weight of a man who had killed a hundred wolves to keep his throne. "Torin," Silas replied, his voice instantly shifting into a smooth, diplomatic baritone. He stepped forward, opening his arms wide in a grand, theatrical gesture of welcome. "I was beginning to worry the winter roads had delayed you. Welcome. Let us put an end to the bloodshed today." Torin didn't answer right away. Eva heard the heavy, slow thud of his leather boots against the frozen ground as he approached the stone table. Through the distorted pattern of her veil, she managed to catch the outline of his silhouette. He was towering, easily a head taller than her father, with broad shoulders and a powerful, scarred jawline. His dark hair was windswept, and even through the fog of her poisoned senses, Eva felt a strange, inexplicable jolt stir deep within her chest—a tiny, desperate warmth that tried to fight through the icy silver-root in her blood. Torin’s gaze swept across the Ironwood side of the table, entirely ignoring the elders and the warriors, until his golden, predatory eyes landed squarely on the veiled figure of Eva. The air grew instantly tense. Torin narrowed his eyes, his nostrils flaring as he took in her scent. To his highly sensitive wolf, she smelled exactly like Silas had intended: a completely blank slate, heavily cloaked in sweet, artificial honey and floral oils, with no trace of a vibrant, living beast underneath. To Torin, she smelled like a fraud. She smelled like a coddled, pampered princess who used expensive perfumes to mask her lack of substance, a delicate spy sent to sit in his bed and steal his secrets. A flash of pure, unadulterated disgust crossed Torin’s rugged features. So this is the prize, he thought bitterly, his jaw clenching. A spoiled, arrogant little brat who hides behind a veil while her father bleeds my borders dry. "Is that her?" Torin asked, his voice dripping with icy contempt, not even bothering to address Eva directly. "The great jewel of Ironwood?" "Ah, yes," Silas said, stepping back toward Eva and placing a heavy, suffocating hand on her shoulder. He squeezed just tight enough to make her flinch beneath the dress, though to the room, it looked like a tender, paternal embrace. "My precious eldest daughter. It breaks my heart to part with her, Torin. She has been the light of my life, raised in luxury, accustomed only to the finest things our pack can offer. I expect you to treat her with the utmost care." Eva felt a sick wave of nausea rise in her throat. Silas was laying the trap perfectly, painting her as a high-maintenance, fragile princess to irritate the rugged, no-nonsense Alpha of the North. "She will receive exactly what she deserves in the Midnight Pack," Torin replied smoothly, though the threat beneath his words was razor-sharp. He walked to the center of the table, where the thick parchment of the treaty lay waiting. He picked up the heavy iron quill, dipping it in ink. "Let's get this over with. My wolves have better things to do than stand in the cold watching a wedding performance." "Of course," Silas chuckled, stepping forward to sign his own name with a flourish. When both Alphas had signed, Silas turned back to Eva, his grip on her arm turning violent as he dragged her forward to the table. "Come, my darling. Sign your name, and seal the peace of our people." Eva’s hands trembled violently as she reached out from her oversized sleeves. She took the quill from Torin’s hand. For a split second, their fingers brushed. An electric shock, violent and burning, shot straight up Eva’s arm, slamming into her heart like a lightning strike. She gasped aloud, nearly dropping the quill. Beneath the thick layer of poison, her deadened soul screamed. Across the table, Torin froze, his golden eyes widening as a low, confused growl rumbled deep within his chest. His inner wolf, Fenrir, suddenly reared up in his mind, clawing at the surface, letting out a mournful, demanding whine that confused Torin to his very core. What was that? Torin thought, his eyes boring into the white lace covering her face. The spark had been undeniable, but as he scented the air again, all he smelled was the cloying, fake sweetness of her father's perfumes. He forced his wolf back down, hardening his heart. A trick, he told himself, his disgust doubling. Her witch-blooded family is trying to use a siren spell to bind me to her. She is a dangerous spy. Eva quickly scrawled Victoria's name on the parchment, her handwriting shaky and uneven. She stepped back immediately, her heart pounding a frantic rhythm against her ribs. "The treaty is sealed," Silas announced, a smug, triumphant grin spreading across his face. He looked at Torin, his eyes full of hidden malice. "Take her, Alpha Torin. She is your wife now. May she bring you exactly what you deserve." Torin didn't offer Eva his hand. He didn't even look at her as he turned toward the pavilion exit. "Load her into the baggage wagon," Torin ordered his warriors coldly, his voice echoing off the canvas walls. "We leave immediately." Through her veil, Eva watched her father and Victoria