LOGINThe mattress dipped under his weight, and the air in the room shifted, becoming thick and suffocating. My heart was hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird.
My wolf whimpered, tucking her tail between her legs. Submit. Please, just submit.
Rider hovered over me. Up close, he was even more devastating. The moonlight caught the sharp angles of his cheekbones and the dark stubble on his jaw.
He smelled like a storm about to break—ozone, rain, and that dark, woodsy scent that made my head spin.
He placed a hand on my waist to pull me closer.
The moment his hand touched my waist, a strange heat shot through me. Rider stiffened like he felt it too.
Rider hissed, jerking his hand back as if he’d been burned. He stared at his palm, then at me, his gray eyes narrowing into slits.
"What did you do?" he growled.
I propped myself up on my elbows, shaking. "I... I didn't do anything."
He leaned in again, his nostrils flaring as he inhaled deeply near my neck. I held my breath, praying, hoping that his wolf would scream the truth at him.
Rider’s eyes flashed gold—his wolf was surfacing. For a moment, the cruelty on his face softened into something like confusion. His hand reached out again, trembling slightly, hovering over my cheek.
"Your smell..." he murmured, his voice losing its hard edge. "What did you put on your skin?."
My heart dropped. "Rider?"
The sound of his name on my lips seemed to snap him out of the trance. The gold vanished from his irises, replaced by cold, steel gray. He stood up abruptly, backing away from the bed as if I were a venomous snake.
He ran a hand through his dark hair, looking furious. "You’re using a scent blocker? Or some kind of pheromone enhancer?"
"What?" I sat up, clutching the silk sheet to my chest. "No! I’m not using anything. It’s just me."
"Liar," he spat. "No Omega smells like that. You’re trying to manipulate me."
He paced the room, his agitation growing. The air crackled with his Alpha aura, making it hard for me to breathe. He was fighting it. He was fighting it with every ounce of his stubborn will, rationalizing it away as a trick.
"I’m not manipulating you," I whispered, tears pricking my eyes. "If you would just look—"
"Silence!"
The Command slammed into me, sealing my lips shut.
Rider walked to the door, buttoning his shirt with jerky, angry movements. "I don't know what kind of game you or your stepfather are playing, hoping to seduce a King, but it won't work. My wolf is agitated. I won't bed you tonight."
He grabbed the door handle, then looked back at me over his shoulder. The look of disgust on his face cut deeper than any knife.
"The doctor will re-examine you in the morning. If I find out you’ve drugged yourself to appeal to me, I’ll throw you in the dungeons."
The door slammed shut. The lock clicked.
I was alone.
I curled into a ball on the massive bed, burying my face in the pillows that still smelled like him. My wolf was howling in grief, scratching at the walls of my mind.
He rejected us. Why does he hate us so much?
"He doesn't know," I whispered into the dark, trying to convince myself.
But as I drifted into a restless sleep, I knew the truth. Breaking through Rider Thorne’s walls wasn't going to be a romance. It was going to be a war.
The next morning, the sun was blinding.
I woke up with a headache and a hollow stomach. No one had come to unlock the door. No breakfast. No instructions.
I waited for an hour. Then two. My thirst was becoming unbearable.
Tentatively, I tried the door handle. It turned.
He must have unlocked it remotely, or told someone to do it. I peeked into the hallway. It was empty, lined with expensive art and endless doors. The Alpha King’s pack house was more like a palace, cold and silent.
I needed water.
I followed the faint sound of clattering pans down two flights of stairs until I found the kitchen. It was massive, stainless steel and marble, bustling with Omega staff preparing lunch.
As soon as I walked in, the chatter stopped.
A dozen pairs of eyes turned to me. Some looked curious. Most looked pitying.
"Um, excuse me?" I asked, my voice raspy. "Could I get a glass of water?"
A plump woman in an apron moved to help, but a sharp voice cut through the air like a whip.
"Don't serve her."
The staff froze.
I turned to see a woman leaning against the doorframe of the pantry. She was gorgeous in a terrifying way—tall, with platinum blonde hair and curves that her tight red dress barely contained. Her scent was cloying, like over-sweet perfume covering up something rotten.
This was Lia. I didn't need an introduction to know who she was. The tabloids loved her. The Alpha’s favorite bedwarmer. The one who thought she would be Queen.
Lia pushed off the wall and sauntered toward me, her heels clicking on the tile.
"So," she sneered, looking me up and down with a look of pure loathing. "This is the merchandise."
"I have a name," I said, standing my ground. I might be sold, but I was still a wolf. "It's Bailey."
