LOGINMy wedding veil choked me with each second that passed.
My one-night stand was my husband?
Here, right before me, standing at the altar with about a hundred people as witnesses, he appeared less dangerous than he did yesterday. It was clear now that this man belonged in the better parts of town and not in a tavern. Never in a tavern.
My hands would not stop shaking. Pain throbbed behind my eyes. My knees buckled. And yet, I still stood in place, staring at the man that would be my husband in the next few minutes.
He was so kind yesterday. Kinder than I would have normally expected with the kind of crazy plan I had. This was good. By some weird way of the fates, I had landed in the hands of a good prisoner.
The priest’s words blurred together, and I only shifted my attention away from my new prisoner when I was prompted to say, “I do.”
Perhaps only a fickle moment in time went by before the priest announced, “You may now kiss the bride.”
It could have been the myriad of feelings that were swarming through me then, but I could swear that the world stilled for us. A gust of warm air hit my face as Lord Aubrey lifted my veil, and I took a deep breath as I really gazed at him for the first time today.
He stood taller than me, just like before, and his black hair fell in strands, shaping his face well. My eyes then fell to his rosy pink lips, and I couldn't help but notice how they were in a tight straight line. He didn’t smile. His eyes didn’t hold the warmth they did last night. He just stood and looked at me… like I was another task to wipe off of his to-do list.
Without warning, he leaned down. Memories from last night played before me. The way he asked for permission before he kissed me. The way he demanded control and yet guided me at the same time. The way he looked at me as though I were more than a crazy stranger.
Our lips touched, and I was forcefully brought back to reality. There was nothing in this kiss. It was brief. Emotionless. Cold.
Cheers erupted from the crowd, but it all felt like noise. Noise that I felt like I desperately needed to escape from.
Luckily for me, we didn’t stay there too long, and soon we were out of the cathedral.
My parents might as well have been the happiest they had been in years, and they had every right to be by their books. They had just traded one of their daughters for a finer position in society.
So that was it? Trade off one daughter and forget that the other one ever existed.
The need to escape everyone gnawed at me even harder. I needed to escape. But look where that landed me earlier?
“Mrs. Aubrey, your mother asked that I escort you to the carriage,” a sharp voice pulled me out of my misery, and when I turned to find its owner, my eyes met a woman about my age. I recognized her. She was Thelma, Ophelia’s favorite maid.
Seeing her hurt more than the wedding.
With a single nod, I allowed her to lead me to the carriage that was supposed to lead me to my new world. It appeared even finer than the carriage I had used in getting here. The cushions were a soft velvet and even the air smelled sweet. Of course a man like him owned something like this.
Getting in, I held my breath and waited for my husband to join me.
What I didn’t expect was for Thelma to get in behind me and shut the carriage doors.
My fingers tingled and my ears rang. Before I could even utter a word, Thelma reached into her petticoat and brought forward a piece of paper.
“What is this, Thelma?” I asked, my voice heavy.
The calm expression she wore earlier shifted to one of panic in an instant. “It’s from your sister. She wanted me to tell you she is safe and that she is sorry about all of this… and for everything. She explains everything in this letter,” she told me, before shoving the paper in my hands.
All of Thelma’s words brushed over me, but not without each one digging cuts of betrayal into my skin. The tears I had been holding back began to resurface, and I could hardly seem to hold myself together anymore.
“She had been planning this for a long time now, hadn’t she? And she didn’t bother to tell me, but she could tell you… and she just left without so much as a g-good bye?” The words fell out of my mouth in a frenzy as my voice varied in pitch.
Thelma shook her head. “That’s far from it. Just read the letter and then you’d understand… be careful, Lady Quinn.”
Before I could open my mouth for more argument, Thelma basically ran out of the carriage, locking the door behind her.
Yet, I was still so full of this pent-up rage, sorrow, and all-around confusion, and I had absolutely nothing else to do with it other than open the letter, and so I did.
It read:
Dear Quinn,
I’m sorry.
