LOGIN“Her.” One word. That’s all it took for Alpha Cain Voss to destroy what was left of Wren Ashford’s life. Five years ago, Wren watched her pack burn. She was sixteen, covered in her mother’s blood, and the wolves who slaughtered her family let her live—but only as a servant. For five years, she’s scrubbed their floors, taken their beatings, and plotted her escape. Three more weeks. That’s all she needed. Then he came. Cain Voss is the most brutal Alpha in the region—a wolf forged in blood and fire who has never shown mercy. When he arrives to claim a tribute bride, every woman in the pack trembles. But Cain doesn’t want beauty. He doesn’t want submission. He wants Wren—because she’s the last living descendant of the ancient healers, and his sister is dying. He doesn’t explain. He doesn’t ask. He just takes. But there’s something Cain doesn’t know: Wren’s healing gift only works when she cares. And right now, the only thing she feels is hate. She plans to let his sister die—her revenge on every wolf who has ever taken from her. But as Cain’s cold exterior begins to crack, revealing scars that mirror her own, Wren realizes the monster who caged her might be the only one who truly understands her. And the Alpha who destroyed her pack? He’s still out there. He knows what Wren is. And he’s coming for her. She was his prisoner. Then his weapon. Now she might be his salvation—if she doesn’t destroy them both first.
View More"Get up, runt. The hall won't scrub itself."
The boot connected with Wren's ribs before she was fully conscious — a sharp, practiced blow that told her exactly what kind of morning this would be. She didn't gasp. She'd learned not to gasp. Instead she rolled to her knees on the cold stone floor, pressed one hand flat against the wall for balance, and breathed through it: four counts in, four counts out, the way she'd trained herself in the first weeks of captivity when every morning brought new reasons to make noise. She didn't make noise anymore. Mara stood over her with her arms crossed and her lip already curling — a large woman with iron-grey hair and eyes the colour of old bruises. Head omega of the Blood Moon pack. Wren's personal architect of misery for the past five years. "I said get up." "I'm up," Wren said, and stood. Mara surveyed her the way she always did — that slow, contemptuous sweep from bare feet to unwashed hair, cataloguing every flaw with the satisfaction of someone who had worked hard to create them. Wren let her look. She'd learned that too. Let them see nothing. Let them see a ghost. "The Alpha wants the great hall in order before midday." Mara's voice was crisp with authority. "Every surface. Every floor. And someone's let the dogs in again, so you'll start with the kennels." Wren nodded. "Yes, ma'am." "I also want the east corridor — the windows, not just the sills, the actual glass — and the kitchen stores inventoried before supper. Don't think I don't know you left three shelves uncounted last week." She hadn't. She'd counted every shelf with the quiet, meticulous attention she brought to everything now, because attention was the only tool she had left. But correcting Mara cost calories she couldn't spare, so Wren nodded again and said nothing. Mara left. The door — a warped plank that didn't quite meet the frame — swung shut, and Wren was alone in the room that had been her world for five years. It was barely a room at all. More of an afterthought: a space tucked behind the pack house boiler room, windowless and perpetually damp, just large enough for a sleeping mat and a wooden crate she used as a table. No mirror. No chair. The smell of mildew had been so constant for so long that she no longer noticed it, which she considered either an adaptation or a defeat, depending on her mood. She dressed in the near-dark, her fingers finding the buttons by memory. Her hands were always raw, always slightly cracked at the knuckles from the cleaning compounds Mara preferred. She paused over the small loose stone in the wall behind her mat. Pressed her fingers against it. Counted the familiar shape. Behind that stone was a tin. Inside the tin was forty-seven dollars in crumpled bills, a hand-drawn map of the supply route to the nearest human town, and a list of guard rotations she'd been memorising for two years. Three more weeks. The supply run to Harrow's Crossing happened on the first of every month. The drivers stopped at the Painted Dog bar for exactly two hours — she'd confirmed this three separate times. Two hours was enough. Long enough to slip out, long enough to get to the highway, long enough to flag down a vehicle and disappear into the human world, where wolves couldn't follow without drawing attention they couldn't afford. Three more weeks. She just had to survive three more weeks. She moved the stone back into place and went to clean the kennels. ❖ ❖ ❖ The news broke at midday, spreading through the pack house like smoke under a door. Wren heard it first from the kitchen omegas — a burst of urgent whispers she caught while returning the mop bucket, snatches of conversation that made her slow her steps. "— confirmed this morning, Kaine got word by runner —" "— which one? There's more than one Voss —" "There's only one Cain Voss, you fool. The Butcher of Black Hollow. He's coming here." The bucket slipped in Wren's grip. She tightened her hands and kept moving. She'd heard of Cain Voss. Everyone had. He was the kind of name that got lowered voices and cut-off sentences. They said he'd killed his first man at twelve. They said he'd fought his own father for the Alpha title at seventeen and won by taking his father's throat. They said he kept the teeth of defeated enemies and wore them on a cord around his neck, which was probably an exaggeration, but the fact that no one laughed when they said it told Wren everything she needed to know. The more important detail, which she extracted over the next hour by moving slowly through corridors where people were talking, was this: Cain Voss was coming to the Blood Moon pack to select a tribute bride. The custom was an