Home / Werewolf / The Alpha's Hidden Debts / Chapter 3: I'll Bite You

Share

Chapter 3: I'll Bite You

Author: Manie write
last update publish date: 2026-05-13 20:16:18

Riven’s Pov

The radio crackled at half past eleven. I was at my desk working through the week's border patrol reports, a mug of coffee gone cold at my elbow. The lodge was quiet at this hour. Most of the pack had turned in and I preferred it that way. 

"Alpha." It was Cord, one of my north border men. His voice had that careful quality it got when something had happened that he wasn't sure how to put into words. "We've got a situation up here."

I set my pen down. "Talk."

"Human female. On foot, coming in from the Ironmoor side. She's bleeding, looks like a forearm wound. We tried to approach and she told us to back up before she made us."

I waited.

"She seemed like she meant it," Cord added.

"Don't touch her," I said, already standing and reaching for my jacket off the back of the chair. "I'm coming."

"Yes, Alpha. Should we"

"Just don't touch her. I'll handle it."

I told myself it was standard protocol as I walked out into the cold. Any human crossing into Northesk on foot at this hour was either running from something or completely lost. Either way it needed handling personally. That was all this was. Protocol.

The north border was a fifteen minute drive through the trees. I parked where the road ended and walked the last stretch on foot, following the sound of Cord's radio until I saw the flashlights ahead through the dark.

Two of my men were standing about ten feet back from the tree line. The fact that they hadn't moved closer told me everything I needed to know about how seriously they were taking her warning. I walked past them without stopping.

"Alpha, she said she'd"

"I heard you the first time, Cord."

I crossed the distance and crouched down in front of her, getting to her level.

Up close she was younger than I expected. Dark circles under her eyes, a strip of torn fabric wrapped firmly around her left forearm, a small cut on her lower lip she probably didn't know was there. A bag sat in the dirt beside her. Her clothes were simple and clean. She had her back against a birch tree with her legs stretched out in front of her and she looked like someone who had decided this was as good a place as any to sit, wait and see what happened next.

She looked at me the way she had looked at my men, straight on. Taking me apart piece by piece with those steady eyes and filing it all away somewhere before I had said a single word.

I waited for the fear. It always came when humans encountered me up close. Some deep instinct they couldn't control, the part of them that recognized what I was before their minds caught up. It didn't come.

She just looked at me. Calm, direct and completely unimpressed.

"If you're planning to breed me," she said, "I'll bite you."

Something moved in my chest. Not what I expected to feel.

"We don't do that here," I said.

Her eyes stayed on my face. I could see her looking, searching for the place where the lie lived. I held still and let her look for as long as she needed.

Whatever she found, or didn't find, made her shoulders drop exactly one inch.

"There's a gash on your forearm," I said. "How deep?"

"Manageable."

"That's not what I asked."

"It's not that deep," she said. "I caught it on a fence post crossing out of Ironmoor. I've had worse."

The way she said it, flat and without drama, told me that was completely true. I glanced at the makeshift bandage. Good pressure, correct placement. Done in the dark with one hand.

"You walked from Ironmoor," I said.

"Two miles, give or take."

"On foot. At night, alone."

"You're very observant."

Cord made a sound behind me. I ignored him.

"Why?" I said.

She looked at me for a moment. "Because I didn't want to stay."

"Fair enough." I didn't push it. Whatever had sent her out of Ironmoor territory on foot with a small bag and a self applied bandage was her business until she decided to make it mine. "Can you stand?"

"Yes." She started to push herself up, got halfway, and her face tightened. Just briefly. A slight loss of color around her mouth.

"Easy," I said, and put my hand out.

She looked at my hand. A full two seconds of consideration, like she was deciding whether taking it meant something she wasn't ready for.

Then she took it. I pulled her carefully to her feet. She steadied herself, took one breath, and let go of my hand like she hadn't needed it in the first place.

"I'm fine," she said.

"You're pale."

"I'm always pale."

"You're swaying."

