LOGINOn the morning of her wedding to Alpha Caelum Sterling, in front of six hundred guests, Ariadne "Ari" Voss is publicly rejected. Her cousin Isolde is named Luna in her place. Ari does not beg. She does not weep. She does not look back. What no one knows is that she walks out of the ceremony carrying the Sterling Pack's inner sanctum ledger the financial record book she stole during the rejection itself. Five years later, Ari returns to the Northern packs to bury her father. She returns as the owner of the largest werewolf-tech investment firm in the Free Cities. As the controlling shareholder of six Northern pack businesses, including the Sterling Pack's main revenue source. As the woman Alpha Caelum Sterling rejected on the floor of his own ballroom and now owes nine hundred million Free Cities credits. Caelum's marriage to Isolde has collapsed. The Sterling Pack is financially failing. And the morning Ari's plane lands in the Northern Hollow, Caelum learns that his pack's largest creditor is the rejected first mate he threw away. He wants her back. But Ari did not survive five years in the Free Cities to come home for a second chance with the man who destroyed her. She came home to take everything he loves and burn it to the ground. And there is one thing Caelum does not yet know one mark hidden beneath the collar of Ari's silk blouse, one bond she has been carrying in secret for three years. She belongs to the Lycan King. And the Lycan King is on his way to the Northern Hollow.
View MoreSix hundred people watched the man I was supposed to marry reject me on our wedding day.
I stood there in the white silk gown that had once belonged to my mother before she was laid to rest. Around my neck rested the Voss family pearls. The Voss wedding crown, forged in 1847, sat atop my dark auburn hair. I had been promised to Alpha Caelum Sterling since I was sixteen years old, honoring my father’s final wish before he died. I had waited seven years for this day. The Sterling Pack ballroom glowed beneath the light of three hundred candles. White roses covered the marble floor like scattered snow. Every Alpha from the seven ruling families of Northern Hollow sat in the front row wearing formal ceremonial robes. I walked the long aisle alone. My father was gone. My mother was gone. My grandmother had passed in 2018. The only family member beside me was my cousin, Isolde, who followed a few steps behind in a pale blue maid-of-honor gown, carrying the train of my dress. At exactly 11:47 in the morning, I reached the altar. Caelum was already there. Twenty-eight years old. Six foot four. Sharp Sterling features. The strong jawline that had appeared on the cover of Werewolf Quarterly three times in the last four years. His gray eyes were famous throughout Northern Hollow. He wore the black ceremonial robes reserved for the Alpha bloodline of the Sterling Pack. And he wasn’t looking at me. His gaze was fixed somewhere beyond me. On Isolde. The ceremony began. Father Voren, the Sterling Pack High Priest, stood before us. He was eighty-three years old and had served generations of wolves. Holding the ancient Sterling ceremonial book dating back to 1612, he recited the traditional Northern Hollow marriage rite. The ceremony lasted seventeen minutes. When the final words were spoken, Father Voren turned toward Caelum. His voice was gentle. “Alpha Caelum Sterling, under the Old Law of the Northern Packs and before the Moon Goddess, do you accept Ariadne Voss as your Luna, your mate, and your bonded wife?” Silence followed. Then more silence. Caelum didn’t answer. The six hundred guests waited. The Alphas seated in the front row waited. Behind me, Isolde remained perfectly still. Slowly, Caelum lifted his eyes. For one long moment, he looked directly at me. Then, beneath the pale spring sunlight spilling through the ballroom windows, he turned away. Toward Isolde. His voice remained calm. “Father Voren.” “Yes, Alpha Sterling.” “I reject my bond with Ariadne Voss.” The entire ballroom froze. Not a single sound. I didn’t flinch. I didn’t allow myself to break. Instead, I raised my chin and met his gaze. Caelum never looked away. In the same composed voice he used during Alpha gatherings, he continued. “I name Isolde Voss as my Luna. Under the Old Law of the Northern Packs, I claim my bond with Isolde Voss. Before this day ends, I will take her as my mate and my bonded wife.” The color drained from Father Voren’s face. Very slowly, he turned toward me. His old eyes held something close to pity. “Ariadne Voss.” “Yes, Father Voren.” “Under the Old Law of the Northern Packs, do you accept this rejection?” Six hundred people waited for my answer. The Alphas watched from the front row. Isolde remained motionless behind me. I lifted my head higher. My eyes found Caelum Sterling. The Alpha I had been engaged to for seven years. The man I had imagined building a future with. The man I had once believed would stand beside me for the rest of my life. When I spoke, my voice sounded exactly the way my mother had taught me to speak when I was three years old. Steady. Controlled. Graceful. “Yes, Father Voren.” A pause stretched between us. “I accept the rejection.” Silence followed. Then I turned. Slowly. Carefully. And I walked back down the aisle. I didn’t cry. I didn’t give anyone the satisfaction. Every lesson of Voss family dignity remained intact. Yet when I reached a small side door near the ballroom exit, I stopped. The door led to the Sterling inner sanctum. The private room where the Sterling Pack financial ledger had been stored since 1847. The door stood unlocked. Earlier that morning, it had been