LOGINRowan’s POV
My eyes didn't leave the silhouette stumbling through the rain toward me. I leaned against the matte-black hood of my SUV, the cold drizzle soaking into my tactical shirt, but I didn't feel the chill. I felt her. Veda Bennett was a flicker of dying light in the middle of a graveyard, her white dress stained, her hair plastered to her cheeks. She should have been halfway to the High-Rise by now. I’d given her the exit. I’d given her the escape. Instead, the stubborn little fool had gone back inside to face the wolves who had just finished tearing her heart out. "You're still here," she panted, stopping a few feet away. She was trembling, her chest heaving, but her eyes—those hazel eyes—were burning with a fire that hadn't been there an hour ago. "I don't leave my property behind," I said, my voice a low grate against the sound of the rain. "I assumed you’d finally finished your farewell tour of the gutter." Veda flinched as if I’d slapped her, but she didn't look away. "Why, Rowan?" "Why what, Veda? Speak clearly. I don't have the patience for riddles tonight." "Why me?" She took a step closer, invading the space most Alphas were too terrified to enter. "You could have had land. You could have had gold. You could have had an elite omega who actually knows how to be a Luna. Instead, you took the one your nephew threw away like trash. Why?" I straightened up, the movement slow and predatory. I let my height tower over her, my shadow swallowing her whole. I could smell her now—vanilla, salt, and the sharp, metallic tang of a broken bond. It was a scent that made my inner wolf shift, baring its teeth at the thought of the man who had caused it. "Maybe I like trash," I murmured, leaning down until my lips were inches from her ear. "Or maybe I saw something in that ballroom that everyone else was too blind to notice." "What?" she breathed. "Potential." I pulled back, my gaze raking over her. "Julian wanted a doll he could pose on a throne. I want someone who knows how to survive a knife in the back. Now, get in the fucking car." "I'm not going anywhere until you tell me the truth," she snapped, her voice rising. "This is a game to you. A way to humiliate Julian. You're using me as a weapon." "You say that like it’s a bad thing." I reached out, my thumb catching a stray raindrop on her lower lip. She froze, her breath hitching, her pupils blowing out until her eyes were almost entirely black. The tension between us was a live wire, humming with a dark, twisted electricity. I wanted to see how far I could push her before she broke. Or before she bit me. "Rowan?" The voice broke the spell. Marcus, my Beta, stepped out from the shadows of the estate’s pillars. He looked at me, then at the shivering girl standing in my personal space, and his jaw practically hit the pavement. "Tell me the rumors are wrong," Marcus said, his voice tight. "Tell me you didn't actually agree to marry the Prince’s reject." "The rumors are understating it, Marcus," I said, not taking my eyes off Veda. "The paperwork is already being filed. She’s moving into the penthouse." "The penthouse?" Marcus hissed, stepping closer. "Boss, the Council is already having a collective stroke. Taking her as a ward is one thing, but a marriage? To a Bennett? It’s a political nightmare." "Then let them lose sleep over it," I replied coldly. "I don't remember asking for your opinion on my domestic arrangements." Marcus went silent, his neck baring instinctively in submission, though his eyes remained skeptical. He looked at Veda with a mixture of pity and distrust, but he knew better than to push me when my aura was this close to the surface. I felt a prickle at the back of my neck. A familiar, irritating scent. I looked past Veda, toward the floor-to-ceiling glass windows of the ballroom. Julian was standing there, his hand resting on the glass, his golden-boy features twisted into something ugly and possessive. He was watching us. He was watching her. Even after the rejection, even after the humiliation, he still looked at her like she was a toy he’d put in the "donate" bin but was suddenly reconsidering. Veda followed my gaze. I saw her shoulders slump, a flicker of that old, pathetic longing crossing her face for a split second. My blood turned to liquid lead. I grabbed her arm, my grip firm enough to make her gasp, and hauled her flush against my chest. My other hand went to the back of her head, forcing her to look up at me, blocking her view of the palace. I looked over her head, locking eyes with Julian through the glass. I didn't growl. I didn't shift. I just let the Butcher look at the Prince. I let him see exactly what I was doing, claiming