Zaria Blackwood stared at the towering iron gates of Vane Estate like they were the gates of hell—and maybe they were.
Rain slicked the black bars, streaking down like tears over rusted steel. Beyond, the massive house loomed in the gray morning like a predator crouched in wait. Her stomach clenched. She hadn’t eaten since yesterday. The bus had left her three miles back, and she’d walked every step through mud and pounding rain, humiliation sticking to her like the wet clothes on her body. Her shoes squelched with each movement, her socks soaked, and her thin coat clung to her skin like a second layer of punishment. Her hair—thick, curly, wild—was plastered to her scalp, dripping water down her spine until she shivered. In her pocket, the letter was damp, but she could still feel its weight like a curse. She didn’t need to pull it out. The words were etched into her brain: “You are hereby required to report for employment to fulfill the outstanding debt owed by your late father, Thomas Blackwood.” Her throat tightened, and she squeezed her eyes shut for just a moment. Her father. The man who had devoted twenty years of his life to the Wolfes—faithful, hardworking, never missing a day—until they accused him of embezzlement. Fired him without proof. Blacklisted him until no other employer would take him. Three months later, he was dead. A heart attack, they’d said. But Zaria knew the truth. Grief had killed him. Shame had finished the job. And now, the punishment had fallen to her. Her jaw set. She wasn’t here for pity. She was here because survival demanded it. The gates creaked open with a deep, metallic groan. The sound sent a shiver crawling down her spine. She stepped forward, legs trembling even though her back remained straight. She couldn’t turn back. She had nowhere else to go. The mansion loomed ahead—dark stone, ivy strangling its walls, black glass windows that reflected nothing. It looked less like a home and more like a tomb for secrets. A storm rumbled in the distance as Zaria mounted the steps. Before she could knock, the door swung open. “You’re late,” snapped a voice like a whip. A woman stood in the doorway, gray hair pulled into a severe bun, cheekbones sharp enough to slice, eyes narrowing in distaste. She looked Zaria up and down as if she were mud tracked across polished marble. “I’m—” “No excuses.” The woman shoved a folded bundle into her arms. “Uniform. Schedule. Map. You’ll address me as Mrs. Flint. I run this household, and if you value this job, you’ll follow my rules.” Zaria’s lips parted, but she thought better of speaking. She only nodded. “Good.” Mrs. Flint’s gaze turned colder still. “And one more thing. You will never step foot in the East Wing. That part of the estate is forbidden. Do you understand?” Zaria frowned. “What’s in the East Wing?” The woman’s spine stiffened, her expression tightening. “Nothing you need concern yourself with.” With that, she turned sharply, heels clicking against the marble as she led Zaria to the servants’ quarters. The room was tiny. A cot, a dusty desk, and a window that refused to open. The air smelled faintly of mildew. Zaria set the bundle down and unfolded the uniform. Gray slacks, black blouse, estate crest stitched at the chest. It was too tight, of course. Life seemed determined to make a joke of her at every turn. She changed quickly, tying her damp curls into a bun, breathing through the knot in her stomach. You’ve survived worse. You can survive this. Clean. Work. Survive. ⸻ By noon, her hands were raw. She had vacuumed three sitting rooms, polished wooden banisters until her reflection gleamed back at her, dusted sculptures worth more than her father’s entire house, and scrubbed a bathroom until it sparkled. Still, she had not glimpsed Lucien Wolfe. The mysterious, cold-blooded billionaire who owned half the city. The man who had ruined her father’s name, destroyed her own future, and made her untouchable to every other employer. She should hate him. She did hate him. And yet… curiosity burned hotter than rage. What kind of man lived in a fortress like this? By the fifth hour, her legs ached so badly she thought they might give out. She pushed open the last guest room door— And froze. A sound. Low. Feral. A growl. It rolled through the floor like thunder trapped in stone. Her breath caught. Another growl. Louder. Closer. Her eyes flicked toward the hallway. Toward the forbidden East Wing. Her pulse stuttered. No. Don’t. Don’t even think about it. But her body betrayed her. Step by step, she followed the sound down the corridor. The deeper she went, the darker the house became. Wallpaper peeled from damp walls. Floorboards groaned beneath her weight. The luxury of the estate melted away into