LOGIN
“Do it.”
The command cut through the council hall like a blade.
For one stupid second, I thought I had heard him wrong.
Not because Alpha Marcus Thorncroft was gentle. He wasn’t. He ruled Black Hollow the way storms ruled the mountain, heavy and cruel and impossible to ignore.
But there were some things even cruel men should not say out loud.
Some lines even alphas should not cross.
Rain beat against the tall windows of the pack house, turning the glass black and silver beneath the storm. Thunder rolled over the mountain, low and angry, shaking dust from the beams above us. The council hall smelled like wet wool, old wood, wolf, and bitter smoke from the fire struggling in the hearth.
Fifty wolves stood around the edges of the room.
Maybe more.
I did not count them.
I could not make myself look at all their faces.
Because every single one of them was watching my life fall apart.
And no one moved.
No one spoke.
No one chose me.
At the center of the hall stood Damien Thorncroft.
My mate.
My future.
The boy who once kissed rain from my eyelashes behind the old diner and promised me that no matter what his father became, he would never become him.
The boy who used to climb through my bedroom window with scraped knuckles, stolen fries, and that reckless smile that made my wolf curl up warm inside my chest.
He stood ten feet away from me now.
And he looked like a stranger.
His black shirt clung to broad shoulders I had once traced with my fingertips. His dark hair was damp from the storm, pushed back messily like he had run his hands through it too many times. His jaw was clenched so hard the muscle jumped beneath his skin.
But his eyes were what ruined me.
Gold.
Burning.
Locked on mine.
For one horrible, breathless second, I saw him.
Not the alpha’s son.
Not the heir to Black Hollow.
Damien.
My Damien.
Pain cracked through his expression so fast most people would have missed it.
I didn’t.
I knew every version of his face. Every small shift. Every quiet tell. I knew when he was angry, when he was lying, when he was trying not to laugh.
And I knew when he was breaking.
Then the pain vanished.
Just like that.
He buried it behind the cold mask he had worn since the council called him home from training three months ago.
Three months of silence.
Three months of him avoiding me.
Three months of me convincing myself there had to be a reason.
Now I was standing in front of the entire pack, and the reason felt like a noose tightening around my throat.
“You heard the council,” Alpha Marcus growled from his carved chair at the head of the room. “Finish it.”
My stomach twisted violently.
No.
No, no, no.
This was not happening.
Damien would never do this.
Not to me.
Not after everything.
“Damien,” I whispered.
His jaw flexed.
The mate bond between us pulsed frantically beneath my skin. It was usually warm. A living thread of heat and instinct connecting me to him, soft enough to ignore when I wanted to pretend I wasn’t hopelessly in love with the alpha’s son.
Tonight, it felt panicked.
Almost afraid.
Like even our wolves knew something was terribly wrong.
Around me, pack members lowered their eyes.
Cowards.
Every single one of them.
My mother stood near the back wall.
Pale.
Frozen.
Terrified.
That terrified me more than anything else.
My mother had survived grief, rumors, hunger, exile inside her own pack, and years of being called cursed behind her back by people too weak to say it to her face. Elise Frost did not scare easily.
But tonight, she looked like she already knew how this ended.
“Please,” I said softly, staring at Damien. “Tell me what’s happening.”
He did not answer.
That hurt worse than the command.
Worse than the staring.
Worse than the rain and the council and the whispers that had followed the Frost name my entire life.
The Damien I knew would have crossed fire for me.
Would have fought anyone for me.
Would have stood in front of death itself with that arrogant little smirk and said, Try me.
But the man standing in front of me tonight looked trapped inside his own body.
“Damien,” Alpha Marcus snapped.
The pressure in the room changed instantly.
Dominance rolled through the council hall like smoke, thick and choking. Wolves lowered their heads. Shoulders curved inward. Knees bent slightly beneath the weight of an alpha command.
Authority.
Threat.
Punishment waiting to happen.
I finally understood.
This was not a choice.
Something cold slid down my spine.
The council was not asking Damien to reject me.
They were forcing him to.
My wolf slammed against my ribs, frantic and confused.
Mate.
Mine.
Mine.
Her grief was so sharp it felt like claws dragging through my chest from the inside.
Tears burned behind my eyes.
I refused to let them fall.
Not here.
Not in front of these people.
Not in front of Damien Thorncroft while he stood there pretending he did not still love me.