the space he had vacated. Julian flinched, his hand dropping from the glass as he took a step back into the light of his own hollow celebration. "He's still looking at you," I hissed against Veda’s lips. "He's my mate," she whispered, her voice trembling. "He was your mate," I corrected, my voice a dark, jagged edge. "Now, he's just the man who was too weak to keep you. And I don't share, Veda. Not even with memories." I shoved her gently toward the open door of the SUV. She stumbled, catching herself on the leather seat, before turning back to look at me with wide, terrified eyes. "You're a monster," she said, her voice barely a whisper. "I told you that already," I said, stepping into the vehicle and shutting the door, sealing us in the silent, leather-scented darkness. As the engine roared to life and we pulled away from the Kingsley estate, I looked at her. She was huddled against the door, staring out at the rain, her fingers picking at the torn silk of her dress. She was still mourning. Still bleeding for a man who didn't deserve a drop of her sorrow. "Listen to me," I said, my voice cutting through the silence of the cabin. She didn't turn around. "Look at me, Veda." Slowly, she turned her head. "The Council wants blood. Julian wants a distraction. And you want a savior," I said, my eyes boring into hers. "You won't find one in me. But you will find a husband." I leaned across the console, my hand catching her chin, forcing her to see the cold reality of the life she had just entered. "You have two weeks," I said, the words a final, heavy vow. "Two weeks to stop looking at him like he still owns you. Because when I put that ring on your finger, if I catch you even thinking his name, I will give you a reason to fear the man you’re sleeping next to." I let her go, turning my gaze back to the road ahead. The High-Rise was waiting, a tower of glass and steel that would either be her sanctuary or her tomb. Veda didn't say a word. She just sat there, the silence in the car heavy with the weight of a future she hadn't chosen, and a man she didn't yet understand. I didn't mind the silence. I had two weeks to teach her that the dark wasn't something to fear. It was something to become.Even as the iron double doors of the grand pavilion slammed shut behind us, locking out the suffocating, hostile glares of the high houses, the accusation remained suspended in the air like a localized toxic frost. The pristine, clinical warlord who had guided the Enforcer division for forty years with mechanical precision didn't talk. He simply marched down the dim, vaulted western corridor, his massive, muscular frame casting a jagged, terrifying shadow over the stone floorboards.His rain-and-ash musk didn't soften; it thrummed with a heavy, restless wildfire frequency that made the passing sentries instinctively drop their eyes and tighten their grips on their rifles."Rowan, wait," I said, my voice a quiet, breathless wire as I hurried to match his massive, heavy strides, my velvet skirt sweeping sharply against the Persian rugs.He didn't stop until we crossed the secure threshold of the executive study, the heavy steel deadbolts sliding into place with a definitive, metallic e
The official document was hand-delivered by a high-ranking judiciary courier, its heavy silver seal flashing under the dim, pressurized light of the executive corridor. Marcus’s tense warning still hung in the air like toxic smoke when the iron gates of the master suite groaned open. The text on the parchment was uncompromising, drafted by the senior elders of the high houses, invoking the ancient pack codes to compel the Warlord to appear before the full assembly immediately."They are pushing the line, Boss," Marcus muttered, his beta scent spiked with an intense, metallic edge of high-stakes anxiety as he stepped into the foyer. "They used the emergency lineage clause. If you ignore this directive, the judiciary committee has the legal right to suspend the winter resource allocations.""Let them try to freeze the grid," Rowan growled low, his towering, muscular frame radiating a terrifying cloud of rain and ash that made the stone arches hum with static. He didn't look at the docu
