LOGINAurelya “Rae” Rivers has spent her entire life surviving in a world that was never meant for her. Raised in a wolf pack that isn’t hers, she’s the girl everyone tolerates—but no one claims. Not even Grant Kingston, the future Alpha… and the boy who used to be hers. Until he got his wolf. Until he started looking at her like she was something he couldn’t touch. Rae’s plan is simple: graduate, leave, and never look back. But Ravenwood Academy has other plans. Because suddenly, the most powerful wolves in school won’t leave her alone. The Beta who watches her like she’s a puzzle he needs to solve. The Gamma who will break bones for her without hesitation. The Delta who knows when she’s hurting before she says a word. And Grant? Grant is losing control. Because no matter how hard he tries to stay away… his wolf won’t let him. Especially not when another Alpha heir starts circling her. Now Rae is caught in the middle of something dangerous—whispers, jealousy, and a pull she doesn’t understand. They say she’s manipulating them. Using them. Taking what was never hers to begin with. They have no idea how wrong they are. Because Rae isn’t human. And when the truth finally breaks free… So will everything else. Including the bond that ties her not to one wolf— —but to all four.
View MoreRae
The Ravenwood Pack had one human.
That human was me.
Most wolves didn’t bother remembering anything else about me. Not my name. Not how long I had lived on their territory. Just the simple, inconvenient truth that I didn’t belong in their world.
Humans didn’t live inside wolf packs.
Yet somehow I had spent most of my life inside the Alpha’s home.
It wasn’t because I belonged there.
It was because of a promise.
When my mother died, Luna Sonya Kingston had taken me in without hesitation. She had been my mother’s closest friend, and she honored that bond even after the rest of the pack quietly questioned the decision. Alpha Harold supported her, and between the two of them, the matter was settled.
At least inside the Alpha house.
The rest of the pack had their own opinions.
That was why I woke before dawn every morning.
The house was silent when I slipped down the stairs, the early darkness still pressed against the tall kitchen windows. I tied my hair into a loose braid and moved through the room quietly, wiping down the counters and rinsing the dishes left from the night before.
Technically none of it was my responsibility.
The Alpha house had staff who handled the cooking and cleaning.
Still, I did it.
Living under someone else’s roof meant proving you deserved the space you occupied. It meant giving people fewer reasons to question why you were there.
The coffee finished brewing just as the sky outside began to lighten. I poured it into the insulated carafe and placed it neatly on the dining table where Alpha Harold would find it after his morning run.
Only then did I grab my bag from the bench near the back door.
Upstairs, the house remained quiet.
Which meant Grant was still asleep.
My hand lingered on the door handle for a moment.
There had been a time when mornings belonged to both of us. We used to race down the back steps together, stealing food from the kitchen before running into the forest behind the house. Grant had always been faster than me, but he never let me lose by much.
Before the rest of the pack decided what I was, Grant had simply been Grant.
My best friend.
My favorite person.
The one place in Ravenwood that had ever felt completely safe.
Back then, I thought we’d grow up together. I thought no matter what the rest of the pack saw when they looked at me, Grant would always see me.
Back then, the difference between us hadn’t mattered.
Then he gained his wolf.
Grant had been twelve when he shifted for the first time. The whole pack celebrated like it was a festival. Becoming a wolf meant stepping fully into the world you were born for.
I remembered running outside to congratulate him.
I remembered the way his expression changed the moment his wolf looked at me.
The warmth vanished.
He stepped away like he had suddenly realized I was something dangerous.
After that night, the distance between us grew year by year. The other pack children followed his lead the moment they gained their wolves too.
Before, I had been the strange girl living in the Alpha house.
After, I became the human.
The outsider.
I pushed the memory away and stepped outside into the cold morning air.
Today was the first day at Ravenwood Academy.
Even thinking the words made my stomach tighten.
The academy existed to train the future leadership of wolf packs. Alpha heirs, Betas, Gammas, and Deltas from powerful territories all came here before eventually returning home to lead their people.
Humans were not allowed to attend.
Normally.
The only reason I had been admitted was because Alpha Harold and Luna Sonya had used their authority to force an exception. My mother had been a wolf, and apparently that technicality had been enough for the pack council to approve my enrollment.
It hadn’t made anyone happy.
Which meant I was walking into a school full of wolves who already believed I had stolen a place that belonged to someone else.