Because he did.
God help us both, he did.
I could feel it.
The bond trembled with it.
Damien stepped toward me slowly.
One step.
Then another.
The hall seemed to hold its breath with each footfall.
His boots scraped softly over the stone floor. The fire popped in the hearth. Rain hissed against the windows. Somewhere outside, a wolf howled once and then went silent.
The bond between us tightened painfully with every inch he closed.
I could still feel how much he loved me.
That was the cruelest part.
His wolf raged beneath the surface. I saw it in the glow burning brighter behind his eyes. In the tension pulling at his body like he was physically fighting himself not to touch me.
I swallowed hard. “Don’t do this.”
Something cracked in his expression.
Small.
Quick.
Devastating.
Then his hand lifted toward my face.
Instinct.
Need.
Goodbye.
The entire council room growled.
The sound rolled around us, low and vicious.
Damien froze.
My heart shattered.
Because fear flashed across his face.
Not fear for himself.
For me.
I turned slowly toward the council.
“What did you threaten him with?”
No one answered.
Of course they didn’t.
Men with power loved silence when the truth made them look ugly.
Alpha Marcus leaned forward in his chair. His eyes were the same sharp gold as Damien’s.
Only colder.
Crueler.
“The girl does not understand her place.”
My spine snapped straight.
I had spent eighteen years in Black Hollow being careful.
Careful with my voice.
Careful with my anger.
Careful not to prove every whispered rumor about Frost women having too much fire in their blood.
But something inside me was done kneeling.
“You don’t get to decide my place,” I said.
A few wolves gasped.
Actually gasped.
Like a girl speaking back was more horrifying than a room full of adults forcing her mate to destroy her.
Damien’s eyes widened slightly.
I had never spoken to the council like that before.
Honestly, it felt amazing.
Terrifying.
But amazing.
Alpha Marcus’s expression hardened. “Careful.”
“No.” My voice shook, but I kept going. “I am done being careful for people who have never been careful with me.”
The room went so still I could hear rainwater dripping from someone’s coat onto the stone floor.
My mother whispered, “Lena.”
Too late.
The words were already climbing up my throat, hot and sharp and years overdue.
“What are you so afraid of?” I demanded. “Why does everyone in this town act like my family is cursed?”
Silence.
Not normal silence.
Wrong silence.
The kind that filled old houses before something moved in the walls.
Damien went rigid.
My mother made a broken sound near the back of the room.
One of the older council members looked toward Alpha Marcus like he wanted permission to speak and feared what would happen if he did.
Then he muttered, barely loud enough for anyone to hear, “Because the Frost bloodline should have died generations ago.”
Every hair on my body stood up.
The fire in the hearth bent sideways.
Just for a second.
Like the room itself had exhaled.
My mother covered her mouth.
Damien moved instantly.
“Enough.”
One word.
The entire room stilled.
Pure alpha authority rolled off him hard enough to shake the floor beneath us.
Not borrowed from his father.
Not learned from training.
His.
Even the council looked surprised.
Because Damien Thorncroft was not alpha yet.
But every wolf in that room felt what he would become.
Dangerous.
Powerful.
Unstoppable.
His eyes found mine again.
And suddenly, horribly, I understood.
He was not rejecting me because he wanted to.
He was rejecting me because they would kill me if he didn’t.
Maybe not tonight.
Maybe not in front of witnesses.
But soon.
Quietly.
Permanently.
The realization hollowed me out.
He was trying to save me.
And still, he was choosing to destroy me.
Both things were true.
That was what made it unforgivable.
“Damien…” My voice broke.
Pain flashed openly across his face this time.
He stepped closer until only inches separated us.
Close enough that I could feel his warmth.
His heartbeat.
His wolf pressing toward mine like it was trying to crawl out of his skin and wrap itself around me.
His hand twitched at his side.
I remembered that hand at fifteen, stealing fries from my plate while he smiled like trouble had been invented just for him.
At sixteen, holding mine under council tables where no one could see.
At seventeen, pressed against my bedroom window because he was too impatient to use the door.
That was the hand that had promised me forever.
Now it would not even reach for me.
His voice dropped so quietly only I could hear it.
“I’m sorry.”
My chest cracked open.
“No,” I whispered.
His hand brushed mine.
Half a second.
Secret.
Desperate.
The touch burned through me.
Not enough.
