INICIAR SESIÓNHe gave me thirty minutes to pack my life and leave. I took twelve. Alpha Damien Cole rejected me in front of the woman he chose over me and sent me to the border with nothing but one bag and a bond burning through my blood. No explanation. No fight. Just his voice, cold and final, telling me I was done. Everyone expected me to fall apart. I did not. Three years later I built the Sutton Foundation from nothing, a safe house network for rejected wolves that the Lycan King himself publicly endorsed. I have a life, a purpose, and a name that means something. I am not the Luna he threw away anymore. Then his Beta shows up at my door. Damien is dying. The severed bond is destroying his wolf from the inside. Sixty days. Maybe less. He needs me. The woman he discarded like she meant nothing is now the only person who can save him. But that is not the worst part. The woman he chose over me has been slowly poisoning him since the night of my rejection. She never loved him. She targeted him. And she has been three steps ahead of everyone for three years. Now I have a choice. Walk away and let the man who shattered me face the consequences alone. Or step back into the world that broke me, face the woman who destroyed my life, and fight for a pack that once watched me leave without a single word. I told myself I was going back for the pack. I am still not sure that is the whole truth. A dark werewolf romance about betrayal, survival, and what happens when the woman a man destroyed becomes the only one powerful enough to save him.
Ver másHe gave me thirty minutes.
I stared at the kitchen clock as he said it. The second hand ticked away—around and around—while everything inside me had ground to a halt. Thirty minutes to pack up my life and get out of Darkwood Pack. That’s all my mate of four years decided I was worth. Thirty minutes. I didn’t use them all. I grabbed my bag from the top of the wardrobe—the same one I carried into the house four years ago, when Damien Cole used to see me as the center of his world. I stuffed in three set of clothes, my documents, a little amount of cash I kept in the drawer beside the bed, and a photo of my mom off the nightstand. That’s it. I left everything else. Not because there wasn’t anything worth taking. Our life together had filled the house—my books, my plants, the blanket I spent months knitting because Damien always said he was cold at night. I left all of it behind. Bringing those things would’ve meant I was still the woman who lived here. And I already knew I’d never be her again. I went downstairs, my bag slung over my shoulder, and I didn’t look at him. I looked at her instead. She stood near the fireplace, arms crossed, eyes fixed on the floor. Beautiful in the way that makes you want to trust her—dark hair, pale skin, the kind of face you’d expect to see on a magazine cover. I’d never met her before that night, but she had clearly been here before. There was no nervousness or apology, just a quiet kind of expectation. She’d already sized up the space, figured out where she’d put her things. I turned to Damien. He stood near the window, half-turned away. That said everything. Four years together, and now he couldn’t even give me his full attention. Just his profile. “Aria.” His voice was careful and low, the voice of someone who rehearsed their lines. “Don’t,” I said. He stopped. I’d spent four years as Luna of Darkwood Pack. I’d sat through nights with grieving wolves, fought the Alpha council twice for omegas who had nobody—given everything to this pack and this man, holding nothing back. And now, I wasn’t going to stand here and listen to some rehearsed, hollow explanation. “I need you to say the words,” I told him. “Properly. So it’s done.” He finally faced me. I wish he hadn’t. He looked sorry—truly sorry—which somehow hurt more than if he’d been angry or cold. Cold, I could hate. Sorry just made it messy, and I didn’t have space for messy. “Aria Cole,” he said, “I, Damien Cole, Alpha of Darkwood Pack, renounce you as my mate and my Luna. The bond between us is hereby severed.” My wolf screamed. Pain isn’t even the right word—it’s like something vital being ripped out, something you’re never supposed to lose. Like your body suddenly realizing its foundation is gone and nothing makes sense anymore. I stood there. I breathed through it. I wasn’t going to fall apart in front of her. I wasn’t going to fall apart in front of him. I picked up my bag, walked to the front door, opened it, and let the night air burn through me. The pack territory lay dark and stretched out ahead. I had twelve minutes left of my thirty. I didn’t use them. I walked until the lights of Darkwood faded behind me, and only the border was ahead. The bond I carried for four years was now just heat and tearing in my chest. I pressed it down with everything I had. My wolf howled for three days. I didn’t. I found a room in a tiny human town forty miles from any pack. Sat alone on a bed that smelled like strangers and made a list—not feelings, just facts. What I had. What I knew. What came next. Because the other option was falling apart. And I’d already decided not to do that. That was three years ago. I’m twenty-six now, running the Sutton Foundation—a network of safe houses across four territories, for wolves who’ve been rejected, abused, left behind. Eight months ago, the Lycan King gave us his public support. We’ve helped over three hundred wolves rebuild from nothing. I know what rejection does to a person. It did it to me. And I know you can survive it. Because I did. I was at my desk, sorting intake files for the week, when Lena knocked and came in without waiting for an answer—like she usually does. “There’s a wolf outside,” she said. “He’s been at the gate twenty minutes. Not aggressive, but he isn’t leaving.” I kept my eyes on the file. “Pack wolf or rogue?” “Pack,” she said. “Darkwood.” The file stopped moving in my hands. Lena watched me, trying to calculate how much this cost me—she’s good at reading people, that’s why I hired her. “Do you know him?” she asked. I put the file down and stood up. “Yeah. I know