Share

I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate
I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate
Author: Angel Cole

Runaway Bride

Author: Angel Cole
last update publish date: 2026-02-02 10:48:06

The white dress was a cage made of silk.

I stood in front of the full-length mirror in my father's study, staring at my reflection as if it belonged to someone else. The gown was beautiful—I had to give him that much. Layers of ivory lace and satin that pooled at my feet, a bodice that cinched my waist and pushed my breasts up like an offering, sleeves that fell off my shoulders in a way that was supposed to look romantic but just made me feel exposed.

I looked like a bride.

I felt like a sacrifice.

"You look perfect, Laney." My father's voice came from behind me, smooth and satisfied, as if he'd just closed a particularly lucrative business deal. Which, I supposed, he had.

I didn't turn around. I kept my eyes on the mirror, on the girl in the white dress who was about to be sold to a monster.

"He's going to be very pleased," my father continued, moving closer. I could see him in the reflection now—tall, broad-shouldered, his alpha presence filling the room like smoke. Marcus Thorne, leader of the Ashwood Pack, a man who'd built his empire on blood and cunning and the broken backs of anyone who got in his way.

Including his own daughter.

"Brant Korr is a powerful alpha," he said, his hand settling on my shoulder. His grip was firm, possessive, a reminder that I belonged to him until the moment he handed me over to someone else. "This alliance will secure our northern borders, strengthen our trade routes. You should be honored."

Honored.

I wanted to laugh. I wanted to scream. I wanted to rip this fucking dress off and run until my legs gave out.

But I didn't do any of those things. I just stood there, frozen, while my father adjusted the veil over my hair and told me how lucky I was.

Lucky.

I was twenty years old and wolfless—a genetic defect that made me worthless in the eyes of the pack. I couldn't shift; I'd been trained to fight, but against wolves, being human made me useless. I couldn't contribute anything except my womb. And even that was questionable, because who knew if a wolfless woman could even carry a shifter child to term?

But Brant Korr didn't care about that. He had plenty of wolves in his pack, plenty of strong alphas and fertile females. What he wanted was a treaty. A foothold in Ashwood territory. A way to expand his influence without starting a war.

And my father was more than happy to give me to him.

"The ceremony starts in an hour," my father said, stepping back. "Don't be late."

He left, closing the door behind him, and I was alone.

I stared at my reflection for a long moment, at the girl in the white dress with hollow eyes and a painted-on smile. Then I turned away from the mirror and walked to the window.

The Ashwood estate sprawled below me—acres of manicured lawns and stone buildings, the forest pressing in at the edges like it was trying to reclaim what had been stolen from it. I could see the ceremony site from here: white chairs arranged in neat rows, an archway covered in flowers, and a red carpet leading to the altar where Brant Korr would be waiting.

Where I would promise to love, honor, and obey a man I'd spoken to exactly twice.

Where I would become his property.

His breeder.

His thing.

I pressed my forehead against the glass, feeling the cool surface against my skin, and tried to breathe.

I couldn't do this.

I wouldn't do this.

The thought came suddenly and sharply, cutting through the fog of resignation that had been smothering me for weeks. I couldn't marry Brant Korr. I couldn't let my father sell me like livestock. I couldn't spend the rest of my life being used and discarded and told I should be grateful for it.

I had to run.

The decision settled over me like a weight and a relief all at once. I didn't have a plan, money, supplies, or anywhere to go. But I had my legs and my wits and a desperate, clawing need to be free.

It would have to be enough.

I turned away from the window and looked around the room. My father's study was on the second floor, too high to jump without breaking something. But there was a trellis outside, covered in climbing roses, that led down to the garden.

I could make it.

I had to make it.

I kicked off the ridiculous heels they'd given me and hiked up the dress's skirt, tucking the layers of fabric into the bodice so I could move. Then I opened the window, felt the cool evening air rush in, and climbed out.

The trellis groaned under my weight but held. I climbed down as fast as I dared, the thorns from the roses tearing at my arms and legs, leaving thin lines of blood on my skin. I didn't care. I just kept moving, hand over hand, until my feet hit the ground.

I ran.

The garden was empty—everyone was already at the ceremony site, waiting for the bride who wasn't going to show. I sprinted across the lawn, my bare feet slapping against the grass, the dress billowing out behind me like a ghost.

I could hear music starting in the distance. The wedding march.