"I'm not." She was, just barely. I didn't argue. She reached for her bag, got a grip on it, straightened up. "Where exactly are we?"

"Northesk north border."

"And you're the Alpha."

"Riven," I said.

Something moved behind her eyes. A small recognition clicking into place. "You were at Ironmoor's gate earlier."

"I was."

"And then you were on the road."

"Same road," I said. "Different reasons."

She opened her mouth to say something else. I watched her decide what it was going to be. Watched her take a breath to say it, then her eyes went unfocused. I was already moving when her knees went.

I caught her before she hit the ground, one arm around her back, her weight coming against my chest all at once. Her bag dropped into the dirt. Her head tipped forward and her whole body went loose, quiet the way bodies did when they simply ran out of road.

I held her and said nothing for a moment. She was lighter than she should have been. That was the first thing I noticed. The second was her scent, hitting me now that she was this close. Something I had never come across before. Something that made every instinct I had go completely and absolutely still. Not in a bad way, more like my whole body had just woken up and didn't know why.

I didn't have a name for it. I buried it and looked up at Cord, who was staring at me with an expression I was going to address later.

"Get the truck," I said.

"Yes, Alpha."

"Cord."

He stopped.

"Nobody touches her," I said. "Nobody asks her anything when she wakes up, nobody goes near her without my word. Clear?"

"Clear," he said quietly, and went.

I looked down at her face. Relaxed now in a way it hadn't been once since I found her. Whatever guard she kept up when she was conscious, it was considerable, because without it she looked younger and quieter and like someone who had been carrying something heavy for a very long time and had only just put it down.

I tightened my hold, picked up her bag, and stood carefully. Something hit against my ribs that I didn't have a name for.

I looked down at her face one more time. Then I looked at Cord. "How far out is the truck?"

"Two minutes, Alpha."

"Make it one."

He jogged ahead without another word.

I carried her toward the lights coming through the trees and told myself this was nothing more than what I would do for anyone found bleeding on my border in the middle of the night. I almost believed

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

Latest chapter

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 75: The Council Room

    Sera's PovThe chamber was larger than I had pictured, and older.Stone walls, the kind that had been quarried and set by hands long dead, rose up into a ceiling so high it disappeared into shadow above the lamplight. The air smelled like old wood and something underneath that, the specific scent of a room that had heard a hundred years of important decisions and had absorbed something of the weight of all of them. My footsteps sounded too loud against the stone floor, the kind of quiet that made every small sound feel significant.Twelve seats curved in a horseshoe at the far end, dark wood, high backed, arranged so that whoever sat in them looked down at whatever stood in the open floor before them. Elder Vael's seat sat at the exact center of the curve, slightly elevated, the architecture of the room itself built to remind everyone where power lived, designed centuries ago by people who understood that a room could intimidate before a single word was spoken.Most of the seats were

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 74: Moving Now

    Riven's PovTwenty minutes was nothing.It was also everything. Twenty minutes was the difference between arriving with a case fully assembled and arriving with half of it scattered across a desk in Northesk, twenty minutes between a hearing that could actually land and a scramble that fell apart the moment someone in that room asked the wrong question.I did not waste any of it."Documents," I said, already moving toward the desk. "All of it. The copies, Coran's written testimony, the records from the facility, the briefing materials we kept duplicates of." I looked at Gideon. "You know where everything is filed. Pull it."He moved immediately, grateful, I thought, for something concrete to do with his hands while his chest was clearly still working through what Liora walking alone into council territory actually meant.Caden was already gone before I finished the second sentence, out the door, his voice carrying back through the hallway as he called for his own people to prep the ve

