LOGINSephina never wanted much—just a quiet life, a warm oven, and a place to belong. But the night she’s thrown out of her home with nothing but the clothes on her back, all that disappears. Desperate and alone, she takes the only job she can find... serving food to the monsters she was raised to fear. The werewolves. Fierce, beautiful, deadly. Everything her world told her to avoid. Especially him. Lucien, their king, is colder than the northern wind and twice as dangerous. When their eyes meet, something stirs—something neither of them understands. It’s not love. It’s not hate. It’s a pull. A bond. And it’s wrong. Because Sephina is only human. Isn’t she? As secrets start to rise, she’ll have to face a truth buried deep in her blood—one that could tear her apart... or change everything.
View More"Thank you, come again,” I said with a weary smile, waving goodbye to the last customer of the day.
As the heavy glass door swung shut with a soft chime, the mask slipped. The exhaustion I’d been holding at bay all afternoon finally crashed over me. It curled into my muscles, turning every step into a small battle. My feet throbbed in my cheap work shoes, a dull ache that reminded me I had another double shift coming up tomorrow. I flipped the sign on the glass door to CLOSED, letting out a breath I didn’t realize I’d been holding. Cling-ling. I winced, turning around ready to tell a straggler we were closed. But it was just Eliza, my best friend, leaning against the doorframe with a tired grin stretching across her face. “Damn, I am beat,” she groaned, pushing a lock of stray hair behind her ear as she stepped inside. She looked how I felt—worn out, overworked, and underpaid. I smiled, the kind of genuine smile that only she could inspire. “Thank you for staying,” I said, sincerity lacing my voice. “I don’t think I could’ve gotten through the afternoon rush without you.” She scoffed playfully, grabbing a rag from the counter. “Please. You would've drowned in latte orders and croissant crumbs without me. You’re good, Sephi, but you’re not an octopus.” We shared a tired laugh before rolling up our sleeves. The next hour was a blur of bleach and lemon-scented cleaner. We scrubbed the counters until they shone, swept the floors, and prepped the dough for the morning bake. By the time we stepped out into the cool evening air, the sun had long dipped below the horizon. The streetlights buzzed overhead, casting long, orange shadows on the pavement. “You okay to walk?” Eliza asked, eyeing me. “You look pale.” “I’m fine,” I lied. “Just hungry. Mom said she’s making dinner.” “Alright. Text me when you get in?” “Always.” We said our goodbyes at the corner, walking off in separate directions. The walk home was usually my time to decompress, but tonight, the silence of the town felt different. Heavier. The wind bit at my exposed skin, and a strange unease settled in the pit of my stomach. It was the kind of instinctual feeling you get when you’re being watched, or when a storm is brewing just out of sight. I wrapped my cardigan tighter around myself and walked faster. When I turned onto my street, I stopped dead. The knot in my stomach tightened into a hard rock. There were extra cars in the driveway. A sleek, black sedan that looked far too expensive for our neighbourhood. I stood on the porch, my hand trembling over the doorknob. The house smelled like jambalaya—my mother’sspecialityy, the dish she only made for major celebrations. But what were we celebrating? I hadn’t been invited to a celebration. I’d just been told to "come home early." The air inside felt heavy, suffocating. I toed off my work shoes, the exhaustion from a ten-hour shift vanishing instantly, replaced by a cold, prickling fear. "I’m home," I called out. Silence. Then, a burst of laughter from the dining room. It wasn't my father’s gruff chuckle. It was a sound I hadn’t heard in six years. A sound that used to make me lock my bedroom door and wedge a wooden chair under the handle every single night. No. My breath hitched. It can’t be. I walked into the dining room, and my world shattered. The table was set with the good china—the plates we weren't allowed to touch. My parents were beaming, wine glasses in hand. And there, sitting in my father’s usual spot at the head of the table, was him. Tyler. My brother. My abuser. He looked older, broader. His suit was expensive and tailored, screaming of money and success, but the eyes were the same. Predatory. Cold. When he saw me, a slow, crooked smile spread across his face. "There she is," Tyler said, his voice smooth like oil. "Little Sephina." I dropped my bag. The thud echoed in the sudden silence. My mother jumped up, wiping her hands nervously on her apron, her eyes darting between us. "Sephina! You're early! Look who’s here!" She gestured to him like he was a war hero returning home, not the monster who had tormented me for years. "What is he doing here?" I whispered. My voice barely worked. My throat felt like it was closing up. "Is that how you greet your brother?" My father snapped, slamming his wine glass down. "After six years? Show some respect." I didn't even think. My body reacted before my brain could. Flight response. Survival mode. I spun on my heel, my hand grasping for the doorframe to propel myself back out into the night. Anywhere but here. I would sleep on the street. I would sleep at the bakery. "Sephina!" My father’s voice cracked like a