
Mated To The Exiled Monster Alpha
After surviving years in the Alpha King's brutal prisons, I returned to my pack only to be stripped of my family home and exiled to a rotting cabin.
I accepted the humiliation in silence, until I found a dying baby girl abandoned in a trash-filled alley.
Taking her in awoke the terrifying, protective beast I had kept chained in my mind. The pack, fueled by rumors and a jealous woman's bruised ego, viewed us as abominations. They trespassed on my land to uncover my "dirty secrets," forcing me to build a massive stone fortress with my bare hands just to keep my daughter safe from their cruelty.
We lived in isolated peace for years, until the day I took her outside the walls to visit my parents' graves.
A convoy of royal Alphas arrived, and their Luna fell to her knees at my mother's cousin's grave, weeping and calling her "sister."
I didn't understand. Why was my forgotten family connected to the royals? And why did Cassian Vargan, the most powerful Alpha in the world, freeze in absolute shock the moment he realized who I was?
"You... are you Gideon Stone's son?"
The bloody past I had buried under a mountain of stone had finally found me.
I didn't answer him. I just pulled my daughter behind me and tightly gripped my knife, ready to slaughter a king if he took one more step.
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Chapter 7
Ryker Stone POV:
The next day, I began to build.
My project was simple in concept, monumental in execution. I was going to build a wall around my home. A high, thick wall of solid stone that would enclose the cabin and a small yard, creating a sanctuary the outside world could not breach.
I didn't need tools. I didn't need a quarry. The mountain itself would provide.
I went to the rocky slope behind my cabin and set my hands on a massive granite boulder, half-buried in the earth. The wound in my side pulled tight as I crouched, a warning flare of heat, but I ignored it. It had to weigh over five hundred pounds. I found my purchase, set my feet, and pulled. Muscles I hadn't used in years bunched and strained, cording in my back and arms. With a great sucking sound, the rock tore free from the soil.
I hefted it onto my shoulder. It was heavy, but manageable. I carried it back to the line I had marked in the dirt and set it down, the ground trembling with the impact. The old wound throbbed dully with each trip, a familiar metronome of pain I had learned to breathe through. Then I went back for another.
Elara watched me from a safe nest of furs I'd made for her near the cabin door. Her bright eyes followed my every move, a look of placid curiosity on her face. To her, this was normal. This was just her father, doing what fathers do.
My work did not go unnoticed. Pack members, drawn by the sounds of my labor, began to gather at the edge of the woods. They watched from a distance, their faces a mixture of awe and terror. They saw me tear boulders from the earth with my bare hands, saw me lift them as if they were hay bales, and saw me place them with impossible precision, fitting them together like a master stonemason.
The whispers started again, new and more fantastic than before. I wasn't just a madman anymore. I was a monster. A troll. The offspring of some forgotten giant. The fear I had cultivated was now blossoming into full-blown myth.
Meanwhile, in the village, Serilda was nursing her wounded pride. Her public humiliation had become her obsession. She gathered her circle of friends—gossips and bored she-wolves like Nora Hale and Tessa Barlow—and spun a tale of my arrogance and mysterious, dark secrets.
"There's something wrong with him," she insisted, her voice trembling with manufactured victimhood. "He threw me out. For no reason! He's hiding something in that cabin. Something shameful."
Her friends, their appetites whetted for scandal, leaned in closer.
"Maybe he's got a mate hidden away," Nora suggested. "A cursed one."
"Or maybe," Tessa added with a malicious snicker, "he's just broken. All that time in the Alpha King's prisons... maybe he can't perform. That's why he was so angry you approached him."
