LOGINEYES OF THE ALPHA Synopsis Cindy has never existed outside of being watched. In a modern city where supernatural power is fueled by public attention, she has built her entire life on visibility. Her relationship with Kenny, a dominant alpha werewolf whose strength depends on fear and admiration, looks perfect from the outside. But behind closed doors it is controlled, suffocating, and slowly hollowing her out. Everything shifts when she meets Michael, a beta werewolf who exists completely outside the system she has devoted herself to. He cannot be impressed by her influence or moved by her performance. He sees straight through her and what unsettles her most is that she doesn't want him to stop looking. But wanting Michael means confronting everything she has refused to face. Kenny's grip on her identity. Her own addiction to validation. The difference between being desired and being loved. When Michael returns transformed into a hybrid alpha carrying power that breaks every rule of their world, the personal becomes catastrophic. Ancient vampire Dain arrives in the city not to rule the supernatural order but to destroy it entirely. He understands Cindy's psychology with a precision that feels less like perception and more like a weapon, and he is not subtle about using it. Caught between Kenny's possession, Michael's truth, and Dain's corruption, Cindy watches the system she built her worth on collapse around her. When the attention finally goes dark and no one is watching anymore, she is left with the only question that has ever mattered. Who is she underneath all of it? EYES OF THE ALPHA is an original dark romance novel exploring identity, emotional abuse, and what it truly costs a woman to choose herself. Rated 18+.
View MoreI know how to be watched.
That's the first thing you need to understand about me. Before Kenny. Before the supernatural world cracked open underneath my ordinary New York life like a fault line I never knew existed. Before I understood that the attention I'd spent my whole life performing for had a price I hadn't agreed to pay.
I know how to walk into a room and make people look. How to hold a conversation and make the other person feel like the most important thing in it while simultaneously making sure everyone around them notices me noticing them. How to dress and move and laugh at exactly the right volume. I grew up in New York. The city teaches you that visibility is survival before you're old enough to understand what either word means.
I just didn't know that for some people visibility was literally everything.
I didn't know that until Kenny.
It's been eight months since the night he told me the truth. Eight months of learning to navigate a world that exists underneath the one I thought I knew. Eight months of understanding that the city I grew up in has a whole other layer moving beneath it, ancient and hungry and organized around rules I'm still learning.
Eight months and I'm still not sure if knowing is a gift or a sentence.
But I'm getting ahead of myself.
Let me take you back to before. That night the fault line cracked open, and everything I thought was solid turned out to be superficial.
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It was February. One of those New York nights that gets inside your coat no matter how good your coat is. I'd been dating Kenny for three months, and I was already in deep in the way you get in deep with someone magnetic and slightly unknowable. He had that quality that certain men have of making you feel like being chosen by them means something. Like his attention was currency and you'd just been handed more than you could spend.
We were at his penthouse on the Upper East Side. Floor-to-ceiling windows. The city lay laid out below us like something he owned. Which, I was beginning to understand, was exactly how Kenny related to most things.
We'd had dinner. Wine. The particular charged silence that precedes either an argument or sex. I was leaning toward sex when he set down his glass and looked at me with an expression I hadn't seen before.
Careful. Measuring. Like he was making a decision.
"I need to show you something," he said.
"Okay," I said, because what else do you say?
He stood and walked to the center of the room, and something shifted. The air changed. I felt it before I saw it—a pressure change, like the moment before lightning. The hairs on my arms stood up, and I set down my own glass very carefully because my hands had started to feel unreliable.
Then Kenny changed.
Not completely. Not the dramatic Hollywood version I would have imagined if anyone had asked me to imagine it, which no one ever had because this wasn't something people imagined. It was subtler and more terrifying than that. His eyes changed first — deepening to something amber and luminous that had nothing to do with the warm brown I knew. His frame expanded slightly, shoulders broadening, presence intensifying until he filled the room in a way that had nothing to do with physical size.
The air around him hummed.
I stood up. Sat back down. Stood up again.
"What?" I said. My voice came out very small. "What are you?"
"Sit down, Cindy," he said, and his voice had changed too. Deeper. More resonant. The kind of voice that moves through you rather than just reaching you.
I sat down.
He told me everything.
Not kindly. Not gently. Kenny didn't do gentle—I already knew that. He told me the way he did everything, with the calm authority of a man delivering information he expected to be received without hysteria. Werewolves. Vampires. A supernatural hierarchy running underneath New York like a second city. Power structures and territories and ancient agreements that had been in place longer than the buildings above them.
And the attention system.
That part took the longest to explain because it was the most impossible and the most true.
In this world public attention is power. Literal, measurable, physical power. Fear generates it. Admiration generates it. Desire generates it. The more people watch you and talk about you and think about you, the stronger you become. Alphas like Kenny had built entire empires on this principle. Their strength wasn't just physical — it was social. Reputational. The moment people stopped watching, stopped fearing, stopped caring, the power began to drain.
"And me?" I asked when he finished. "Where do I fit into this?"