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 73: What Liora Did

    Sera's PovThe room absorbed it the way different rooms absorbed bad news, unevenly, each person finding their own particular shape for the same piece of information.Gideon went pale. His arms uncrossed from where they had been folded, and his hand found the edge of the wall behind him, the small involuntary movement of a body looking for something solid to lean against. He had known Liora before any of us. The years of proximity in Ironmoor's household showed on his face now, the specific fear of someone watching a person they cared about walk into something they could not protect her from.Caden went very still.Not the controlled stillness he used for difficult negotiations, not the composure he carried into formal rooms. This was different, something closer to the stillness of a person whose body had simply stopped while the rest of them tried to process what had just been said. His jaw worked once, then went tight, locked.Riven went the opposite direction. He moved immediately,

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 72: Where Liora Went

    Riven's PovMy first instinct was containment.Lock the gates. Run a full compound sweep. Treat it as a security failure first and ask questions second, the way I had trained my pack to respond to any unexplained absence, especially one this close to an active threat from the council.I talked myself out of that in about four seconds.Containment assumed she was a problem. It did not account for the possibility that she was something else, an asset moving on her own initiative, a piece on the board doing something useful that none of us had asked her to do. Locking the compound down to search for a woman who had walked out willingly would tell me nothing except that I had panicked.I needed information before I needed action.I found my best tracker within minutes, a quiet wolf named Senna who had a gift for reading ground that bordered on its own kind of ability, and I gave her the assignment low-key, no alarm in my voice, just instructions. Find Liora's trail. Find out where she wen

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 71: The Real Name

    Sera's Pov"Do you know what it means?" Cael asked. "The name."I shook my head. "My mother never explained it. She just wrote it. Said I would know it when I needed to.""It's old," he said. "Older than the council, older than most of the words wolves use now. The hybrid bloodline had its own language once, before it was scattered and quieted and pushed underground." His eyes went somewhere distant, somewhere past the walls of this room, somewhere thirty years and more behind us. "Few people speak it anymore. I am one of the few left who still can. My grandmother taught me, in a kitchen that doesn't exist anymore, in a world that mostly doesn't exist anymore either.""Tell me," I said.He looked at me for a long moment, like he was deciding how to carry something carefully across a distance without dropping it."In the old tongue," he said, "it means something close to light that survives the dark."The room went very still."Not light that defeats the dark," he continued, his voice

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 70: What Her Father Knows

    Sera's PovWe sat in his room, the three of us, and he talked for two hours.Riven pulled the second chair close to the bed, and I sat on the edge of it nearest my father, and the morning light came up slowly through the window while he gave us pieces of a story he had been carrying alone for thirty years."My name is Cael," he said, near the start, as if that was the first true thing he wanted me to have. "I should have said it sooner. In the room, I only thought of you.""Cael," I said, trying it out. It fit him the way a name fit someone who had grown into it over a long life."I was never a wolf," he said. "I want you to understand that clearly, because it matters for everything that comes after." He folded his hands on the blanket, the same careful posture he had held in the facility chair, though here it looked less like survival and more like simple habit. "I am something older. A remnant, the old texts would call it. The hybrid bloodline was never new. It only became visible a

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 1: She Is My Fated Mate

    Sera's Pov "She actually thought she deserved to be our Luna. How pathetic."I heard every word and kept my eyes forward, my hands loose at my sides, my breathing even. Three years in this pack taught me that much. You didn't react, you didn't give them the satisfaction. You kept your face smooth

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 10: The First Crack

    Sera's PovI didn't know about the message for a full day.I found that out later, the way you find out most things in a pack, sideways, after the fact, pieced together from things people don't quite say. Riven had it on his desk for a day before he called me in. I didn't know that when I walked in

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 9: What Northesk Runs On

    Sera's PovMy second week at the household desk started the way the first one ended, with Mara handing me a stack of ledgers and saying, "These haven't been touched since spring," in the tone of someone who'd been waiting a long time to say it to someone other than herself.I worked through them at

  • The Alpha's Hidden Debts   Chapter 8: Liora

    Liora's PovIronmoor's dining hall was smaller than the great hall, which I'd been grateful for at first. Fewer eyes. Fewer wolves tracking my every movement like they were waiting to see if I'd do something wrong.I'd been wrong about that too. Fewer eyes just meant the ones that remained looked h

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