Home / Werewolf / THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM / Chapter Two — The Pack House

Share

Chapter Two — The Pack House

Author: LUMINOUS
last update publish date: 2026-05-23 06:12:41

Nobody came to meet me at the door.

The driver carried my single bag to the entrance, set it on the stone steps, and left without a word. I stood in the cold and watched the black car disappear back down the long driveway and told myself this was normal. This was how powerful households worked. There would be someone inside. There would be warmth inside.

I picked up my own bag and pushed open the front door.

The entrance hall of Ironveil pack house was the size of my entire home. Black marble floors, ceilings that climbed three storeys, a staircase that split at the landing and curved in two directions like arms opening or a trap closing. Everything was dark wood and iron and the particular kind of silence that comes not from emptiness but from people choosing not to speak.

Wolves lined the walls.

Not literally. But they stood along the edges of the hall, staff and ranked members both, and every single one of them looked at me the way you look at something that has wandered into the wrong place. Curious. Assessing. Faintly contemptuous.

I kept my chin up. My father had told me to keep my chin up.

"You must be Hazel."

The voice came from my left, small, quick, belonging to a girl about my age with a dark braid and wide brown eyes that somehow managed to be kind in a house that felt like it had forgotten the word. She was dressed in the grey uniform of house staff, a small embroidered wolf at her collar.

"I'm Isla," she said. "I've been assigned to you." She glanced once at the people lining the walls, then back to me, and something in her look said don't mind them without saying anything at all. "I'll show you to your rooms."

I followed her up the staircase.

"Is it always this quiet?" I asked.

"No," she said. "It's quieter when he's home."

I almost asked who. Then I didn't, because I already knew, and the knowing sat differently in my stomach than it had three days ago in my warm kitchen with my father's cold hands over mine.

My rooms were on the third floor, east wing.

They were beautiful. I hated that they were beautiful, because beauty made it harder to feel the wrongness I couldn't yet name, the way no one had greeted me, the way the driver hadn't spoken, the way my mother had held me like she was saying goodbye to something she would not get back.

The bedroom had a window that looked out over the grounds, dark trees, iron fencing, a training yard where three wolves moved through drills with a precision that made my chest tight. The bed was large enough to feel like a statement. The wardrobe, when Isla opened it, was already full.

I touched the sleeve of a dress I had never seen before. Pale grey. My size exactly.

"Who chose these?" I asked.

Isla's hands stilled on the wardrobe door for just a moment. "They were arranged for you."

"By Alexander?"

She turned to face me with an expression I would later learn to read, the careful blankness of someone who had survived this house by knowing which questions not to answer. "By the household staff," she said. "On instruction."

I nodded like that meant something pleasant.

"When do I meet him?" I asked. "Alexander."

Isla looked at the window. Outside, the wolves in the training yard had stopped. One of them stood apart from the others, taller, still, the kind of still that wasn't rest but restraint. Even from three floors up, even with his back half turned, everything about him said do not.

"That's him," Isla said quietly.

I moved closer to the glass.

He wasn't what I had built in my head over three days of nervous imagining. I had pictured an Alpha's son the way girls do when they're trying to be brave about something, handsome in a manageable way, perhaps stern but fair, someone whose eyes might soften when they landed on you.

Alexander did not look like he had ever softened anything in his life.

He stood at the edge of the training yard with his arms crossed and said something to the wolves nearest him. I couldn't hear it. But the two wolves nearest him dropped their gazes immediately, shoulders curving inward, chins tilting down in the instinctive submission of lower ranked wolves before a dominant one. One of them nodded rapidly.

Alexander didn't acknowledge the nod. He turned and walked back toward the house.

He moved like the ground owed him something.

"He doesn't know you're watching," Isla said beside me. It wasn't a warning. It was just a fact.

I stepped back from the window.

I met him for the first time an hour later.

I was in the hallway outside my room, trying to find my way to wherever meals were served. Isla had gone to fetch me something from the kitchen and I had made the mistake of wandering. When a door at the end of the corridor opened and he walked out. My breath hitched instantly. Even before he looked up, I recognized the brutal breadth of his shoulders and that dynamic, untouchable stillness. It was the man from the yard.

