LOGINRomy pov
“Did… did she just reject him?” “Did she reject Alpha Rowan?” “Is she crazy?” “Wait… she’s the Alpha’s mate?” The frantic, horrified whispers of the crowd swept through the grand reception hall like wildfire.Hundreds of pairs of eyes darted between me and the towering Beast of Flames standing only a breath away.
A slow, dark smile appeared on my lips in absolute satisfaction. I had humiliated him. The Supreme Alpha of Stormveil, the most feared man on the continent, publicly cast aside by a bridesmaid. The urge to leap forward and bury my fangs into his perfectly sculpted, arrogant face was a living, breathing thing inside me.It hurt worse than the memory of the fire and it burned hotter than the night I watched him pull a silver blade from my sister’s chest.
The Goddess forbade the man who slaughtered my family turned out to be my fated mate. The Moon Goddess must be absolutely silly to play such a sick, twisted joke on my life. I waited for the mythical, soul-tearing agony that lore promised came with rejecting a fated mate. But there was no tearing of my spirit, no collapse of my mind.Instead, there was only the vicious, searing heat of the cursed mark pulsing beneath the raven tattoo on my neck.
I had no idea why the mark was reacting so violently to his presence, but the phantom fire only fueled the venom in my blood. I didn't want to stay in his face for another second. I had until the early hours of the morning to make him beg for death.I clutched my phone, the one he had just picked up from the floor, and turned on my heel to walk away.
His voice, cold, low, and laced with absolute command, stopped me dead in my tracks. "Rejection isn't something I accept little Raven…" Raven. The breath violently left my lungs and my chest seized.He had called me Raven.
I turned back slowly, my eyes snapping up to his face, searching frantically for any sign that he'd recognized me.Did he know? My mind violently dragged me back when I was six up until my family died. I remembered him playing with me in my wooden treehouse.I remembered begging him and Alina to let me tag along on their walks and I surely remembered Alina ruffling my hair with a bright smile, calling me her stubborn little Raven.
I stared into his gray eyes, waiting to see the realization that he was looking at the survivor of the family he had massacred. But his gaze held nothing but cold, dark amusement and an infuriating indifference.He didn't know who I was. To him, I was just a rogue, defiant female who happened to be his mate. I tilted my chin, swallowing the lump of ash in my throat.
"...It's my thing to do." He completed. Without giving me another second of his time, Rowan simply turned away.He adjusted the cuffs of his tailored suit and casually walked toward the far side of the room, heading straight for the groom's father and Amy's parents as if I hadn't just insulted him in front of hundreds of people.
The crowd instantly parted for him, but their eyes stayed glued to me. Everyone was looking at me like I was a rabid, crazy bitch who had just signed her own death warrant. A hand grabbed my wrist and yanked me hard. "Romy, what is wrong with you?" Kathy hissed, pulling me toward the bridal entrance, her face was pale. "Stop looking at the Alpha like you want to murder him and get in line before Amy dies of anxiety!" My phone vibrated against my palm and I pulled it up, glancing down at the encrypted screen.Xry: Abort mission. Target is Alpha Vexley. DO NOT ENGAGE.I expected this. Cowards.
I scoffed, sliding the phone back into the slit pocket of my dress. Abort? There was absolutely no way I was letting him slip away. Not after thirteen years.
The rest of the wedding ceremony passed in a suffocating blur. Rowan took a seat near the front, his presence commanding the entire room. I knew he had come here for a reason, something I couldn't specifically put my finger on. The Beast of Flames didn't just attend random weddings.With his identity now revealed to the underground, I wondered who he was really here for.
As expected, the reception was dominated by whispers about my audacity. "She just wants the attention," Camellia whispered loudly to one of the other bridesmaids, her eyes green with envy as we stood near the edge of the dance floor. "She's playing hard to get and it’s okay she rejected him, honestly. The Alpha is way too great for someone like her anyway. If anything, he should have been the one to reject her."I ignored her, my eyes drifting back to the Alpha's table. It was undeniable how terrifyingly handsome he had grown.
He possessed a larger-than-life body, his broad shoulders stretching the fabric of his dark suit, radiating a lethal, untouchable power.
Although I was no stranger to how he currently looked. Back at my apartment, I had a hidden "blue room"—a locked office bathed in the glow of monitors.
The walls were plastered with blurry surveillance photos, red string, and newspaper clippings of his pack.
I looked at his face every single day and I ground his features into my mind to keep my hatred sharp, to never forget the monster beneath the skin.
Now, standing in the same room with him in the flesh, while my agency frantically declared an aborted mission? I would not let tonight pass. This was my only chance. Before I could strategize my next move, Amy found me. She looked absolutely stunned, her white gown rustling as she pulled me into a quiet circle with Mrs. Waxman, Mr. Waxman, and Erica trailing nervously behind her. "Romy," Amy breathed, her eyes wide. "That's... that's Rowan. Alina's Rowan." "I know," I said, my voice dangerously quiet. "How is it even possible that he has another mater? And it turned out to be the sister of his late ex?" Amy muttered, rubbing her temples.I sighed. "Tell me about it," i muttered.