I woke to the smell of cold cedar and suffocating ash.The heavy satin drapes of the master suite were drawn tight, sealing out the pale morning light, but the localized fever pulsing through the room told me exactly who was standing in the shadows. I shifted against the silk sheets, my fingers instinctively drifting to my neck to touch the hot, thrumming punctures of the mating mark. The skin was tight, a constant, low-frequency wire that connected my pulse directly to the massive alpha currently leaning against the stone fireplace.Rowan hadn't changed his clothes. He still wore his dark linen shirt unbuttoned to the chest, his broad shoulders hunched forward as he stared into the dying embers of the hearth."What time is it?" I whispered, my voice a quiet, breathless wire in the stillness."Late," he rumbled, his deep voice a low, gravelly grate that physically vibrated across the mattress. He didn't look at me, his slate-grey eyes blown out into a dark, unblinking intensity. "The
The estate has become unusually quiet after the attempted abduction. Guards patrol every corridor, and Rowan refuses to let Veda leave his sight.The heavy silence inside the executive wing was thick, oppressive, and highly pressurized. The broken oak doors in the western gallery had already been replaced with reinforced steel, and the faint, lingering scent of Julian’s sour copper blood had been scrubbed from the Persian rugs. But the air remained completely saturated with Rowan’s rain-and-ash musk—now dialed up to a suffocating, hyper-vigilant frequency that left no room to draw a comfortable breath.I paced the length of the private study, my silk skirt rustling sharply against the floorboards. Every time I neared the perimeter of the room, the two Enforcer sentries stationed exactly at the threshold shifted their weight, their rifles catching the weak winter light."Rowan, this has to stop," I said, stopping directly in front of his massive mahogany desk.He didn't look up immedi
The footsteps continue.They were light, frantic, and entirely out of place in the heavily guarded western wing. My heart slammed a violent, erratic rhythm against my ribs as the cold winter-mint scent grew suffocatingly thick, instantly drowning out the distant, comforting frequency of Rowan’s rain and ash. The hair on the nape of my neck stood up as the shadow on the marble floorboards elongated, rushing toward my silhouette with a reckless, silent speed.I didn't cower. I didn't whimper. The liberating confidence I had built at Rowan’s left hand flared to life, and I whirled around, my heels clicking sharply against the stone as I locked my eyes onto the darkness of the archway."Julian," I breathed out, my voice a dead, flat wire.He lunged out of the shadows of the third pillar, his golden alpha eyes completely blown out into an unhinged, wild desperation. His tailored royal coat was torn at the shoulder, his face bloodless and dripping with a cold sweat that smelled of raw copp
My heart slammed a violent, erratic rhythm against my ribs as the cold winter-mint scent grew suffocatingly thick, instantly drowning out the distant, comforting frequency of Rowan’s rain and ash. The hair on the nape of my neck stood up as the shadow on the marble floorboards elongated, rushing toward my silhouette with a reckless, silent speed.I didn't cower. I didn't whimper. The liberating confidence I had built at Rowan’s left hand flared to life, and I whirled around, my heels clicking sharply against the stone as I locked my eyes onto the darkness of the archway."Julian," I breathed out, my voice a dead, flat wire.He lunged out of the shadows of the third pillar, his golden alpha eyes completely blown out into an unhinged, wild desperation. His tailored royal coat was torn at the shoulder, his face bloodless and dripping with a cold sweat that smelled of raw copper and pure panic. He didn't speak. He didn't offer a pathetic apology. The stalking escalated into an attempted
The heavy armored door of the SUV clicked open, and the raw, suffocating weight of the Kingsley pack hierarchy hit me like a physical blow.Rain-slicked cobblestones mirrored the harsh white glare of the overhead floodlights, casting long, jagged shadows across the grand courtyard. The cold drizzle
Veda’s POV I woke with his heavy, gravelly vow still echoing through the quietest chambers of my soul.“If this marriage stopped benefiting the West District tomorrow, I wouldn't let you go. I would murder the entire Council, I would slaughter Julian’s loyalists, and I would burn Kings City to the
Rowan’s POV The silence that followed her question was a physical blow that shattered the remaining air in the room.Veda’s hazel eyes were wide, glittering with a fragile, glass-like sheen of hot tears as she stared up at me, her fingers still desperately clutching the fabric of my black trousers
Veda’s POV A single printed slip of paper shattered the fragile sanctuary I had begun to build.I found it slipped beneath the threshold of the terrace doors after breakfast. It was an anonymous, heavy stock parchment with no crest and no return address. The words printed on it were sharp, clinica







