Mag-log inContent: (Warning! +18 Sexual elements, Alpha Wolf, Witch, Cursed Love, Small Town, Young Wolf, War, Age Gap, Passion, Consensual Fantasy, Psychological Elements, Strong Female Lead, Drama, Romance) Bound by blood, sealed by magic. You have finally come, Rose's daughter… Eva Rose is the last and most powerful heir of a sacred witch bloodline. Kael is a cursed Crimson Alpha King. Centuries ago, on the night they discovered they were fated mates and were about to be married, their enemies attacked to destroy them both. To save Kael, Eva made a desperate choice , she trapped him in a magical sleep for 200 years. The price was her own life. But their love was so powerful that Eva did not truly die , she was reborn. Through her own bloodline, she returned to the world as the same woman, with the same soul, the same heart. Now, who is friend and who is enemy? And why does this man feel so strangely familiar? How can you escape someone who even visits your dreams?. 📌📚🔥
view moreMy grandmother was everything to me. Today, I laid her to rest.
She and I had left this cursed town years ago. This town had taken my mother and father from me. The reason for their deaths had always been kept hidden, like a dark mystery. They would only say "a fire." I wouldn't learn until much later that it was a witch hunt.
Snow blanketed the earth, thick and merciless. I stood alone at the edge of the old cemetery, clutching the small wooden box that was all that remained of the woman who'd been my only family. The priest had refused to come. The townspeople had refused as well. Only a handful of crows were there, watching intently, as if they'd come to witness a ceremony.
I didn't cry. Not yet.
My grandmother had made me promise, as if she'd known it would be her last Christmas. Now I was struggling alone to fulfill that wish. But I couldn't have predicted what was coming.
Three days later, I was driving along the icy road toward Blackthorn Ridge. There I was. Twenty-five years old, the last of the Rose bloodline, returning to a place where people looked at me as if they wanted me dead. My red pickup climbed the hill as the wind filled my ears with an ominous howl. My only goal was to reach the mountain house as quickly as possible.
Then I saw it. A dark shape in the white snow covering the road. As I got closer, it became clear it was a vehicle, hood open, and a man examining the engine. Despite the bone-chilling cold, he was wearing nothing but a t-shirt, as if he wasn't cold at all.
The townspeople's hostility had already started to rub off on me. I thought about driving past. But damn it. I couldn't be as savage as the people in this town. I stopped.
I grabbed my coat from the passenger seat and put it on. The moment I stepped out of the car, I started shivering. Okay, I'm someone who gets cold even on summer days, but these cursed lands were really putting on a show.
I walked closer and called out. "Hello. Looks like you're stranded?"
He lifted his eyes from the engine and looked at me. That gaze made a cold settle inside me that had nothing to do with the weather. Then I got a proper look at him.
He was breathtaking. Jet-black hair, dark silver eyes, chiseled features, tall, muscular. Those eyes, piercing.
I was impressed. Just a little. Don't exaggerate, ladies.
He smiled, a sly, flirtatious look in his eyes. "Yes," he said. "You could say I'm stranded." He closed the hood.
And that was when I froze.
There was a massive log embedded in the front windshield of his car. Seriously embedded. Wasn't this man seeing this? Did he seriously think the problem was the engine right now?
"Wow," I said, my surprise obvious. "It's like a giant came and stuck this tree in your windshield like a big toothpick."
He suddenly burst out laughing. "I think giants went extinct a long time ago." Then his eyes focused on me with a meaningful look. "This town's past is remembered for its wolves and witches," he murmured.
"Hmm. Thanks for the interesting local history lesson. But I don't think I can find you a witch or a wolf right now." I pointed to my car. "What I do have is a vehicle. I can drop you off in town if you want."
He looked at me, those deep dimples appearing when he smiled. For a moment, I could have sworn I saw a silver gleam spinning in his eyes.
"If I'm not bothering you," he said, "I'd be grateful."
