LOGINSeraphina Blackwood, heir to Shadow Creek's ruling family, died betrayed by the man she loved most. After sacrificing her birthright, distancing herself from her family, and giving everything to her husband, Kaelen Draven, she believed they had built a perfect life together. But after the birth of their son, tragedy struck. Told the child was stillborn, Seraphina later learned the horrifying truth: Kaelen had poisoned their unborn son to hide his own sterility and, driven by jealousy and ambition, murdered her as well to steal the ancient Alpha Prime power running through her bloodline. As death claimed her, the Moon Goddess offered Seraphina a second chance. She awakens ten years in the past, the day after the hunt where she first met Kaelen, armed with memories of every betrayal and every life that will be lost if history repeats itself. Determined to rewrite fate, Seraphina must protect her family, expose the monster hiding behind Kaelen's charm, and uncover the truth behind a mysterious white wolf connected to her destiny. But changing the future won't be easy. Kaelen is just as cunning as before, and this time, Seraphina must rely on her instincts, embrace her true strength, and fight for the life that was stolen from her.
View MoreThe poison burned like liquid fire, spreading from her throat through every vein, every artery, every desperate pulse point. Silver-laced nightshade—she could taste it now, acrid and sweet, the same taste that had been in his kiss an hour ago.
Kaelen Draven, her mate, her alpha, her heart's single beating reason, had pressed his lips to hers with that devastating gentleness she had fallen for a decade ago. His hands had cradled her face like she was something precious. His scent—pine and woodsmoke and winter frost—had enveloped her as it always did, a familiar comfort that now felt like a cage closing. "My love," he had murmured against her mouth, his voice that velvet rumble that made her knees weak even now. "You look tired. Let me make you tea." She should have known. The way his golden eyes had flickered, just for a second, to something cold and calculating. The way his thumb had traced her jawline, almost reverent, like he was memorizing her face before he erased her. "No," she had said, smiling, always trusting. "I'll make it. You've been working so hard with the council." He had insisted. That should have been her first warning. Kaelen never insisted on anything. He was the alpha who led through quiet example, through patience and wisdom. He was the wolf who had won her heart not with dominance but with kindness, who had shown her that even in a world of fangs and fury, love could be soft. And now that softness was killing her. Kaelen's hand, so gentle, had given her the cup. She remembered the warmth seeping into her palms, the fragrant steam rising to her face, the way he had watched her drink. His eyes, usually warm amber, had been flat. Dead. Like a wolf looking at prey. The first sip had tasted strange. A hint of bitterness beneath the honey and chamomile. "Is something wrong?" he had asked, his voice perfectly modulated. Concerned alpha. Loving mate. "Just a little strong," she had said, and she had drunk it all. Now she lay crumpled on the cold stone floor of her chambers, surrounded by the tapestries she had woven with her own hands. The ones that told the story of their pack's history. The ones she had made in the quiet hours while waiting for him to come home from council meetings that stretched late into the night. She had been so patient. So understanding. Such a good mate. The poison was in her lungs now. Each breath came shallow, ragged, a desperate flutter like a bird with a broken wing. Her wolf was dying inside her, and she could feel it—the slow dimming of that wild, bright light that had been her constant companion since birth. Where is my wolf? she thought, panic starting to claw through the poison's haze. Where is my pack? Where is— She reached out with her pack bond, that shimmering web of connection that linked every wolf of the Shadow Creek pack to their alpha and their alpha pair. She had always been the bright center of that web, the heart that kept them all warm. Now the web was cold. Silence answered her. No, not silence. A wall. A barrier of ice and stone that pushed her back, that rejected her touch. Someone had closed off the bond. Someone had— He knew. He planned this. He has been planning this for— The thought shattered as a new presence filled the doorway. Her mate stood silhouetted against the torchlight. He was beautiful still. He would always be beautiful. Tall and broad-shouldered, his dark hair falling across his brow, his face carved by the moon itself. The face she had kissed a thousand times. The hands she had held through grief and joy. The heart she had believed was hers. "Our son is dead," she whispered, the words coming out a croak. "My chest... I cannot..." The infant. His tiny body, so still. Three days ago. The grief had been a physical blow, a death of its own. She had held him, her perfect little wolf, and felt her soul crack in half. And Kaelen had held her. Had promised her they would survive. Had whispered that he loved her. That they would