Lia laughed, a harsh, barking sound. "Furniture doesn't get a name, sweetie. You’re a womb with legs. Rider paid for a service. Once you pop out a pup, you’ll be in the trash where you belong."
My hands curled into fists. "Is that what you’re worried about? That the trash might take your spot?"
The kitchen went dead silent. The Omega staff looked terrified.
Lia’s eyes flashed dangerous amber. She stepped into my personal space, her claws lengthening just enough to be a threat. "Listen to me, you little mutt. Rider doesn't do love. And he certainly doesn't do family. He hates you. He told me this morning that your scent makes him sick."
The words landed like a physical blow. Makes him sick.
"He didn't say that," I whispered, my voice wavering.
"Oh, he did," Lia grinned, showing teeth. "He thinks you're repulsive. He’s only going to touch you because he has to. So don't get any ideas about playing Luna. I run this house. And if you step out of line..."
She reached out and shoved me hard.
I wasn't expecting it. I stumbled back, my hip catching the corner of the granite island. Pain shot down my leg, and I gasped, gripping the counter to stay upright.
"Oops," Lia smirked. "Clumsy."
"You have no right," I hissed, my own wolf bristling. "I am the King's guest."
"You are the King's whore!" Lia shrieked. She raised her hand, her claws fully extended, aiming for my face.
I flinched, bracing for the impact, protecting my stomach out of instinct.
"ENOUGH!"
The voice was like a thunderclap.
The pressure in the room dropped instantly, forcing everyone, including Lia, to their knees. The Alpha Command. It was absolute.
I looked up, gasping for air.
Rider stood in the doorway. He was wearing a dark grey suit, immaculate and terrifying. He looked at Lia, who was trembling on the floor, and then his gaze slid to me. He looked at my hip, where a bruise was likely already forming, and his jaw ticked.
He walked into the room, the crowd parting like the Red Sea.
He stopped in front of Lia.
"Rider, baby, I was just—" Lia started, her voice high and pitchy.
"Get up," Rider said coldly.
Lia scrambled to her feet, smirking at me, thinking she had won.
Rider didn't look at her. He kept his eyes on me. They were cold, devoid of warmth, but burning with a dark, possessive fire.
"Did I give you permission to damage my property, Lia?" he asked softly.
Lia’s smirk vanished. "What?"
"If you scratch her face, or stress her out, she might not conceive.” I don’t like when people touch what’s under my roof.
He stepped closer to Lia, looming over her. "If you touch her again, I will rip your throat out. Not because I care about her. But because I don't like people breaking my toys."
Lia paled, nodding frantically. "Yes, Alpha. I'm sorry."
"Get out," he barked.
Lia fled. The kitchen staff scurried away, leaving us alone in the vast, cold kitchen.
I stood there, humiliated. He had saved me, but his words hurt more than Lia’s claws ever could. Property. Money. Toy.
Rider turned to me. He didn't ask if I was hurt. He stepped into my space, grabbing my arm and yanking me toward him. I felt the heat spread again, instantaneous and hot. He ignored them, though I saw his pupil dilate.
"And you," he growled, leaning down until his nose brushed mine. "You don't talk back to high-ranking wolves. You don't start fights. You exist to be quiet and useful."
"I didn't start it," I argued, my voice shaking. "I just wanted water."
"Then learn to fetch it without causing a scene," he snapped. He released my arm, pushing me back slightly.
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small, velvet box. He tossed it onto the counter. It slid across the marble and stopped in front of me.
"Put it on," he ordered.
I looked at the box, then at him. "What is it?"
"Insurance," Rider said, checking his watch. "I have a meeting. Wear it. If you take it off, there will be consequences."
He turned on his heel and walked out, leaving his scent lingering heavily in the air.
With trembling fingers, I opened the velvet box.
I gasped.
It wasn't a ring. It wasn't a necklace.
It was a collar.
A thin, diamond-encrusted leather collar with a small tracking device woven into the gems. And hanging from the center was a small silver tag engraved with a single word.
Mine.
My stomach dropped. He didn't just want an heir. He wanted to own me completely.
I looked up at the empty doorway, my hand clutching the cold leather.
"I hate you," I whispered.
But my treacherous heart thumped a different rhythm.