I nodded and headed to my door, then called back over my shoulder. "You won't bother me as long as you don't complain about me listening to Elwes."
A deep smile spread across his face. He grabbed his leather jacket from his car and came over. The moment he got in, his expression changed. My heater, which I had cranked all the way up, hit him like desert heat.
"I think you were a bit cold," he said.
I'm always cold," I said with a smile. And I hit the gas.
His eyes were on me from the moment we started moving. Under normal circumstances, being watched by such a handsome man might have been flattering. But the people in this town were so strange I wasn't sure this was a good thing.
"Hey. Could you stop that," I said, briefly glancing at him before looking back at the road.
He ran his fingers through his hair and smiled sheepishly. "I'm sorry. You're just so different. I couldn't take my eyes off you."
"Everyone in this town makes me feel different," I said, pulling a face. "I'm starting to think I have 'I'm a stranger' written on my forehead."
He laughed. "Are you always this sarcastic?"
For some reason, I wanted to be honest with him. The words came out before I could stop them. "Let's call it my way of camouflaging pain. I buried my grandmother yesterday."
I looked at his face.
Normally when you tell someone that, their expression shifts. Surprise, at least. But on this man's face there was neither surprise nor anything else. As if he already knew. But no one had attended my grandmother's funeral except the gravedigger who buried her.
That was unsettling.
A few seconds later he asked, "I'm sorry. Did you love her very much?"
"Yes," I said. "She was my only family. I loved her more than anything."
"I understand. Then why are you still here?" he asked.
Normally I would have answered politely. But I didn't like being questioned, especially not in the way the townspeople questioned me, like they wanted me gone. That "why haven't you left" tone was extremely irritating.
I turned to him and raised my eyebrows. "For Christmas," I said. "I just came to celebrate Christmas."
He wasn't surprised. On the contrary, he had the look of someone who understood perfectly well I was mocking him.
We didn't talk for the rest of the drive.
Finally we arrived at the town center. I stopped the car. He got out and came to the window. There was a warm smile on his face.
"My name is Joe," he said.
I extended my hand. "Eva. Eva Rose."
"Pleased to meet you." His expression changed. I could see the sly grin settling in. "Well then. Merry Christmas, Rose's daughter."
My eyebrows came together.
The day I came to town for the funeral arrangements, everyone had looked at me with that phrase like they wanted to kill me. What the hell was this "Rose's daughter" thing? Every person I encountered called me Rose's daughter with a look of disgust. For the people of this town, being named Rose seemed more like a curse than anything.
Just then, the old man who ran the town market, sitting on a wooden chair on the sidewalk, came rushing over, pointing his finger and shouting. "Don't talk to her, Joe! Have you lost your mind? She brings bad luck!"
That was the end of the politeness my grandmother had raised me with.
I stuck my head out the window and pointed right back at him. "I'm not cursed! I don't carry a contagious disease. I haven't even killed anyone yet. And I don't even know you. Stop talking about me, you senile old fool!"
I hit the gas.
But my anger hadn't finished. As I passed right beside him I leaned out one more time.
"I've talked to you now too," I called out pleasantly. "I really do hope I bring you bad luck."
I floored it and drove away.
In the rearview mirror I could see the man's face, red with rage. And Joe, doubled over laughing, slapping his knees.
I suppose it was time for this stubborn town to witness the stubbornness of Rose women...
