
One Night With The Cruel Alpha
I traded my innocence to my fated mate, the Alpha King, just to get a stalk of Moonlight Grass to save my dying brother.
But after a night of agonizing physical connection, he didn't mark me. Instead, he tossed me a single, useless dried leaf and a credit card, treating our sacred bond like a cheap transaction.
When I refused his insulting offer to be his secret, nameless mistress, he choked me against a wall and banished me from his lands forever. I fled to the human city, only to watch from the shadows a week later as he publicly escorted a pure-blood noble female, preparing to make her his Luna. Meanwhile, I was forced to sell herbs in the lawless black market just to survive, where I was cornered by a gang of violent rogues.
I didn't understand. We were chosen by the Moon Goddess. When our skin touched, the mating sparks nearly blinded us both. Why did he look at me with such cold disgust? Why did he throw me away like trash, only to parade another woman as his queen?
Running for my life from the rogues, I tripped and fell onto the asphalt, right at the feet of a convoy of black SUVs.
The man stepping out was the Alpha King who had sworn to kill me if he ever saw me again.
But as the rogues demanded I be handed over, his eyes darkened with a terrifying, primal fury.
"She's mine."
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Chapter 2
Elara Thorne POV:
The bathroom was larger than the entire cabin my brother and I called home. Marble tiles, a glass-walled shower, a tub deep enough to drown in. I stared at my reflection in the vast, gold-framed mirror. A stranger stared back—a gaunt, wild-eyed creature with mud in her hair and desperation etched into every line of her face. It was absurd.
I turned the silver knob in the shower, and a moment later, steaming hot water cascaded from the showerhead. I stepped under the spray, a low sigh of pleasure escaping my lips. It had been years since I'd felt such a luxury. Since our pack was destroyed, a hot bath was a forgotten dream. The simple comfort felt so alien, so undeserved, it was almost painful.
As the water washed away the grime, a faint, silvery scar on my forearm became visible. I traced it with my finger. A rogue had given me that wound three years ago, when I’d thrown myself in front of Ethan to protect him.
The scar pulled me back, tumbling through time. I was thirteen again, small and awkward at my first cross-pack Full Moon Run. I’d been struggling to keep up, my young wolf clumsy in her own paws. A hulking, bad-tempered warrior from another pack had been about to barrel right over me.
Suddenly, a flash of black fur had intercepted him. A younger, leaner Ryker, only eighteen himself, had placed his powerful form between us, letting out a low, authoritative growl that sent the other wolf slinking away with its tail between its legs.
Later, under the silver light of the moon, he’d shifted back. He didn’t say a word, just draped his own jacket over my shivering human shoulders. The moment his scent—that intoxicating mix of pine and frost—had enveloped me, my own wolf had awakened for the first time, screaming a single, possessive word in my mind. *Mine!*
I knew then. He was my fated mate. But I had also seen the look in his father’s eyes—the reigning Alpha King—as he glanced at me, the heir to a small, insignificant pack. I heard the snickers from the other high-born wolves. The chasm between us was too wide to cross. So I had buried that love, that fierce, primal connection, deep in my heart where no one could see it.
The hiss of the shower brought me back to the present. I turned off the water and wrapped myself in a towel so soft it felt like a cloud. In a small adjoining closet, a single garment hung waiting for me: a slip of a nightgown made of black silk. It was beautiful, expensive, and clearly meant for seduction.
Slipping it on, the cool, smooth fabric felt like a costume, a lie against my skin. I walked out of the bathroom into the bedroom. A massive king-sized bed dominated the space, the pristine white sheets turned down invitingly. It looked less like a bed and more like an altar, prepared for a sacrifice.
*He will take us, but he will not see us,* Lyra whimpered, her pain a sharp echo of my own. We were about to give our body to our mate in a loveless, transactional coupling.
*It's for Ethan,* I reminded her, my voice in my head firm, betraying none of the heartbreak I felt. *And it’s to end this. After tonight, he and I are finished. We will be even.*
I walked to the window. The rain had stopped, leaving the forest outside looking clean and freshly washed. A new scent began to permeate the air, growing stronger by the second. Pine and frost. He was coming.
My heart hammered against my ribs. My palms grew slick with sweat. *It’s just a deal. It’s just a deal,* I chanted to myself, a desperate mantra.
The bedroom door opened without a sound. Ryker stepped inside. He’d changed into a simple black t-shirt and dark lounge pants. The casual clothes did nothing to soften his powerful frame; if anything, they made him seem more dangerous, more predatorily male.
His gaze landed on me, and for a fraction of a second, his stoic mask slipped. His breathing hitched, his grey eyes darkening to the color of a stormy sea. The clean scent of my body, mixed with the faint floral notes of the soap and my own unique, earthy fragrance, was clearly affecting him.
I saw the struggle in the tense line of his jaw. His inner wolf was roaring, demanding he claim me, possess me, mark me as his. But the Alpha King fought it back.
He walked to the bed and sat on the edge, the mattress dipping under his weight. He patted the space beside him, his voice a low command that allowed no argument. "Come here."
It was an Alpha's Command. My body, my very wolf essence, screamed to obey. I took a deep breath, pushing down the tidal wave of eight years of secret love and longing. I walked toward him. Each step felt like I was walking to my own execution. This was it. The grand, tragic ceremony to sacrifice the last vestiges of my girlhood dreams.
I sat stiffly on the edge of the bed, my muscles rigid, my eyes fixed on my hands clasped in my lap. I couldn't look at him.
A warm hand cupped my jaw, gentler this time, tilting my face up. He leaned in, his own face just inches from mine, his warm breath ghosting across my lips.
"Don't disappoint me."
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8.5
Everyone knew Caroline loved Jacob, the frail man in a wheelchair, even giving up her chance at marrying into wealth for him.
She devoted everything to his recovery, enduring hardship and humiliation to help him stand again.
When he finally recovered, they were praised as perfect together-until danger came.
Faced with saving her or her sister, Jacob chose the latter without hesitation. Only in her final moments did Caroline realize his heart was never hers.
Reborn, she made a different choice, choosing power over love.
When Jacob later begged, she looked down coldly. "I have no interest in men who can't stand on their own."