They'd be looking for me soon.

I hit the tree line and plunged into the forest, branches whipping at my face, roots trying to trip me. The dress caught on everything—thorns, branches, fallen logs—but I didn't stop. I just kept running, deeper and deeper into the woods, until the sounds of the estate faded behind me.

My lungs burned. My legs screamed. But I didn't slow down.

Behind me, I heard shouting. The enforcers had realized I was gone.

I pushed harder, my heart hammering against my ribs, adrenaline flooding my system. I didn't know where I was going, didn't have a destination in mind. I just knew I had to get away, had to put as much distance between myself and the Ashwood estate as possible.

The forest opened up ahead of me, and I saw it: a creek, narrow but fast-moving, the water dark and cold. On the other side, the trees were thicker, wilder, the kind of forest that didn't belong to any pack.

Neutral territory.

If I could just make it across—

"There!"

The shout came from behind me, close enough that I could hear the crunch of boots on leaves. I didn't look back. I just ran for the creek and jumped.

The water was freezing, stealing my breath, soaking the dress until it weighed a thousand pounds. I struggled to the other side, my hands scrabbling at the muddy bank, my legs kicking against the current. I could hear the enforcers behind me, splashing into the water.

I pulled myself up onto the opposite bank and ran.

I don't know how long I ran. Hours, maybe. Long enough that the sun set and the moon rose, long enough that my feet were bloody and my dress was in tatters, and I couldn't hear the enforcers anymore.

Long enough that I finally, finally, let myself stop.

I collapsed against a tree, gasping for air, my whole body shaking with exhaustion and cold and the adrenaline crash that was hitting me like a freight train. I was soaked, freezing, covered in mud and blood and God knew what else.

But I was free.

I'd actually done it. I'd run from my father, from Brant Korr, from the life they'd tried to force on me.

I started laughing, the sound half-hysterical, echoing through the empty forest. I laughed until I cried, until the tears mixed with the dirt on my face, and I couldn't tell the difference anymore.

Then I heard it: the sound of an engine in the distance.

A road.

I forced myself to stand, forced my legs to move, and stumbled toward the sound. The trees thinned out, and suddenly I was standing on the shoulder of a two-lane highway, the asphalt stretching in both directions like a promise.

Headlights appeared in the distance, growing brighter as they approached.

Something stirred uneasily inside me.

I stepped into the middle of the road anyway.

And raised my hand.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    Controlled Demolition

    The call about Josylyn came at 3 a.m., four days into the operation, and it could not have picked a worse — or better — time."She's in labor." Elara's voice was tight over comms; Moss Thorn pack house was loud and chaotic behind her. "Full labor, Laney. Marc's with her, the birth team's fifteen minutes out, and I don't know what to do with my hands.""Where's Sirus?""Sitting on the kitchen counter eating crackers like it's a Tuesday afternoon." A short, disbelieving laugh escaped her. "Laney, he's five, and he is currently the calmest person in this house. He told Marc to stop pacing because it was — and I quote — 'not helping anybody.'"That tracked. Sirus had been through more in five years than most wolves saw in fifty, and somewhere along the way he'd come out the other side of it with a stillness that unsettled grown warriors. Nothing rattled that kid. Nothing was allowed to.Fifteen minutes was a lifetime when you were also running the biggest legal takedown in a decade, and I

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    THE TERMS

    With Voss gone, it was Josiah's turn to answer.He didn't get to walk away clean the way he'd planned it — sign a few papers, disappear north, let the council forget his name in a decade the way councils forget things when there's no body and no headline. Not after ten years of running the largest smuggling corridor in shifter territory. Not after what he did to my sister to get his revenge in the first place. Ten years we knew about. God only knew what we didn't.I looked at Elara across the annex and felt my chest tighten. Two men had spent years turning her into a chess piece — Voss, who'd used her body against her will and left her carrying the proof of it, and Josiah, who'd used her pain the same way, arranging her like a piece on his board because it served his own war. Voss was already gone. Handled. Buried under his own trafficking charges with eleven kids recovered and his name erased from every registry that mattered.Today, it was Josiah's turn. And I got to watch my sister

