Partager

CHAPTER 2

Auteur: MidasPen
last update Date de publication: 2026-01-23 17:44:08

Ciara's POV

I tried my best. What did I do to deserve this?

That was the thought that circled through my mind as the cold seeped deeper into my bones.

I had studied pack law until my eyes burned. Practiced healing until I could set a bone and stitch a wound without flinching. Learned six different languages, the history of every major pack in the territory, the proper protocols for everything from treaty negotiations to funeral rites.

I did all of this for a man who had never even spared me a glance.

Maybe he was right. Maybe all those years of training had not made me special. Maybe they had just made me good at pretending to be something I was not.

The cold stopped hurting after a while. My body just went numb, heavy, like I was sinking into the snow rather than kneeling on top of it. My thoughts grew fuzzy, distant.

This was not so bad, really. Going numb. Feeling nothing.

Laughter spilled from the house.

My stepmother and my father were talking, laughing over something that didn't include me. Just like the day she first came here, when my mother was dying.

My mother's voice whispered through the fog in my mind.

Little star. My brave little star.

Tears ran over my frozen skin, scorching and sharp, making me tremble.

No, Mom. I was not brave. I had never been brave.

No one would protect me like you once did.

No one was coming.

Boots appeared in my fading vision. Black leather, expensive. Military style with silver buckles.

I stared at them dully, too cold to look up, too tired to care who they belonged to.

"Well." The voice was dark, smooth, like smoke over deep water. "I did not expect to find anything interesting on my walk tonight. But here you are, the rejected bride, kneeling in the snow like a penitent."

Something in that voice cut through the numbness. Something sharp and aware and awake in a way that made my sluggish heart beat faster.

I forced my head up.

Draven Stormclaw looked down at me with eyes like black ice.

The Alpha's bastard son. Kaden's half brother. The one people whispered about in fearful voices—ruthless, cunning, dangerous. The one who had clawed his way up from nothing through blood and brilliance.

The one no decent she-wolf would ever approach.

He tilted his head, studying me like I was a puzzle he might or might not bother solving. "You are the Beta's daughter. Ciara, is it not?"

I could not speak. My lips were too numb, my throat too tight.

"Tell me, does hypothermia hurt? Or does it just make you quietly fade away like your mother?"

The question should have frightened me. Instead, it sparked something—some tiny flame of anger in the frozen wasteland of my chest.

He shouldn't have brought up my mother. And I was not ready to fade away.

I shot him the fiercest glare I could manage, though I could feel the last of my strength draining from me.

Yet he smiled.

"So you're not as boring as they claimed," he murmured. "A feisty little wolf."

"Don't talk about my mother." My voice was so faint it barely carried above the wind.

He chuckled, then slowly dropped into a crouch in front of me, clearly entertained. Snow dusted his dark hair, but he seemed entirely unbothered by the cold—as if it were nothing more than a mild inconvenience.

"Off-limits?" he said, tilting his head. "The Alpha's daughter of the Obsidian Pack. High-born. Gave everything up for love, only to be destroyed in the end."

His eyes shifted back to me. Studying. Weighing.

"And you. The Luna heir who was raised to be perfect. Rejected by someone who never cared about you, and now on your knees in the snow, just waiting to die here." He paused, letting the words settle like the snow around us. "Tell me, what's the difference?"

Anger surged through me.

I hated what he was saying.

But that didn't stop it from hitting exactly where it hurt most.

Tears slid down my cheeks, burning trails through the cold. I couldn't tell if they came from grief or rage anymore. Maybe it was both. Maybe there was no longer any difference between the two.

My voice came out rough, scraped raw. "So do you think I still have any other choice? Run?"

A bitter smile crossed my lips.

"My father cared more about his reputation than anything else. I'd never make it to the border." I swallowed, the words tasting like ash. "He'd have the guards bring me back. And once I was... it wouldn't be this gentle."

The snow kept falling. Silence stretched between us, broken only by the soft hiss of flakes hitting the ground.

He chuckled again, clearly amused by something I could not see.

"So if there were a better way out, you'd definitely take it. Right?"

I looked up at him, stunned.

His eyes were dark and unreadable, offering nothing—no warmth, no pity, no indication of what lay behind that question.

Was he offering me a way out?

Why would someone like him help me? Someone like Draven Stormclaw did not extend mercy without reason. Everyone knew that. The whispers, the fearful glances, the way wolves parted when he walked through a crowd—none of it spoke of kindness.

And yet he was here. Crouching in the snow in front of a dying girl, asking questions that sounded almost like an invitation.

My mind was racing, grasping at possibilities even as my body continued to betray me. The cold had drained what little strength I had left. My fingers had gone completely numb, curled uselessly against my legs. My vision began to swim, the edges darkening, the world growing soft and distant.

He stood slowly, brushing the snow from his coat with unhurried precision, his gaze fixed on me as if waiting for my answer.

As if I had any time left to give one.

My body gave up.

I fell forward, my hands barely catching me before my face hit the ground. My throat wouldn't let me speak. Not even a full syllable.

But my eyes gave me away.

I wanted to survive. From this freezing night. From this hell I used to call home.

"Help…" I forced the sound out, reaching for him.

Then everything went black.