him.” I walked downstairs, across the ground floor, stepped outside. And saw exactly who I expected: Marcus. Damien’s Beta. His best friend since childhood. The one who stood in my kitchen three years ago and watched me leave without saying a word. He looked wrecked. Older than three years should have made him, eyes hollow like someone who hasn’t slept in weeks. He saw me walking over, and something in his face cracked just a little before he masked it again. “Aria,” he said. “Marcus.” I stopped at the gate, looked through the bars, but didn’t open it. “You look like you drove a long way.” “Eight hours,” he said. “Didn’t stop.” I waited. He swallowed, hard. “It’s Damien.” For the first time in months, my wolf stirred inside me—not with longing, but something quieter, older, and nameless. “He’s dying, Aria.” Marcus’s voice broke, then he forced it steady. “The bond severance—it’s destroying his wolf from inside. Medics say sixty days. Maybe less.” It was quiet around us. Somewhere inside, a wolf named Isla was sleeping her first decent sleep in four days. Yesterday, she arrived with nothing but the rejection mark on her neck. I knew exactly what she was dealing with because I’d lived it myself: a room that smells like strangers, a practical list, and a stubborn refusal to fall apart. I kept looking at Marcus through the gate. “There’s something else,” he said, stepping closer, lowering his voice. “Something I only found out two weeks ago—about the woman in your house that night. Aria, I don’t think the bond severance is the only thing killing Damien. Someone’s helping it along.” I watched him for a long moment. Then I unlocked the gate. “Come in,” I said. “Tell me everything.” He walked through. I closed the gate behind him. And when I turned toward the building, I swear I caught a scent on the air—chemical, sharp, metallic, just beneath expensive perfume. I stopped. A black car had pulled up across the street while my back was turned. The door eased open. And out stepped the same woman from my fireplace three years ago—the one who waited for me to leave. She’d found me first.Standing in the front hall of the Darkwood packhouse, I read Wren’s message over and over. I hoped the words would somehow change the more I stared at them, but they never did.Someone had tried to get into my birth record. Mine. Not the foundation’s finances. Not the donor list or anything someone might use to tear down what we’d built. Just that one file—my name, my mother and father, the exact day and place I existed. Vance was looking for proof.He knew I’d been in the pack records room today, digging through old files. Now he was trying to see if I’d found what was hidden in those bloodline records before Selene wiped the correspondence files.He was nervous—and honestly, I liked that. People screw up when they’re scared.I typed back to Wren: Lock my personal file. Completely. Take it offline if you have to. Nothing gets in or out without me.Her answer came right away. Already done—ten minutes ago. And Aria, the access attempt traces to a council server. I had my contact check.
I didn’t find anything else in the records that night. It wasn’t because there was nothing left to find. Somebody had beaten me to it.I realized it at half past nine. I opened the drawer where the correspondence files from four years ago should’ve been. Empty. Not even a scrap left behind, not a single file shoved out of place or misfiled. Just the neat hanging folders, labels in careful handwriting from whoever kept the records before me, but every sheet inside gone.I stood there, staring at the empty drawer for a long second. Then I checked the next drawer. Also empty. And the one below. Same. Three whole years’ worth of correspondence. Disappeared.I sat down in the records room chair, just looking at those empty drawers, thinking through the day. I’d been in the room since morning, but I’d stepped out twice—once to call Cassian in the hallway, once when I heard Selene’s voice and went to the door. Both times, I left the records room door unlocked.Somebody took three years’ reco
My father’s name was Aldric Vance.I just sat there on the floor of the records room, file open in my lap, staring at the faded ink like it might change if I looked long enough. Aldric Vance. Mara Sutton’s mate, father of one daughter, born thirty years ago. Me.Elder Vance—my father.The words felt too big to hold all at once, like handling a piece of glass you’re not sure won’t break. I tried out the truth from every direction, poked at it, waited for it to crack. It didn’t. It just sat there, solid and awful.Suddenly, everything made sense. The targeting before I’d done anything to deserve it. How invested Vance was in getting me out of Damien’s life. The weirdly huge resources deployed against me. The poison. The fake intelligence. Years of careful plotting.Turns out, I wasn’t just a Luna who’d gotten too successful. I was Aldric Vance’s daughter.If anyone found out—and if I ever said it out loud—the fallout would bury him. The council’s bloodline law was clear: a senior elder
I spent the rest of the morning tucked away in the pack records room. It’s a small space off the main hallway—packed floor to ceiling with filing cabinets and old files, smelling like paper and that familiar dust from things nobody’s touched in ages. I’d been in here plenty of times before, back when I was Luna. Usually, it was all admin stuff—checking over finances, membership lists, the paperwork that keeps a pack running. But I never thought I’d sit in here looking for proof that someone had been plotting against me for four years. I started with the visitor logs. Every pack keeps these—it’s standard security, lists every wolf who comes onto the territory, where they came from, why they showed up, how long they stayed. Most Alphas treat them like a checkbox. I never did. I always knew the most dangerous threats don’t announce themselves. Selene’s first recorded visit to Darkwood? Three years and eight months ago. Not three years—three years and eight months. That’s eight months






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