something older, hungrier. She reached the double doors at the end. Black. Slightly ajar. Her fingers trembled as she pushed them open. ⸻ Lucien Wolfe was on his knees. Shirtless. Drenched in sweat. Muscles trembling with strain. His hands clawed at the marble floor as though fighting something inside himself. Then his body convulsed. His spine arched with a crack. Skin rippled. Fingers twisted into claws. His jaw stretched impossibly wide. Zaria’s breath snagged in her chest. Golden eyes blazed in the dark. Lucien’s head snapped toward her. In a blur, he was across the room, his hand slamming the wall beside her head, caging her in. His body radiated heat, so scorching she could feel it in her bones. His chest heaved, breaths ragged, animal. “I didn’t mean—” she whispered, voice breaking. He inhaled sharply, nostrils flaring. His gaze dragged down her neck. “You shouldn’t smell like that,” he rasped, voice low and hoarse. Her lips trembled. “Smell like what?” He didn’t answer. Instead, his head dipped, his lips brushed her skin— And then his teeth sank into her throat. Zaria gasped, a cry torn between fear and something she couldn’t name. Fire ignited in her veins, searing, endless. Her knees buckled, the world spinning out of control. Heat spread from the wound, golden, burning, alive. And then it seared into permanence. A mark. A crescent brand glowing faintly against her skin, pulsing with unnatural rhythm. Lucien staggered back, horror etched across his face. “No,” he choked. “No, no, no. This can’t be happening.” Her fingers pressed the mark, her chest heaving. “What… what did you do?” His golden eyes darkened with torment. “I didn’t mean to. It was instinct. The bond—” His breath hitched. “You’re not supposed to be my mate.” The word ricocheted inside her skull. Mate. Her father’s destroyer. Her enemy. Her fated mate? Her throat tightened. “Undo it. Take it back.” His jaw clenched. “It doesn’t work that way.” She stumbled back, chest heaving. His voice dropped to a growl. “Forget this happened. I’ll pay your father’s debt. You’re free to go.” “I don’t want your pity!” she snapped. “It’s not pity.” His golden eyes burned. “It’s protection.” “From what?” He leaned closer, his voice a whisper of danger. “From me.” ⸻ That night, Zaria curled into her cot, shaking. The mark throbbed like a second heartbeat. Sleep was no escape. Her dreams spun into shadows and wolves, eyes gleaming gold, a voice whispering her name. When she woke gasping, her hand shot to her neck. The mark pulsed beneath her touch. Something inside her had changed. Something dangerous. She wasn’t just Zaria Blackwood anymore. She was marked. Bound. And Lucien Wolfe—the man who had ruined her life—had just sealed her fate. ⸻ 💬 AUTHOR’S NOTE – CHAPTER ONE 🔥 Okay, WOW. Did we all just survive that first chapter?! Zaria walked into Vane Estate with muddy boots and rage in her chest… and walked out marked by the most dangerous man alive. 👀 But wait—did Lucien just claim her and then push her away like it meant nothing?! Oh, he DID. And he’s so going to regret it. Now, here’s the real question: 👉 Should Zaria run far, far away? 👉 Or should she make Lucien BURN for what he just did? Drop your choice in the comments ⬇️ 💖 Comment “Queen Zaria” if you’re on her side no matter what. 💀 Comment “Alpha Trash” if you’re ready to drag Lucien to hell and back. ✨ Don’t forget: ✅ Add to library ⭐ ✅ Leave a vote 🗳 ✅ Comment 💬 so I know you’re loving it! Chapter Two is coming soon, and trust me… the bond is only the beginning. 😈The city did not sleep that night. From the boardroom, Zaria could see the skyline smeared in silver, skyscrapers piercing the dark like spears driven into a battlefield. Below, headlights moved in endless currents, humanity rushing blind through the veins of the metropolis, unaware that gods and monsters sat above them making decisions that could break the world. Lucien had dismissed the board with a single look. The vampires slithered out, smirking with secrets they thought only they carried. The witches floated after them, their silks whispering spells. Even the humans had left silent, their fear sharper than their greed. But the CFO remained. Lucien had not dismissed him. Not yet. The silence that followed was heavier than any argument. Zaria stood near the window, her heart still pounding in her ears. The pulse she had heard skipping, faltering, betraying him—it hadn’t left her. It was carved into her bones now. And the moment Lucien’s amber eyes had met hers, she knew he h