Raven's POV“You are still writing in that language,” I said as I stepped into the doorway of the east guest room, my voice steady even though I had already decided not to make this a confrontation.Callum did not look up right away. He continued writing at the small desk positioned near the window, the kind of placement that suggested whoever had assigned this room had not expected him to stay long enough to care about comfort. The exit paperwork was spread across the surface, half completed, and his pen moved with practiced familiarity over the old pack dialect that most wolves in this territory had stopped using years ago.I stayed where I was for a moment longer than necessary, not because I was uncertain about entering, but because I was observing him. I had not seen Callum in twelve years without the distance of a crisis, a battlefield, or a council directive shaping the context between us. Without that pressure, he looked different in a way I was not prepared for. Older, more c
Rider's POV“Are you planning to stay in here all morning,” Declan asked from the doorway, his voice casual in the way it always was when he already knew the answer.I did not look up immediately. I was seated at the kitchen table with a plate of eggs in front of me that I had not planned to eat here, in this room, at this hour, with Bailey sitting on the counter across from me as if this were an ordinary morning and not the aftermath of a political confrontation that would ripple through the territory for months. I took another bite before answering, because I had learned over the years that reacting too quickly to Declan rarely ended well.“I am eating,” I said evenly. “That does not require an explanation.”Declan stepped fully into the kitchen, eyes flicking over the scene in front of him with open amusement. He crossed the space in three long strides, reached out without asking, and stole a forkful of eggs from Bailey’s plate as if it were a habit rather than a provocation.Baile
Bailey's POV“Are they really gone,” I asked quietly, my hands resting on the cold stone of the corridor window as I watched the last of the Council vehicles roll toward the outer gates.The council left before dawn, their departure efficient and controlled, with none of the ceremony that had marked their arrival days earlier. Voss was escorted through the gates by Rider’s men, flanked on both sides as if there were any doubt he would comply, and yet he did not struggle, did not argue, and did not look back even once. That silence unsettled me more than any protest would have, because it felt deliberate, as if he was storing something away rather than surrendering it.I stayed at the window long after the final vehicle disappeared beyond the gates, li
Bailey's POV “I am walking into that hall first,” I said before anyone else could start arguing logistics around me because I already knew they were going to try and protect me by rearranging me and I was done being rearranged for other people’s comfort.Rider looked at me immediately, his expression sharpening with instinct before reason fully caught up with whatever argument he was about to make.“That is not protocol,” he replied carefully.I stepped closer instead of backing down, the mark on my collarbone still warm under my skin and my wolf fully awake inside me for the first time in my entire life, steady and watchful and no longer buried under someone else’s control.“I am the Luna of this pack as of approximately one hour ago,” I told him calmly, “and I will walk in however I choose.”Declan looked away slightly like he was trying not to laugh at the fact that Rider was losing this argument in real time while Raven stayed completely still beside him, though I felt approval f
Rider's POV“It does not change anything,” I told her the second I walked fully into the room because pretending I had not been standing outside listening would have been pointless and because the look she gave me when she turned around made honesty feel less optional than breathing.Bailey held my gaze across the room, steady and calm in that dangerous way she gets when she has already reached a decision internally and is now just waiting to see who else catches up to it.“I know,” she replied quietly.I nodded once but stayed where I was for a second longer before finally sitting down across from her.“I need to say it anyway,” I admitted.
Rider's POV“Are you certain,” I asked her one last time before the doors closed fully because despite everything that had happened, despite the council and Voss and the clock running itself bloody outside these walls, I still needed her to have one final chance to walk away freely.Bailey looked directly at me, then at Raven, then at Declan.“Yes,” she said quietly, “I am done letting other people decide my life before I even get to stand inside it.”Declan exhaled softly beside me, something almost relieved in the sound, “Good answer.”Raven stepped closer to her, gaze steady, “If anything feels wrong during this, you say it immediately.”Bailey nodded once, “I know.”I looked at all three of them for a second and realized suddenly that there was no version of my life before this room that still fit me properly anymore.Then the ritual began.And afterward I understood why the old texts never described it properly.Not because they were protecting tradition, but because language its
Bailey’s POVI paced around my room throughout the day, restless as I waited for him to return. Hours passed slowly, stretching into evening, and eventually exhaustion won. I lay down on the bed, pulling the duvet up to my chest and tucking myself in.It was nearly midnight when I heard the sound of
Bailey’s POVI couldn’t stop replaying Raven’s words in my head even after breakfast was long over, every step I took beside him feeling careful, measured, like I was walking on something fragile and didn’t want to be the one to crack it, and the worst part was that I didn’t even know what I was af
Bailey’s POVLaila didn’t answer me right away and the silence stretched long enough that I almost regretted asking, she looked like someone who had been handed a fragile thing she did not want to drop, her fingers twisting together in her lap, her gaze fixed on the wooden floor like waiting for it
Bailey’s POVI didn’t know what to do with Raven standing there in front of me like that because I was used to Rider’s anger that filled a room and Declan’s jokes that never stopped flowing, but Raven was quiet, still and intense in a way that made my thoughts scatter instead of sharpening, and it







