MasukShe was never supposed to exist. He was never supposed to want her. Nyx has spent her entire life hiding what she is. In a world ruled by werewolf packs, she is the one thing every Alpha, every warrior, every wolf alive has been trained to kill on sight: a Skinwalker. Born with the ancient curse to steal the form, scent, and memories of anyone she touches, Nyx has survived by being invisible. No pack. No name. No trace. When the feared Alpha of the Obsidian Throne, Caelan Voss, demands a bride from the weakest pack in the territory to seal a blood treaty, the elders don’t hesitate. They choose their most disposable member—the orphan girl no one would miss. Nyx is dragged to the altar expecting death. Instead, something impossible happens. The mating bond ignites—not the ordinary wolf bond, but something older, something even the Moon Goddess cannot control. A blood tether. It means Caelan feels everything she feels. Every fear. Every lie. Every surge of heat. And Nyx? She accidentally absorbs a piece of his wolf during the bonding kiss. Now she can shift—but into his wolf form. A massive black wolf with silver eyes that every pack member recognizes as their Alpha. The wrong bride. The wrong species. The wrong vow. But the Moon didn’t make a mistake. She made a weapon. When the truth about what Nyx is comes out, will the bond that was never supposed to exist be the thing that saves them both—or the thing that destroys everything?
Lihat lebih banyakPOV: Nyx
“Smile,” Elder Maren said. “Don’t speak unless spoken to. And whatever you do—don’t let him touch your bare skin longer than necessary.”
She came down the cellar stairs slowly, the white wedding gown draped over both arms like something offered in a ceremony Nyx hadn’t agreed to. The silk caught the light from the single hanging lantern and threw white across the walls. Nyx had memorized those walls on the first night—scratches in the stone, seventeen sets of them, some shallow, some deep enough to leave dust on the floor. She’d traced them with her fingertips in the hours before sleep. She’d wondered about the people who made them, whether they’d been afraid or simply past it.
The cellar was cold. It had been cold for three days. The stone floor had done something permanent to her lower back that she suspected would outlast the morning.
“The dress,” Maren said, holding it out.
Nyx stood. Her legs ached. She crossed to the elder and reached for the gown by its edges, careful. Not careful enough. The backs of their hands grazed and the curse fired before she could stop it—a sharp involuntary flash: Maren’s handwriting on a sheet of official parchment, a name scratched out and replaced with Nyx’s own. Written by Maren’s hand. Not the Alpha Council’s decision. This one had been Maren’s.
She pulled back before she could absorb more. The elder’s eyes moved to her face and then away, and what Nyx caught there was not cruelty. It was fear. Maren was afraid of something and had chosen her anyway. That was worse than cruelty. Cruelty at least had a logic she could map.
Three pack women arrived after. Gloved, professional, handling her with the detachment of people who had learned not to be curious about what they were asked to do. They bathed her hair with scented water, pinned it up with silver combs, laced the dress tight enough that breathing became a considered act. Through the thin fabric of their gloves, she felt nothing—just warmth and pressure and the wordless efficiency of their hands.
They talked among themselves. They kept their voices low enough to suggest courtesy without providing it.
“They say he killed his own father at nineteen,” the first one said.
“His father needed killing,” said the second. “What his wolf became after is the problem.”
The third said nothing. She moved faster.
Nyx had been hearing Caelan Voss’s name through the cellar’s inadequate ventilation for three days. She’d catalogued everything she managed to catch: he’d killed the escort of the last potential bride for looking at her too long. The council had given him one final chance to take a mate before they considered alternatives. Alternatives, in pack law, was a word that meant something specific and irreversible. Three women had been sent to the Obsidian Throne before her—two had fled, one had been returned without explanation, and nobody who knew the explanation was talking.
She thought about running. She’d thought about it every hour for three days. She thought about it now with the same detached thoroughness she applied to all impossible problems—turning it over, looking for angles, setting it down when she ran out of them. A wolf without a pack dies alone in the open territories. Nyx wasn’t even a wolf. She had no money, no transport, no name that anyone beyond Ashwood would honor, and Ashwood had been glad to be rid of her.
She’d been found at the border as a toddler. She understood now what that meant. Someone had calculated the cost of keeping her and found it too high. She’d been making the same calculation in reverse for twenty-two years—how much can I take from this place before they notice, how little can I give before they stop feeding me, how invisible can I make myself. She’d become very good at invisible.
The vehicle arrived at midday. A black SUV, tinted windows, pack insignia on the door. Two guards flanked the entrance to the lodge. Nyx walked toward them and one reached out automatically to steady her on the step—old reflex, meaningless—and his hand closed around her arm.
The curse activated.
A burst of his memories, faster than she could manage: the boundary line of the Obsidian Throne territory, the way the forest changes on the other side, the specific quality of darkness inside the fortress dungeons. And beneath the images, running through everything like a current, a name he thought constantly without saying aloud. Caelan the Kinslayer. He was terrified of the man. He served him anyway.
She jerked her arm free. The guard frowned but didn’t speak. Her skin was buzzing from wrist to shoulder. She shoved the borrowed memory down into the locked place inside her, stacked it on top of twenty-two years of accumulation—other people’s fears, other people’s griefs, other people’s private shames—and turned toward the vehicle.
The drive was silent. Through the back window, Ashwood fell away: farmhouses, tree lines, the lodge with its ordinary smoke from ordinary chimneys. The pack’s routines continued without pause. Nobody had come to the cellar to say goodbye. Nobody had asked how she was sleeping, if she was eating, if she was frightened. Twenty-two years, and her departure went unmarked.