The speculation grew wilder, more vicious. Their collective curiosity, fueled by jealousy and boredom, became a dangerous, living thing.
"We should find out," Serilda finally said, her eyes gleaming. "Tonight. He always goes deep into the forest to hunt after the sun sets. We'll slip in while he's gone and see what his precious secret is."
The idea was a shocking breach of pack law. To trespass on another's land, especially one who had a treaty with the Alpha, was a serious offense. A few of them hesitated.
"Are you afraid?" Serilda taunted. "He's just one wolf. There are four of us. What can he do?"
Her bravado, born of shame and a desperate need for revenge, was contagious. One by one, they agreed. They would become spies, adventurers in their own small, petty drama.
I knew nothing of their plotting. My world had shrunk to the simple, satisfying tasks of lifting, carrying, and placing. The wall grew with astonishing speed. By nightfall, a formidable barrier, already waist-high, encircled my home.
I would occasionally stop, turning to look at Elara. Her presence was a silent anchor, the reason for every stone I moved. The sight of her, so small and so trusting, would soften the brutal intensity of my labor, filling me with a feeling so fierce and tender it almost hurt. This wall was for her. A physical barrier to match the monstrous ones she already had. Inside, my true sentinels kept their vigil. Beyond the walls, in the deep shadows of the forest that were as much my domain as the cabin itself, my true sentinels kept their vigil. Fen, the Dire Wolf, with his silent tread and eyes of ghost-light, would guard the gate. And Jormungandr, a mountain of patient scales, would coil in the ancient roots of the cliffside, ensuring no one approached from the rear. They were Elara's unseen shadows, her impossible guardians. They were Elara's shadows, her impossible nursery maids, and this wall would be their fortress.
That evening, after I put Elara to sleep in her cradle, I prepared for my nightly hunt. My side ached from the day's labor—the silver scar still tender beneath my palm—but the hunt wouldn't wait. It was a necessity. I needed fresh meat, and it was the only time I could leave her unattended for a short while.
As I melted into the shadows of the deep woods, a different set of shadows detached themselves from the edge of the forest. Serilda and her friends, cloaked in the darkness of the new moon, began their approach.
They crept toward the wall, a dark, jagged silhouette against the star-dusted sky.
"Now," Serilda whispered, her voice a tense hiss of excitement.
They had no idea. They thought they were about to uncover a dirty secret.
They were about to step into a nightmare.
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9.3
I woke up in a freezing, desolate wasteland, my body weak and covered in sores. A mechanical voice in my head informed me that I was a defective rabbit-mutant, and if I didn't conceive within twenty-four hours, I would die permanently.
The terror was suffocating, but the system left me no choice. To survive the brutal cold and the decay of my own heartbeat, I had to force a pregnancy with a stranger.
I stumbled through the snow, my fingers turning blue, until I found a massive, wounded Arctic Fox-mutant in a dark cave. He was a Tier-9 predator, dying and radiating the exact heat I needed to stay alive. I threw away my dignity, crawling into his fur to merge our energies, desperate to trigger the life-reset protocol before my time ran out.
I felt like a monster, forcing myself onto a man who didn't even know I existed, just to keep my own heart beating. How could I ever face him if he woke up? Why did I have to be the one to pay the price for this twisted, mechanical ultimatum?
The fusion was a success, but when I woke up the next morning, the apex predator had me pinned under his massive claws, his fangs inches from my throat. I didn't beg for mercy. I stared into his feral, ice-blue eyes and made a deal that would change everything: I would be his anchor, and he would be my protector. But then I dropped the final, terrifying truth: I was pregnant, and he was the only one who could save us.

