LOGINClaus's POV The boardroom of Brooks Enterprises didn’t smell like the future; it smelled like dust, old parchment, and the stagnant breath of dying men.
I sat at the head of the mahogany table, watching the Pack Elders bicker. They were relics, their graying furs and trembling hands a testament to a world that was supposed to be mine. Across from me, an empty chair mocked me—the seat that belonged to my father, Raymond, who was too busy coughing up his lungs in a darkened room to defend his son’s birthright. "The shift is undeniable," Elder Hakan wheezed, tapping a gnarled finger on a high-resolution photo of Zelda’s neck. "The mark left by Bane Blackwood isn't a mere bite. It’s glowing, silver-rimmed. The Moon Goddess herself has reached down and rewritten the bond." I forced a smile, the kind of polished, charismatic expression I’d practiced in mirrors since I was twelve. Inside, I wanted to tear Hakan’s throat out. "The Moon Goddess is fickle, Hakan," I said, my voice smooth as aged bourbon. "Zelda was under duress. Bane is a predator; he used his position and his... illegitimate charms to confuse her. A bond shift? Or a sophisticated forgery of the soul?" "It cannot be forged, Claus," another elder countered. "The shimmer in her womb—the reports from the medical staff—it’s Brine blood. If she bears Bane’s child before you produce an heir, the Alpha title bypasses you entirely. It is the law of the First Blood." I leaned back, steepled my fingers, and let the silence hang. I needed them to feel my 'stability' even as my world was burning. "Then I suppose I’ll just have to ensure my heir arrives first." I returned to my suite, the rage finally bubbling beneath the surface. I slammed the door so hard the crystal decanters on my bar rattled. Zelda. My sweet, pliable, infertile Zelda. I had spent years grooming her, pampering her into a state of emotional paralysis so she would never look at another man. And in one night, she had crawled into the bed of the one man I hated more than death itself. A soft knock at the door made my jaw lock. "Get out," I snarled. The door creaked open anyway. Freya stepped in, her eyes red-rimmed, her hair a mess of blonde tangles. She looked frantic, a far cry from the sleek, composed assistant I used for my more... carnal distractions. "Claus, we need to talk," she sobbed. "I heard what they said at the meeting. You’re going after her, aren't you? You’re going to try and bring Zelda back." I turned, my eyes narrowing. "She is the key to the throne, Freya. Don't be tedious. Pack your things; I have no use for a general’s sister who can’t keep her composure." "You’re choosing her!" Freya screamed, her voice hitting a shrill, hysterical note. "After everything? I’ve been the one by your side while you played house with that boring, empty-headed girl! If you want her so badly, then fine. I’ll go to the clinic. I’ll abort this child right now and you can have your precious Zelda back!" The word child hit me like a physical blow. I froze. My mind, usually a whirlwind of schemes, went deathly quiet. I looked at Freya. Her stomach wasn't showing yet, but the scent of her pheromones had changed. It was faint, buried under the smell of her cheap perfume, but it was there. The shock lasted only a second before the predator in me took over. I didn't see a woman I’d shared a bed with; I saw a biological loophole. I shifted my posture. The cold, lethal Alpha vanished. I softened my eyes, letting a look of profound realization wash over my face. I took two long strides toward her and gathered her into my arms. "Freya," I breathed into her hair, my voice a soothing, honeyed caress. "Oh, my sweet Freya. Why didn't you tell me?" She stiffened, her sobs turning into confused hiccups. "You... you were going to kick me out." "I was stressed," I lied, pulling back just enough to cup her face in my hands. I used my thumbs to brush away her tears, my touch as gentle as a summer breeze. "I was terrified of losing everything. But a child? Our child?" I let out a low, shaky laugh that sounded perfectly relieved. "Zelda was a duty, Freya. A burden I carried for the sake of the Pack. But you... you’re the one who has actually given me what I need. What I want." "You mean it?" she whispered, her greed beginning to eclipse her fear. I could see the wheels turning in her head—the title of Luna, the jewels, the power. "I will make you my Luna the moment that child draws breath," I promised, kissing her forehead with a reverence that made my stomach churn. "Zelda is nothing. A shadow. You are the future of the Brooks line." She melted against me, clutching my shirt. I looked over her shoulder at the wall, my expression turning into a mask of pure, unadulterated coldness. She was a peasant, a temporary vessel, but she was currently the only thing standing between me and the abyss. Once I had tucked Freya into bed with promises of a morning shopping spree, I stepped into the hallway. Paul, my Beta and Freya’s brother, was waiting in the shadows. He had heard everything. "She’s pregnant," Paul said, his voice grim. "I know," I replied, the sweetness