old one — a formal alliance mechanism between packs of significantly different standing, where the lesser pack offered an unmated female as a gesture of goodwill and fealty. It was, in practical terms, exactly what it sounded like: one pack handing over a woman to another. Wren had seen it happen once before, when she was new to Blood Moon and too stunned with grief to process much of anything. A girl from a rival family, well-dressed and publicly honoured, packed into a car with strangers. She'd thought herself lucky not to qualify for such a thing. She was a servant. A nobody. Less than nobody — she was an Ashford, which in most wolf circles meant she was the last remnant of a line that had been deliberately and violently erased. No Alpha would look at her. By the time she reached the great hall to begin her afternoon duties, every unmated female in the pack with any standing had already started considering her best dress. Mara's daughter Lydia — nineteen and beautiful in the way of someone who had never missed a meal — was being ushered upstairs by three attendants. The energy in the hall was high and nervous, halfway between excitement and dread. Wren picked up a rag and started on the window sills. Nobody looked at her. Nobody ever looked at her. And in three more weeks, she would be gone. ❖ ❖ ❖ The great hall was ready by late afternoon: floors swept and scrubbed, long tables polished to a low shine, the fire banked high against the autumn chill. Pack members had been filtering in for an hour, the unmated females arranged along the walls with the careful staging of people who knew they were being evaluated. Wren positioned herself at the back, near the servants' entrance, and made herself small. The doors at the far end swung open. He walked in the way the stories had suggested he would — not like a man entering a room, but like a weather front moving in. Tall, broad-shouldered, built with the density of something forged rather than grown. Dark hair. A jaw like a blade. He wore no visible weapons but moved with the absolute assurance of someone who had never needed them. Two warriors flanked him, large men themselves, made to look ordinary by the simple fact of being near him. The hall went very quiet. Cain Voss's eyes were pale grey — almost silver in the firelight — and they swept the room the way a hawk surveys open ground: thoroughly, systematically, without any trace of warmth. He didn't acknowledge Alpha Kaine's welcome. He didn't smile at the assembled women. He walked to the center of the hall and stopped, and his gaze began to move. Wren pressed herself further into the shadow by the servants' door. Alpha Kaine presented his candidates one by one. His beta's daughter, red-haired and proud. The Garrison twins, each more carefully dressed than the other. Wren watched Cain's face across the hall and saw exactly nothing — no interest, no reaction, just that same flat, assessing attention that dismissed each woman the moment it finished with her. "No," he said. And again: "No." And again. Kaine's smile was getting thinner with each rejection. His jaw worked between presentations. She could see the political calculation in his eyes — the cost of a refusal, the embarrassment of having offered his best and had them all turned down by a wolf who hadn't even had the grace to seem interested. She counted the women remaining. Counted the exits. Counted the minutes until she could reasonably slip out under the cover of the commotion. That was when he looked at her. She felt it before she registered it — some animal awareness, the back of her neck prickling, the sudden certainty of being watched by something at the top of a food chain. She looked up before she thought to stop herself, and those silver eyes were already there, fixed on her face with an attention that was entirely different from the absent, dismissive look he'd given everyone else. This look was intent. This look was recognition. Wren's heart stopped. She made herself look away. Made herself study the floor. Made herself breathe. When she looked up again, he was moving. The crowd parted before him without anyone appearing to mean it. She watched his path and understood with cold clarity where it was going to end. He stopped three feet from her. This close, the stories felt inadequate. She could see the network of old scars crossing his jaw and throat. She could see the steadiness of his hands. She could see — and this was the detail that frightened her most — that he wasn't looking at her like a woman he'd decided to take. He was looking at her like something he'd been searching for. "What's your name?" he asked. His voice was low and rough, the kind of voice that had given a great many orders and expected all of them to be obeyed. "That's no one," Kaine said quickly, materialising at Cain's elbow with his oily smile already deployed. "A servant, Alpha, surely beneath your consideration. If you'd like to reconsider the Garrison girl —" "I asked her." Two words. Kaine stopped speaking mid-sentence. Wren's mouth had gone dry. Her mind was already running calculations — the exit was twelve feet behind her, but his warriors had shifted positions, and the door was almost certainly guarded. She thought of the tin behind the stone. She thought of forty-seven dollars and a hand-drawn map and three more weeks. She thought: this is the end of that plan. "Wren," she said. "Wren Ashford." Something moved in his silver eyes. Not surprise — he wasn't surprised, she would be certain of this later. Something more like confirmation. The click of a door finding its lock. "Ashford," he repeated. The word hung between them with a weight she didn't entirely understand. Then: "She'll do." The hall erupted. Kaine's protests rose over the noise. Wren heard Mara's voice somewhere behind her, high with fury. She heard a dozen whispered conversations detonate at once. She heard Lydia's attendant say something with the outrage of someone whose ambitions had just been publicly discarded. She heard none of it clearly. Because Cain Voss had already turned away, dismissing