I know you must hate me right now, and you have every right to. But if I stayed, they would have buried me in silk and called it a wedding.
I found Father’s ledgers a month ago. The payments. The names. The symbols written in red.
We aren’t rich because of trade. We were never rich on our own. We’re rich because of them and they aren’t men, Quinn.
They wear skin like costumes during the day. At night… they aren’t human. I heard one of them outside Father’s study. The sound it made didn’t belong to anything God created.
And our family made a deal with them centuries ago and now they have come to take a daughter in exchange for gold.
It’s happened before us. It will happen after us.
I was supposed to be next.
That’s why I pushed you to live a little. To have something before they locked you into a cage like they planned for me. I wish I could have told you sooner, but they were watching me and I hate myself for leaving you like this.
I am so so sorry
Mother doesn’t care whether we love or breathe or beg. Only that the pact is honored.
So I ran.
Call me selfish. Call me a coward because that is what I am. I didn’t want to die.
And if they chose you instead… again, I am so, so sorry.
If the man you marry feels wrong, if he looks at you too long, don’t let him smell your fear, and don’t let yourself trust him.
And Quinn?
If you ever get the chance to run. Run!
Love you always,
Ophelia.
My heart thundered against my chest.
I slept with a monster last night?
I had just married a monster?
My parents had sold their souls?!
Air wouldn’t reach my lungs. Black spots danced at the edge of my visions. I could have sworn that I was ready to meet my maker.
The doors of the carriage flew open, and on instinct, I hid Ophelia’s letter behind me. I guess speed was magically granted to me when it was a matter of life or death.
Dark brown eyes regarded me up and down, and my heart found a new reason to throw a fit. “I know what you are.” My mouth was faster than my head.
“Funny,” Lord Aubrey said softly. “You didn’t seem afraid when you begged to share my bed last night.”
My hands trembled around the edge of the table even though I tried to keep them steady.Breakfast was more tense than usual.This morning the air felt thicker than usual, charged with the lie Iris was about to tell and the truth I was terrified Frank would see through. My shoulders curved inward as I lowered myself into my chair, hoping I portrayed the very picture of a frail Feywin carrying a precious bloodline. Every movement I made, I thought twice about. I felt Frank’s eyes on me from the moment I entered the dining room. They were heavy, assessing and hungry. I did not dare look at him. One glance and I knew I could shatter the fragile performance we had built the night before.The chair scraped against the floor as I sat. The sound was too loud in my ears. My hand drifted to my stomach as if the weight of what I carried already exhausted me. I kept my eyes down, focusing on the bread in front of me. Then I coughed a single, controlled cough into my napkin, slightly wet, slightly
My heart wouldn’t stop hammering.It slammed against my ribs like it wanted to crack them open and spill everything ugly inside me onto the cold stone floor. Ophelia. Ophelia. Ophelia. The name kept repeating like a vicious loop that wouldn’t let go. No matter how much she hurt me by betraying me and running and leaving me to rot in this monster’s den, the bond between us still existed. She was my only sister and the only person in my family that at least tried to treat me like family.I could hate her for abandoning me to this monster world and Frank’s madness, but I could not — would not — let her fall into his hands.Because I knew what that meant.It would be worse than death.I couldn’t breathe properly. My nightgown clung to my skin, damp with cold sweat born of pure terror. My bare feet slapped against the stone as I ran, platinum hair wild and tangled down my back. I looked like a madwoman. I felt like one. But I kept moving, lungs burning, legs shaking, heart screaming her
The more I stayed in monster world, the more it felt like I was adapting to its ways and its people.Perhaps I had gone mad.I woke to the familiar weight of Lewison’s bed and the absence of his body beside me. The sheets on his side were still warm, the indentation where he had lain still visible. I lay there for a moment, staring at the ceiling, noticing the small aches in my body without letting myself examine why they felt different this morning. Dare I even say, safer or more familiar.Sitting up, I found the tonic Iris had given me earlier along with a small note.Hope it helped.-AubreyMy finger went up to my forehead involuntarily. I could still feel the oil from the tonic. He must have put it on me while I slept. A blush crept up to my cheeks before I could stop it.This means nothing. I am only his breeder. I repeated the words in my head again and again until I heard the door budge.Immediately, I hid the letter.Maids filed in shortly after carrying that undercurrent of e
