LOGIN
I nearly escape, my things packed and my key in my hand, just as I am about to lock the door, that’s when I hear footsteps.
If I were living a normal life, I would have thought it was probably my neighbors returning from a late night party. But no, nothing about my life has been normal ever since my mum died. I know they have found me, so I do not bother locking the door. I drop the key and run. Soon, I realize all exits have been blocked. One of the masked men slaps me across the cheek. “That is for giving us a hard time.” Then he brings out a gun, pulls the trigger. I wake up with a shout. “Oh my God, oh my God. It was a dream. It was a dream. I escaped. I’m still alive.” I try to tell my brain that. But my heart is still beating fast. I have had nightmares, but this one feels so real. Running, always running. And it seems as though it will never end. I do not know what they want from me. But those are the last words my mum said before she died. Run. She never told me what or who I am running from, or where I am running to. That was yesterday. Today, I woke up from another weird dream I keep having. Broke people should not be having wet dreams, but since that is the only way I ever get a taste of sex, I have no right to complain. The strange thing is that the man in the dream never reveals his face. I keep feeling as though it is too real to be just a dream, or that he is waiting for me somewhere. But that cannot be possible. Can it? I look around my cheap dig, a tiny space that barely fits a bed. I move in last month. It is not much, but it is mine. It is better than the room I used to share with my late mum before she died last year. She actually died on my birthday. What does that say about me? Since then, I have been on the run. I have nearly been killed, kidnapped, sold off, slaughtered, whatever method they choose. Over time, I discovered that I am being chased by different groups of people. Who they are and what they want from me, I never care enough to find out. When you see stranger men with different weapons you never knew existed, you don’t offer them a sit and chitchat, you run. As fast as you can. In the space of one year, I moved through seven different provinces. I am not even surprised by how they keep finding me. At this point, I keep my bank cards and personal documents with me at all times. I carry my essentials everywhere, ready to leave at the slightest hint of danger or any suspicious activity. The last time, I worked as a church cleaner. The pay was not much, but I thought it will be safe. I was wrong. Whoever is looking for me ended up killing the resident pastor when he tried to help me. I escaped. Barely. After staying here for three weeks, I finally secured a job at a restaurant. Today is my third day, and I am already tired of the manager. All I want is to keep my head down, work, get paid, and stay under the radar. I try not to attract attention, no matter how many times the ugly creep grabs my ass. I do not have the luxury of getting angry and losing my job. Today is my birthday, and I wake up to a leaking roof. Wow. What a beautiful way to start my day. I mean, what else could possibly go wrong? My bike. Dear universe, when I ask what else could possibly go wrong, it was not a challenge. So why is my bike refusing to start when I am already five minutes late? My motorcycle needs servicing, and no matter how much I plead with it to start, the stubborn beast refuses to listen. Well. Happy birthday to me. I start trekking to work. Luckily, my workplace is not far from my cell, because the place I live in cannot possibly be called a room. But it is all I can afford. When I arrive, my manager calls me into his office and starts shouting about how incompetent I am. I am sure he raises his voice so everyone can hear him. He humiliates me in front of everyone without actually doing it in their presence. I remain silent and let him finish. Then I apologize for coming late and go out to start taking orders. At the end of my shift, exhausted, I am called into his office once again. I have no choice but to go. The moment I step inside, he instructs me to close the door. I do. I wait for him to speak, but instead, he stands and walks toward me. I fight the urge to step back. “Why are you resisting me when I can make your life much easier?” he asks, stepping into my personal space. I keep telling myself not to punch him. “Sir, I am here to work and get paid. I am not interested in anything else,” I reply, looking him straight in the eye. He smiles. “But I can make it more interesting for you. Don’t waste your beauty.” The word beauty lands with his palm on my breast, followed by a deliberate squeeze. I see red. My fist connects with his nose, followed by a hard kick to his groin. He collapses to his knees, his face turning crimson. That pain should keep him occupied long enough before he calls the police if I stick around. And yes, I have been through this before. The police never take my word for it. So I walk out. Unemployed once more. What a glorious birthday.I gently push Tyson toward the bathroom, my hand firm against his chest despite the way his eyes linger on me like he has other ideas.“Shower,” I tell him softly, but there’s no room for argument in my tone.I don’t wait to see if he changes his mind. The moment the door closes behind him, I turn and head back out. The fortress is quiet at this hour, the kitchen dim and still. I don’t bother waking the chef. Instead, I move quietly, gathering what I need, putting something simple together myself.It feels… grounding.After everything, the danger, the tension, the weight of what’s coming, this small act steadies me.By the time I return to the room, the sound of running water has stopped.Tyson is already out of the shower.My steps slow for just a second.He stands there, damp skin catching the low light, tension still carved into every line of his body. Even clean, even freshly showered, he looks like a man carrying too much on his shoulders.His eyes lift to mine the moment I enter
