ログインFive years of war, three peace summits. One rule that never changed. Ray Carter and Levi Morgan stay on opposite sides, until the night fate decides otherwise. Ray feels nothing, rules everything and answers to no one. He built his empire on control and his reputation on fear, and he has never once lost either. Then Levi walks into the room. His enemy, his rival. The heir of the pack that took everything from him, his mate. One bond, two men on opposite sides of a war neither of them started. Laws older than their bloodlines demand they reject each other, walk away, and pretend it never happened. But the bond doesn’t care about laws and neither, it turns out, does Ray. Someone already knows their secret and someone who has been waiting for exactly this moment. The question isn’t whether Ray and Levi can survive each other. It’s whether either of them will survive what’s coming and who exactly wants them to find out the hard way?
もっと見るRAY'S POV
The blade was at his throat before he stopped running.
"Where is he."
"I don't — I swear—"
I pressed harder.
"Last chance."
"Voss, old mill, route Nine." Tears running down his face. "Please. I have kids."
I stepped back. "Then go home to them."
Gone before he hit the ground.
The retrieval contract came through a courier at sundown.
Neutral corridor, standard markers, In and out before sunrise. Simple job, good pay. The kind I'd been taking for five years because simple jobs didn't ask questions and good pay didn't require explanations.
I had built my entire life around things that didn't ask questions.
I checked the route twice. Moved out before dark.
The neutral corridor at night was exactly what it always was cold, quiet, and belonging to nobody dangerous enough to hold it. I moved fast through the trees, no light. I didn't need one. Five years of surviving alone had sharpened everything the grief hadn't taken.
I found the package at the marked location. Secured it. Turned back.
Checked my position against the tree markers.
Checked again.
My stomach dropped.
I was inside Crimson Ridge territory. Not clipping the edge, but a full quarter mile in, moving deeper. The markers had been shifted and repositioned just enough to walk me across without noticing.
Someone had moved them.
I turned immediately. Low and fast. If I moved now I could be back across the border before—
They came from three directions at once.
Six wolves, crimson Ridge markings. Moving with the patience of a patrol that had been waiting, not searching.
My knife was out before the first one reached me. Dropped two, broke a grip. Took an elbow to the jaw that split my lip open and snapped my head sideways. Tasted blood, kept moving and kept fighting.
Five years alone had taught me one thing above everything.
The moment you stopped was the moment you lost.
"Hold."
Every wolf froze.
And the world tilted.
Something inside my chest lurched sideways like a door blown off its hinges in a house I thought was empty. Not pain, not fear. Something I had no name for that moved through me before I could stop it.
I stopped breathing.
Genuinely stopped.
Until I turned and saw him stepping out of the trees and then I understood completely and wished I didn't.
He didn't command the clearing. He just stood in it and the clearing rearranged itself accordingly.
Tall, dark eyed. Moving like gravity was something that happened to other people. He walked into that clearing and the noise of the fight, the rain, the six wolves still surrounding me, all of it dropped away until there was only him.
His eyes found mine.
The bond hit.
The bond didn't feel like finding something. It felt like losing everything I'd built to avoid it.
It cracked through my sternum without permission. Sudden and total. My wolf, silent for five years, half buried under grief and survival, slammed forward with a recognition so violent it nearly buckled my knees.
He stepped out of those trees and my wolf didn't growl. It went silent the way prey goes silent, completely, instantly. Like it already knew it had lost.
Mine, it snarled, Ours.
My chest didn't just tighten. It reorganized itself around him like it had been waiting for permission.
My knees wanted to buckle. I locked them.
My hands were shaking. Five years of this work and my hands had never once shaken.
I crushed it down. All of it. Grabbed everything the bond was doing to me and shoved it beneath five years of practiced emptiness and breathed through the pain of that because it did hurt, crushing it hurt, like pressing both hands against a wound that wasn't ready to be closed.
He was still looking at me.
His jaw tight. Hands completely still at his sides. Something moving behind his eyes, fast, controlled, almost invisible.
Almost.
"You're on my land." His voice was low, the kind that had never needed volume, "Rogue."
"I'm leaving," I said. Steady and small miracle.
"No." Slight tilt of his head, "You're not."
"I don't take orders from people I don't know."
"Levi Morgan." He let it sit, "Alpha of Crimson Ridge." His dark eyes didn't move from mine, "Now you know me."
His scent reached me. Cedar, rain. Something underneath that my wolf recognized before I did and responded to before I could stop it.
My cock hardened and I hated every part of myself for the timing.
"Name," he said.
"Ray Carter."
"You led a pack once."
Not a question. He could smell it on me the way you smelled old smoke on stone, faint but permanent.
"Not anymore," I said.
Something shifted in his face. There and gone so fast I almost missed it.
"What happened to it."
"None of your business."
He looked at me for a long moment. The kind of look that went looking for things you hadn't put on display.
"Bring him to the compound," he said.
"I'm not going anywhere with you."
He turned and walked back into the trees like the conversation was already finished.
"You crossed my border, Ray Carter." He didn't look back, "You don't get a vote."
The wolves closed in.
I went.
Told myself it was tactical, told myself I'd find a way out by morning and told myself what I felt the moment Levi stepped into that clearing was adrenaline and nothing more.
I'd survived five years by trusting nothing and no one. In thirty seconds this man had become the only thing in the room my instincts refused to treat as a threat.
The compound rose through the trees, large, fortified, every wall saying something about a man who didn't leave gaps. They moved me through the gate and into a corridor and put me in a room with a bed and a barred window I clocked immediately.
