Home / Werewolf / The Alpha's Bought Bride / Into the Wolf’s Den

Share

Into the Wolf’s Den

Author: Ak
last update publish date: 2026-05-06 21:26:06

The interior of the SUV was a silent, leather-scented tomb. Outside the window, the familiar forests of the Silver Moon Pack blurred into unrecognizable shadows as we sped north. I kept my back pressed against the door, as far away from the man beside me as possible, but in the cramped space, I could still feel the radiating heat coming off his body.

He’s too close, I thought, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. He smells like a storm—cold air, ozone, and something dark and wild.

Alpha Silas hadn’t said a word since we left. He sat with his legs apart, his large, gloved hands resting on his knees. He was looking straight ahead, but I knew he was watching me. An Alpha of his caliber didn’t need to look with his eyes; he could feel my every breath, my every tremor.

"Stop shaking," he said suddenly. The vibration of his voice seemed to hum through the seat and into my spine.

"I'm not shaking," I lied, even as my knees knocked together.

Silas turned his head slowly. The dim light of the passing streetlamps flickered across his face, highlighting the jagged silver scar that sliced through his handsome features. It looked like a bolt of lightning frozen in time.

"You are a terrible liar, Elara. Your scent is thick with the smell of a cornered rabbit. It's offensive."

I bristled. "Maybe if you hadn't bought me like a piece of livestock, I wouldn't be so 'offensive' to you."

The car swerved slightly as the driver reacted to my tone, but Silas didn't flinch. Instead, a slow, predatory smirk pulled at the corner of his scarred mouth. It wasn't a kind smile. It was the smile of a man who enjoyed a challenge.

"I didn't buy a rabbit," he whispered, leaning toward me. "I bought a bride. And if you have claws, little wolf, I suggest you show them soon. My pack is not kind to the weak."

The weak. The words stung. He didn't know I was a "dud." He didn't know that my wolf was a silent, dormant thing that refused to wake up. If he found out he had paid the ultimate price for a Luna who couldn't even shift, he wouldn't just be disappointed—he would be lethal.

We reached the Black Ridge Pack territory as the moon reached its peak. The architecture here was different—harsh, stone-built, and fortress-like. The pack house wasn't a house at all; it was a castle carved into the side of a mountain.

As the car stopped, the doors were flung open by guards in tactical gear. Silas stepped out first, and for a moment, I considered locking the door and refusing to move. But then he reached back in, his massive hand wrapping around my wrist.

"Out," he commanded.

I stumbled onto the gravel, the mountain air hitting me like a sheet of ice. It was much colder here, and my thin silk dress offered no protection. I shivered violently, my teeth beginning to chatter.

Without a word, Silas unclipped the heavy, fur-lined cloak from his own shoulders. Before I could protest, he draped it over me. It was heavy, weighing me down with the scent of him, but it was incredibly warm.

"Don't mistake my pragmatism for kindness," he muttered, his eyes fixed on the massive stone steps ahead. "I won't have my bride freezing to death before the first night is over."

He led me through the iron-bound doors. The hallway was lined with members of his pack. They stood in perfect, terrifying silence, their eyes tracking my every movement. I felt like a lamb walking through a gauntlet of wolves. I could hear their whispers—vibrations in the air that only a werewolf could sense.

“Is that her?”

“She’s so small.”

“A peace offering? Or a sacrifice?”

Silas didn't stop until we reached a set of double doors at the very top of the castle. He pushed them open, revealing a bedroom that was larger than my father’s entire house. A fire crackled in a hearth made of black stone, and a massive bed sat in the center of the room, draped in furs.

"This is your cage," Silas said, stepping into the room and closing the doors behind us with a finality that made my stomach drop.

"Where are you going to sleep?" I asked, my voice cracking.

He began to peel off his gloves, his blue eyes darkening. "This is the Alpha’s suite, Elara. There is only one bed in this room. And as of an hour ago, you are the Alpha’s wife."

