LOGINTo settle her father’s life-threatening debt, Seraphina Ashlyn signs a contract she never fully understands—one that binds her in marriage to Darius Nightfang, the most feared Alpha in the werewolf world. For Darius, the marriage is not about love. It is a calculated arrangement designed to silence the pack council and protect his throne. His curse ensures that every woman who becomes his true mate dies before the bond completes, and Seraphina is expected to be no different. But the contract goes wrong. Seraphina survives the Alpha’s mark, weakening Darius’s ancient curse and awakening a dangerous obsession he refuses to acknowledge. As rival packs close in and whispers spread about the “human bride” who did not die, Seraphina begins to uncover the truth about her bloodline—a power deliberately erased from werewolf history. Bound by a contract meant to be temporary, hunted by those who fear what she represents, and trapped with an Alpha who never intended to keep his bride alive, Seraphina must decide whether to remain a pawn in a political marriage… or claim the bond that was never supposed to exist. The contract forbids love. Breaking it may cost them the world.
View MoreThe first thing Seraphina Ashlyn noticed was the smell of blood.
Not fresh—old, metallic, soaked deep into the stone walls of the underground hall. It clung to the air like a warning, thick enough to taste. She curled her fingers into her thin coat, forcing herself not to gag as two armed guards shoved her forward. “Move.” She stumbled but didn’t fall. Falling would mean weakness, and weakness was a luxury she could no longer afford. Chains rattled somewhere ahead. Torches flickered, casting monstrous shadows across the cavernous chamber. Seraphina lifted her chin, even as her heart hammered violently against her ribs. This was not a courthouse. This was not justice. This was a sale. At the center of the hall stood a long obsidian table etched with glowing runes. Behind it sat men and women whose eyes gleamed gold, silver, and red in the firelight. Werewolves. Alphas. Power incarnate. And at the head of them— He stood. Darius Nightfang did not sit like the others. He leaned against the stone dais, tall and immovable, dressed in black as if the shadows themselves had sworn allegiance to him. His dark hair fell carelessly across his forehead, his jaw rough with stubble, his presence so overwhelming that the room seemed to bend around him. When his gaze lifted and locked onto hers, Seraphina felt it. A pressure. A weight. A primal awareness that sank into her bones. His eyes were not gold. They were something darker. Something older. The room fell silent. “So,” Darius said, his voice low, unhurried. Dangerous. “This is the girl.” Seraphina swallowed. She had imagined monsters with claws and fangs, not a man who looked carved from sin and command. Not a man whose calm was far more terrifying than rage. “She’s human,” one of the council members said dismissively. “Barely worth the debt.” Human. The word hit her harder than any insult. Darius’s gaze swept over her slowly—not leering, not kind. Assessing. Like she was a blade he was deciding whether to use or discard. “How much?” he asked. Her stomach dropped. This was real. Her father’s shaking hands. His debts. The men who had come in the night. The choice she had never been given. The council elder slid a parchment across the table. “Her father owes a life-debt. Gambling. Theft. Repeated offenses.” Seraphina clenched her jaw. She would not cry. Not here. Darius picked up the parchment, skimmed it once, then tossed it back as if it bored him. “And the terms?” “A political marriage,” the elder said. “A contract bride.” The word echoed in her head. Bride. Darius’s lips curved—not into a smile, but something colder. “You’re offering me a wife.” “You need one,” the elder replied. “The council needs assurance. A Luna calms the packs.” A muscle in Darius’s jaw flexed. Seraphina felt it then—something sharp in the air. Anger, restrained so tightly it hummed. “She won’t live,” Darius said flatly. The hall went still. Every Alpha knew the truth. Every woman who had ever attempted to become Darius Nightfang’s mate had died before the bond completed. Some in days. Some in hours. A curse. Seraphina’s breath hitched. The elder hesitated. “She doesn’t need to be a true mate. Only bound by contract.” Darius’s gaze snapped back to her. For a brief, terrifying moment, she thought he could see everything—her fear, her resolve, the silent promise she’d made to herself not to beg. “You,” he said. Her spine stiffened. “Do you understand what you’re being offered?” Offered. As if this were anything but a death sentence wrapped in ink. Seraphina lifted her chin. “I understand that my father lives if I sign.” A murmur rippled through the hall. Darius studied her, something unreadable flickering in his eyes. “And if you don’t?” She met his gaze without flinching. “Then he dies.” Silence. Then—unexpectedly—Darius laughed. It was low, humorless, and sent a chill racing down her spine. “You’re not begging,” he observed. “I don’t beg,” Seraphina replied. “I endure.” Something in the air shifted. Darius stepped closer. One step. Then another. Each footfall echoed like a verdict. When he stopped in front of her, she had to fight the instinct to retreat. He smelled like smoke and night and something wild beneath it all. “You should know this,” he said quietly, so only she could hear. “This contract does not protect you from me.” Her heart thundered. “Good,” she whispered. “I’m not asking for protection.” For the first time, something like surprise crossed his face. The elder cleared his throat. “Alpha Nightfang, do you accept the terms?” Darius straightened, turning back to the council. His voice was calm again. Controlled. “I accept,” he said. “On one condition.” The hall leaned in. “She is mine,” Darius continued. “No council interference. No reassignment. No nullification. If she dies, she dies under my authority alone.” Seraphina’s blood ran cold. The elder nodded slowly. “Agreed.” A quill was pressed into her hand. The parchment glowed faintly, runes pulsing like a living thing. She stared at it, knowing that once she signed, there would be no undoing this. Darius watched