gone from my voice. "But Bane’s pups are already growing. The 'High Alpha' bloodline matures faster. Even if Freya is a few weeks along, Zelda will deliver first. We’re still losing, Paul." Paul looked down the hallway to ensure his sister was asleep. He stepped closer, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "There are ways to tilt the scales, Claus. Old ways. Dangerous ways. My grandfather spoke of a lineage of practitioners who don't follow the Moon Goddess. They follow the Earth’s rot." I looked at him, my interest piqued. "Go on." "Magic that can accelerate a pregnancy," Paul said, his eyes darting nervously. "It forces the body to skip the months of waiting. The child is born in weeks, fully formed. But it requires a sacrifice. A tether to the bloodline." I thought of my father, Raymond. He was already dying. He was a weak Alpha, a man who had let his illegitimate brother walk all over him for decades. He was useless to me alive. "Where do we find this practitioner?" I asked. "The outskirts of the Grey Marsh," Paul said. "The Liminal Broker. But Claus... the price is never just gold." I didn't hesitate. I didn't feel a flicker of guilt or a moment of doubt. I only felt the burning, obsessive need to see Bane Blackwood stripped of his pride. "Get the car," I commanded. The Grey Marsh was a place where the modern world died. The air was thick with the smell of sulfur and decaying vegetation. We walked through the knee-deep fog until we reached a shack that looked like it was being swallowed by the earth. Inside, the Liminal Broker was a thing of nightmares—shriveled, ageless, and smelling of copper. She didn't look up as we entered. She was busy grinding something in a bowl made from a wolf’s skull. "I need a birth," I said, stepping into the dim light. "Fast. Before the next full moon." The Broker chuckled, a sound like dry leaves skittering on a grave. "A shortcut. You want to outrun the Goddess." She held out a withered hand. "The tether, little Alpha." I pulled a small, glass vial from my pocket. Inside, the blood was dark and sluggish. It was the blood I had drawn from my father’s arm while he slept under the influence of his pain medication. The blood of the first blood heir. "Ripen her womb," I said, my voice cracking like a whip. "I don't care what it takes. I don't care if the process burns her from the inside out. I want that child born before Bane's." The Broker took the vial, her eyes gleaming with a sickly yellow light. She poured the blood into the bowl and began to chant, a low, guttural sound that made the very shadows in the room writhe. I stood there, watching the dark magic take hold, a slow, predatory grin spreading across my face. Bane thought he had won because he had the girl and the fated bond. But he forgot one thing. I don't play by the rules of gods. I write my own. I stared at the bubbling blood in the bowl, my eyes wide and manic. "Find more witches," I whispered to Paul, even though she was right in front of us. "Find every dark thing in this world. Because by the time Zelda realizes what I've done, there won't be a world left for her to run to."Zelda's POV I whipped around to face him, my eyes scanning his features desperately to see if this was some twisted, dark joke. But Bane’s face was a wall of unyielding stone. There wasn't a single trace of amusement in the sharp, dangerous angles of his jaw."You..." I stuttered, my voice cracking under the weight of my disbelief. "Do you... do you actually mean that?"He didn't bother to answer. He simply gestured toward the massive, dark-timbered mattress. "Get on the bed."Something inside me snapped. The sheer, exhausting accumulation of the night's terror, Claus’s chilling phone call, the sound of bone-crushing violence over the receiver, the blood downstairs, and the brutal way Bane had just interrogated me, ignited into a flash of hot, defensive anger. He thought he could dominate me, terrify me until I was trembling, and then just command me into his bed for his own satisfaction?"Are you completely insane?" I demanded, my voice rising as I took a step back from him. "Why d
Zelda's POV "Zelda! Wait!" Mr. Thomas’s voice echoed through the cavernous barn, heavy with sudden, profound concern. I didn't listen. The world had shrunken down to the frantic, erratic beat of my own heartbeat and the echo of Claus’s voice whispering in my ear. I broke into a dead sprint, my boots churning up the wet mud of the lane as the downpour tore into me. The freezing rain blinded me, plastering my hair to my face, but the absolute terror consuming my mind acted as a compass, driving me back toward the house. I burst through the front door, gasping for air, the silence of the foyer a jarring contrast to the violence I had just heard over the receiver. My hands were shaking so violently I could barely function. I flew into the kitchen, my eyes locking onto the chef's knife I had abandoned earlier. I grabbed the handle, the cold steel providing a pathetic illusion of safety, and rushed back toward the front door. With my left hand, I unlocked my phone again, fran
