تسجيل الدخولArielle’s POV
The iron gates groaned open as the car rolled up the long driveway, and the mansion came into view the same way it always did. It looked too large, too quiet, too full of things that didn’t move. Every topiary trimmed to the same perfect angle. Every window was gleaming. Nothing was out of place. Nothing had changed while I was gone, and somehow that made the tightness in my chest worse instead of better. It was the kind of stillness that reminded you the world kept turning without asking your permission. David pulled up to the entrance and stepped out before I could reach the handle. He opened my door without a word, offering his hand the way he always did. Steady, practiced, giving nothing away. I didn’t take it. I stepped out on my own and smoothed the front of my clothes, not because they needed it but because I needed a moment before walking through those doors. The foyer was exactly as I’d left it. Cool marble, fresh white lilies in the tall vase by the staircase, replaced on schedule regardless of whether anyone was home to appreciate them. The faint scent of cedar and lemon polish settled around me the second I stepped inside. Home. The word rose up in my chest and sank again just as fast. I wasn’t sure what to do with it. My father was at the dining table. He sat at his usual place at the head, but his breakfast was untouched in front of him. There were eggs congealed, toast gone cold and a glass of orange juice which was still full. He wasn’t reading. He wasn’t on his phone. He was just sitting, hands folded on the table, and when he looked up and saw me standing in the doorway, something shifted in his face that he didn’t bother to hide. He’d been waiting for me. My chest pulled tight at that thought. “Ari.” He rose slightly from his chair, not all the way, just enough. “Come and sit with me.” He only called me Ari when he was happy or sorry. Right now I couldn’t tell which, and I hated that I was trying to figure it out instead of just walking away. I crossed the room slowly and pulled out the chair beside him, not across from him the way I usually sat when things were tense. I don’t know why I chose to sit close. Some part of me had already started putting things down before I’d made the conscious decision to. “Are you alright?” he asked, his eyes moving over me the way they used to when I was small and had fallen.“I heard a man took you in. Were you hurt? You must have been scared. How did you cope?” The questions came out all at once, and his hand landed gently on my arm, barely touching, like he wasn’t sure if he was allowed to. “Nothing happened,” I said flatly. I was aiming for cold and indifferent. I wasn’t sure I pulled it off. He exhaled slowly, nodding once. He didn’t push. That surprised me. “I overreacted,” he said. His voice was measured, but I could hear the effort it took to keep it that way. “Freezing your accounts. That wasn’t appropriate. I know that. But I did it because I want to protect you, Ari. When you’re safe, it puts me at ease. When you’re not, I can’t think straight.” He stopped. His jaw tightened. “I know,” I said. And I did know. That was the part I hated most, that I couldn’t hold onto the anger the way I wanted to, because I understood him. I understood exactly where it came from, which meant I had to carry both things at once: the resentment and the guilt, pressing against each other like opposing weights. “The world out there is full of bad people,” he said quietly. He reached for his coffee cup and turned it slightly, placing the handle with the edge of the saucer. “And worse things. I let my guard down once. Just once, Ari.” He paused. “And it cost me your mother.” His voice broke on the last two words. Not dramatically, but enough to land. I looked at him properly then, the way I’d been avoiding since I sat down. I saw the lines around his eyes, the grey at his temples that hadn’t been there a few years ago. His shoulders were just slightly less square than they used to be. He didn’t say her name. He never did. “I’m sorry, Dad.” The words came out softer than I intended. “It’s my fault too.” I looked down at my feet. David had excused himself quietly at some point. I hadn’t even noticed him leave. The room felt smaller now, and heavier, but not in a bad way. My father looked at me for a long moment. Then he pushed his chair back and spread his arms open. I stood up slowly and leaned into his embrace. He held me the way he used to before things got complicated between us, before I started fighting everything just to prove I