7.5
To save my family's dying company, I was forced to marry a billionaire I hadn't seen in fourteen years.
But right outside the City Clerk's office, he tossed our marriage certificate at me like a cheap receipt and shoved a four-year-old boy into my arms.
"Your new life has begun. You're on babysitting duty now."
He sneered and left me stranded on the sidewalk. I realized with absolute horror that my new husband was Ellsworth Marshall, the sickly boy I had relentlessly bullied in middle school.
He didn't spend five billion dollars to save the Bradford family. He bought me to execute a slow, suffocating revenge.
He used his orphaned nephew as a pawn, explicitly threatening my father that if I failed to play the perfect, compliant nanny, he would instantly destroy our family's legacy.
He even had his guards lock me out of his Long Island estate on my first night, forcing me to stand in the cold dark just to prove he owned me.
I was trapped in a gilded cage, suffocated by the guilt of my past and the terror of my present.
Why did he involve an innocent child in his twisted vendetta? How much humiliation was enough to pay for my childhood cruelty?
Looking at the terrified little boy clinging to my skirt, I tightened my grip on my suitcase.
If he wanted to destroy my will piece by piece, I had to find a way to survive the monster I created.

7.7
I fled my werewolf pack five years ago to hide in a human city, all to escape a recurring nightmare.
Every full moon, a terrifying, golden-eyed Lycan slaughters everything in his path, forces me to my knees with a crushing Alpha command, and claims I am his fated mate.
The vivid dreams were destroying my inner wolf, forcing me to finally agree to return to my pack for the annual Pack Run to seek a cure.
But right before my flight home, I accidentally bumped into Rick Miller, the most arrogant, tyrannical Alpha on our college campus.
He looked down at the coffee spilled on his expensive leather jacket with pure disdain, publicly humiliating me in front of the entire airport.
"Do you have any idea what this jacket costs? Never mind. It's not like you could afford to replace it."
As he coldly insulted me, a terrifying realization suddenly froze my blood.
He smelled exactly like the ancient pine and storm from my nightmares, and his brief touch sent a mate's electric spark straight to my soul.
How could this cruel, spoiled campus bully possibly be the legendary, terrifying Lycan King who haunted my every sleeping moment?
As he turned and boarded his private jet, I looked down at my trembling hands and realized the horrifying truth.
My trip back to the pack wasn't a journey to heal my trauma.
I was walking straight into the cage of the very monster I had spent five years trying to outrun.

7.2
Elara Vex had everything-a flawless ice core, the title of prodigy, and a place at the pinnacle of the High Tower. But in one brutal night, it was all ripped away. Her mentor tore the core from her chest. Her fiancé drove a sword through her back. Her own sister smiled as she bled out on the cold marble floor.
When Elara wakes, she's years in the past, mere hours before her core is scheduled to be stolen. This time, she won't be anyone's sacrificial lamb. She shatters her own core with forbidden blood magic and forges something far more terrifying in its place-a bottomless, ravenous Chaos Core that devours magic itself.
Now, branded a worthless cripple and cast into the deadly Abyss, Elara is pulled from the darkness by the outcasts of Elysium Academy-a school for heretics, psychopaths, and everything the Tower despises. Under the tutelage of a reclusive principal who knew her murdered mother, Elara will master her forbidden power and uncover the Tower's darkest secrets.
When the Five Academies Ranking Tournament arrives, Seraphina Vex stands in the arena, draped in white saintess robes, ready to claim ultimate glory. She doesn't know that a ghost from her past has clawed her way back from hell. She doesn't know that Elara is coming-and this time, the prodigal sister isn't asking for mercy. She's bringing chaos.

9.7
Eighteen months ago, the man I loved shattered my heart, claiming everything between us was a mistake. Now, he's back, a ghost of his former self, a rookie tryout in my pro esports team. And I will make him regret crawling back.
Clifton, captain of a legendary esports team, was secretly battling a severe wrist injury that threatened his career, every match a fight against his own body. He pushed through the pain, ignoring doctors' warnings, desperate to maintain his god-like status.
His world was already on the edge, but nothing prepared him for seeing Justice Terry again in the team basement. Justice, pale and trembling, his eyes wide with naked terror, was now a rookie tryout.
Clifton had spent a year and a half trying to forget that rainy Chicago alley, the raw revulsion in Justice's eyes, the whispered "it wasn't real" that had left him heartbroken. Justice had vanished, and Clifton had erased every trace. Now, the boy who once looked at him like he was the sun was back, flinching at his touch, displaying a deep, primal fear. Amidst sponsor pressure and whispers of being "washed," Clifton saw Justice's return as a chance for vengeance. He publicly humiliated Justice on a live stream, forcing him into a suicide mission, then coldly benched him.
Yet, the satisfaction never came. Instead, a hollow emptiness and a torrent of questions: What had truly happened in the past? Why was Justice here, and what trauma had carved such fear into his bones?
Clifton, unwilling to be fooled again, swore to uncover every secret and every lie. He would force Justice to explain why he had returned, even if it meant tearing down everything they both had left.

8.8
My husband thought I was just a docile wife, easily controlled. He didn't know I'd spent five years meticulously dismantling his life. Tonight, his world would finally crumble into dust.
For five years, I endured Jackson's entitled demands and his family's greed, silently funding their lavish life in our Beverly Hills mansion.
My illusion shattered finding his mistress Amber's lingerie in his suitcase. My attorney just severed all financial ties, making Jackson's arrogant demands hollow.
I tossed my diamond ring into the trash, summoning an industrial compactor. Jackson, his mother, and mistress watched in horror as their designer luggage, bought with my money, was crushed, turning their lavish trip into garbage.
A cold, dead smile marked my cathartic release from five years of betrayal. How could they be so blind to the woman they dismissed?
Stepping into an armored Maybach, I left them in chaos. My iPad confirmed Jackson's credit cards freezing. This wasn't just divorce; it was a calculated demolition, making their pampered lives very real.