He looked at me with those amber eyes and said, "You're the most watched woman in every room you enter. You always have been. You just didn't know what it was worth."
I sat with that for a long time.
"You're using me," I said finally.
"I'm protecting you," he said. "There's a difference."
I wanted to argue that. I still want to argue that. Eight months later I'm still not sure which one of us was right.
What I know is that I didn't leave. I sat in his penthouse with the city glittering below us, and I let him pour me more wine, and I listened to him explain the rules of a world I hadn't consented to enter.
And somewhere underneath the fear and the shock and the completely rational voice in my head saying, "Cindy, get your coat and go," there was something else.
Something that recognized the attention his world ran on. Something that had been performing for exactly that kind of hunger its entire life without knowing it had a name.
I stayed.
That was my first mistake.
Or maybe it was the most honest thing I'd ever done.
I'm still not sure.
Kenny was already inside my apartment when I got home.Not the penthouse. Mine. The West Village apartment he paid for but never spent a night in. The one he didn't have a key to.Except apparently he did.He was sitting on my sofa in the dark with his coat still on and his hands clasped in front of him and his eyes full amber, and the sight of him there, in my space, my real space, the only place that had ever felt like mine, made something cold move through my chest."How did you get in?" I said."I own the building," he said simply.I stood in the doorway. "I didn't know that.""There are things you don't know," he said. "We're finding that out about each other tonight."The air in the apartment was thick with his power. I could feel it pressing against my skin the way it did when he was fully fed, except this wasn't satisfaction. This was something harder. Something with edges.I closed the door behind me and didn't move further into the room."Say what you came to say," I said."
Michael arrived in twelve minutes.I was still sitting at the same table when he walked through the door, and his eyes found me immediately, and something in his expression when he saw me made my chest tighten. Not the careful stillness I was used to. Something more urgent underneath it.He sat across from me where Dain had sat and looked at me like he was checking for damage."What did he say?" he asked."Everything you'd expect him to say," I said. "He was precise. He knew exactly where to push. "I looked at my hands. "He knew about the document."Michael's jaw tightened."He knew about you too," I said. "He said he'd observed you.""I know," Michael said quietly. "I felt it."I looked at him. "You felt him watching you?""Betas are sensitive to surveillance in ways alphas aren't," he said. "I've known he was in the city for three days." He paused. "I should have warned you sooner. I'm sorry."The apology landed simply and without performance, and I felt it the way I felt everything
He found me on a Wednesday afternoon.Not at a supernatural event. Not through Kenny's world or Michael's quiet brownstone or any of the spaces I'd learned to navigate over the past eight months. He found me at a coffee shop two blocks from my apartment, where I went every Wednesday at three pm because I was a creature of habit, and apparently that was information available to people who wanted it.I was sitting at my usual table by the window with my usual order going cold beside me and my phone face down on the table when someone sat across from me without asking.I looked up.He was not what I expected.I don't know what I'd imagined. Something dramatic maybe. Something that announced itself. Kenny's power announced itself. You felt it before he entered a room. Michael's stillness was immediately distinctive. I'd built Dain in my imagination as something you'd recognize immediately as dangerous.He looked ordinary.Late thirties maybe. Dark hair. Pale in the way of someone who spent
I couldn't avoid him forever.I knew that walking back to my apartment from Michael's brownstone. I knew it, standing in my own shower, letting the hot water run until it went cold. Knew it, sitting on my sofa with my phone face up on the cushion beside me, watching Kenny's messages accumulate like evidence of something I'd already decided.Fifteen messages. Then sixteen. Then a call I let ring out.Then nothing.The silence after the calls stopped was worse than the messages. Kenny going quiet meant Kenny making decisions. And Kenny making decisions without information was dangerous in ways I was only beginning to fully understand.I texted him at noon.Coming over at two.His reply was immediate. I'll be here.No anger in those three words. Just certainty. The particular quality of a man who had decided to wait because he knew you were coming back. Because you always came back. Because that's what his asset did.I looked at myself in the mirror before I left. Really looked. The woman
We stayed on the bench for a long time.His hand over mine. The city is moving around us. Kenny's messages were piling up in my bag unread and unanswered, and I couldn't make myself care about any of it. Not right now. Not with the document sitting in my chest and Michael's hand warm and steady and
I saw him again on a Tuesday.Not at a supernatural event. Not at one of Kenny's carefully orchestrated visibility performances. Just on a Tuesday afternoon in the West Village, three blocks from my apartment, standing outside a coffee shop with a cup in his hand, looking at nothing in particular.I
I woke up alone.Kenny never stayed until morning. That was one of the first things I'd learned about him. He slept beside me until approximately four am and then he was gone, back to whatever the other side of his life looked like, the side that existed outside of me and the attention I generated f
We got home at midnight.Kenny was fed well tonight. I felt it in the elevator, his hand gripping my waist too tight, his breathing heavier than usual, his eyes already burning full amber before we'd cleared the lobby. Three hours of visibility and dominance and carefully orchestrated attention, and
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