This is it, I thought, my pulse roaring in my ears. The moment the monster claims what he paid for.

I backed away until my heels hit the stone hearth. The heat of the fire was at my back, and the heat of the King was in front of me. I crossed my arms over my chest, clutching his cloak around me like a shield.

"I won't... I won't sleep with you," I stammered. "You can't force me."

Silas stopped a few feet away. He looked at me for a long time, his gaze traveling from my messy hair down to my bare toes. Then, he did something I didn't expect. He sat down in a large leather armchair by the fire and began to unlace his boots.

"I have never had to force a woman into my bed, Elara. I don't intend to start with a girl who looks like she’s about to faint." He leaned back, his eyes catching the light of the flames. "Sleep. You have a long day tomorrow. My people expect to see their new Luna at dawn."

"And if I don't want to be their Luna?"

"Then you should have told your father to pay his debts," he snapped, his voice turning cold again. "You are here because you were sold. You are here because I own you. Now, get in the bed before I lose my patience."

I crawled into the furs, keeping my clothes on and staying as close to the edge of the mattress as possible. I watched him from the shadows. He didn't come to the bed. He stayed in that chair, staring into the fire with an expression of profound loneliness that didn't match his brutal reputation.

Who are you, Silas? I wondered as exhaustion finally began to pull me under. Are you the monster who bought me, or the man who gave me his cloak?

I fell asleep to the sound of the crackling fire and the heavy, steady breathing of the Scarred King. I didn't know it then, but my life as a "dud" was over. In this house of wolves, I would either find my voice—or be devoured by the man sitting in the shadows.

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

Latest chapter

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Eternal Horizon

    The world of men and mountains continued its turn, spinning through the vast, indifferent dark of space. Seasons shifted, the frost melted into spring, and the memory of the Eclipse Queen and the Alpha King gradually softened from sharp, painful history into the comfortable, golden glow of legend.In the Gilded City, the palace remained—not as a seat of power, but as a sanctuary. It was a place where people came to sit in the quiet of the courtyard, to listen to the wind whistling through the archways, and to teach their children that once, long ago, the night had been a terrifying enemy, and then, it had become a friend.But in the place that existed outside of time, the wind did not blow, and the stars did not move.Elara walked through the silver grass, her footsteps silent. There was no need for shadows here, no need for the bracer or the collar or the weight of a crown. She was simply herself—a girl who had once feared the dark, and a woman who had learned to command it.Silas wa

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Echoes of the Dawn

    Back in the world of stone and blood, the morning light hit the Gilded City with a clarity that felt like a baptism. The bruised violet haze had vanished, replaced by a sky of such crystalline, pale blue that it hurt the eyes to look up.Kaelen stood on the palace balcony, her hands gripping the cold marble. Beside her, the remaining generals of the Northern and Southern hosts stood in a jagged, silent line. They were waiting for a sign—a message, a miracle, a command—from the throne room. But the throne room was empty.The heavy doors were locked from the inside, and when the guards finally forced them open, they didn't find a Queen or an Alpha. They found a chamber bathed in the soft, fading embers of a fire that had burned hotter than anything the world had ever seen. The obsidian collar sat on the dais, shattered into a thousand harmless fragments of black glass. The air in the room didn't smell of ozone or death; it smelled of mountain air and the faint, lingering scent of pine.

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Silent Threshold

    There was no pain. There was no transition of darkness. There was only the feeling of weightlessness, as if the very marrow of my bones had turned into light.I was standing—or perhaps simply existing—in a place that was not a place. It was a threshold, a shimmering, endless field of silver grass beneath a sky that held both the stars and the sun. It was the space between the worlds, the quiet intermission between the last breath and whatever came next.Silas was there, too. He was human, in the way he had always been when the world was quiet and the weight of the crown was set aside. He stood a few paces away, his silhouette sharp against the silver horizon. When he turned to look at me, there were no scars on his face. The armor, the burden of the throne, the cold, jagged history of the North—it had all been stripped away."Elara," he said. His voice was not the gravelly roar of the Alpha, but the soft, steady rhythm of a heart at rest.I walked toward him, my own spirit feeling lig