She looked up at me, her eyes pleading. "Romy, you have to apologize to him. I know you loathe him but he's no ordinary person. You rudely rejected a Supreme Alpha in public.”
“What?” I questioned, stunned.
“Yes” Erica chipped in. “Even if he didn't formally accept the rejection because you don't know the proper rites, you have no idea what a man like that can do to our family."
Mrs. Waxman nodded vigorously, wringing her hands. "Please, Romy. Your rejection will cause a massive rift. The Alpha's wrath is not something we can survive."
I clenched my jaw. I was stubborn and I was an assassin. Bowing to him definitely made my blood boil, but I looked at Amy—the woman who had clapped a hand over my mouth and dragged me away to save my life.
I would do nothing but protect my sister, plus, I actually needed to be in close proximity with him. I pressed the little tracking device in my hand.
I've never been anywhere without them and I'm thankful I didn't make today an exception.
"Fine," I gritted out and they gasped. I smoothed down the silk of my dress and headed across the room. Rowan was standing near the head table, talking to the groom, Draven and the groom's father, Marcus Thorne. As I approached, Marcus quickly thanked Rowan for coming, offering a nervous apology for the disruption, before scurrying away.The groom followed suit shortly after, leaving Rowan and me entirely alone in a bubble of dangerous tension.
He turned to face me, his hands resting casually in his pockets. "I was told to apologize," I stated, keeping my voice flat. He tilted his head slightly. "For?""For humiliating you publicly by rejecting you," I replied, meeting his cold stare. "I understand the Alpha suffers no rejection."
Rowan scoffed, a dark, arrogant sound. "So, are you really sorry, little Raven?"
"Isn't that what I'm doing?" I snapped.
"Ohh," he mocked softly, clearly enjoying my forced submission."I could buy you drinks to properly apologize," I offered.
I didn't sound convincing at all, but I didn't care. I just needed an excuse to close the distance.
He raised a dark brow, his gaze dropping to my lips before snapping back to my eyes. "Why? So you could easily poison me?" My heart stopped as the air vanished from my lungs. Did he somehow find out who I truly was?Before my panic could fully set in, Rowan let out a low menacing grunt. "Not like you can," he added smoothly.
I exhaled a sharp breath, masking my shock with a sneer. "Well then. Good day... Alp...ha."
The title tasted like ash on my tongue. I hated him, and hiding it was becoming impossible.
I turned sharply to leave. As I pivoted, I purposefully crossed my ankles, letting my four-inch heel slip against the polish marble. I let out a soft gasp, stumbling backward.
Exactly as I planned, he moved with supernatural speed and Rowan caught me before I hit the floor. His massive, warm hand clamped firmly around my waist, pulling my back flush against his solid chest.
The moment his fingers pressed into my skin, the mark on my neck flared to life again. It breathed hot—a violent, undeniable pulse of electricity that shot straight down my spine.
I blinked rapidly. That was the second time today.
There was no ignoring the overwhelming, physical sensation of his touch."Careful there, little Raven," he murmured, his breath brushing the shell of my ear.
I hastily pulled myself up, ripping myself from his grip. I forced a tight, polite smile, bowed slightly, and quickly walked away, feeling the heavy, burning weight of his gaze tracking my every step.
My heart was thudding violently against my ribs, but a real, sinister smile finally touched my lips.
Despite the erratic pulse of my cursed mark, I was glad.My perfect stumble had worked, and slipped seamlessly into the inner lining of his expensive suit jacket, was a micro-tracker.
By 1:30 AM, I would track him down, and I was going to make sure the Supreme Alpha kissed the earth in the most gruesome death he had ever seen.