8.6
I was the youngest Paladin in history, the absolute pride of the Azure Blade.
But after a disastrous mission in the snow, I was falsely accused of slaughtering my own squad.
Grand Master Bernardo Rowe didn't just exile me; he surgically severed my connection to the magic Aether, turning me into a crippled mortal.
Desperate to survive, I tried to climb the Holy Stairs to reclaim my legendary sword, "Rebellion."
Instead of answering my call, my own blade shrieked in absolute rejection and blasted me down the thousand stone steps.
My bones snapped like dry twigs, and I was left in a pool of my own blood.
The pilgrims laughed at me. The guards declared me a lost cause and left me to rot in the dirt.
I should have died there, betrayed by the Order and the holy magic I once served.
But a silent, massive laborer named Cato Sims dragged my mangled body into the shadows.
He healed my shattered skeleton in mere days with impossible skill, yet he allowed lowly servants to spit on him and beat him just to keep my presence hidden.
I didn't understand why my holy sword had abandoned me, and I understood even less why this stranger was protecting a condemned criminal.
When I finally snapped and demanded to know his price for saving my life, he didn't ask for money or my body.
"The mountain does not forget its debts. I am reclaiming what was taken from it."
Staring into his unyielding eyes, I realized my exile wasn't the end, but the beginning of a terrifying truth.

7.4
Cadence, a modern botanist, woke up to a glaring sun and massive, alien purple leaves blocking the sky. She was stranded in a terrifying, primal world.
Before she could process the metallic smell of blood in the air, a white tiger the size of an SUV crushed a giant boar's neck right in front of her. The beast locked its piercing blue eyes on her hiding spot. But instead of tearing her throat out, a blinding flash of silver light erupted, and the monster transformed into a towering, heavily scarred naked man.
He was Harlan, a shifter who immediately claimed her as his mate under tribal law. Dragged back to his primitive village, Cadence faced a brutal reality. Unbonded females were targets, and she was expected to take multiple mates just to survive. The tribal women mocked her fragile frame, calling her useless. To make matters worse, her foreign scent attracted a rogue serpent-shifter who violently ambushed her in the river.
The icy shock of the serpent's attack plunged Cadence into a deadly, burning fever. The tribe's Shaman tried his healing magic, only to shake his head and abandon her.
"She lacks primal fortitude. She will rely entirely on her own weak vitality. I can do nothing."
As Harlan held her shivering body in despair, Cadence felt a deep sense of desperate injustice. Was she really going to die in a filthy stone hut in an unknown universe, killed by a simple cold?
No. She remembered her grandfather's strict survival lessons. Forcing her heavy eyes open, she grabbed her terrified tiger mate's hand. She didn't need their failing magic; she had science.
"I need specific plants to live. I need white willow bark. And a spicy, ginger-like root."
She rasped, preparing to show this savage world the true power of a modern survivor.

