Dr. Mira Lane was never meant to return to the world of wolves. After surviving the night her pack was slaughtered, she buried her past and her pain, becoming one of the best trauma surgeons in the human world. She doesn’t shift. She doesn’t trust. And she definitely doesn’t believe in mates. Until the night he is brought into her ER. Alpha Grey Maddox. He was bleeding, unconscious, and radiating the same wild power she’s tried to forget. He’s the leader of the very pack that once betrayed hers. And fate just marked him as her mate. Saving him means more than stitching wounds. It means exposing her secrets. Reawakening the wolf she swore she’d never be again. And stepping back into a world where power is everything… and love can kill. Grey is dangerous, controlling, and loyal to a war she wants no part in. But the bond between them burns hotter each day and when enemies begin hunting Mira for reasons she doesn’t understand, Grey may be the only one who can protect her. But he wants more than her trust. He wants her submission. Her loyalty. Her heart. And Mira must decide: will she run from the mate who could break her or fight for the only love that ever felt real?
View MoreThe smell of blood was never supposed to bring comfort.
But for Dr. Mira Lane, it grounded her. It was the smell of order, of crisis she could control, nothing like the chaos she’d left behind years ago. Nothing like the smell of scorched fur, burning pine, and betrayal that haunted her nightmares. Here in the ER, blood meant she still had a chance to save someone. And that was all she had left to live for. She pulled her gloves tight and pressed the back of her wrist to her forehead. It was nearly midnight. The last trauma had been a car crash. A teenager survived. Mira stitched his artery like it was nothing. Because she was good. One of the best. And she had to be. The doors to the trauma bay slammed open with a force that made every hair on her neck stand up. “Male patient! Multiple stab wounds! Found unconscious near the warehouses!” a nurse shouted, pushing through the swinging doors as the gurney rolled in. “Vitals?” Mira demanded, already moving into position. “BP 80 over 40 and dropping. Pulse thready. GCS three.” “Get me a unit of O-neg, start fluids wide open, and someone page the OR!” The body on the gurney was massive, easily over six feet, thick with muscle, though most of it was obscured by torn clothing soaked in blood. But then Mira caught the scent. She froze. It wasn’t just blood. It was something ancient. Earthy. Crisp like winter air. Tinged with ash and moonlight. Wolf. Her stomach lurched violently. “No,” she whispered to herself. But she couldn’t move. She stepped closer. Her fingers reached out almost on instinct. When they brushed his neck to find a pulse, everything stopped. For just one breath. And then her heart kicked. Hard. Desperate. Linked. Her lungs seized. Heat rushed through her spine like liquid fire. Her wolf, buried so deep for so long, surged upward like it had been waiting for this exact moment. Mira snapped her hand back, breath hitching. No. This wasn’t happening. She hadn’t shifted in over five years. She’d suppressed every instinct, every tether to the world she’d once belonged to. He couldn’t be…. “Name?” she asked sharply. “None,” the nurse said. “No ID. Found alone. Knife wounds and… claw marks?” Mira flinched. Claw marks. She turned back to the patient and began cutting away his shirt. Her hands worked quickly, but her brain moved slower, unwilling to piece together the impossible. His skin was littered with deep lacerations, wounds that should have killed a human. Yet… “They’re closing,” she murmured, stunned. “What?” another nurse asked. “These cuts. They’re healing.” And he wasn’t intubated yet, but suddenly his chest was rising easier. His color was returning. He was recovering….too fast. Which could only mean one thing. He wasn’t human. Mira’s hands trembled as she reached for the suture tray. “I’ll stabilize him enough for surgery. Prep the OR and keep him under heavy sedation” His hand snapped up like a lightning strike. Gloved fingers around her wrist. Tight. Burning. Gasps filled the room. Mira looked down and saw his eyes open. Golden. Glowing. Wolf eyes. And yet,....so full of pain. Recognition. And something far more terrifying. Possession. “Don’t run from me,” he rasped. “Mira.” She went cold. He knew her name. How could he know her name? “Mira, what do we do?” a nurse asked. She didn’t answer. She couldn’t. She stared at the man lying half-dead before her, and for the first time in years, she felt fear. Not of him. But of what he might mean. Her wolf wasn’t just awake. It was screaming. Then his eyes rolled back, and he went still again. End of Chapter One ……………………… Who is this wounded stranger who knows Mira’s name? Why is the mate bond triggering after all these years? And what secrets has Mira buried deep enough to shatter her now?The wastelands didn’t welcome wolves.They warned them.Even in daylight, the skies above the ruined valley stretched gray and still, like the sun itself had given up. Wind dragged through the jagged trees like breath through broken lungs, and every shadow whispered secrets Mira didn’t want to hear.Grey led them up the ravine, his limp worse now, though he never slowed.Mira kept her gaze sharp, her senses wider than they’d been in years. She hadn’t shifted in so long her body ached with the tension of resisting it but here, every hair on her skin stood on end. Her wolf stirred beneath the surface, restless and alert.“Are we close?” she asked.“Almost,” Grey said. “He doesn’t live in a house. He lives beneath one.”“Lovely.”Liam snorted. “I’m guessing we knock on a crypt and hope he’s home?”Grey stopped.“No,” he said. “He’ll find us.”Before Mira could respond, a deep, craggy voice echoed from the ridge above.“He already has.”They turned.An old man stood in the rocks, tall and
