LOGINOn the night of her eighteenth birthday, Aria Vale is publicly rejected by her fated mate, Alpha Kaden Cross. He chooses someone else. He doesn't look back. What he doesn't know is that the rejection just broke a seal the Moon Goddess placed on Aria at birth — and whatever has been locked inside her for eighteen years is now wide awake. Now a stranger named Zane Ashford is standing at the edge of the trees saying he's been searching for her for three years. He knows what she is. She doesn't. And Kaden is already starting to realize that rejecting his fated mate may be the worst mistake any Alpha has ever made. Some wolves are born powerful. Aria was born chosen. There's a difference — and everyone is about to find out what it is.
View More"I, Kaden Cross, Alpha of the Iron Crest Pack, reject you, Aria Vale, as my fated mate."
The words hit me like a blade to the chest.
Every single wolf in the great hall heard them. Three hundred people. Every elder, every warrior, every packmate I had grown up beside, every face I had known my whole life. They all heard it. And not one of them moved.
The pain came a second later.
If you've never had a mate bond broken, I can't explain it properly. It's not heartbreak. Heartbreak is quiet. This was like something reached into my ribcage with both hands and pulled. Like every nerve in my body fired at once and then went silent. Like the part of me that had been whole since the moment I turned eighteen, the part that had known he was mine before I ever said a word to him, was being ripped out by the root.
My knees hit the stone floor.
I didn't decide to kneel. My body just gave out.
"Aria." His voice was flat. No warmth. The voice he used in war councils, in disciplinary hearings, in every room where he needed people to understand he had already decided. "Accept the rejection. It will hurt less."
I looked up at him.
Kaden Cross was the most powerful Alpha in the northern territories. Six foot four, jaw like something carved from granite, eyes the color of a storm that had already decided to destroy everything in its path. I had loved him since I was sixteen years old. I had waited two years to turn eighteen, two years to feel the bond snap into place, two years telling myself that when he felt it he would look at me differently.
He was looking at me.
Not differently.
"Why," I said.
The word came out steady. I don't know how. Every part of me was on fire and the word came out steady.
Something crossed his face. Just for a second. Then it was gone.
"Selene is my true choice." He didn't look away when he said it. I'll give him that. He looked me in the eye while he said the name of the Beta's daughter, the girl who had been at his side for three years, the girl who everyone had assumed was just a close friend. "She has been for a long time. The mate bond was fate's decision. This is mine."
Fate's decision.
I almost laughed.
Three hundred wolves watched me kneeling on the stone floor of the great hall on the night of my eighteenth birthday, and I almost laughed, because the Alpha of the Iron Crest Pack had just told me the Moon Goddess's choice was less important than his own.
He had no idea what he'd just said.
He had no idea who he'd just said it to.
"Accept the rejection, Aria." His Beta, Marco, stepped forward. His voice was kinder than Kaden's but the message was the same. "The sooner you do, the sooner the pain stops."
I pressed my hand flat against the cold stone floor.
I should have been sobbing. I should have been begging. Every story I'd ever heard about rejections said this was the part where the female fell apart, where she screamed or cried or accepted because the alternative was feeling this way forever.
I felt the pain.
And then I felt something underneath it.
Something that had nothing to do with Kaden Cross or the Iron Crest Pack or the bond being severed. Something older than all of it. Something that had been sitting at the bottom of me my entire life, so deep and so still I had always thought it was just the way I was built, a quiet place, a dark room with no door.
The rejection tore the door off its hinges.
Whatever was in that room opened its eyes.
The pain didn't stop. It burned hotter. But it wasn't only pain anymore. There was something moving through it, moving through me, silver-white and enormous and so completely foreign that I stopped breathing for a full three seconds.
My hand on the stone floor began to glow.
I stared at it.
The light came from under my skin, tracing the lines of my veins from my palm to my wrist to my forearm, silver-white and steady, the most beautiful and terrifying thing I had ever seen in my life. It pulsed once. Twice.