Meanwhile, at the waterfall grotto, the twins had completely sealed the dungeon door. Since the dungeons of the stone manor were carved entirely from rock, they were sure Liam couldn't escape. But their real fear was him shattering the steel door into pieces.Rai stood right behind them, watching with a growl."How much time do you think we have left?" he asked.Alex looked at the deep claw marks on Axel's chest with worried eyes."We have a lot of work to do, but I don't think we have much time, boss. Even one of his claws is enough to tear us apart right now," he grumbled.Rai understood the severity of the situation. He had to act according to the worst-case scenario left to him."Alright, we have no guardian, no witch, no Alpha. There's only one thing left for us to do, children," he said.Alex and Axel turned their gazes to him. The twins had always shown Rai great respect. No matter how much they acted playful, careless, or sarcastic, being part of this pack had always made them
Elly stood between the two Alphas, her patience wearing thin from their competitive glares."Enough! Stop this nonsense. I'm going to figure out what 'the firstborn's claw' actually means. You two behave yourselves," she said. She turned her back and headed for the books.Kael's eyes were locked on Joe's. His teeth were clenched, a low growl rumbling in his chest.Joe, meanwhile, had his back against the wall, arms crossed over his chest, speaking calmly."I knew you were old, but I didn't expect this much," he said.Kael's eyes narrowed. He was annoyed by Joe's empty talk, but he didn't care enough to waste a reply on him.Joe continued, laughing."Should we call you grandpa now? Or maybe uncle?"Kael shook his head and looked away, as if to say, "What is this idiot talking about?"But Joe had no intention of stopping. Shamelessly, he burst out laughing."And on top of that, you married a hot twenty-six-year-old. Good for you, grandpa!"Kael closed his eyes. He was growling with irri
Kael was running through the forest in his wolf body, heading toward Elly's mountain house. But as he got closer, he realized he couldn't smell Elly's scent nor feel her guardian power. He understood that she wasn't there.The only place that came to his mind where he could find Elly was Eva's mountain house. He quickly changed direction and headed there.Meanwhile, Joe had met with Nancy and learned that everything was fine. After that, he had returned to Elly's side. Joe got out of the car and was about to enter Eva's house when he felt the presence of an ancient wolf behind him. He knew Kael had arrived.Without turning around, he heard Kael's growl."You can't enter that house, bad blood?"There was a questioning expression on his face, but underneath it, a grin was not missing.Joe answered with a smile."As a matter of fact, I managed to enter this mountain house this morning without even realizing it."He approached Kael as he spoke.Kael was surprised."Impossible. Grandmother
Eva had always felt at peace in this mountain house. Even in those first days when she had returned to town, she had never felt truly alone. But now, with the Demon King's return, she felt a void inside her, as if she had lost Kael. She placed her fingertips on the midnight seal on her chest, trying to feel his presence.But one thing she was certain of now: it was time to take the reins. She quickly pulled herself together and got to work.A little later, the inside of the mountain house was dim with the orange glow of the late afternoon sun. Elly had lit the incense and drawn a circle. Eva sat on the floor, cross-legged, her eyes closed. In front of her lay the items from her grandmother's chest: an old bone comb, dried gerbera flowers, and a small crystal vial.Elly sat across from her, holding a rolled parchment. She wet her lips and murmured the ancient guardian spells. But nothing was happening. The seal on Eva's chest remained dull. No purple flames. No wind. Nothing.Asia sat
"Let's go now," said Elly. They headed for the car.Just then, Elly's phone rang. An unknown number filled the screen."Hello?" She answered."Hello," came a woman's voice on the other end. "I got this number from my, from our mother. May I ask who I'm speaking with?"Elly's brows knit together. "O
A little while later, Eva and Kael had emerged from the water onto the rocky shore beside the waterfall. Kael gently laid Eva's bare body down on the sand and leaned over her.Eva still couldn't believe what had just happened."We are genuinely lying completely naked on the sand right now," she sai
Meanwhile, the town doctor Lily had arrived home after a exhausting day. She unlocked the door, took off her shoes and tossed them into a corner. Then she removed her blue shirt. She was left in her jeans and bra. She dropped herself onto the big armchair in the living room and rested her head. She
Meanwhile, Joe had arrived at the manor. He knew his father wasn't there, he hadn't caught his scent from outside. But it was as if this massive pile of concrete was nothing more than a display of his father's power. For years, he had terrorized everyone in town and made them dependent on him. He ha






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