After I tell them everything I know, I don’t stay to watch the weight of it settle on their shoulders.I leave.The war room feels too heavy, too suffocating, so I head back to the kitchen instead, back to something normal, something I can control. The familiar rhythm of chopping, stirring, directing others helps quiet my mind.But they’re still there.Hours later, when I return with food, Tyson and his men haven’t moved. Maps still spread. Voices still low. Eyes still sharp with focus and exhaustion.I understand what I’ve given them the location of an enemy that has remained hidden for years. For the first time, MoonHaven has the chance to strike first instead of waiting to be attacked. But even opportunities like this can wait a few hours. They need food. They need sleep.Something in me tightens.“That’s enough,” I say, my voice cutting through the room before I can soften it. “You need to eat.”Tyson doesn’t even look up at first.Typical.I step closer, my gaze hardening. “That
I stand just outside the war room doors, my fingers curling slightly at my sides as the low murmur of voices seeps through the heavy wood. Tyson and Aiden have been locked in there for days, barely sleeping, barely eating, building strategies from the information I risked my life to bring back.Now, they’re ready for me.I push the door open.The air hits me first, thick, tense, calculated. Maps are spread across the long oak table, marked with symbols, lines, and hurried notes. The faint scent of ink mixes with something darker… magic. It lingers, heavy and warning.Tyson doesn’t look up immediately.He stands at the head of the table, one hand braced against it, the other gripping a charcoal pencil so tightly it snaps in two. His shoulders are rigid, like he’s holding back something dangerous.Aiden notices me first. His sharp gaze flickers toward me, softening just a fraction.“She’s here.”That’s all it takes.Tyson lifts his head.And the moment his eyes lock onto mine, something
Then he took a deep breath, physically forcing himself to calm down. “Explain.”I swallow.“I didn’t break in,” I say quickly. “Not exactly. It was a layered concealment field. It responds to magic. I studied it… countered it… and it accepted me.” It burned though. Like cold iron under my skin. I wasn’t sure I’d make it back out. But I can’t tell Tyson this. He is already angry that I put myself at risk. Guilt twisted inside of me, because i can imagine what he went through when he thought something bad must have happened to me. But I honestly can’t fold my hands and do nothing. MoonHaven is in my home, and as Luna, I refuse to let my people continue to be vulnerable just because we can’t locate our enemies’ camp.The room goes still again.Tyson’s voice drops dangerously. “It accepted you.”I nod once. “Yes.”A long pause, then he steps closer.Slowly. Carefully, like he’s recalibrating everything he thought he knew about me.“You walked into a witch-guarded rogue fortress,” he says
Tyson goes completely still. Not the controlled stillness of a leader holding himself together.The kind of stillness that comes right before a storm decides where to strike.His eyes lock onto mine. “Say that again,” he says slowly as if he thought he didn’t hear me correctly.My throat tightens, but I don’t look away.“I found where the rogues are hiding.”Aiden’s posture straightens immediately.The guards behind Tyson shift uneasily.Tyson doesn’t blink, doesn’t move.Just studies me like he’s trying to decide whether to be furious again, kill me himself or kiss me.“…You went into rogue territory,” he says slowly.“I didn’t go far..”“That is not what I asked.”The tone makes my words die in my throat.I lift my chin slightly anyway. “Yes.”A sharp inhale from someone behind him, Tyson closes his eyes for half a second.Just one.When he opens them again, the anger is still there,but it’s buried under something heavier.Calculation.Focus.As if he has decided to get the informa
By the time I return to the compound, the sky has already shifted into deep night.Too late.The moment I step past the outer guards, I feel it. The atmosphere is wrong, like the entire place is holding its breath and refusing to exhale.Then I hear it.A voice.A roar of command that shakes the corridor walls.“You three were supposed to guide her!”I freeze.Oh.That’s… not good.Because I recognize that voice instantly.TysonI don’t even need to see him to know what he looks like right now. A wolf whose mate has gone missing doesn’t behave like a man anymore.He behaves like something restrained by thin threads of control. A wolf in that state does not sleep.Does not eat.Does not think clearly.His instincts override logic. He tracks scent patterns obsessively, replaying every second he last had his mate in sight.He becomes hyper-aware of sound, movement, presence.And worst of all he becomes possessive in panic.Not gentle possessiveness, not romantic.Territorial devastations
I think I fainted again I regain consciousness at the same time I feel a hand brush mine, but when I open my eyes, Alpha is standing a little far from me, looking as if he is ready to cut off my neck.He frowns. “You really fainted. You were not pretending. I could taste your fear and confusion.”
I woke up in a bed, surrounded by three big men. They are all huge. I pretend as if I am still unconscious.A voice booms beside me. “Open your eyes, spy. We can tell you’re awake.”I open my eyes to glare at the speaker. A tall blond man who looks about thirty-four. “You don’t need to be so loud,
Chapter TwoAs much as I would love to get myself some buzz, I can’t do that with my state of unemployment. I hardly get drunk, it takes a lot of alcohol to get me to that state. Lucky me, nothing ever works my way. Back when my mum was still alive, she used to tell me I am wasting my time trying
The silence that follows feels like it has weight. Like it’s pressing down on my chest, making it harder to breathe.I don’t realize I’ve stepped back until my shoulder brushes against something solid.Warm and alive. Tyson He doesn’t say anything at first, but I feel it, the shift in him. The way