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    The Takedown

    The clearing was exactly where Elara said it would be.We came through the eastern tree line in the gray hour before full morning, the three of us moving at an even pace, close enough that our shoulders nearly touched. Josylyn on my left. Elara on my right. The ground was soft from two days of rain, and the logging stumps that ringed the clearing's edge were older than I was, mossy and low and offering nothing in the way of cover.Voss was already there.He stood at the far edge of the clearing with seven wolves ranged behind him in a loose formation that was meant to look casual and was not. He was taller than I'd expected — broad-shouldered, the kind of physical presence that had probably served him well his whole life, the easy authority of a man who had never once been the smallest thing in a room. His eyes found me immediately and stayed there.He didn't look at Elara.He didn't look at Josylyn.That was his first mistake."Laney Ashwood." He said my name as if he were identifyin

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    The Proposal

    River's expression did not change when I told him.That was somehow worse than if it had.He stood at the window of the war room — a generous name for the space Alpha Tomas had given us, which was really just a large sitting room with the furniture pushed back — with his arms crossed and his jaw set and his eyes on me the entire time I spoke. Not the map. Not the door. Me. Like if this went sideways, it'd be my fuck-up.Cade sat on the edge of the table. His father, Alpha Rian, had joined us via phone, on speaker, propped against a stack of books in the center of the table. Luna Elizabeth was on the same call, her voice clear and dry and precise as a filed edge. Tomas stood near the back. Marc stood next to Josylyn with his hand at the small of her back, which I suspected was the only thing keeping him from pacing.I laid it out the way I'd laid everything out since this started. Piece by piece. No softening.The sisters enter the clearing. Brianne's wolves inside the perimeter first.

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    What We're Walking Into

    Josylyn found the map first.She'd asked one of Alpha Tomas's wolves for paper — actual paper, not a phone, not a screen — and now it was spread across the bed between us, a printed satellite image of Korr's old territory that someone had pulled from a county land registry. Unmarked roads. Dense tree cover. A river cutting through the eastern edge that didn't appear on most GPS systems because it had been rerouted sometime in the 1970s and never officially updated."Brianne's people have been living here," I said, tracing the tree line with my finger, "for years. On routes that don't exist on any map Voss has built. Which means every blind spot he thinks he owns—""Is occupied," Josylyn finished."By wolves who know that land the way you know your own house in the dark."Elara was sitting cross-legged at the foot of the bed, her palms resting on her knees, her eyes moving across the map with the careful attention she gave things she was committing to memory. She hadn't said much. She

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    The Ashwood Sisters

    The bathroom tile was cold under my knees.I didn't care. I pressed my forehead against the rim of the toilet and breathed through my nose the way Colette had shown me, slow and deliberate, like I could trick my body into believing this was normal. That this was fine. That I was absolutely fine.I was not fine.I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand, grabbed the edge of the counter, and pulled myself upright. My reflection in Alpha Tomas's guest bathroom mirror looked like something that had been wrung out and hung to dry. Hair pulled back in a hasty knot, eyes too bright, jaw set the way it always set when I was holding something together that wanted very badly to fall apart.Sirus.The name had been running on a loop since Luna Elizabeth said the words. A tight, relentless circuit. Sirus is missing. We don't know how long. That's the problem.I knew how he got to him. I'd been turning it over since last night, the same way you press a bruise — not because it helps, but because yo

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    Lightening the Load

    The room is quiet.Waiting.I take a breath, going silent.At first, nothing.Silence.Then Luna Elizabeth speaks."Wow." Her voice is warm, approving. "Honest. And the true sign you are the right person for this job."I blink at her.She leans forward, closer to the screen, her gaze steady."To ad

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    Drowning in Responsibility

    I hated myself for admitting this, but as soon as the plane carrying Luna Elizabeth and Sirus lifted off the tarmac yesterday, I felt it.Lighter.Less weight. Less responsibility. The shift was immediate.Sharp enough to make guilt settle in my chest right behind it.But it didn’t change the trut

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    I’ll Be There When It’s Safe

    The morning comes too fast.I wake to pale light filtering through the curtains, Cade's arm heavy across my waist, River's breath warm against my shoulder.For a moment, I let myself pretend.That today is just another day.That Sirus is still here, safe in the room down the hall.That I don't have

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    The Interrogation

    The observation room is cold.Air leaks through the vent, raising goosebumps on my skin—even with Cade and River pressed close on either side of me.Cade’s hand rests at the small of my back.River’s shoulder brushes mine.Heat.Solid.Certain.Through the reinforced glass, the faction leader slum

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status