could. He was still solid. He still smelled like cedar and old paper and the same aftershave he’d worn my entire life. I let myself stay there longer than I’d planned. “Don’t run off again,” he said quietly. “I won’t give you a reason to. Okay?” I nodded against his shoulder. He patted my back twice in that firm, brief double-pat that was his version of saying things he didn’t have words for and then we let each other go. After the reunion, I excused myself to my room. I hadn’t managed much of breakfast. It wasn’t that I’d lost my appetite entirely. I was just somewhere in between, caught between too tired to eat and too unsettled to care. The exhaustion had settled into my bones somewhere on the drive home and hadn’t left. I kicked off my shoes at the door and dropped onto the bed face-first, arms out, not caring about anything except the texture of the mattress and the familiar weight of my own sheets. They smelled like lavender and something underneath familiar. I closed my eyes and felt the last few days start to loosen their grip, slowly. “Thank God you’re back home, Ari.” I turned my head without lifting it. David was in the doorway, one shoulder against the frame, watching me with an expression I was too tired to read. I’d almost forgotten about him. Almost. “Not now, David.” I pressed my face back into the pillow. “I’m really exhausted. Go away.” There was a beat of silence. “Are you still upset?” “You didn’t hear that from me. Ugh let me sleep, okay?” “I want to make it up to you.” Something in his voice made me go still. It wasn’t the usual David. Not the composed,keep-everyone-at-arm’s-length version I’d known for years. It was quieter, or maybe more direct. I wasn’t sure. I sat up suddenly, confused by whatever it was I’d just heard in it. “Huh?” He had stepped further into the room. He wasn’t looking at me the way he usually did. Measured and professional, like I was something to be managed. He was looking at me like he was making a decision. “So, Ari.” He stopped at the foot of the bed. “Do you want to do this?”Arielle’s POVThe three hooded figures didn't move an inch. They just kept staring up at my window, their faces completely hidden in the dark shadows of their hoods. A cold weight settled heavily in my stomach. Who were they? Why were they watching me?My hands trembled as I gripped the edge of the curtain. Part of me wanted to yell for my dad or call our security guards, but a deeper, stronger instinct told me to be quiet. If these people were connected to the world Marcus had just dropped me into, normal human security wouldn't stand a chance.I carefully stepped back from the window, letting the curtain fall completely shut. The darkness of my bedroom felt suffocating. I crawled back into my bed, pulling the thick duvet all the way up to my chin, but I couldn't sleep. Every time I closed my eyes, Marcus’s harsh voice echoed in my mind.“It is most likely because you mated with a wolf.”My face burned hot against my pillow, a mix of pure embarrassment and anger washing over me.
Victor's POV "We are lifting your banishment, Victor." Elder Marcus said before a low vibrating sound filled the room. He immediately excused himself and exited the room. I could tell his subordinates were not pleased with the abruptiveness of this action. But the meeting went on. I do wonder though, the kind of emergency that would make someone like Marcus leave an important meeting like this. "The council has decided that your years in exile have served as penance for the blood on your hands," Elder Helena continued. Her eyes remained sharp and cold, lacking even a shred of the grace her words implied. "You are free to walk pack grounds. You are, once again, a member of the Bloodclaw clan." "And my title?" The question slipped out before I could stop it. Rowan let out a dry, mocking chuckle from the corner. "You lost the right to the Alpha seat the moment you let your wolf rip open a human throat, Victor. The Moon Goddess herself turned her back on you. Michael remains A
Arielle's POVI was running in a forest and right beside me ran a massive wolf. His fur was as black as the night sky, but it was his eyes that caught my attention. They were a striking, bright electric blue. I would recognize those eyes anywhere.Victor.We ran side by side, our fur brushing against each other. A deep, natural heat started to build between us that had nothing to do with the chilly night air. When he slowed down, turning his massive head toward me, the intensity in those blue eyes made my breath hitch. He leaned in close, gently rubbing his nose against the side of my neck. His hot breath bloomed against my fur. A low, rumbling purr vibrated deep in his chest, sending a fierce, electric shock straight down my spine. It felt incredibly close, raw, and completely overwhelming. He pressed nearer, his heavy weight gently pinning me down to the forest floor. As his muzzle stroked against mine, the sheer intensity of the moment made me throw my head back, a soft purr
