Share

The Iron Den

Author: Angel Cole
last update publish date: 2026-02-02 11:37:55

"Good luck, honey. Whatever you're running from—I hope you make it." Carol said, wearing her jacket, and twenty dollars she'd kindly given me stuffed in my pocket.  I was grateful. 

I opened the door and stepped out into the cold. The air bit at my exposed legs, my torn feet, but I didn't flinch. I closed the door, watched Carol's taillights disappear down the highway, and turned toward the diner.

I was alone now.

Completely, utterly alone.

It should have terrified me.

Instead, it felt like the first real breath I'd taken in years.

The diner bathroom was a study in institutional grimness: cracked tile, a mirror spotted with age, a sink that dripped rust-colored water. But it had a lock on the door and soap that smelled like fake flowers, and that was enough.

I stripped off what was left of the wedding dress, watching it pool on the floor like a shed skin. The fabric was torn, mud-caked, and streaked with blood from the cuts on my arms and legs. It looked like something that had been through a war.

I supposed it had.

I washed myself as best I could in the sink, scrubbing away the dirt and blood and the lingering scent of the Ashwood estate. The water was cold enough to make my teeth chatter, but I didn't care. I needed to feel clean, needed to wash away every trace of the life I'd left behind.

When I was done, I pulled Carol's jacket back on over my bra and the slip I'd been wearing under the dress. It wasn't much, but it was better than nothing. I finger-combed my hair, trying to tame the wild tangle of dark waves, and stared at my reflection.

I looked like hell. Pale skin, hollow eyes, a cut on my cheek that was still oozing blood. But there was something else there too—something fierce and defiant that hadn't been there before.

I looked like a survivor.

I looked like someone who'd chosen herself over everything else.

I liked it.

I left the bathroom and walked back out into the diner. The waitress—fiftyish, bleached hair piled high, eyes sharp enough to cut glass—looked me over and didn't say a word. She just poured me a cup of coffee and slid it across the counter.

"On the house," she said.

I wrapped my hands around the mug and drank it black, feeling the heat spread through my chest. It tasted like burnt rubber and regret, but it was exactly what I needed.

"You know, anywhere around here I could... lay low for a while?" I asked, keeping my voice casual.

The waitress studied me for a long moment, her expression unreadable. Then she jerked her head toward the window.

"There's a place about five miles up the old logging road," she said. "The Iron Den. Biker bar. Not the kind of place a girl like you usually ends up, but..." She shrugged. "They don't ask questions."

I nodded, committing the name to memory. "Thanks."

She refilled my coffee without being asked. "You be careful, honey. That place—it's not what it seems."

I almost laughed. Nothing was ever what it seemed.

The sun was just starting to rise when I left the diner, painting the sky in shades of bruised purple and sickly orange. I followed the highway north for about a mile, then found the turnoff the waitress had mentioned: a narrow dirt road that disappeared into dense forest, half-hidden by overgrown brush.

It looked like the kind of road that led to nowhere.

Or to the kind of places people didn't talk about.

I turned down it.

The forest pressed in on both sides, the trees forming a canopy overhead that blocked out most of the early morning light. My feet—still bare, still bloody—left prints in the dirt, but I didn't stop. I could hear something up ahead: the low rumble of engines, the distant thump of bass.

Music.

Life.

I rounded a bend and stopped dead.

The building squatted in a clearing like a predator at rest: low-slung, made of weathered wood and corrugated metal, with a neon sign that flickered weakly in the gray light. THE IRON DEN, it read, the letters half-burnt out. Motorcycles lined the front—dozens of them, gleaming chrome and black leather, parked in neat rows like soldiers at attention.

It was a biker bar. The kind of place my father had always warned me about, the kind of place where good girls didn't go.

Good thing I wasn't a good girl anymore.

I took a breath, squared my shoulders, and walked toward the door.

Inside, the bar was dark and close, the air thick with smoke and sweat and something else—something wild and animal that made the hair on my arms stand up. The walls were lined with old license plates and faded photographs, the floor sticky with spilled beer and God knew what else. A jukebox in the corner played something low and bluesy, the kind of music that sounded like sex and regret.

The bar itself ran the length of the back wall, bottles glinting in the dim light. A handful of men—and a few women—were scattered around the room, some playing pool, some hunched over drinks, all of them radiating the kind of casual menace that said they could kill you without breaking a sweat.

