Mag-log inHe bought my body. The bond claimed my soul. Kael Draven is a ruthless Alpha who never loses. I'm the Omega he acquired to settle a debt I never made. I should hate him. I should escape. But when enemies come for me, he'll spill blood to keep me safe. The only problem? Falling for him might cost me everything.
view moreArielle
Life has never been easy or good to me.
That's not me feeling sorry for myself. That's just the truth. Some people are born into warmth—into mothers who smell like vanilla and fathers who lift them onto their shoulders and houses where the floors don't creak and the windows let in sunlight. I was born into a world that wanted me dead before I took my first breath.
My mother died when I was eighteen months old. Heat complication. That's what the shelter records say. What they don't say is that she couldn't afford the safe suppressants. What they don't say is that the cheap ones she bought from some guy in an alley were cut with something that made her heart stop. What they don't say is that my father didn't cry at her funeral. He was already calculating. Already planning. Already looking at his infant daughter and wondering what she might be worth someday.
I never met her. My mother. I don't have a single memory of her face, her voice, her scent. All I have is a photograph—creased at the edges, faded from years of being folded and unfolded—that I keep tucked inside my notebook. She had dark hair like mine. Dark eyes like Emery's. A smile that looked tired but real.
I look at that photograph sometimes. Late at night, when Emery is asleep and the apartment is quiet and the weight of everything presses down on my chest until I can't breathe. I look at her and wonder if she knew. If she felt it coming. If she was scared.
I wonder if she'd be proud of me.
Probably not. I'm not proud of me either.
My father's name is Marek Vale. He's a gambler. An addict. A man who sells information about unregistered Omegas to wealthy Alpha families for cash, then spends it all on cards and bottles and needles before the sun comes up. He's the kind of man who looks at his daughters and sees assets instead of children. The kind of man who disappears for days and comes back smelling like whiskey and lies.
The kind of man who leaves a six-year-old and a twenty-two-year-old alone in a shelter district apartment with nothing but overdue rent notices and a hot plate balanced on a crate.
I hate him.
I hate him so much it scares me sometimes. The anger lives inside me like a second heartbeat. It keeps me warm when the heat shuts off. It keeps me moving when my legs want to give out. It keeps me alive when everything else tells me to lie down and stop fighting.
But I don't stop. I can't stop. Because I have Emery.
She's six years old. She has our mother's eyes and our father's stubbornness and a laugh that sounds like sunlight. She sleeps with a stuffed rabbit she's had since she was a baby—its fur matted, one ear missing, stuffing coming out of a tear in its side—and she believes, really believes, that the world is good. That people are kind. That her big sister can fix anything.
I don't want her to stop believing that. Not yet. The world will break her soon enough. Let her have a few more years of thinking she's safe.
So I work. I work part-time at a café that pays under the table because Omegas aren't supposed to have jobs without their Alpha guardian's permission, and I don't have an Alpha guardian, and the system would rather see me starve than break its own rules. I work night shifts at a diner where the fluorescent lights buzz and the customers don't look at my face. I run errands for people in the underground—packages delivered, messages passed, questions never asked—because it pays cash and cash keeps the lights on and the suppressants in my system.
The suppressants.
I hate them almost as much as I hate my father.
They're cheap. Black market. Bought from a guy who knows a guy who knows a guy. They burn when I apply them—a sting that radiates down my collarbone and into my chest—but burning is better than broadcasting. Burning means I smell like nothing. Burning means no Alpha on the street can catch my scent and decide I look like an opportunity.
I've been taking them since I was eighteen. Four years of chemical erasure. Four years of scrubbing myself into invisibility. Four years of wondering if my mother felt this same burn before her heart gave out.
Emery doesn't know. She's too young to understand what I am, what she might become. She doesn't know that the world will treat her like a commodity the moment she presents. She doesn't know that our father has already calculated her worth.
I haven't told her. I don't know how.
So I work, and I hide, and I take care of her the best I can. I put food on the table—macaroni and cheese from a box, the cheap kind where the powder clumps if you don't stir it fast enough. I read her bedtime stories from a battered picture book about a rabbit who finds his way home. I braid her hair in the mornings and kiss her forehead at night and try not to think about the fact that she deserves so much better than this.
She deserves preschool. Daycare. A place where she can learn and play and make friends while I work. But the fees are insane. Everything costs money, and money is something that slips through my fingers like water no matter how tightly I cup my hands.
So while I work, I leave her with Mrs. Delgado.
Mrs. Delgado is our neighbor. A Beta woman in her seventies who lives three doors down and has grandchildren she never gets to see. She doesn't ask for payment. She says watching Emery reminds her of when her own kids were small. I bring her groceries when I can—eggs, bread, the dented cans from the discount shelf—but it's never enough. It's never close to enough.