Victor’s POV Harrison Hunt could not stop staring. The creature lying on the floor of the hallway was a wolf. There was no denying the reality of it. Its silver gray fur shone under the bright chandelier lights. The wolf looked weak, and helpless. But Harrison could not forget what wolves meant to him. For years, he had hated them with a passion. He blamed them for taking his wife away. He had promised himself that if he ever saw a wolf again, he would shoot it without hesitating. Now, one was lying right in front of him. And it was his own daughter. The realization felt like a sharp knife twisting inside his chest. "Sir?" One of the bodyguards gripped his gun tighter, his knuckles turning white. "What should we do?" The sound of the guard preparing his weapon broke Harrison's trance. He swallowed hard, his throat dry. He was still terrified and completely confused, but nothing could change the truth. That wolf was Arielle. He had watched the horrific change hap
Victor's POV The moment I saw the pack grounds, a familiar weight settled in my chest. Home. I hadn't called it that in years. The last time I stood here, I was no longer Alpha, no longer a leader, just a man who had failed. One of the three guards walked ahead of me while the other two walked beside me. They seemed to be new. If they recognized me as their former Alpha, they did well not to show it. We passed through the training grounds, which were as full as I remembered with wolves both male and female, eager to prove themselves. Multiple eyes followed us as we walked by. IlI could hear whispers of surprise, confusion, and dare I say, excitement. Was that just my hope, though? The patrol towers still stood at the edges of the territory, and the pack house remained exactly where I remembered. For a moment, memories threatened to surface. I shoved them down; there was no point looking backward. We passed by many people. Some I remembered, some I didn't, but no one s
Arielle's POV I couldn't stop thinking about what Stella had said.I think you need to go see Victor. Right now.I sat on the edge of my bed staring at the wall.Could she be thinking that I...I was turning into what Victor was?Was that even possible? And if it were, how did I turn?These were questions Victor could answer. He would know what was wrong with me.I grabbed my jacket and headed downstairs.I almost made it to the front door before Martha spotted me."Going somewhere, dear?"Forcing a smile, I replied, "Just getting some air."The old woman narrowed her eyes. Clearly she didn't believe me, but thankfully she didn't stop me.A few minutes later I was in my car heading toward the police station.The closer I got, the stranger I felt. My pulse kept speeding up. My palms were sweating.I couldn't deny that seeing him again was something I'd been looking forward to.The realization annoyed me."Get a grip, Arielle. You're only going there to ask questions, not spend the nigh
Arielle's POV The cloth tied around my wrists was starting to burn against my skin. I shifted slightly in the backseat and tried to loosen my hands again, but it was useless. The man beside me immediately grabbed my arm harder. “Sit still.” I glared at him, unable to say anything since my mout
Arielle's POVI stared at David while my brain did skips and jumps. The woman still didn't look at me. She looked like a ticking time bomb ready to explode."Dave, so all this while you were running around with another bitch and I had no idea about it?" Her nose reddened.David remained mute like h
Arielle's POVWhen I woke up, Victor wasn't on the bed.I got up slowly, still feeling the ache in my lower abdomen from last night. I hadn't showered after, I still smelled like Victor’s strong cologne and sex.Memories from last night rushed through my head, fuck! I had to admit that Victor did t
Arielle's POVI sat up.“You'll assume the role of a patient and I'll be the doctor.""Sounds interesting." I smiled. "What illnesses can you treat?""You'll find out. Soon." His eyes stayed on mine. "Let's not rush things."I nodded."Good." He strode to the table and picked up a pen and paper."T