Never enough.
Then he stepped back.
And the mate bond started trembling violently.
Every wolf in the room went silent.
Damien looked directly into my eyes.
But his voice sounded like it was tearing him apart from the inside.
“I reject Lena Frost as my mate.”
The world stopped.
Pain exploded through my chest so violently I nearly collapsed.
My knees hit the stone.
The sound echoed through the council hall.
For one breath, I waited.
For my mother.
For Maggie.
For anyone.
No one helped me up.
My wolf screamed.
Not metaphorically.
I heard her inside my skull, a raw, wounded sound that split something open in me.
Agony ripped through the bond connecting us like claws through silk. One second it was there, golden and warm and alive.
The next it was being shredded.
Hands reached for me.
I shoved them away.
No.
No one got to touch me now.
Not after standing there and watching.
Tears blurred my vision, hot and humiliating.
Across from me, Damien looked just as destroyed.
Blood trickled slowly from the corner of his mouth.
Because the bond hurt him too.
Good.
I hated that I thought it.
I hated more that it wasn’t enough.
The council watched silently.
Satisfied.
Monsters.
My breathing turned uneven as I stared at the male I loved more than my own life.
And despite everything—
despite the humiliation,
despite the betrayal,
despite the pain splitting me open in front of the whole pack—
I still wanted him.
Pathetic.
Human.
Wolf.
Mine.
Damien’s wolf pushed violently to the surface again. His eyes flashed brighter, and a snarl tore from his throat before he could stop it.
Mine answered instantly.
The bond jerked between us.
Not broken.
Damaged.
Bleeding.
But not gone.
The realization flashed across Damien’s face the exact second I felt it.
Horror.
Because the council noticed too.
An elder stood abruptly, chair scraping against stone.
“Impossible.”
Another elder whispered something under his breath and took a step back from me.
Not with disgust.
With fear.
Like he was seeing a ghost.
Alpha Marcus rose slowly from his chair.
“What did you do?”
I laughed once, breathless and broken. “Me?”
The fire bent again.
This time every flame in the hearth turned silver.
The council hall erupted.
Wolves shouted. Someone screamed. My mother tried to push toward me, but two guards grabbed her arms.
Damien stepped toward me.
The council stepped toward him.
And then—
The lights exploded.
Every window in the hall shattered inward at once.
Rain and glass burst through the room like the mountain itself had thrown a fist.
Wolves roared.
People screamed.
The floor beneath my feet pulsed.
Once.
Twice.
Like a heartbeat waking under the stone.
Silver light crawled across my veins.
I looked down at my hands and stopped breathing.
Across the chaos, Damien stared at me like his worst nightmare had just come true.
And through the destruction, through the rain, through the screams of the pack that had watched me break, I heard one terrified voice whisper:
“The heir has awakened.”
My Queen “My queen.” The words did not sound like a greeting. They sounded like a claim. The ruined entry hall went so still I could hear water dripping from the broken ceiling into a puddle near my boots. One drop. Then another. Then another. Damien stepped forward. A growl rolled from his chest, low enough to make the floor tremble. “Call her that again.” The silver-eyed man looked at him. Not annoyed. Not threatened. Barely interested. “Thorncroft.” Just the name. Nothing more. Still, Damien reacted like he had been struck. His shoulders locked. The bond snapped tight between us. Anger. Recognition. A flash of something inherited and old. I looked at him. “You know him?” Damien’s mouth tightened. “No.” The journal opened. BLOOD KNOWS BLOOD. I slowly turned my head toward him. “Try again.” Damien’s jaw flexed. Kael moved closer, blade angled downward but ready. His face had gone sharp in a way I had not seen before. The new man smiled faintly at Kael.