The night air was thick with the echo of that broken howl.Mira was already moving, boots slapping wet asphalt as she sprinted through the alley and out onto the silent street. Her blood pounded louder than the wind. It couldn’t be him. It wasn’t possible. But her wolf wasn’t questioning it, she was clawing, howling, aching toward the sound.“Mira, wait!” Grey was just behind her, injured but fast.She didn’t wait.She turned sharply down a narrow side street, past a rusted chain-link fence, and into the abandoned courtyard of an old church. The air changed here. Heavy. Charged. Like something sacred had been burned away long ago.And then she saw him.A figure, barely standing in the moonlight. Leaner than she remembered. Older. But unmistakable.He turned.Her breath caught.“Liam,” she said.He didn’t speak. His eyes, one golden, one bloodshot, searched hers like he was trying to make sure she was real.“I thought you were dead,” she whispered.He gave a shaky smile. “Same.”Grey m
Mira snatched the radio from the hunter’s belt.Her hands trembled, but her voice came out steady. Cold. Calculated.“He’s down,” she said into the speaker. “The Luna is not secured.”Silence.Then the voice returned, sharp and venomous:“Then you’re dead.”A high-pitched screech exploded through the speaker.Mira dropped the radio, just before it sparked and erupted into flames.“Shit!” Grey cursed, stomping it out before it could catch the carpet.“What kind of tech is that?” Mira gasped, staring at the melted plastic.“Black-market,” Grey muttered. “Hunter grade. Self-destruct failsafe. He was never meant to survive this job.”She turned back to the unconscious body. “Then he’s not just a grunt.”“No,” Grey said. “He’s a warning.”Mira crouched beside the hunter, grabbed his jaw, and forced his head to the side to check the scar again. It wasn’t just burned, it was ritualistic. Carved deep. Symbolic.The crescent. The daggers.Ghost Howlers.“They were wiped out a decade ago,” she
The collar gleamed under the hallway light; silver, thick, and humming with magic.Mira’s stomach turned. She hadn’t seen one since she was sixteen.Used by hunters to control rogue wolves. Not to kill. To break.“Get behind me,” Grey rasped, forcing himself to his feet.But Mira didn’t move.Her eyes locked on the intruder’s. “You’re not here for him,” she said coldly. “You’re here for me.”The hunter stepped into the apartment. His boots crunched the broken wood beneath him. The mask he wore was obsidian-black, marked with a faded white crescent.“I don’t know you,” she said, keeping her voice level. “But you clearly know me.”The man didn’t speak. He lifted the collar, slowly, deliberately.Grey snarled. “If you think you’ll touch her….”The hunter struck.Faster than she could follow, he lunged. Mira barely had time to dodge, her body moving on instinct, slamming into the wall beside the door. Grey charged, his knife flashing.The hunter caught his arm mid-swing and slammed him in
The scent of wolfsbane was thick in the air, acrid, poisonous, unmistakable!Grey groaned, pressing a hand to his bleeding shoulder. The wound was already swelling, the skin around it turning an angry black. His regeneration was slowing.Mira didn’t think. She reacted.She pulled him deeper behind the dumpster and yanked off her coat. “Don’t move.”“Wasn’t planning on it,” he hissed through clenched teeth. “Who the hell shoots wolfsbane in the city?”“Hunters,” she snapped, tearing through her coat pocket for the emergency kit she always carried. It was small; bandages, painkillers, a scalpel, sutures. Barely enough.But she had one thing that mattered more: a silver syringe tucked inside the lining. One she hadn’t touched in years.A wolfsbane neutralizer.“You carry antidote?” Grey looked at her with something close to awe.“Every day since I was sixteen.”She didn’t explain that it had been meant for herself. In case her wolf ever came back.Mira jammed the needle into the muscle a
The scent hit her like a wall of stone and smoke.He was still nearby.Mira dropped to her knees beside the unconscious nurse. She pressed two fingers to the woman’s neck. Her pulse is present but faint. No blood. No signs of trauma. Just… knocked out.She exhaled shakily.He didn’t hurt her. He could have, but he didn’t.“Get me a gurney in Room 9 now!” she barked to a tech as footsteps raced toward her.“Doctor Lane, what happened?”“He’s gone,” she snapped. “Sedated and restrained, and somehow he still walked out of here. Find security. Pull the cameras. Check every exit.”The orderly’s face went pale. “But… we’re five stories up.”“I don’t care if he grew wings and flew,” she growled, her voice darkening more than it should have. “Find him.”He nodded and ran.Mira stood slowly, scanning the room. The leather restraints were shredded, not broken, not unclasped. Shredded.Her stomach twisted.Even among wolves, that level of strength was rare.He didn’t just have power.He had rage
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