try again. That their love was eternal. It had all been a lie. "The child was never mine," Kaelen said, and his voice was ice. It was the voice of a stranger wearing her mate's face. "He was a bastard. Proof of your infidelity." "What?" The word came out a breath, barely sound. "No. No, you know that's not true. He was yours. He had your eyes, your—" "He had nothing of mine." Kaelen stepped closer, his boots echoing on the stone. He looked down at her like she was something foul. Something to be scraped off his boots. "I waited, Seraphina. For years, I waited for you to bear me an heir. And when you finally did, when I held that black-haired, golden-eyed boy in my arms, I knew." "You knew what?" She tried to lift her head, but the poison had her in its grip. Her muscles wouldn't obey. She was paralyzed from the neck down, trapped in her own body as death crept closer. "I knew he was not mine," Kaelen said. "Because I am incapable of siring children. The healer confirmed it when I was seventeen. A hunting accident. The wound that almost took my life also took my... future." The words landed like blows, each one stealing more breath. "I never knew," she breathed. "You never told me. You never..." "Would you have stayed with me, Seraphina? Would the great Seraphina Blackwood, princess of the Red Valley pack, have chosen a barren wolf as her mate? Would she have given up her birthright for a man who could never give her children?" "I would have," she said, and the truth of it burned in her chest, hotter than the poison. "I loved you. I loved you more than anything. More than my pack. More than my future. More than my—" "Lies." The word was a blade. "All of it, lies. I knew the moment I saw you that you would never truly be mine. You were too bright. Too powerful. You drew others to you like moths to a flame, and I saw how they looked at you. How Dane looked at you." "Dane? My brother's best friend? Kaelen, he was just—" "Just what? Just a friend? Just someone who worshipped the ground you walked on? I saw the way he held you after the stillbirth." Kaelen's voice cracked, just slightly, and for a moment she saw the grief beneath the rage. "I saw how you wept in his arms." "Because you weren't there! You were always at some council meeting, some emergency, some—" "I needed to build alliances. I needed to secure our future while you were busy playing the grieving mother." "I WAS GRIEVING!" The shout tore from her throat, and with it came a trickle of blood. She tasted iron and poison mixed together. "Our son was dead. Our baby. And you were never there. You were never there, Kaelen. You left me alone with—" "With Dane." His voice was flat. "Who comforted you so well that nine months later, you presented me with a son who looked nothing like me." "There was no one else!" she screamed. "I would never betray you. Never. I loved you. I loved you, and you killed our baby, didn't you? You killed him because he wasn't yours, and you killed me because—" "Because I need to be free." Kaelen knelt beside her, and his hand brushed her hair back from her face. His touch was cold, clinical. "I have loved you, Seraphina. In my own way. But love is weakness. Love has made me weak. And I cannot be weak anymore." "What are you talking about?" "I am not merely the alpha of Shadow Creek," he said. "I have been building something. Something bigger. A new order, where wolves do not bow to the moon goddess's whims. Where we create our own power. And to do that, I needed your power." "My power?" "Your wolf," he said. "She is rare. Ancient blood runs through your veins. The blood of the first wolves, the ones who walked the world before the goddess cursed us with bonds and loyalty and all that weak, tender nonsense. When I drink from you, I will absorb that power. I will become something new. Something more." And then he bent down, his face inches from hers, and for one terrible moment she thought he was going to kiss her one last time. Instead, his teeth sank into her throat. She felt her lifeblood pour out of her, felt her wolf's last desperate cry as Kaelen drank her dry. The pack bond flickered, a dying emerald. She heard them, then, the pack she had loved and nurtured and cared for with every ounce of her being. She heard them screaming in pain as the bond was severed, heard them crying out for their alpha pair. My children, she thought, as darkness crept in at the edges of her vision. My poor, sweet pack. What will happen to them? What will he do to— "The council approved this," Kaelen said, pulling back, his lips stained red with her blood. He looked... powerful. Glowing, even. "They are tired of your weak-hearted rule, Seraphina. Tired of your patience and your softness. They want a wolf who will lead them to greatness. And I will give them that." "Traitor," she breathed. "You are... you are a traitor to your own... to your own mate..." "I am a survivor," he said. "And now, I am a god." He rose to his feet and left her there, drowning in her own blood, poison burning through her veins. She lay alone for what felt like hours. Minutes. Eternities. And in that time, she remembered everything. Every kiss. Every whispered promise. Every gentle touch that had made