The Storm Goes SilentThe Hollow King roared.This time, the sound did not come from below the house.It came from everywhere.The mountain.The woods.The road.The sky.It rolled over Black Hollow like a living thing and shook every broken board in Frost Ridge.The rogues screamed.Not in pain.In answer.The house lurched beneath us.Damien rose from one knee and staggered slightly.I caught his arm.He looked at my hand.Then at me.Neither of us moved away.Not yet.The bond still burned from what he had done.Chosen to kneel.Chosen to make an old oath his own.Chosen to give me something that was not possession, not command, not apology.Trust.I hated how badly that mattered.Outside, the rogues scrambled backward from the porch.One by one, they vanished into the trees.Not fleeing.Repositioning.That was worse.Kael stepped into the entry hall, silver blade still in his hand. “He felt that.”“The king?” I asked.“Yes.”“What exactly did he feel?”Kael’s gaze moved to Damien
On His KneesThe storm was kneeling.That made no sense.Rain could not kneel.Wind could not bow.Clouds did not lower their heads in respect to girls who had spent the last six years trying to avoid hometown trauma and emotionally unavailable alphas.And yet, outside Frost Ridge, the rain hung still in the air.Thousands of silver drops suspended beyond the shattered windows, catching moonlight that had not been there a moment ago.The rogues lay flat in the mud.The trees had gone still.Even the house held its breath.The only thing moving was the bond.It pulsed between Damien and me like a second heartbeat.Gold.Silver.Wound.Oath.Want.Choice.I looked at Damien.He stood in front of me, bloody and rigid, trying to turn his body into a wall between me and every ancient thing that wanted a piece of me.Typical.Infuriating.Almost sweet.The floor beneath him glowed.He looked down.So did I.The crown-and-claw symbol burned silver beneath his feet.Then the claws vanished.O
The Bond BurnsAgain.The whisper rose from beneath the floorboards like smoke.Soft.Hungry.Pleased.Damien stepped farther away from me.I hated that I noticed.I hated that part of me wanted to grab his shirt and drag him back.The bond between us burned.Not like before.Before, it had been raw. Damaged. A torn thread pulling at scar tissue.Now it felt alive.Too alive.Gold heat twisted with silver light, wrapping around something inside me that had not been awake a few minutes ago. My wolf paced beneath my skin, but she was not alone anymore.Something stood behind her.Tall.Still.Crowned in branches and flame.I pressed a hand to my chest.“What did we do?”Damien’s face had gone pale. “I don’t know.”The house groaned.Kael stepped through the ruined doorway, rain dripping from his black coat. His silver eyes moved from Damien’s mouth to mine.Then to the floor.Then back to me.His expression hardened.“You fed it.”Damien turned on him with a snarl. “Careful.”Kael did n
The Kiss That Broke Six YearsThe floor split open beneath us.Not wide.Not enough to swallow the whole room.Just enough to remind me Frost Ridge could still change its mind.Damien grabbed me around the waist and hauled me back against him as the crack tore through the entry hall, silver light spilling upward from somewhere below.I hit his chest hard.The air left my lungs.His arms locked around me.Outside, Kael shouted something in a language I did not know.The house answered with a groan.The mountain answered with another roar.Apparently everyone had opinions.Damien’s breath was hot against my ear.“Hold still.”I would have laughed if my heart had not been trying to claw out of my chest.“Excellent plan. Very heroic. What’s step two?”“Survive.”“Love the ambition.”The crack widened.A blast of cold air rushed up from below, smelling like wet stone, old blood, and something rotten beneath snow.The journal slid across the floor toward the opening.“No!”I lunged for it.
I Hated Missing YouThe one that made her leave.The words moved through the broken house and found every wound in me.For a second, no one spoke.Not Damien.Not Kael.Not me.Even the rain seemed quieter.I stared at Damien through dust and silver light and six years of everything we had never said.“The one that made me leave?” I repeated.Damien’s throat moved.The alpha of Black Hollow looked away first.That told me enough.“No,” I said softly. “Look at me.”His eyes came back to mine.Gold.Tired.Guilty.Still beautiful enough to make me angry.“What truth?”Kael shifted near the doorway.Damien’s gaze cut to him. “Leave.”Kael raised one brow.“I served queens before your bloodline learned to crawl. You do not command me.”Damien’s claws slid out.The journal snapped open.TRUTH. NOT TEETH.I almost laughed.Almost.“Even the book is tired of both of you.”Kael’s mouth twitched.Damien’s did not.But his claws retracted.Progress.Tiny.Exhausting.I looked at Kael. “Give us
Tell Me to StopThe silver chain tightened around Damien’s ankle.He caught the bedpost before it could pull him off his feet.
The House Is ListeningThe laugh came from beneath the bed.Soft.Low.Wrong.
Do Not Let Them Find HerMy name was carved into the journal.Not written.Carved.Like whoever made it
Don’t Say My NameMy mother’s voice came from upstairs.“Lena?”Soft.Frightened.