Continuez à lire ce livre gratuitement
Scanner le code pour télécharger l'application

Dernier chapitre

  • Rejected by the Alpha Heir, Mated to His Rival Brother   CHAPTER 37

    Ciara’s POVThe next day.I was coming back from a session with Serafine, my hair still loose, when movement in the entrance hall below caught my attention. I stopped at the railing, looked down and saw a woman.She was tall. Dark-haired, with an elegance that came from years of knowing exactly what effect she had when she walked into a room. She wore deep green, simply cut, and she moved like someone who had never once doubted that she deserved the space she occupied.The guards at the entrance were practically falling over themselves. The older one on the left — the one who had never once smiled at me without prompting — was grinning like she'd just said the funniest thing he'd heard all year. She laughed with them, easy and warm, her hand resting briefly on the younger guard's arm, and every single one of them stood a fraction straighter without noticing they were doing it.I stood at the railing and watched this for longer than I should have.A maid came around the corner behin

  • Rejected by the Alpha Heir, Mated to His Rival Brother   CHAPTER 36

    Draven's POVMarcus left the report on my desk at midnight with a single line written beneath his summary in his precise, economical hand: *This one is worse.*I read it twice before I set it down.Corvin. Junior aide, twenty-three years old, attached to the council offices for the past fourteen months. The kind of young man who blended into the background of every meeting he attended — quiet, efficient, forgettable. The kind that nobody watched because nobody thought there was anything to watch.The leaks that couldn't have come from Wren pointed directly to him. Meeting schedules that Wren wouldn't have known. Internal correspondence from council sessions. Details about pack resource allocation that lived in exactly one set of documents — the ones that passed through the council offices before they reached anyone else.Corvin had access to all of it.I sat back and let that settle for a moment. Two informants. One a guard with gambling debts and a contact at a tavern. The other a co

  • Rejected by the Alpha Heir, Mated to His Rival Brother   CHAPTER 35

    Kaden’s POVMy father was still in the chamber when I turned back. He was standing at the window, hands clasped behind him."A word," he said, without turning.I closed the door and waited.He turned and looked at me for a moment before moving to his desk and settling into his chair with the deliberate ease of a man choosing his next words carefully."I've been in correspondence with the Ashvale Pack," he said. "Their Alpha has a daughter. Well-bred, politically connected, the kind of match that would consolidate our eastern alliances considerably." He slid a folded document across the desk toward me. "I'd like you to consider it."I stared at him."You're not serious."His eyes came up. "I am entirely serious.""It has been weeks," I said. "Weeks since the engagement with Ciara ended. You want me to begin courting someone else in the same breath?""The pack cannot wait on your emotional timeline, Kaden—""This isn't emotional." The words came out sharper than I intended. "This is bas

  • Rejected by the Alpha Heir, Mated to His Rival Brother   CHAPTER 34

    KADEN'S POV The council chamber smelled of old wood and political anxiety, which in my experience were rarely separable. I arrived exactly on time, which meant my father and both senior council members were already seated and had been for long enough to exchange whatever preliminary conversation they hadn't wanted me present for. Councilman Thorne sat to my father's left, his hands folded neatly in front of him. As always, his expression revealed nothing. The man had spent so many years in politics that even his silences felt deliberate. Every reaction was measured, every glance considered. He gave away nothing he wasn't prepared to lose. Across from him sat Elder Cassian. Older. Sharper around the edges. Less interested in appearances. Cassian had survived the reigns of four Alphas, which told me more about him than any title ever could. Men like him did not last because they were agreeable. They lasted because they were useful. And because they knew the differenc

  • Rejected by the Alpha Heir, Mated to His Rival Brother   CHAPTER 33

    CIARA'S POVDraven stood there with a tray balanced against his hip — bread, stew, the quiet routine he'd built without ever announcing it as a routine."How did training go?" he asked, stepping past me into the room."It changed everything, actually." I shut the door behind him. "Serafine told me the heat isn't separate from my wolf. It never was. She *is* the power. Every time it's surged — the heat I've been describing to you for weeks — that was just her, surfacing."He set the tray down and turned to look at me with real interest. "So when you've been afraid of losing control—""I've been afraid of her. Yes." I sat across from him, still working through it myself. "And every time I pushed it down, told myself to calm it, I wasn't managing some wild force. I was silencing her."Draven went quiet, watching me with the kind of stillness that meant he was actually turning it over rather than waiting for his turn to speak."That changes how you'll have to think about training," he sai

  • Rejected by the Alpha Heir, Mated to His Rival Brother   CHAPTER 32

    CIARA'S POVThree weeks in, I started to feel the difference.The power used to arrive without warning — a flood, sudden and total, no space between feeling fine and feeling like my skin couldn't hold what was underneath it. Now there was a moment before. A low warmth sitting just beneath my sternum, like a coal that hadn't caught yet.My wolf, stirring before she surfaced."There," I said, sitting up straighter. "Right there — do you see it? Well, you can't see it, but something just happened. I felt her before she rose. A breath of warning. Maybe two." I pressed my palm flat against my chest. "She's awake right now. I can feel her."Serafine's hands stilled over the herbs she'd been sorting. She looked up properly this time. "Describe it. Don't simplify it for my benefit."I frowned, trying to find the actual shape of the thing rather than a tidy version of it. "Before, it felt like something happening to me. Like she would surge up out of nowhere and I'd just be carried along by it

Plus de chapitres
Découvrez et lisez de bons romans gratuitement
Accédez gratuitement à un grand nombre de bons romans sur GoodNovel. Téléchargez les livres que vous aimez et lisez où et quand vous voulez.
Lisez des livres gratuitement sur l'APP
Scanner le code pour lire sur l'application
DMCA.com Protection Status