opened for the traditional Alpha blessing ceremony. No one had secured it afterward. Quietly, I slipped inside. The room smelled faintly of old paper, oak wood, and centuries of pack history. The ledger rested on an aged oak stand. Without hesitation, I picked it up. Carefully, I concealed it beneath the folds of my white silk gown. Then I walked back out. No one stopped me. No one noticed. I left the ballroom. I crossed the Sterling courtyard. The cool spring air touched my skin as I stepped into the pale morning sunlight of Northern Hollow. Waiting at the curb was Mikhal Korven. He was sixty-seven years old. The same Voss family driver who had driven my mother to her own wedding in 1991. The old black Bentley stood beside him. As soon as he saw me, he opened the rear door. “Lady Voss.” I slid into the back seat. The Sterling ledger rested beside me. “Mikhal.” “Yes, Lady Voss.” “Take me to the Free Cities.” For a moment, he said nothing. A long moment. After forty-three years serving the Voss family, Mikhal Korven had mastered the art of hiding surprise. His expression never changed. He simply closed the door. Then he walked around the Bentley beneath the bright spring sky and settled into the driver’s seat. The engine rumbled to life. In the rearview mirror, his eyes met mine. “The Free Cities, Lady Voss.” A brief pause. “Using the Northern roads, the journey will take five days.” I lowered my gaze to the Sterling Pack ledger resting beside me. The heavy leather cover felt almost warm beneath my fingertips. Then I spoke softly. “Yes, Mikhal.” Silence lingered for a heartbeat. “Five days is exactly the amount of time I need.”The full moon climbed high, and I returned to the forest. Mikhal dropped me at the tree line. From there, I made the long walk by myself, nearly an hour through shadow and silver light. I wore a charcoal suit cut sharp enough to pass for armor, the Voss pearls cool against my throat. Lysander’s mark its silver crescent stayed hidden beneath my sleeve. My hands were empty. No briefcase. No documents. No ledgers stacked with three hundred and fifty years of Voss records. For the first time since I became an adult, I stepped toward the most important room of my life with absolutely nothing to present. A distant part of me the part that always observed, always cataloged found it oddly familiar. It felt like that morning five years ago, when I walked into the Sterling Pack courtyard in a white silk wedding dress. Empty-handed. Expecting nothing. On the edge of losing everything. But this time, the emptiness was mine. I had chosen it. That was the difference. That was the entire jo
The second summons arrived on a Tuesday. It always did. Same pale, bone-white envelope. Same seal pressed in silver wax a full moon slashed through with two thin lines. Same unseen courier, leaving it at my door without disturbing even a single bead of dew on the grass. But the message inside had changed. The Moon Court will reconvene at the next full moon. The matter of the King’s mate remains unresolved. It is reopened under petition by Seraphina Dane. You will attend alone. You will not be permitted to bring papers. I read that final line again. Then once more. You will not be permitted to bring papers. She’d learned. She had stood in that amphitheatre and watched me tear her arguments apart with three and a half centuries of Voss ledgers. Then she’d seen me stop her run on the fund using nothing but a board and cold, simple numbers. And she’d understood exactly what that meant. My weapon was the ledger. So she took it away. “She’s forcing you onto her ground,” Lysander
All twenty-three Northern pack families showed up at the Voss Capital office on Thursday. They arrived uneasy. It was written all over them the stiff shoulders, the low voices, the way their eyes moved too quickly as they filed into the long conference room on the top floor. Four stories up, right on the busiest financial street in the Second Free City. These were the same people who had trusted me with everything. The same ones who had backed me, funded me, believed in what I was building. And now, after a few whispered words from a silver-eyed woman, they were here wondering if it was all about to collapse. Four of them had already pulled out. The remaining nineteen had come to decide if they would do the same. I didn’t rush them. I let them sit. Let them talk in hushed tones. Let the tension thicken in the air until it pressed against the walls. Fear has a voice of its own. At a negotiation table, if you give it space, it speaks loud enough. Then I rose to my feet at the hea
The attack arrived nine days later. It didn’t come from the Moon Court. There was no silver glow, no Old Tongue curling through the air, no brittle, bone-pale summons delivered with ritual weight. It came the way my real enemies always came. Through numbers. Through ink. Through a ledger. Bertrand Aldermoor placed it in front of me on a Wednesday morning, the Voss Capital office still carrying the faint scent of parchment, candle wax, and the city beyond our windows. His usually composed Free Cities expression was tight, more unsettled than I had seen in three years. “Lady Voss,” he said carefully, “there’s an issue with the Northern Packs Restructuring Fund.” He set the figures down. I looked. And in less than five seconds, the truth landed clean and cold in my chest. Seraphina Dane had found my ledger. The Northern Packs Restructuring Fund carried the reworked debts of eleven Northern packs. Its capital came from twenty-three Northern pack families my clients. The ones who






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