She told herself it was fine. She’d been telling herself variations of that for as long as she could remember.
The vehicle crossed the boundary line and the forest changed.
It changed immediately. The trees grew taller and denser, their canopy pressing down until the road felt less like a road and more like a passage through something living. The air coming through the vents shifted—volcanic soil beneath everything, and above it a heaviness that wasn’t weather. It was power. Alpha power, radiating outward from the center of his territory with enough force to reach the border. She’d never felt anything like it. It tasted like iron at the back of her tongue. It tasted like the moment before lightning strikes.
Her curse stirred. Not activating—just waking. Something beneath her sternum moved toward the source of that power with the blind recognition of something that has found what it was made for.
She pressed her hand flat against her chest.
Through the trees, the fortress appeared. Black volcanic rock carved into towers and walls and a gate wide enough for armies, embedded into the mountain as if it had grown there over centuries, shaped by pressure and time into something that looked less like habitation and more like inevitability. Four towers. Windows that held the afternoon light briefly before letting it go.
On the highest balcony, a silhouette stood.
She couldn’t see his face. The distance swallowed detail. But she felt him before she understood what feeling meant in this context—a weight settling against her chest, specific and directional, like being watched by something that knew exactly where she was. He’d been waiting long enough to see the vehicle round the last curve in the road. Long enough to know exactly when to look.
The curse surged against her ribs. It pressed outward, hungry in a way she didn’t have language for, straining toward that silhouette with the certainty of a compass that has finally found north after years of spinning.
She kept her hand flat against her sternum. She kept breathing.
The vehicle slowed. The gate opened. Guards lined the entry corridor two deep on both sides, and she could feel their power even through the vehicle’s walls—a hundred wolves, each one stronger than anything she’d encountered in Ashwood, their combined force pressing against her like a tide. She was going to walk through that corridor in a white dress with no wolf, no family, and no name that mattered to any of them. She had seconds before the door opened.
She used them to recite the rules she’d built her life around. No skin contact. No emotional surges. No losing control.
The door opened. She stepped onto black volcanic stone and straightened her spine and arranged her face into something that might pass for calm, and did not look up at the balcony.
When she finally looked, it was empty.
But the pressure on her chest hadn’t lifted. He was still watching. Just from somewhere she couldn’t find.
POV: Caelan"She is not a wolf," Kira said. "Whatever she is—she isn't one of us."The inner circle met in the small council room adjacent to Caelan's study, before dawn, while the pack slept. Kira had been awake already; she was always awake before she needed to be, a habit left over from years of training in secret when sleeping past dawn meant getting caught. Marcus, his Beta, arrived within two minutes of being summoned with the appearance of a man who had been lying awake waiting to be needed. Dr. Hale came last, still pulling on his jacket. Four people in a room with the door closed. The kind of conversation that didn't exist outside it."You've suspected this since the inspection," Caelan said."Since before the inspection," Kira said. "Since the scent report from the border unit. She crossed into the territory and they said her scent was wrong—not suppressed. Wrong. Like someone who has never shifted. But not like a human, either.""What does it smell like?" Marcus asked.Kira
POV: Nyx"Stop," she told it.The thing inside her did not stop.She backed away from the mirror, putting the vanity between herself and her own reflection, as if distance would help. Her hands were shaking. The wolf fragment behind her ribs was pressing outward with methodical, relentless force, testing the shape of her the way something tests the walls of a container it has decided to leave. She'd spent twenty-two years keeping her curse contained. She knew the sensation of something trying to get out. This was different. This wasn't trying to escape. It was trying to give her something.A form.She shoved against it. The same technique she used for everything: push it down, lock it up, breathe through it until the sensation passes. The fragment ignored her. It pressed harder, and her skin began to ripple.She felt her bones move.Not break. Shift. A slow, nauseating rearrangement, her skeleton deciding it was interested in a different geometry. She'd been terrified of this since ch
POV: Dual — Nyx / Caelan— Caelan —The wolf had been trying to surface for six hours.Caelan stood at the altar and breathed through it, the way he'd been breathing through it every minute of the last four years—measured, deliberate, each breath a reminder that he was still the one in control. His bones ached from the constant fight. His hands, loose at his sides, had been trembling for twenty minutes with the effort of keeping the shift contained.The hall was full. He registered the wolves in his periphery without really seeing them—three hundred threads of the pack bond radiating outward, each one a responsibility, each one a weight. Normally the pack bond steadied him. Tonight it felt like pressure from the wrong direction.His wolf was frantic. Not violent—that was the part he couldn't explain to anyone, the part the council didn't understand when he tried. The beast wasn't trying to attack. It was agitated the way something is agitated when it can sense what's coming and desper
POV: Nyx“She doesn’t smell right.”Kira Voss stopped in the doorway of the council chamber and said it the way someone states something obvious that everyone else has been too polite to mention. She stood with her arms crossed and her head tilted, nostrils flaring, and she looked at Nyx the way a predator looks at something it hasn’t classified yet.The inspection froze. Six elders with their ledgers and their instruments and their small, practiced humiliations, all of them going still at once.The council chamber was built for exactly this kind of moment. High stone walls, a single raised dais where the elders sat in a curved formation, a floor of polished black volcanic rock that made sound travel in strange, exposed ways. Nyx had been standing in its center for twenty minutes while they measured her height, recorded her weight, asked her to open her mouth. They’d circled her, scented her, peppered her with questions designed to find the seams in her story. Where was she born. Who






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