The great hall went absolutely silent.
"What—" Marco took a step back.
I looked up at Kaden.
His face had changed.
The stone certainty was gone. In its place was something I had never seen on him before. Something that looked, for the first time in the six years I had known him, exactly like fear.
"Aria." His voice was different now. Lower. Careful. "Stop."
"I'm not doing anything," I said.
"Aria—"
"I, Aria Vale," I said, and my own voice sounded strange to me, layered, like two people speaking at once, "accept your rejection."
The bond didn't just break.
It shattered.
The pain went supernova for exactly three seconds and then it was gone, every last trace of it, replaced by the silver-white heat spreading from my hand up my arm and into my chest, filling the space where the bond had been with something that was not warmth exactly but was the closest word I had.
I stood up.
My legs didn't shake.
Three hundred wolves stared at me. Some of them had stepped back. The elders at the far end of the hall were on their feet, faces I had never seen afraid, afraid.
Kaden hadn't moved.
He was staring at my arm. At the silver light still tracing my veins, fading now but not gone, a thread of it remaining at my wrist like a brand, like a mark, like something that had decided to stay.
"What are you," he said.
I looked at him.
Two years of loving him. Six years of wanting him to see me. One night of him deciding fate's choice wasn't worth his consideration.
"I don't know yet," I said.
I picked up the small bag I had carried to the ceremony. My birthday gift to myself, packed that morning as a joke, because some part of me had known. Some part of me had always known he was going to do this and had quietly, practically, packed a bag.
I walked toward the door.
"Aria." His voice cracked on my name. Actually cracked. "You can't leave. You have nowhere to go."
I stopped.
I didn't turn around.
"I have everywhere to go," I said. "You just don't know that yet."
I walked out of the great hall.
The night air hit my face, cold and clean, and the silver thread at my wrist pulsed once in the dark like a heartbeat, like a hello, like something that had been waiting my entire life for exactly this moment.
I had no idea what I was.
I had no idea where I was going.
But somewhere in the trees at the edge of the Iron Crest territory, something moved.
Something that had been standing very still.
Something that had watched the light come off my skin through the great hall's high windows.
I heard a voice. Low. Close. Closer than it should have been.
"There you are," it said.
I spun around.
A man stepped out of the tree line.
Tall. Dark hair. Eyes that caught the moonlight wrong, too bright, too silver, the eyes of something that was not entirely wolf. He was looking at me the way people looked at things they had been searching for, the specific relief of finding.
"Who are you," I said.
He looked at my wrist. At the silver mark. At whatever was written there that I couldn't read from the outside.
"My name is Zane Ashford," he said. "And I've been looking for you for three years."
The silver at my wrist flared.
My wolf, the quiet wolf I had always thought was weak, the wolf that had never once given me a sign or a surge or a single moment of power in eighteen years, threw her head back inside me and howled.
Not in fear.
In recognition.