I only needed to survive four years.
That was the plan.
Graduate.
Leave Ravenwood.
Leave the wolf world behind for good.
The wolves might tolerate me because of the Alpha and Luna, but I was tired of spending my life feeling like a guest in someone else’s home. If I could earn my degree, find work in a human city, and build a life away from pack politics and werewolf hierarchies, maybe I could finally stop being the human everyone merely tolerated and become someone who actually belonged.
Getting through Ravenwood Academy wasn’t about becoming part of the wolf world.
It was about escaping it.
The academy buildings rose from the forest ahead of me, tall stone walls wrapped in ivy. Students were already gathering across the courtyard when I arrived. Some were hauling luggage toward the dormitory buildings while others clustered in small groups, laughing and greeting friends they hadn’t seen since the previous term.
I slipped through the crowd toward the dormitory lobby.
A large board covered the far wall, packed with room assignments.
It took a moment to find my name.
Aurelya Rivers — Dorm B, Room 214
I stared at it for a second before heading upstairs.
The door to room 214 was already open.
Someone stood near the window unpacking books onto one of the desks. When she turned and saw me in the doorway, her entire face lit up.
“Rae!”
Chrissy Fredricks rushed across the room and hugged me before I could even drop my bag.
I laughed in surprise. “You’re my roommate?”
“Obviously,” she said with a grin. “Did you really think they’d put you with some Alpha princess who hates humans?”
Chrissy had been my only real friend in the pack for years. As an Omega, she had never quite fit neatly into wolf society either. She had earned her place at the academy through grades alone, graduating top of her class at the preparatory school.
Seeing her here beside me felt almost too lucky.
“You think this was arranged?” I asked quietly.
Chrissy’s smile turned slightly sheepish. “Probably. The Alpha and Luna might have… suggested it.”
That sounded about right.
Just like getting me admitted to the academy in the first place.
I set my bag down beside the other bed, feeling a little less tense than I had when I walked in.
“Ready to face the wolves?” Chrissy asked.
I exhaled slowly. “Not really.”
She laughed and grabbed my arm anyway.
The academy courtyard had grown even more crowded by the time we stepped outside. Groups of students filled the open space between the dormitories and the main hall.
That was when someone called out loudly.
“Well, look who decided to show up.”
My shoulders stiffened.
Quinn stepped away from the group gathered near the fountain. Her long dark hair fell perfectly over one shoulder as she approached, her expression already carrying that familiar mixture of amusement and disdain.
Two girls followed behind her.
Rebecca.
Stephanie.
“Didn’t realize the academy was opening enrollment to humans this year,” Quinn continued lightly.
I tried to step around her.
She blocked my path.
“You know,” she said thoughtfully, “this school was built for wolves.”
Her eyes narrowed slightly.
“Not strays.”
Rebecca bumped my shoulder as she walked past. The shove was just hard enough to throw me off balance.
Chrissy grabbed my arm.
“Rae—”
Another shove came from behind.
My bag slipped from my shoulder.
I hit the stone courtyard hard on my hands and one knee as laughter erupted around us.
“Careful,” Rebecca said mockingly. “Humans break easily.”
Quinn stepped closer, looking down at me.
“You should really know your place.”
My fingers curled against the stone.
Normally I stayed quiet.
Normally I ignored it.
But today something sharp twisted in my chest as I started to stand.
A cold voice cut through the courtyard.
“That’s enough, Quinn.”
Every wolf nearby went silent.
I looked up slowly.
Grant Kingston stood a few feet away.
Tall. Broad-shouldered. Calm in the way only someone raised to lead a pack could be. His steel-blue eyes moved briefly across the scene before settling on Quinn.
Quinn’s entire attitude changed instantly.
“Grant,” she said sweetly, slipping her arm through his.
The motion hit harder than the shove had.
Grant barely looked at me.
“Let’s go,” he said calmly.
Quinn cast one last satisfied glance in my direction before allowing him to guide her away.
Behind him, three more figures followed.
Julien Bennett.
Brax Weston.
Lincoln Adler.
The future command wolves of Ravenwood.
A bitter thought crossed my mind.
If these were the wolves who would one day run the pack, then people like me would always stay on the ground.
Just as I started to push my feet, a shadow stepped in front of me.
A hand appeared in my line of sight.
I looked up.
Julien Bennett stood there, his green eyes studying me quietly.