exchange a look of sheer delight. She was officially a prisoner of the monster, trapped in a lie that would surely cost her her life.The wind outside the pavilion howled like a dying beast, whipping flakes of aggressive, icy snow against the heavy black canvas. Inside, the atmosphere was dead silent, save for the heavy, retreating footsteps of Alpha Torin and his formidable guard. They didn’t wait for her. They didn't offer a cloak to shield her from the oncoming blizzard. To the Midnight Pack, she was baggage, an unwanted transaction wrapped in white lace. Before Evangeline could take a step to follow her grim new reality, a heavy, iron-like grip clamped onto her upper arm. Silas hauled her back into the shadows of the pavilion, away from the prying eyes of the remaining elders who were already gathering the treaty documents. He pulled her so roughly that her shoe caught on a tent stake, and she stumbled, her shoulder slamming hard against one of the iron support beams. The impact sent a jar of dull pain through her collarbone, but the silver-root poison circulating in her veins muted the ache, leaving her feeli
The neutral summit grounds sat in a desolate, forgotten valley where the borders of the two packs collided. A massive pavilion of black iron and heavy canvas had been erected over the frozen earth, snapping violently in the biting northern wind. Inside, a long stone table split the room in two, acting as a stark barrier between peace and total annihilation. Evangeline stood just behind Silas’s left shoulder, a silent ghost shrouded in white lace. The silver-root poison was a heavy, numbing weight in her veins, dulling the sharp edge of her terror into a muted, foggy haze. Beneath the dense bridal veil, her breathing was shallow. She could see only the blurred outlines of the room, the flickering torches, and the tense, rigid backs of the Ironwood enforcers who stood with their hands clamped tightly on the hilts of their blades. "They are late," Silas rumbled, his voice low and vibrating with irritation. He adjusted the heavy fur collar of his cloak, though his posture remained domin
The heavy wooden door of the preparation chamber clicked shut, cutting off the raucous laughter and clinking goblets of the Grand Council Hall. The sudden silence in the smaller room felt violent, thick with an anticipation that made the hairs on Eva’s arms stand on end. Eva stood rigidly in the center of the room, her vision still clouded by the thick white lace of the bridal veil. She didn't dare lift it, even though her breath was catching in the heavy material. She could hear the rustle of silk and velvet behind her—Silas and Victoria had followed her in, their shared aura of malice settling over the small room like a suffocating blanket. "Take off the veil, Evangeline," Silas commanded. His voice had lost the booming, theatrical warmth he had used to sway the council. Now, it was flat, cold, and entirely lethal. With trembling hands, Eva reached up and pulled the heavy lace back over her hair. The bright torchlight of the preparation chamber stung her eyes, and she blinked rap
The Grand Council Hall of the Ironwood Pack was suffocatingly hot, packed wall-to-wall with the scent of anxious wolves, heavy leather, and the lingering sting of cheap tallow candles. High on the stone dais sat Alpha Silas, his posture commanding and unyielding, flanked by the senior elders of the pack. To his right stood Victoria, draped in a gown of deep crimson velvet, her chin held high as she bathed in the admiring glances of the assembly. Down at the very back of the hall, half-hidden behind a heavy stone pillar and a cluster of low-ranking guards, stood Evangeline. Her skin burned beneath the rough, suffocatingly high collar of a heavy woolen traveling dress. It was far too large for her, a discarded garment meant to make her look small, frumpy, and forgettable. Over her face hung a thick, dense bridal veil made of opaque white lace. It obscured her vision, turning the crowded hall into a blur of shadows and torchlight. Her hands, still raw and stinging from the morning’s ly
The cellar floor was always coldest just before dawn. For Evangeline, the chill wasn't just a seasonal shift; it was a permanent resident in the damp, stone-walled underbelly of the Ironwood Packhouse. She pressed her forehead against the rough wooden handle of her scrub brush, her breath blooming in faint, fleeting clouds of silver mist. Her fingers were raw, the skin split and stained a deep, permanent gray from the caustic lye soap she used to scour the grease from the great hall's massive cooking cauldrons. "Still dragging your feet, useless?" The sharp, mocking voice cut through the heavy silence of the cellar like a whip. Eva flinched, her shoulders instinctively hitching upward as she scrambled to her knees. She didn't need to look up to know who stood at the top of the stone stairs, but she kept her gaze dutifully lowered anyway. Looking either of them in the eye was a punishable offense. Victoria descended the steps slowly, her leather boots clicking rhythmically against