the chaos the way a stone dismisses weather, and as he moved back toward the doors, he paused — just for a moment, just at the threshold — and looked back at her over his shoulder. His expression was unreadable. But his eyes, for just a fraction of a second, were not the eyes of a wolf who had made a political selection. They were the eyes of someone who had found exactly what he was looking for. And Wren, standing in the ruins of her escape plan, felt the bottom drop out of her carefully constructed world — because if he'd known her name before she said it, if that flicker had been recognition rather than surprise, then Cain Voss hadn't come to Blood Moon for a tribute bride at all. He had come for her specifically. The question that followed her out of the hall and into the cold corridor, the question she turned over through the rest of that terrible night, was the one she didn't yet have the information to answer: How long had he been looking?Elara learned to sit up in her fifth month.Not all at once—in stages, the incremental mastery of a new configuration of her own body. First the supported sitting, with a hand behind her, and then the leaning, and then the brief unsupported moments that ended in a topple that she regarded with philosophical interest rather than distress. By the end of the week she was sitting for several minutes at a time, occupying herself with whatever was within reach, with the specific focused attention of someone who had recently discovered that the world contained things and was still cataloguing them.Wren sat on the floor with her and watched her catalogue.She had been doing a great deal of this. Sitting on the floor, specifically—she had found that the floor was the right height for a child who was not yet standing, that meeting the child in the child's actual space rather than pulling the child up to the adult's space produced a different quality of interaction. Elara regarded
She had the full conversation over three days.Not three days of continuous conversation—three days of returning to it, in the spaces between Elara's rhythms, in the specific time that new parenthood created between the sleeping and the feeding and the particular kind of stillness that settled over a house when both the child and the other parent were asleep and she was the one still awake, thinking.The argument for accepting was simple: power given to someone who would use it well was power worth having. The High Healer seat would allow direct intervention in Council decisions at the moment they were being made rather than in the aftermath. It would formalize what had been informal—the healer network's political influence—in ways that made it more durable and more resistant to being dismantled by whoever came next.She was good at this. She had been doing it for two years. She had demonstrated she could do it.The argument against accepting was also simple: Elara w
Elara ate constantly.This was, Maret had assured her, correct and expected and the sign of a healthy child who was growing at the rate healthy children grew. Wren knew this. She had read about it and she had been told about it and she had, in the abstract, understood that a newborn's primary occupation was feeding.The abstract had been insufficient preparation for the reality.The reality was: Elara ate, and then Elara slept, and then Elara ate again, and the intervals between these two activities were shorter than Wren had imagined and the activities themselves were longer, and the net effect was that Wren's experience of the first three weeks was organized almost entirely around the rhythm of a small person who had no knowledge of schedules and no interest in developing any.She loved it.This surprised her. She had expected to love Elara—that part she had anticipated, had understood theoretically that the bond between a mother and child would be significant and real. She had not
Labor started at three in the morning on the fourteenth of April.She had been expecting it for two weeks—had been in the specific late-pregnancy state of constant awareness, the body's increasing impatience with itself, the gift reading the child's state several times a day in the involuntary way it had developed as the pregnancy progressed. She had known it was close. She had not known it would start at three in the morning.She lay in the dark for twenty minutes, timing, confirming.Then she woke Cain.He went from asleep to fully present in approximately two seconds, which was the Alpha's specific capacity and had startled her the first dozen times she had seen it and no longer did. He read her face. He understood."Now," he said."Now," she confirmed.He was already reaching for his clothes. She watched him move with the specific controlled urgency of a wolf who has been planning for exactly this moment and is now executing the plan—the calm that was
The days that followed blurred together in a frenzy of preparation.Black Hollow transformed from a peaceful village into a fortress. Defenses were rebuilt and reinforced with new walls, new trenches, new obstacles designed to slow an invading force. Patrol schedules were rewritten from
"Again."Wren pushed herself up from the hard-packed dirt, her arms shaking with exhaustion. Every muscle in her body screamed in protest, begging for rest, for mercy, for just one moment without pain. Sweat dripped into her eyes, blurring her vision and stinging like fire. Her lungs burned with ea
"Enough."Cain's voice cut through the tension like a blade through silk. He stood at the end of the hallway, silver eyes blazing with cold fury. His presence filled the space, commanding and absolute, leaving no room for defiance.The widow's hand dropped to her side. Her body trembled, but not wi
"Hold steady."Cain's voice cut through the wind like a blade. Sharp. Final. The kind of voice that made wolves straighten their spines and soldiers check their weapons.Wren gripped the saddle harder. Her fingers were white from holding on so tight. Her back hurt from sitting for so many hours. He












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