Every single one of them turned to look at me when I walked in.

I froze, my hand still on the door, and felt the weight of their attention like a physical thing. I knew what they were seeing: a girl in an oversized jacket and a slip, blood on her feet and face, hair wild and tangled, eyes too bright with desperation and fear.

I looked like prey.

I looked like a victim.

I looked like something they could break.

But I didn't run. I lifted my chin, met their stares head-on, and walked to the bar.

The bartender was a woman—tall, broad-shouldered, with arms covered in tattoos and a scar running from her temple to her jaw. She looked me over with a flat, assessing gaze, then poured a shot of whiskey and slid it across the bar.

"You look like you need it," she said. Her voice was rough, like gravel and smoke.

I picked up the glass. "I don't have any money."

"I'll buy it for you."

The voice came from my left—male, smooth, with an edge of something predatory underneath. I turned and found myself looking at a man in his thirties, broad-shouldered and thick-necked, with the kind of face that might have been handsome if it wasn't twisted into a leer.

I could smell him from here: wolf. Alpha. The scent was unmistakable, even to someone like me who'd never shifted.

"Thanks," I said, keeping my voice neutral. "But I'm good."

"Come on, sweetheart." He moved closer, invading my space, his hand reaching for my arm. "Let me buy you a drink. We can get to know each other."

I stepped back, putting the bar between us. "I said I'm good."

His smile didn't waver, but something cold flickered in his eyes. "Don't be like that. I'm just trying to be friendly."

His hand shot out, faster than I expected, grabbing my wrist. His grip was tight, possessive, his fingers digging into my skin hard enough to bruise.

"Let go," I said, my voice low and dangerous.

"Or what?" He pulled me closer, his breath hot on my face. "You gonna make me?"

I looked him dead in the eye.

Then I drove the heel of my palm straight into his nose.

The crack was loud enough to cut through the music. Blood exploded across his face, hot and red, and he stumbled back with a howl of pain and rage.

"I said no, asshole," I said, shaking out my hand.

The bar went silent.

The wolf was clutching his nose, blood pouring between his fingers, his eyes wild with fury. He took a step toward me, and I tensed, ready to run or fight or do whatever it took to survive.

But then I heard it: laughter.

Low, rich, amused.

I turned and saw them for the first time.

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

Latest chapter

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    WHAT'S LEFT

    The council chamber didn't look like the end of ten years of blood and trafficked routes. It looked like paperwork, cold and fluorescent and utterly unglamorous. That was the point. Men like Josiah spent their whole lives being feared. The least he deserved was to end the way he should've been treated all along — as a line item.Elizabeth stood at the podium with a stack of filings thick enough to bury a man, because it was about to. "Petition to strip title and territory, corroborated by direct testimony, independent documentation, and four days of real-time evidence gathered under full council authority." She set the stack down with a weight that seemed to echo through the whole room. "Motion to dissolve the northern corridor in its entirety — not transfer, not restructure. Dissolve."That word mattered more than most people in the room understood. A takedown by force leaves a vacancy, and vacancies get filled — some ambitious wolf with a grudge and a gun steps into the empty seat w

  • 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    More than One Enemy

    Beta Antonia found me three hours later, still at the border between the Alpha Thomas pack and the Ashwood pack.I was still at the barn, coordinating patrols with Marc and River. The 48-hour clock was already ticking.She didn't knock. Just walked in, and the look on her face stopped every convers

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    They Are Coming for Us

    ClaimedThe celebration stretched into the night—music pulsing through the great hall, laughter echoing off stone walls, the mingled scents of three packs creating something new and electric in the air.I stood near the dais with Sirus tucked against my side, his small hand gripping mine like a lif

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    Iron Fangs

    Alpha Rian stood at the base of the stairs, hands clasped behind his back, posture relaxed but unmistakably commanding. Tall, broad-shouldered, with silver threading through dark hair that only added to his authority. I could see River in the set of his jaw, Cade in the steadiness of his stance.Be

  • I Accidentally Became the Alphas' Mate    Prove It or Bleed

    The Black Talon yard was already full when we rolled in.Engines idled low, rumbling like something alive beneath the gravel. Leather creaked. Metal clicked. The air itself felt territorial—thick with dominance, challenge, and the kind of silence that didn't come from peace, but from waiting.Bikes

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