I think about this as I walk home from my shift at the café. The sun is already down. The streets in the shelter district are narrow and cracked, the streetlights flickering like they can't decide whether to stay on or give up. A group of teenagers loiter on the corner, their laughter too loud, their eyes tracking me as I pass. I keep my head down. I keep my blockers strong. I keep walking.
My feet ache. My back hurts from bending over the espresso machine for eight hours. There's a stain on my shirt—caramel syrup, I think—that I'll have to scrub out before my next shift. I'm tired. God, I'm so tired. The kind of tired that sleep doesn't fix. The kind of tired that lives in your bones and whispers that this is all there is, all there will ever be.
But Emery is waiting for me. Emery is always waiting for me. So I keep walking.
That night, I dream of drowning.Not in water. In tide. A great, dark tide that pulls me under and spins me around and drags me toward something I cannot see. The current is too strong to fight. I kick and claw and scream, but the tide does not care. It pulls me down, down, down, and just when I think I will never breathe again, I feel hands on my body. Strong hands. Familiar hands. The hands of the Alpha who marked me.I wake with a gasp, my body on fire, my sheets soaked with sweat.The clock on the nightstand says three in the morning. The penthouse is silent. Emery is asleep. Mrs. Hartley is off-duty. And somewhere in this building, Kael Draven is sleeping—or not sleeping—and I can feel him through the bond like a presence in the dark
The penthouse is nothing like I expected.I thought it would be cold. Sterile. A concrete box with expensive furniture and no soul. But it is worse than that. It is beautiful.The elevator opens directly into the main living space—a vast, open room with floor-to-ceiling windows that show the entire city sprawled below like a glittering carpet. The floors are dark wood. The furniture is sleek and modern, all clean lines and neutral tones. A staircase curves up to a second level. The kitchen gleams with marble and chrome. Everything is spotless. Everything is perfect. Everything smells like him.I step out of the elevator, and the scent hits me like a wave. Cedar and steel and that electric charge, the one that makes the hair
I think about the apartment. The mattress on the floor. The hot plate balanced on the crate. The landlord's notes slipped under the door. The life I am leaving behind. It is not much of a life. It has never been much of a life. But it is mine. The only thing I have ever had that belonged to me alone."No," I say. "No problem."He studies me for a moment longer, and I feel his gaze like a weight on my skin. Then he stands, buttoning his jacket, his movements precise and unhurried."My driver will take you back to collect your things. Pack only what you need. Everything else will be provided for you at the penthouse." He pauses at the door, his hand on the frame. "And Arielle? The suppressants. You'll stop taking them."My blood goes cold. "What?""You heard me." He does not turn around. "You've been abusing black-market blockers for years. Your scent glands are damaged. Your cycle is unstable. The estate physician will need to assess you, but the first step is stopping the poison you'v
That night, I cannot sleep.The bed is too soft. The room is too quiet. The penthouse hums with a silence that is louder than any noise, and every time I close my eyes, I feel the bond pulsing in my chest like a second heartbeat. Somewhere in this building—maybe in the room at the end of the hall, the one Mrs. Hartley did not show me—Kael Draven is sleeping. Or not sleeping. I cannot tell which.I get out of bed and walk to the window. The city glitters below, indifferent and eternal. I press my palm against the cold glass and think about the last time I was alone in the dark like this. The night before the river. The night before the bite. The night when I thought the only way out was down.I have not taken my suppressants since this morning.The thought creeps in, unwanted. It has been almost twenty-four hours since my last dose. Already, I can feel the difference. My skin is warmer. My senses are sharper. The scent of cedar and steel that permeates the penthouse is stronger now, mo
I wait.The hours crawl past. Mrs. Delgado brings Emery home. I tell her I'm tired from work. I make dinner—macaroni and cheese, the powder clumping because I forgot to stir it. Emery eats hers with enthusiasm. I push mine around the bowl and pretend to take bites when she looks at me."Riri?" She
I turn the corner onto our street, and that's when I see them.Huge men in suits. Three of them. Standing outside my apartment door like they own the place. Their shoulders fill the narrow hallway, blocking the light from the bare bulb overhead. One of them is an Alpha—I can tell by the way the oth
I remember the door opening. I remember lights. A bed. Then his mouth was on mine and nothing else mattered.He kissed like he was trying to crawl inside me.There was no softness. No asking. His tongue pushed past my lips and he swallowed my moan like he owned it. His hands were everywhere—in my h
The room was spinning.Not the slow, gentle spin of a few drinks. This was the kind of spin that told me I'd made a mistake three glasses ago and kept going anyway. My back pressed against something solid—a wall? A door? I couldn't tell. Everything was warm and blurry and wrong.But then I smelled












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