her believe she was loved. Every moment she had given up for him—her pack, her family, her future, her own goddamn soul. I gave him everything, she thought, the pain of betrayal sharper than any poison. Everything I was. Everything I could have been. I made myself small so he could feel big. I dimmed my light so he could shine. And this is what he gave me in return. This. Her wolf stirred, a last, dying ember. And in that ember, she saw it—a flash of light, a shimmering thread, a doorway opening in the fabric of time itself. The Moon Goddess sees, a voice whispered in her mind. The Moon Goddess knows. And she offers you one chance, Seraphina Blackwood. One chance to undo what has been done. One chance to go back, to the very beginning, to the moment when everything changed. But you must carry the weight of this memory. You must remember everything. The love. The pain. The betrayal. You must remember, or the lesson will be lost. "What do I have to do?" she asked, her voice barely a whisper. Dawn. The day after the hunt. The day he first spoke to you. The day you fell in love. Return to that dawn, Seraphina. And this time, choose differently. The darkness swallowed her whole. And then—The weeks that followed were a test of Seraphina's endurance. Every day, she played the part of the slowly healing girl, allowing Kaelen to court her in full view of the pack. Every evening, she met Dane in secret, reporting every detail of her encounters with the enemy.It was exhausting. It was degrading. And it was necessary."He asked me to the moon ceremony," she reported one night, her voice flat with disgust. "He wants to be seen with me in front of the entire pack. To solidify his position."Dane's expression darkened. "The moon ceremony is sacred. It's meant for mates and families. If you go with him—""Everyone will think we're mated." She finished the thought, her stomach churning. "I know. That's exactly what he wants.""Then don't go." Dane stepped closer, his hands gripping her shoulders. "Tell him you're not ready. Make up an excuse.""And lose everything we've worked for?" She shook her head, her jaw tight with determination. "No. I have to go. I have to make him belie
The days that followed were a careful balancing act, a dangerous dance on the edge of a knife. Seraphina played her role perfectly—the confused, traumatized girl struggling to recover from her ordeal. She kept her head down, avoided eye contact with Kaelen, and let the pack whisper about her fragile mental state.But beneath the surface, she was working tirelessly.Dane had proven to be an invaluable ally. His connections ran deep through the pack, and he knew exactly which wolves were loyal to the Blackwood family and which ones had been seduced by Kaelen's promises of power. Together, they had identified a small but growing network of wolves who were willing to fight for the true alpha line."The council is divided," Dane reported one evening, his voice low as they met in the shadows of the forest. "Half of them still support your family. The other half are Kaelen's creatures now. Your father's illness has made them nervous. They want stability, and Kaelen is offering it.""My fathe
The forest grew darker as Seraphina pushed deeper into the untamed wilderness on the outskirts of Shadow Creek territory. The trees here were older, their branches twisted and gnarled, their leaves forming a thick canopy that blocked out most of the fading sunlight. The air smelled of damp earth and pine and something else—something that reminded her of safety.Dane's cabin is close, she thought, her heart pounding with a mixture of hope and fear. Please let him be there. Please let him listen.She had known Dane her entire life. He was her brother's best friend, a constant presence in the Blackwood household since they were children. He had taught her how to track game, how to read the stars, how to fight with claws and teeth. He had been there for every important moment of her life—her first hunt, her first heartbreak, her first triumph.And in the original timeline, he had been there for her darkest moment too.She remembered it vividly. The stillbirth. The cold, silent room. The w
Seraphina returned to Shadow Creek with fire in her veins and ancient power thrumming beneath her skin. The white wolf's gift had transformed her—not just physically, but spiritually. She could feel the difference in every step she took, every breath she drew. Her senses were sharper, her reflexes quicker, her wolf more powerful than it had ever been.But power alone wouldn't save her pack. She needed a plan.The village was quiet when she arrived, the afternoon sun casting long shadows across the familiar wooden buildings. Cooking fires sent plumes of smoke into the clear sky, and the sounds of daily life drifted through the air—children laughing, wolves calling to each other, the rhythmic thud of an axe splitting wood.It all seemed so normal. So peaceful.He's already here, she thought, her nostrils flaring as she caught a familiar scent on the breeze. Pine and woodsmoke and winter frost. He's already wormed his way into our lives.She followed the scent through the village, her he
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