End of Chapter 1
BOOK FIVE: THE LUNAR ECLIPSE(Jace’s Perspective)When you build a vault to trap a monster, you have to accept that if the doors ever jam, you will be the one locked in the dark.I was sinking. The subterranean river was pitch black, freezing, and rushing with a violent, chaotic current from the massive displacement of the abyssal bullet. The Obsidian Chassis, completely devoid of power, felt exactly like what it was: a thousand-pound coffin of void metal.The atmospheric seals at the collar had blown. Freezing, ancient freshwater was steadily filling the helmet. It was past my chin, creeping up over my lips.I didn't panic. Panic burns oxygen, and I only had about forty seconds of it left.I closed my eyes in the pitch black, focusing entirely on the faint, rhythmic thump-thump of the earth’s magma nodes echoing through the bedrock. It was a comforting, steady lullaby. I had done my job. The Spire was standing. The wolves had the sky.The water crested over my nose.CRACK.It wasn't
BOOK FIVE: THE LUNAR ECLIPSE(Jace’s Perspective)Falling through solid earth is a terrifying sensory deprivation. For ten seconds, there was only the deafening roar of the hydrostatic thrusters melting the basalt beneath my boots, and the violent, strobing flashes of purple and silver light inside my helmet.The Obsidian Chassis was tearing itself apart. The left side of the suit desperately wanted to anchor to the earth's heavy core; the right side violently pulled toward the sky. I was riding a localized physics glitch straight down into the dark.Two miles down.I breached the ceiling of the primary continental aquifer.I didn't land on solid ground. I plunged into a massive, subterranean river of freezing, pitch-black freshwater. The void metal instantly adapted, the localized gravity field pushing the water away to create a protective vacuum bubble around the suit.I hovered in the dead center of the underground current, suspended in a pocket of dry air.I looked down the sprawl
BOOK FIVE: THE LUNAR ECLIPSE(Jace’s Perspective)If you want to cut through solid steel, you don't use a hammer. You use water. You compress it, you focus it into a microscopic point, and you fire it at a high enough velocity. Under absolute pressure, water doesn't just flow; it acts as an indestructible blade.I stared at the broken charcoal on my drafting table."It's not coming over the coastal wall," I said, my voice dropping to a rapid, calculating whisper. "The gravity shield repels mass on the surface. But the Hive-Mind knows that. It isn't going to fire this bullet through the air.""Then how does it reach us?" Elara asked, her eyes darting to the massive brass dials on the console. "Aethelgard is a hundred miles inland. If it doesn't cross the surface, it has to go under.""The aquifers," I breathed, the blood draining from my face.Beneath the human continent lay a massive network of subterranean rivers and pressurized freshwater aquifers. We relied on them to cool the blas
BOOK FIVE: THE LUNAR ECLIPSE(Jace’s Perspective)When you introduce a new apex predator to an ecosystem, the ecosystem does not immediately fight back. It goes completely, terrifyingly quiet.I woke up in the medical ward of the Grandmaster’s Spire to the sound of rolling thunder. But the sky outside the arched windows was perfectly clear, bathed in the bright afternoon sun."That isn't thunder," Elara said, noticing my eyes opening. She was sitting in a wooden chair beside my cot, reviewing a stack of logistical manifests. She looked exhausted, but the crippling, ambient dread of the lunar starvation was completely gone from her posture.I sat up slowly, my head swimming. I looked down at my right arm.The jagged, permanently cooked veins mapping my skin were no longer a dead, dormant black. They shimmered with a faint, pale silver luminescence. I had acted as the conduit between the earthly grid and the lunar frequency, and the celestial gravity had left a permanent echo in my biol
BOOK FOUR: THE ABYSSAL TIDE(Jace’s Perspective)You cannot melt the heart of the world with a standard fire. The Sunken Anvil was forged in the millions of degrees of the earth's inner core. If we wanted to melt the remaining forty-nine splinters down into a usable alloy, we had to replicate the c
BOOK FOUR: THE ABYSSAL TIDE(Jace’s Perspective)A forge is defined by the heat of its fire and the weight of its anvil. For a hundred years, the humans and the wolves built their empires on the roaring, volatile fire of the earth's mantle. We pushed outward. We expanded. We fought the world with b
BOOK FOUR: THE ABYSSAL TIDE(Jace’s Perspective)Rising from the abyss is worse than falling into it. When you fall, the pressure builds gradually, compressing you into the dark. When you rise, the ocean violently tries to expand the air in your lungs, threatening to tear you apart from the inside
BOOK FOUR: THE ABYSSAL TIDE(Jace’s Perspective)At thirty-six thousand feet below sea level, water does not flow. It strikes. If you remove the localized gravity bubble holding back sixteen thousand pounds of hydrostatic pressure per square inch, the ocean does not gently fill the void. It collaps






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
reviews