We were six feet apart before either of us stopped.

Up close he was worse. Not in the way ugly things are worse, in the way a storm is worse when you're no longer watching it through glass. He was tall, broad through the shoulder, dressed in a black shirt with the sleeves pushed to his elbows. His hair was dark. His eyes, when they landed on me, were a blue so pale they were almost grey.

They moved over me once. Top to bottom. The assessment took less than two seconds and registered nothing, no warmth, no recognition, no interest. I was furniture he was deciding whether to move.

"You're Hazel," he said.

Not a question.

"Yes." My voice came out steadier than I deserved. "I arrived this afternoon. I was told..."

"I know when you arrived."

The words weren't loud. They didn't need to be. They simply closed the door on whatever I had been about to say.

He looked at me for one more moment. Something moved behind his eyes, there and gone before I could name it.

Then he walked past me without another word, close enough that I caught his scent, pine and smoke and something darker underneath, and I stood in the hallway and listened to his footsteps disappear down the stairs and told myself the tremble in my hands was cold.

The hallway wasn't cold.

I stood there for a long time.

This was the man my father had called my salvation. This was the man who had apparently seen me in a garden and decided he wanted me. He had looked at me like I was an inconvenience he hadn't yet figured out how to solve.

He chose me.

The thought felt different now. Smaller. Like something seen from the wrong end of a telescope.

I found my way back to my room. I sat on the edge of the bed. I pressed my mother's silver bracelet between my palms wincing slightly as that same unnatural, icy chill bit deep into my skin and I did not cry, because crying felt like admitting something I wasn't ready to admit.

Somewhere below me, a door slammed.

The walls didn't shake. Nothing broke. But every wolf I passed in the corridor that evening walked a little faster, eyes forward, and nobody spoke above a murmur until long after the sun went down.

I didn't understand it yet.

I would.

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

Latest chapter

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Fifteen — The Price of It

    I did not plan it.That was the honest truth of it. I had not woken that morning with the intention of disobeying anything. I had woken with Serena's eyes in my memory and the bracelet's changed rhythm against my wrist and the particular clarity that comes from a night of too little sleep and too much thinking.I had not planned it.But when I turned the corner at the end of the east corridor at seven in the morning and found the Omega wolf collapsed against the wall, young, perhaps sixteen, her uniform torn at the shoulder, a wound on her forearm that had been bleeding long enough to darken the fabric beneath it, the decision made itself before I had finished registering what I was seeing.I knelt beside her."Hey." I kept my voice low. "Look at me."She did. Her eyes were glassy with the particular unfocus of someone managing pain through stillness. She had been managing it for a while. The wound was not fresh and the wall behind her had a faint smear where she had leaned against it

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Fourteen — Serena's Game

    The formal request from the Blackthorn Pack had completely shifted the gravity of the fortress.I knew the stakes before anyone explicitly spelled them out for me. The pack house changed temperature the way it always did when Alexander received information that truly threatened his control, that particular drop in ambient noise, the quickened pace of ranked wolves in the corridors, and the way the entire east wing seemed to hold its breath. Something heavy was coming in fast from the outside.Isla had appeared in my doorway earlier with a pale face, ordering me to stay confined while Alexander handled Zane's delegation at the outer gates. Refused formally or not, Zane's men hadn't left our territory. They were currently camped directly at our secondary boundary, waiting out the seventy two hour clock.Unranked. Unshifted. That was how Zane had categorized me in his formal legal request. Not as a person. As a legal loophole. Something that could be moved between territories like a piec

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Thirteen — An Offer of Freedom

    Zane's formal request arrived on a Tuesday.I knew something had happened before anyone told me. The pack house changed temperature the way it always did when Alexander received information that truly mattered, that particular drop in ambient noise, the quickened pace of ranked wolves in the corridors, and the way Nadia appeared at my door forty minutes earlier than usual. Her expression was doing its absolute best to remain neutral, and not quite managing it."Stay in the east wing today," she said flatly."What happened?""Blackthorn's formal envoy arrived at the gates an hour ago." She positioned herself in the doorway with the practiced ease of someone who had been managing fortress access points for years. "Alexander is receiving them now."I looked at her steadily, refusing to shrink. "What did they ask for?"Nadia held my gaze for three full seconds, the rapid calculation of a warrior deciding how much a person needed to know versus how much they were legally permitted to know.