“Need a hand?” he asked.
For a moment, the entire courtyard held its breath.
GrantThe cafeteria doors slammed shut behind Rae.For a moment, the room seemed to forget how to breathe.The laughter lingered for another second before beginning to taper off, replaced by the uneasy shifting of students who suddenly found their lunches far more interesting than the girl who had just fled the room covered in food. A few conversations resumed in hesitant whispers, but the atmosphere had changed. Even the smell of hot food seemed heavier now.Three chairs scraped backward almost at the same time.Julien stood first. Linc followed a heartbeat later, while Brax carefully lowered the fork he had halfway to his mouth back onto his tray. The grin that normally seemed stitched permanently across his face had vanished, replaced by an expression I had only seen a handful of times over the years.None of them looked at each other.They didn’t have to.Whatever decision had just been made, all three of them had reached it independently.I pushed my own chair back.“Grant.”Quin
RaeBy the time the lunch bell rang, my stomach had tied itself into enough knots that I wasn’t entirely sure I was hungry anymore.Combat class had been exhausting in ways that had nothing to do with exercise. Between Mr. Calder trying to sideline me, Quinn’s comments, and somehow ending up training with Julien and Linc, I felt like I’d spent the entire morning standing in the middle of a spotlight I had never asked for.All I wanted now was twenty quiet minutes.The cafeteria was enormous, easily large enough to seat the entire academy at once. Long rows of wooden tables stretched across the room beneath high timbered ceilings, while the smell of fresh bread, roasted meat, and soup drifted from the serving line. Conversations echoed off the stone walls, blending into a constant hum that somehow managed to feel both lively and overwhelming.Chrissy nudged my shoulder as we collected our trays.“I’m going to grab something sweet before they run out,” she said, eyeing the dessert count
RaeA laugh almost slipped out of me, but I swallowed it quickly as Mr. Calder began demonstrating the first drill.The movement was simple enough in theory. One partner grabbed the wrist. The other rotated against the thumb, stepped back, and broke the hold before creating distance. Wolves relied too much on strength. Mr. Calder said that twice, though the only person in the room without supernatural strength was me.Julien demonstrated first with Linc, breaking the hold smoothly and explaining the mechanics under his breath.“Don’t pull backward,” he told me when it was my turn. “That turns it into a contest of strength, and you’ll lose.”“Thanks for the confidence.”“It isn’t personal. It’s physics.”Linc held out his hand. “Against the thumb.”I placed my wrist in his grip.His hold was firm, but careful
RaeCombat Training was the one class I had been dreading since the moment I saw it on my schedule.Not because I was afraid of getting hurt. I had been hurt before. Bruises faded. Split lips healed. Scraped palms stopped stinging eventually.What I dreaded was the reminder.Every other class at Ravenwood Academy could at least pretend I belonged there if everyone tried hard enough. History was history. Strategy could be studied. Pack Law could be memorized, even if most of it had clearly never been written with someone like me in mind.Combat was different. Combat belonged to wolves.The training arena sat behind the main academy building, half indoors and half open to the forest. The structure was built from dark stone and reinforced wood, with wide doors that opened onto the outdoor training fields. Rows of weapons lined the walls: practice staffs, padded batons, wooden daggers, training blades dulled at the
RaeAnd when I finally looked up, it wasn’t who I expected.Not even close.Brax Weston stood in the doorway balancing two pizza boxes, four sodas, and enough confidence to make it seem like he’d been invited.Chrissy’s eyes widened.Brax grinned.“Good,” he announced. “You’re alive.”I blinked.“W
RaeBy the time I made it back to my dorm room, the box in my hands felt heavier than it had any right to.It wasn’t the weight of the things inside it. It was everything attached to them—the way Sonya had looked at me, the way Julien hadn’t backed down, the way Grant had stepped into the conversat
RaeBy the time classes ended, I understood something I hadn’t been prepared for when I walked into Ravenwood Academy that morning.Being ignored had been easier.At least when I was invisible, people didn’t look at me like I was something to be figured out.Now they did.The whispers had changed.
RaeJulien Bennett’s hand remained extended in front of me, steady and patient, as if the weight of the entire courtyard staring at him didn’t exist.For a moment, I didn’t move—not because I needed help getting up, but because of what that gesture meant. Wolves like Julien didn’t involve themselve










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