7.7
I gripped the wheel of my Porsche through a Manhattan downpour, staring at the positive pregnancy test on the passenger seat. Haden's voicemail was my only answer.
A semi swerved into my lane. Brakes failed. I slammed into the guardrail, airbags exploding, pain ripping through my gut.
Headlights pierced the rain. My sister Corrie stepped out under an umbrella, smiling coldly. "Beauvais Fashion is liquidated. Dad's dying." Haden stood beside her, eyes dead, shoving equity papers through the window. "Sign, or no ambulance."
I tore them up. Corrie lit a flare, tossed it onto the gas-soaked seats. Flames whooshed as they walked away.
I woke strapped to an operating table, agony tearing me apart. "No heartbeat," the doctor said. Nurses pinned me down. Instruments invaded. Corrie dropped a death certificate on my chest, then set the room ablaze with alcohol and a cigarette flick.
Smoke choked me. A cabinet blocked the door. I collapsed, burning. Then a man in black burst in, scent of cedar and tobacco, scooping me from the fire.
Five years later, I'd rebuilt myself as Sloane, flawless and cold. I signed a sham marriage to Donavan Mason, nursing his dying grandfather in their estate—the house that swallowed my father's legacy.
Betrayed by my lover and sister, child ripped away, identity erased—how could they do this? Who was the man who saved me?
Now, I infiltrate their world, armed with secrets and scars, ready to burn them all down.

7.4
Bridget, a ruthless twenty-first-century Wall Street analyst, woke up violently coughing up murky lake water in a decaying 1978 slum.
She quickly realized she was trapped in the body of a naive, marginalized teenager who had just committed suicide over a boy's cruel rejection.
The original girl had been mercilessly bullied by a fake rich kid named Kurtis and his cruel followers. They had publicly read her desperate love letters out loud, mocking her as a toad trying to eat swan meat, and simply watched as she threw herself into the freezing water. Now, her impoverished mother was left weeping by the bed, facing catastrophic debt and total social ruin in their small town. Everyone expected the surviving girl to wake up begging and crying for the boy who humiliated her.
Instead, a cold, calculating fury took over Bridget's analytical mind.
"I already died in that lake. That stupid girl is never coming back."
How could anyone throw their life away for a pathetic, vain clown wearing a mass-produced fifty-dollar watch? To Bridget, those uncollected love letters weren't symbols of teenage heartbreak. They were toxic assets. They were reputation landmines left out in the open that threatened her new family's survival.
Locking away the dead girl's weak emotions, Bridget forced her freezing, exhausted body out of the clinic bed. She set a hard three-month deadline to drag this family out of tier-one poverty. But first, she was marching straight to the volunteer camp to liquidate those liabilities and completely destroy the people who drove this body to death.

7.2
Christa discovered her adopted daughter Evelyn was sneaking around with a street thug named Dante.
When she furiously confronted her, Evelyn squeezed out a few tears and played the tragic, abused orphan.
"Mom is so cruel to me, I just want someone to love me," Evelyn cried to the men of the house, who instantly took her side.
Christa didn't realize her anger only gave the girl the perfect victim card. Evelyn manipulated the family's guilt to drain their wealth and orchestrate a massive corporate fraud.
When the authorities closed in, Evelyn let Christa's eldest daughter Julianna take the fall, sending her to federal prison.
The Stephenson family went completely bankrupt.
Christa's husband Grant, crushed by the betrayal and debt, jumped off a Manhattan skyscraper.
Until her family was entirely destroyed, Christa couldn't understand. They had given the orphan a home, a trust fund, and endless love.
Why did Evelyn treat them like easy marks? Why did she use their kindness as a weapon to tear them apart?
Opening her eyes again, Christa saw the heavy velvet drapes letting in the pale morning light.
She was back seven years ago, on the exact day she first caught Evelyn texting that thug.
This time, Christa wouldn't scream or fight. She would cut off the money, drop the rules, and watch the parasite dig her own grave.