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Twelve — I Do Not Repeat Myself

    Alexander's POVThe second pack assembly of the week was not scheduled.I called it at six in the morning, which meant every wolf in the house had forty minutes to dress and present themselves in the great hall. Forty minutes was enough time for the ranked members. For the lower wolves it was a test. I had learned years ago that the response to an unscheduled assembly told me more about the state of my pack than any formal report.I stood on the platform at exactly seven and looked out across the room.The noise hit immediately. Not spoken noise, the kind that filled a room when people talked, but the other kind. The kind only I heard. Eighty wolves thinking simultaneously, their thoughts layering over each other like competing frequencies, and my mind sorting through them the way it always did: automatically, efficiently, without effort.What happened. Did something happen. Blackthorn again. Is it war. Where is Liam. Why is the Alpha—I filtered it. Filed it. Moved on.Liam's thought

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Eleven — The Book

    Rex told him. I knew it before the summons arrived.I had been back in my room for exactly forty minutes, long enough to sit with everything Cora had said, long enough to press the bracelet flat against my wrist and feel the persistent throb of something that had apparently been waiting inside me for eighteen years, when the knock came.One rap. Official.Nadia appeared in my doorway before I reached it."I'll walk with you," she said.Not a question.She fell into position to my left as we moved through the corridors.I watched the pack house from the corner of my eye and cataloged what I could.Three staff members found reasons to be elsewhere as I passed.Two ranked wolves clocked my direction and exchanged a look I couldn't fully read.Then came the particular shift in atmosphere that always preceded Alexander's attention falling on something, a drop in ambient noise, a tightening in the posture of anyone nearby.Liam was outside the study when we arrived.He looked at me once.So

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Ten — The Seer’s Ledger

    Elder Cora was not difficult to find.That was the first strange thing. I had expected to search, to ask careful questions of people who might report the asking, to navigate the pack house's invisible architecture until I located someone who did not want to be located. I had prepared for the difficulty of it on the walk from the east wing, rehearsing how I would ask, who I would ask, what I would say if someone wanted to know why.Instead, I turned the corner at the end of the north corridor and she was simply there.Seated in a high backed chair beside a window that overlooked the inner courtyard, a cup of something hot sat on the small table beside her. A book lay open in her lap that she was not reading. She looked up when I rounded the corner with the unhurried certainty of someone who had known I was coming before I had made the decision myself."Sit down," she said.There was no other chair.I looked around. Found a low wooden stool pushed against the wall several feet away. Pull

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Three — What Exactly Am I Here to Be?

    The knock came at nine in the evening.Not Isla. Isla knocked twice, soft, the way someone does when they're checking if you're decent. This was one knock, sharp, official, and when I opened the door a wolf I had never seen stood in the corridor dressed in all black, arms behind his back, expressio

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter One — The Chosen One

    The day my father told me I was chosen, I cried.Not from fear. From relief.We had been struggling for three years quietly, the way families do when pride costs more than food. I knew about the debt. I wasn't supposed to, but walls in small houses don't keep secrets well, and my father's voice car

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Five — The Room At The End

    I waited until two in the morning.Not because I had planned to. Because my body refused to move before then, kept me sitting on the edge of the bed with the key in my palm, turning it over and over, the bronze key refused to warm against my skin, held back by the persistent, icy chill radiating fr

  • THE ALPHA'S RELUCTANT CLAIM    Chapter Four — The Debt Girl

    Isla didn't lie to me.That was the thing I kept coming back to afterward, she didn't lie. She sat on the edge of my bed with her hands twisted together in her lap and she told me the truth in the careful, measured way of someone releasing pressure from a wound. Not all at once. Just enough so I di

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