The boardroom at Wolfe Tower wasn’t simply a room; it was a kingdom carved into marble, glass, and steel.Floor-to-ceiling windows framed the night sky, a dark velvet backdrop against which the city glittered like a bed of fallen stars. The table was a monolith of obsidian, polished so smooth it reflected the faces gathered around it—a strange gallery of power. Some were human, their tailored suits whispering of old money and influence. Others were not. Vampire financiers with eyes like garnet wine, witches draped in silk threaded with sigils, and wolves from allied packs, their raw dominance barely veiled beneath Armani jackets.And at the head of it all sat Lucien Wolfe.He looked as though he owned the night. Midnight suit, tie knotted to perfection, amber eyes smoldering beneath lashes heavy enough to cut. A bandage hid the worst of the wound at his temple, but power radiated from him regardless—controlled, contained, and dangerous.Zaria sat at his right hand, where the whole wor
The smoke of battle still clung to Wolfe Tower. Though the alarms had fallen silent, their ghostly echoes lingered in the walls, vibrating through the glass, the marble, the very steel skeleton of the skyscraper. The city below still pulsed with fear—wolves prowling streets, humans whispering about the blackout of lights that had rolled across districts, witches sending their wards flaring into the night sky. But up here, in the Tower’s courtyard high above the glittering skyline, silence reigned. Zaria stood alone by the fountain, its water cascading in silver ribbons under the moonlight. The courtyard had been designed for serenity—a place of polished stone walkways, clipped hedges, sculptures of wolves poised in eternal vigilance. Tonight, though, the calm felt like a deception, the kind of hush before a storm that made the hairs on her arms rise. She leaned on the marble edge of the fountain, hands trembling faintly. Lucien’s words from the battle still burned into her, a bran
The night split open. Shadows fell like a tide against Wolfe Tower, spilling across the polished marble floors, drowning chandeliers in trembling light. The blood alarm howled, not just a sound but a vibration in bone and blood, each pulse warning of the predator who had finally stepped into their territory. Kael.His presence rolled over the city like a stormfront, oppressive and suffocating. Wolves across the district felt it, ears flattening, hackles rising, throats tightening around instinctive growls. Allies faltered. Enemies sharpened their knives. Inside Wolfe Tower, every soul knew one truth—tonight would test them to their breaking point. Lucien stood at the head of the marble war room, his tailored suit shredded at the seams where his wolf strained beneath. Amber fire raged in his eyes, dominance burning so fiercely it warped the air around him. He was no longer the cold billionaire with diamond cufflinks and precise control; he was raw power, blood-soaked devotion, fury
The aftermath of chaos left Wolfe Tower humming with tension. Outside, the city murmured beneath the rising moon, but inside, the pulse of the pack was steady, anxious, and electric.Zaria sat alone on the edge of the balcony, silver eyes reflecting the fractured city lights, hands trembling slightly from adrenaline and the lingering echo of Caelus’s surging power. Silas had taken a patrol to check the perimeter; Rowan and Mara were tucked into the armory, reviewing weapons and strategizing contingencies; Nadia Clarke hovered at the threshold, sensing every tremor in the city, every ripple of shadow that might signal Kael’s next strike.Lucien appeared quietly behind her, boots soundless against the marble, amber eyes shadowed with the weight of command and the unspoken burden of his devotion.“You shouldn’t be out here alone,” he said, voice low, almost a growl, though not in anger. There was concern threading the edges, raw and possessive.“I’m fine,” Zaria whispered, turning slight
The heart of Wolfe Tower throbbed with tension, the kind that made marble floors feel like thin ice ready to crack beneath every step. Wolves paced the halls, claws clicking against the polished stone; the air buzzed with restrained energy, half anticipation and half fear. Even Silas, usually the calmest in the face of chaos, ran his hands through his hair, muttering under his breath about the increasing audacity of Kael’s strikes.Rowan leaned against the edge of the training hall balcony, arms crossed, his gaze darting toward Zaria, who sat stiffly in council chambers, silver eyes faintly glowing as she struggled to keep Caelus contained. Mara and Nadia Clarke flanked the council table, alert but visibly tense. Mara whispered to Nadia, “If she goes full wolf in here, I’m claiming the chandelier as my weapon of choice.”Nadia smirked faintly. “I’ll take the balcony. Less mess.”Zaria could feel the surge inside her, the pulse of Caelus demanding release as if it sensed every misstep,