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Resonance of Two

    The vault was no longer a room; it was a throat, a narrowing passage of reality where the laws of physics bowed to the crushing weight of the First Speaker’s awakening. The discordant hum that had lived in the back of my mind for months had become a physical roar, a sound so loud it felt like it was liquefying my marrow.Silas stood before me, his chest heaving, his hands bare now that his blade had shattered. He was a man made of nothing but raw, bleeding defiance."The circuit," I gasped, the cold of the vault biting into my skin. "The Conductor... she needs our resonance. If we don't give it, she can't shatter the veil. She’s trying to force us into a synchronized frequency.""Then we go out of tune," Silas growled, stepping in front of me, his shadow falling across my face like a shroud. "Elara, look at me."I met his gaze. His amber eyes, usually so fierce and predatory, were soft—an oasis of absolute, unwavering humanity in the middle of a collapsing universe. He reached out and

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The March of the Last

    The journey back to the Northern Hold was not a march; it was a funeral procession for a world that didn't know it was already dead. The sky had turned a bruised, permanent violet, and the sun—once a symbol of the Council’s false hope—now hung in the heavens like a cataract-clouded eye.The vanguard rode with us, three thousand strong. They were silent, their faces grim, their armor adorned with the black banners of the Eclipse. They knew what we were doing. Word had leaked from the palace—the Conductor’s influence had ensured that, a final, sadistic twist of the knife. The people of the capital hadn't rioted. They hadn't begged. They had simply shuttered their homes, waiting for the end.I rode at the head of the column, my hand resting on the pommel of a sword that felt like lead in my grip. I was no longer the conduit, no longer the vessel. I was a hollow shell, the void-taint having stripped away the last of my mortal energy to feed the ley-lines. My hair, once dark, had turned th

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Frequency of the Final Note

    The desert encounter was a turning point. We were no longer fighting a war of armies; we were engaged in a surgical, desperate hunt. We returned to the Gilded City not as victors, but as the only people aware that the foundations of the world were being systematically poisoned.The next few weeks became a blur of travel and destruction. Kaelen organized a network of elite scouts who moved across the continent, tracking the signature of the shadow-seeds. Silas and I acted as the spearhead. We tracked the artifacts to the damp, forgotten ruins of the western coast, to the high, frozen crags of the forbidden border-towers, and even to the foundations of the great trade ports we had only recently secured.Every seed we destroyed required a piece of me. The process of inverting the energy was physically and mentally corrosive. By the time we reached the ninety-fourth night, the star-silver bracer on my arm had become a dead, leaden weight. My skin felt brittle, and the violet glow that had

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Ash of Saints

    The retreat of the Sun-Eaters had left behind a world that felt fundamentally broken. As I stood on the ramparts, leaning heavily into Silas’s warmth, I looked out over the valley. The snow, once a pristine and sparkling white, was gone. In its place was a thick, suffocating layer of pale grey ash—

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Weight of Infinite Gold

    The collision of the golden haze and our violet storm was not a sound; it was a sensory erasure. For a moment, the world ceased to be a place of stone and snow, becoming instead a pressurized vacuum where the absolute light of the Council’s ritual fought to bleach the very existence of our shadows.

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Altar of the Fallen

    The violet twilight I had summoned didn't fade with the retreating soldiers. It clung to the valley like a heavy velvet shroud, dampening the sounds of the dying and the frantic, echoing calls of the Northern healers. I stood on the edge of the stone bridge, my hands still tingling with the residua

  • The Alpha's Bought Bride   The Shattered Sun

    The initial blast of violet fire didn’t just hit the Council’s front lines; it consumed the very air they breathed. The screaming of the High Inquisitor was cut short as the amethyst wave rolled over the vanguard, turning the snow into steam and the silver-thread cloaks into ash. Behind me, the mas

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