her, eyes dark and intent. “Last chance,” he murmured. “Run.” She thought of her father’s face. His tears. His shame. She signed. The parchment burned. A sharp pain sliced across her palm, and blood spilled onto the contract. The runes flared violently, chains of light snapping into place around her wrist—then vanishing into her skin. The bond sealed. Darius sucked in a sharp breath. For a split second, the entire room trembled. Seraphina gasped as heat rushed through her veins—not pain, not pleasure, but something powerful. Awakening. Darius stared at her hand. Then slowly, dangerously, he smiled. “Well,” he said softly, eyes glowing in the firelight. “That’s new.” The elder frowned. “What is?” “She should be dead,” Darius replied. Seraphina’s heart pounded as his gaze locked onto hers again—no longer detached, no longer distant. Possessive. Interested. “And yet,” he murmured, stepping closer, “my contract bride is still breathing.” A shiver ran through her. Darius leaned down, his voice brushing her ear like a promise and a threat all at once. “This changes everything.”The words Darius had spoken in the courtyard spread through Kieran's territory before the sun had fully set.We rebuild.For many of the survivors those two words became the first real hope they had felt since the night their world had burned.The wolves who had arrived exhausted and broken now found themselves speaking quietly among one another about the future instead of only mourning the past.It did not erase their losses.It did not bring back the dead.But it gave them something to hold onto.And for wolves who had spent days believing they had lost everything, hope was a powerful thing.Inside the healer's quarters Darius sat near the window watching the activity outside. More survivors had arrived throughout the afternoon. Kieran's scouts continued searching the surrounding territories and every few hours another small group appeared at the gates.Some came wounded.Some came frightened.Some came carrying children.Others came carrying nothing at all.Yet every single one of
Rain fell steadily through the early hours of the morning covering Kieran’s territory in a cold quiet haze while most of the pack still slept.But inside the healer’s chamber Darius remained awake.Sleep had become difficult ever since his rescue because every time exhaustion pulled him under he saw the same things again.Fire spreading across the territory.Blood covering the ground.Rhyden falling.Ken fighting beside him until the very end.And the faces of wolves who had trusted him to protect them.Darius sat upright slowly against the bed despite the ache pulling through his body while the storm outside continued softly beyond the windows.His injuries were healing.But not fast enough for him.Nothing felt fast enough anymore.A quiet knock sounded before the chamber door opened and Kieran stepped inside already dressed for the day his expression serious.“You are awake early.”Darius gave a dry breath.“That makes one of us.”Kieran glanced at him carefully.“You should still
The days following Darius’s return passed slowly inside Kieran’s territory but the calm surrounding the pack did not erase the damage left behind by war because every person walking through the grounds carried the awareness that things had changed permanently.Nothing would ever return to the way it had once been.Still life continued.Warriors trained.Guards patrolled.Healers moved constantly between chambers treating injuries from the rescue mission and the battles that had come before it.And inside the healer’s quarters Darius remained confined to bed despite how much he hated it.By the third morning his frustration had become impossible to hide.“You are staring at the door again.”Seraphina’s voice carried quiet amusement as she stepped inside carrying a tray with fresh food and medicine prepared by the healers.Darius looked away from the entrance slowly.“I am not staring at the door.”“You have looked at it at least fifteen times since I came in.”“That is because everyone
Morning came quietly over Kieran’s territory but inside the healer’s chamber there was no real sense of peace because the weight of everything that had happened still sat heavily over every breath and every thought.Darius woke slowly to the faint light filtering through the windows and for a few seconds he simply stared upward trying to steady himself against the dull ache spreading through his body.Pain greeted him immediately.Not sharp enough to stop his thoughts but constant enough to remind him of everything he had survived.He shifted slightly and the movement alone pulled a strained breath from him.“You should not move too much yet.”Seraphina’s voice reached him softly from beside the bed and he turned his head carefully to find her already awake and watching him with tired but relieved eyes.“You are still here,” he murmured.Seraphina almost smiled.“You keep sounding surprised by that.”Darius studied her quietly for a moment before his gaze lowered slightly toward where
Morning came too quickly.Seraphina woke before Darius, her eyes tracing the strong line of his jaw as he slept. For a moment, he looked younger, less burdened, less like an Alpha and more like the man she had fallen for.But memory returned quickly.The kiss.The avoidance.The confession.Her wol
The air in the pack house was heavy long before the council assembled.The scent of blood still lingered in the wind from the night before. It clung to the stone walls, to the guards’ armor, to the very breath of the wolves who had carried their fallen brothers home.Seraphina stood beside Darius a
Darius had faced enemies stronger than himself.He had faced rival Alphas, blood-soaked battlefields, betrayals that could have shattered a weaker leader.But standing in his chamber with Seraphina looking at him like that, hurt already forming in her eyes, it felt worse than any battlefield.“What
The Alphas did not leave immediately.That in itself was like a threat.By tradition, once council matters were concluded, visiting leaders returned to their territories before the next sunrise. This time, several remained. Their guards lingered along the outer compounds. Their eyes observed everyt






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