How to Make a King (Even If You’re Really Not Into It)
Ember never meant to make a king.
She was just trying to survive her heat without embarrassing herself in front of the massive, infuriatingly calm wolf living in the loft next door.
Ember has spent most of her life keeping people at a distance. She’s stubborn, private, and perfectly happy suffering through things alone—including the inconvenient attraction she’s been pretending not to feel toward Ghost.
Ghost notices everything.
He notices when Ember skips meals. When she hasn’t slept. When she’s pretending she doesn’t need help. Calm, steady, and impossible to shake, he’s the kind of man who doesn’t push—but also doesn’t leave.
Which becomes a problem when a violent storm destroys half of Ember’s apartment and Ghost is the one who drags her out of the wreckage.
Suddenly the fiercely independent she-wolf who hates relying on anyone is stuck living next door to the one man she’s been trying not to want.
Then Ember’s heat hits.
What starts as proximity and stubborn attraction turns into something neither of them expected when their bond snaps fully into place—awakening a long-buried bloodline Ember never knew she carried.
For generations, wolves like her were known as Kingmakers—rare mates capable of exposing corruption and keeping pack leadership honest. Twenty years ago, someone tried to wipe them out.
Now Ember’s power has awakened.
And the quiet city she and Ghost call home—long governed by careful politics instead of true pack leadership—is about to change.
Because Ghost never wanted to be an Alpha.
But Ember’s bloodline has a habit of exposing exactly the kind of wolf who should be.
And Ember might have just made a king.