whip across the room. It wasn't a greeting; it was an order. I froze, my back to them, my heart hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird. "Don't you dare walk away," he growled, the chair scraping loudly against the floor as he stood up. "Sit down. Now." I turned slowly, my eyes meeting Tyler’s. He was swirling his wine, a predatory smirk playing on his lips, watching me squirm. He enjoyed this. He enjoyed the power. He knew he had me.I opened my eyes for the second time, but instead of the white void or the pitch black from its scattered pieces, I was met with the ceiling of what looked like a house.My mind was still swirling from what happened a few moments ago. Serena was gone.The thought made me sad. I was still half expecting her to chastise me for thinking something so absurd about her, but it seems that this was the reality of everything now.A few stray tears leaked from my eyes and slid into my hair.“Being sad about it wouldn’t bring her back,” I said, wiping my eyes. I looked down and saw I was in cotton pajamas.Where am I? That was the only thing that rang in my head. I stood up, dragging the bedsheets aside, and slipped out of bed to see where I was.As I walked out of the room, I couldn’t help but remember the last thing that happened before I fell unconscious. Finding Mom, the talk we had, Hugo, and then the ambush. The ambush.I didn’t know what came over me, but I started to run. Catching Mom’s
I woke up to a white, stark light. It was blinding that I had to snap my eyes closed again instantly to prevent myself from going blind. The glare burned straight through my eyelids, making my head throb It took me a long moment to realize where I even was. I tried to move my arms, but my body felt heavy, like I was buried under sand. I just groaned out loud from how tired I was, my voice sounding flat in the empty space. “You are finally awake,” I heard a voice say. It was the unmistakable voice of Serena. It sounded right next to me, close by. I forced my eyes open against the glare, turning my head to where the sound came from. I saw her sitting right beside me on the white floor. She was looking down at me and smiling. Smiling? The sight shook me. I stood up abruptly, scrambling backward to get some distance between us. My chest was heaving. Why the f*ck was she smiling at me? “Calm down,” she said. She moved toward me smoothly, reaching out and pressing her palm flat against
“My apologies, Your Majesty. I should probably bow,” he said with a mocking tone before proceeding to bow toward Lucien in a mock gesture.He rose back up to his feet and casually straightened his tailored attire. From the crisp lines and quality of his outfit, it was obvious he wasn’t just some lowly man working at the facility. He looked like someone important. Someone wealthy.“What do you want, Hugo?” Lucien growled, his body shifting into a defensive stance.Wait. Hugo? That was my cousin. Now that I was looking at him directly, I could see he shared similar features with my mother when she was younger. There was a slight, undeniable family resemblance in the cut of his nose and the set of his eyes.“Oh, nothing, Your Majesty. I was simply informed of my dear aunt having a visitor, and I wanted to come down and see exactly who they were,” he explained smoothly. I watched as his cold eyes flicked away from Lucien and moved directly toward me.
"Aurelien?” she asked, her voice dropping as she was trying to make sense of the words she had just heard. “Like Eugene Aurelien?” She questioned him directly, her eyes wide as she tried to clarify if she had heard the name correctly. Lucien gave her a firm nod at her words. “Yes, ma'am—” Before Lucien could even finish speaking, my mother moved with a sudden speed. She was right in front of me, throwing her small frame forward to block his view of me. “You demon!” she shouted at the top of her lungs. The sheer volume of her voice startled us both, echoing loudly off the bare walls of the room. “You came here to kill my daughter just like you had done to my husband! All of you from that family are demons!” ‘Very true. Couldn't have said it better myself,’ Serene hummed in agreement. “Ma'am, you are misunderstanding—” Lucien tried to explain again, keeping his
The transition from consciousness was like being pulled through thick, dark honey. When I finally drifted awake, I wasn't met by the familiar decorated celling of the estate walls or the faint smell of flour from my old life. Instead, I was in another room entirely. It was unfamiliar, bathed in a
The sky was already clearing by the time I finished formulating my next move. With the first light of dawn, I decided it was time to handle this once and for all. I needed to get to the root of the rot in my own house. I took the private stairs to my office, avoiding the staff; I didn't trust what
I woke up in a bed that cost more than my entire life. The room Mrs. Higgins had given me was in the servants' quarters, but it was still nicer than anything I’d ever owned. Silk sheets, a private bathroom, and a window overlooking the dense, fog-covered forest. I remembered the rules Lucien—Mon
I turned to head up the stairs, my heart pounding in my ears. I was shaking, but for the first time in my life, I felt light. The secret was out. The poison was drained. "Wait." The voice was barely a whisper, but it stopped me cold. I turne
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