The Beta with the scar through his brow stopped at the door.
"Don't try the window."
"Wasn't going to."
He didn't believe me. Smart man.
The door closed. I sat on the floor with my back against the wall and my fist pressed against my sternum and tried to think clearly. Markers moved, patrol waiting, someone had engineered tonight from the outside.
But underneath all of it, louder than all of it, the bond sat in my chest like something alive. Warm and insistent and completely unbothered by the fact that I was in a barred room in enemy territory trying to remember how to feel nothing.
Three hours later the door opened.
Not the Beta.
Levi.
He sat in the chair across from me and said nothing. The bond moved through the room like a third presence. Like it had been waiting for us to be in the same space again.
"Your markers were moved," he said finally.
"I know."
"Before you ever received the contract." His eyes didn't leave mine, "Someone wanted you on my land tonight."
I said nothing.
"The question I can't answer," he said quietly, leaning forward, "is whether they wanted you here—"
He paused.
"—or whether they wanted us in the same room."
RAY POVThe moment the chamber sealed behind me, I felt it. Like the space decided I wasn’t allowed to leave the same way I came in.My breath caught slightly before I even understood why.“Okay,” I muttered under my breath, forcing air into my lungs. “That’s not comforting at all.”The chamber wasn’t a room and it didn’t feel like walls or ground. It felt like memory made solid.Like I had stepped into something that already remembered me before I arrived.“Eric…” I called out, voice lower now, tense. “If this is another one of your setups, I swear—”No answer because now I was alone inside whatever this was.That silence sat heavy, like even noise wasn’t allowed unless it fit the space.I swallowed once, slow.“Of course,” I muttered. “Of course you’re not here now.”The center of the chamber shifted.Not breaking or opening. Just changing shape like it was deciding what it wanted to become.My body went still.Something inside it was forming.“No way…” I whispered. “No way I’m seei
LEVI POVThe deeper I pushed in, the worse it got. Like the structure wasn’t breaking, it was correcting everything that didn’t belong.“Hell…” I muttered under my breath, slowing for half a second. “This place is seriously not normal.”Even saying it felt pointless now. Like the words didn’t matter here, like they were just noise the structure tolerated.The corridor behind me didn’t stay still anymore.It shifted out of reach like it didn’t want to exist as back anymore. Like “going back” wasn’t even a valid idea in this place.My chest tightened a little.That uncomfortable pressure when something stops behaving like space and starts behaving like awareness.“Okay… focus,” I whispered to myself, dragging in a breath that didn’t feel fully mine. “Just get through this.”But even my voice felt off here. Like it came out slightly delayed, slightly dulled, like the space didn’t fully allow it to exist the way I meant it.Every step forward felt heavier.Not because I was resisting it b
RAY POVThe structure shifted again, countdown didn’t slow. It didn’t wait. It just kept moving, like it didn’t care what I understood anymore.My breathing turned shallow without me realizing it, like my body was reacting faster than my thoughts could catch up.“Eric,” I said, voice tight, forcing it out like it didn’t want to come. “What did you just do?”But he wasn’t looking at me anymore.His eyes were locked on the chamber like I wasn’t even the important part of this moment.That alone made my stomach drop because it meant whatever was happening wasn’t new to him.It was expected and I was just catching up too late.My hands curled slightly without me noticing.“Don’t ignore me,” I added, sharper now. “I’m standing right here.”Eric finally spoke, but his voice didn’t match the situation.“It’s already begun,” he said.That hit wrong.Not because I didn’t understand the words but because I did.My chest tightened.“What has?” I asked, slower now.Eric exhaled once, like he was
LEVI POVI didn’t calm down after Ray vanished, if anything, it got worse, like the space itself had just exhaled after ripping him away, and I was still stuck inside what it left behind.“Fuck…” I muttered under my breath, dragging a hand through my hair. “That was not supposed to happen like that.”My chest still felt tight, like something had been pulled out of the air and left a gap I could still feel.I forced myself to move again because standing still made it worse.Every step felt heavier now, like the structure was watching me differently, not just around me but through me.That feeling alone made my stomach tighten.“Okay… focus,” I whispered to myself. “Just figure out what the hell is going on.”But even my voice sounded off in here, muted, like the space was swallowing intent before it could fully form.Then I felt it—a shift, not around me but inside the structure, something reacting again, but not randomly, targeted, and I stopped instantly.“…no way,” I muttered, eyes
RAY'S POVWe rode the first supply route at sunrise.Just the two of us. Horses borrowed from the compound stable. The forest route running northeast through old growth trees and cutting across two pack border edges before looping back through the neutral corridor.Three hours round trip according
RAY'S POVMina left on a Tuesday.No ceremony. No send off. She packed a single bag and walked through the compound gate at sunrise and turned once to look back at the walls she had spent twenty years inside.Levi stood beside me at the gate.Daniel on his other side.Chris at the back.She looked
RAY'S POVThree days after Dean Foster left, the council confirmed both nominations.Aaron Thorn. Daniel Carrick.Official. On record. Permanent.Daniel received the confirmation letter at breakfast and read it twice and set it down and went back to eating like nothing had happened. Then picked it
RAY'S POVThe morning of the hearing I found Levi at his desk at five in the morning.Reading glasses on. Three documents spread in front of him. Cold cup beside his hand that suggested he’d been there long enough to forget he’d made it.I leaned against the doorframe and watched him.He hadn’t hea
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.