Rowan povBy the sixth morning, I was leaning against the bedroom doorframe, watching Romy drag her thumb along the edge of the washstand.A thin line cut through the dust beneath her touch.The bruising on her neck had finally started to fade. The deep purple beneath her jaw was turning yellow around the edges, like an old bruise finally giving up the fight. The marks from my fangs were almost hidden under her hair now. She thought the bond was nothing more than a desperate measure to keep her alive, well that was exactly what I wanted her to believe.If she learned the truth too soon, she’d run. She’d climb over the orchard wall, disappear into the forest, and keep running until the poison finished what it had started.She thought I’d only bitten her to pull the silver from her body and keep her alive. That was the story I’d given her, and for now, it was the one she believed.Romy reached for the tin cup on the shelf, but her hand missed the handle. Her knuckles tapped the wall w
Romy POV By the fourth day, the room felt smaller.The fog outside never lifted. It pressed against the windows from morning until night, turning the glass pale and dull.The corners of the bedroom faded into shadow long before sunset, and every hour that passed made the walls seem closer.I lay on my back, staring at the door.Twelve feet.I’d measured it so many times I no longer needed to look. Twelve feet from the bed to freedom.My thumb rubbed against the edge of the blanket, catching on a loose thread. The wool scratched my skin.Somewhere under the covers his scent lingered–cedar smoke, clean soap, and something warmer that seemed impossible to escape.Because he was always here.If he crossed the room, I knew it. If he shifted in the chair near the hearth, I knew it. If he stood by the window, I felt it before I heard it–the bond made sure of that.A plate landed on the cedar chest at the foot of my bed.“You need to eat something, Romy,” he said, his shoulder against the bed
RomyI woke slowly, keeping my eyes shut and my jaw locked tight.Something heavy lay across my legs, pinning me in place. One of my boots was still on, pressing painfully against my toes beneath the blanket.A warm thumb rested at the base of my neck, rough against my tangled hair whenever it moved.Rowan was behind me.His chest rose and fell against my back with every breath, the heat of his bare skin bleeding through the thin fabric between us. He smelled faintly of smoke and rain and whatever hell the Hawthorne ruins had dragged him through.I stayed perfectly still.I moved my fingers first, testing the mattress. Then I slowly dragged my hand toward my waist until I found the button of my trousers, still jammed through the hole with dried mud packed into the fabric.My jacket was gone. I was in a loose undershirt I didn’t recognize, the seam under one arm already coming apart.I kept my breathing even, then I tested the weight behind me again. He was Still asleep.Of course he wa
Rowan pov I was hallucinating.I had to be.Fear had wrapped itself so tightly around my chest that maybe my mind had finally broken.Because the last thing I remembered was dropping beside her in the mud.The last thing I remembered was holding her.I remembered dropping beside her. Remembered pulling her against me.Remembered begging her to wake up.I didn’t remember letting her go.I didn’t remember the darkness that followedBut when I looked up, Liam Mercer was ankle-deep in the rain with Romy in his arms.Her head rested against his shoulder. Red hair clung to the dark wool of his coat. Her arms were limp, fingers streaked with dirt. Mud dripped from her boots.He went completely silent. Terribly silent.“Liam.” My voice barely sounded human.The boy only adjusted his hold on her, lifting her higher.Rain had washed the dirt from his face. For a second, I saw the same boy I’d seen outside the villa. Young. Stubborn. Looking at her with that same awful certainty.As if he belie
Romy povThe ground under my cheek wasn’t tile.For one stupid second, my mind reached for the villa anyway–for the cold marble floors, the echoing halls, the polished prison I had learned to hate with every breath I took inside it.But this wasn’t marble.This time it was wet, broken, root-tangled earth pressed hard against the side of my face. Mud had found its way into my mouth. Something sharp scraped my lower lip when I tried to breathe. The air smelled of rot, rain, and old iron, thick enough to choke on.Above me, the remains of a stone arch leaned against the storm as if it had been trying not to fall for a hundred years and was finally tired. Mist crawled under it in pale strips, clinging to the mossy stones, sliding over my hands, my boots, my ruined clothes.I tried to lift my head, but the pain exploded in me.It came from my shoulder, then my chest, then everywhere at once. A slow, ugly burn spread under my skin, deep enough that it no longer felt like a wound. It felt l
Romy’s POVAt six o’clock that morning, the guards were changing shifts, and I’d been watching the four-minute gap between rotations at the east gate for two days.I left through it in the rain.The rain had started around five. My boots were already sinking two inches into the ground before I was through the perimeter By the time I cleared the tree line, water had soaked through to my shoulders. My chest ached with each breath, a dull, deep pull that had nothing to do with the cold. I kept walking anyway. If I stopped, I wasn’t going to make it the rest of the way. I had known for thirteen years what day this was. I’d marked it every year–in the Waxmans’ spare room with the door shut, in training facilities and airport lounges, in a hotel bathroom in Oslo with the shower running so no one outside would hear. I had never had a place worth visiting, and I had never been close enough. But now, I was close enough.The Hawthorne property sat forty minutes from the eastern boundary–dow
Romy POVThe second physician arrived Friday afternoon and confirmed everything Dr. Evander had already told us, right down to the tone of cautious optimism that irritated me on instinct.By Saturday I was in a terrible mood about it, and by Sunday I had spent most of the day trying to figure out h
Romy POVThe phone belonged to one of the kitchen girls.Not Petra–Petra I liked, and I wasn't going to burn her. It was the one who left her jacket on the south terrace twice a week and spent her break leaning against the service wall scrolling through something that wasn't estate business. I'd b
Rowan POVI heard Valerie before I stepped onto the south terrace.Not shouting.Valerie rarely raised her voice. Even angry, she preferred quiet over chaos. But lately, the control she wore so carefully had started slipping in small ways. Sharper answers at dinner. Too many late-night visits outsi
Rowan POVThe fire had burned low by the time I came back to the study. I poured whiskey into a glass and sat behind the desk with the intention of reviewing council reports before bed.I had barely gone through four pages when Valerie knocked. I could smell her awful perfume even with the door cl