Zelda's POV The echo of Claus’s voice was still vibrating like a parasite in my inner ear when a sharp, heavy knock rattled the front door.I jumped, a small, strangled gasp escaping my throat. My phone nearly slipped from my sweat-slicked fingers. For a fleeting, desperate second, I thought it might be Bane, that he had turned the car around, that he had realized leaving me alone was a mistake.But the hope died instantly. This was Bane’s house. He possessed the security codes, the keys, and the absolute alpha authority to walk through any threshold he owned. He had no reason to knock.The weight of Claus's threat, ‘I know exactly where you are,’ pressed down on my chest, turning my breathing into shallow, panicked hitches. I forced my trembling legs to move, slipping quietly into the kitchen. My eyes locked onto the wooden block on the counter. I gripped the handle of a heavy, forged steel chef’s knife, sliding it behind my back, hiding the blade against the fabric of my oversized
Bane's POVI sprinted to the car, but as I threw open the door, the car’s central console screen flickered to life, overriding my security. Claus’s face appeared on the digital display, a smug, manic grin pulling at his lips. "Looking for your vessel, Uncle? You're too late. She's currently having a drink with some of my father’s old 'creditors' down at the local watering hole. Let’s see how fast that Brine wolf can run when the floor is made of gasoline.”The dashboard console had gone black the moment Claus’s face vanished, leaving me in a suffocating silence broken only by the frantic beat of my own heart.‘The watering hole.’There was only one place in this backward village that fit the description, a dilapidated tavern on the western ridge called The Rusty Spur. It was a known gathering spot for the local laborers, a place where law was fluid and outsiders were viewed as meat. If Claus’s rogue creditors were there, if Zelda had been lured into their hands, I would turn that tav
Bane’s POV The rain began to fall the moment I crossed back into the neutral zone, streaking across the windshield of my car like grease. I pushed the engine hard, the headlights cutting dual paths through the dense, low-hanging fog of the countryside.I didn't head toward the glittering skyscrapers of Blackwood Corp. I couldn't risk the surveillance. Instead, I tore down a forgotten logging trail on the extreme northern edge of my territory, stopping where the canopy grew thick enough to swallow the vehicle whole.Killian, my Beta and the only man alive who carried my absolute trust, emerged from the shadows of an abandoned mill. He didn't look like a corporate executive today; he was dressed in damp tactical gear, his eyes constantly scanning the tree line.I stepped out of the car, the cool rain instantly soaking through my suit jacket. "Report.""The border patrol didn't flag your return, boss, but Claus’s enforcers are already crawling near our corporate parameters," Killian sa
Zelda's POV I scrambled backward, my bare heels skidding on the damp tiles. The sheer, primal weight of the air in the room shifted from suffocating heat to a terrifying, sub-zero chill. The dark look in Bane's eyes hadn't just deepened; it had weaponized. He was staring at me the way an apex predator stares at an encroaching enemy, someone or something he needed to eliminate swiftly and without mercy.I kept moving back, my heart hammering a frantic, erratic rhythm against my ribs, until the spine of my shoulder blades hit the cold, tiled wall. There was nowhere left to run. But he didn't stop. He kept coming closer, his towering, unclad frame cutting through the white vapor like an unholy apparition.As he stepped into my immediate space, the sheer panic in my chest gave way to a sudden, jarring realization. Something was fundamentally wrong. His piercing blue eyes weren't actually focused on me. His gaze was clouded, swimming with a dark, detached haze as if he were looking str
Claus’s POV The office was dimly lit, smelling of the expensive oak and the metallic tang of the ritual I had performed only hours prior. The door didn't just open; it was thrown back on its hinges. Paul stood there, his chest heaving, his eyes wide with a frantic energy."Claus," he gasped, his
Zelda's POV I gasped, ending the call abruptly. My heart hammered against my ribs like a frantic bird trapped in a cage. Start a war? That was exactly what I would be doing if I confessed my secret to Bane. The truth, raw and terrifying, threatened to overwhelm me. I was pregnant with his child,
Zelda's POV I bolted upright, a gasp catching in my throat. My head throbbed, a relentless drumbeat against my skull, mirroring the frantic rhythm of my heart. The room was unfamiliar, the scent of a masculine cologne heavy in the air. Then I saw him. Bane Blackwood. My mate’s uncle. The man w
Zelda's POV “Zelda, for the last time, you and Claus are healthy,” Doctor Ray stated, his voice a calm tide against the storm brewing inside me. “But if you continue taking unprescribed drugs and engaging in… intimate relations, it will affect you.” His words, usually a dull thrum in the backgro