The silence after Dorian faded felt heavier than the ghost himself.I watched the last traces of unnatural cold leave the back of my neck. The air normalized against my arms. He had delivered what was needed and left like always.Lewison kept staring at the empty space where his brother had stood. His hands remained clenched into hard fists, knuckles pale. The proof of Dorian’s presence had hit him squarely, cracking the mask wide enough for me to see the fracture underneath. Iris watched him with lightly squinted eyes and a chin pointed upwards.No one spoke for several long heartbeats. I could hear my own pulse in my ears.Lewison’s mouth moved. Once. Twice. His gaze stayed fixed on that empty shelf as if willing his brother back into existence.“Dorian…” The name came out rough, almost broken. “If you can hear me… the things I never got to say—”The unfinished sentence hung in the air, raw and heavy with years of unsaid words. All directed at nothing but empty air and old books.I
Perhaps I had truly gone mad, because one of the things my body refused to acclimatize to was seeing Lewison’s face fracture before me.On pure instinct, I took a step back, not knowing if a mini war was going to break out next.He simply stood there, mouth slightly open, jaw working as if trying to form words that refused to come. The heavy shelves rose around us like silent judges. The air smelled of old parchment and wax.Lewison did not explode contrary to how I played this out in my head. He did not demand explanations or call anyone mad. He simply stood there as though he were trying to find a way to put his mask back on. My eyes refused to leave him and in some ways I was beginning to feel like I learned to read him in the same way he could read me. The fractional tightening at the corner of his eye. The way his fingers stayed perfectly motionless at his sides as though moving might betray him. This was not the usual statuesque Lewison. And it terrified me in a way Frank’s th
Endless abuse was the secret to getting supernatural powers, it seemed.The herbal drink had gone cold in my hands, but I kept my fingers wrapped around the cup anyway. It gave me something solid to hold while I pondered on everything Iris just shared with me.I stared at the floor for a long moment, then looked up at her.“There is more,” I finally let out, hoping it gave me some sort of direction because at the moment I saw none.Iris’s now cold eyes didn’t shift, but I saw the shift in her posture. The grieving woman receded. The strategist had returned.I told her everything.The way Dorian had appeared in Lewison’s chambers after Frank dragged him away. The cold that came with him. The silent words I had read on his lips. Trip. Danger. The slicing motion across his throat. Frank. And the final piece that had destroyed the little bond Lewison and I had managed to grow.“If he refuses, mention his mother. That was the last thing he told me.”Iris listened without interrupting. When
The pages kept turning like a countdown to my inevitable ruin.I sat hunched at the small table in the corner of the SouthPoint Pack library, watching Iris flip through the ancient ledger with growing dread. Every rustle of the dusty, old parchment made my stomach twist. Three weeks. Maybe a month.
I shouldn’t have seen it.And yet I couldn’t unsee it.It was unbelievable. Unreal. And yet it was very much real.My lungs wouldn’t work properly until we were in the carriage. Then the air came in ragged gasps, too fast, too shallow. My chest heaved. My hands shook.I blinked once, only to find I
My back was flat against cold metal, and the sharp, bitter scent of crushed herbs filled my nose—mint, something sour, something medicinal.The difference was that this time, I wasn't forced to have my legs spread-eagled while wrinkled hands I still tried not to remember violated me. Instead, Iris
Werewolves weren’t real until I was to marry one.And ghosts were a thing of the imagination until I was informed that my brother-in-law was one.Dark eyes that reminded me a little too much of Lewison followed my every movement at breakfast. It was when I noticed the blond hair this person carrie







