
The Alpha and His Chosen Family
Lena never expected peace to find her.
After years of surviving one hardship after another, she has learned to trust no one but herself. Quiet routines and emotional distance have become her safest form of protection. Then one night, a chance encounter with a powerful and mysterious man changes everything.
Julian is an Alpha feared by many and truly known by very few. Calm, controlled, and fiercely protective of his pack, he has spent years keeping his world stable through discipline and restraint. He has rules for a reason-and one of them is never allowing anyone close enough to become a weakness.
Especially not a human woman.
But from the moment Julian notices Lena standing alone beneath the glow of a city café, something shifts between them. Not instant love. Not fate wrapped in fantasy. Just a quiet pull neither of them can explain or ignore.
As their paths continue to cross, Lena slowly discovers the hidden world Julian comes from-a world of werewolves, pack politics, loyalty, danger, and old wounds that never fully healed. Yet beneath the strength and power surrounding him, she also finds something unexpected:
A family.
Julian's pack is not built on fear alone. It is made of people who have chosen one another through loss, sacrifice, and survival. Rath, loyal and dependable. Kael, sharp-tongued but fiercely protective. Mara, calm and insightful. And eventually, children whose laughter transforms guarded walls into a home.
For the first time in years, Lena begins to feel safe.
And for the first time in even longer, Julian begins wanting more than survival.
But peace never comes easily.
Old enemies still watch from the shadows, waiting for weakness. Rival Alphas resent Julian's growing influence, and when Lena becomes the center of Julian's world, she also becomes a target.
What begins as quiet healing soon turns into a fight to protect the life they are building together.
Through betrayal, danger, heartbreak, and recovery, Julian and Lena discover that love is not found only in dramatic moments or destiny-it is built slowly in everyday choices.
In shared mornings.
In exhausted laughter.
In children climbing into bed after nightmares.
In the people who stay when life becomes difficult.
As the pack slowly transforms from a place of survival into a true community, Lena and Julian realize they are creating something stronger than fear:
A chosen family.
The Alpha and His Chosen Family is a slow-burn werewolf romance filled with healing, found family, emotional intimacy, pack dynamics, and the quiet strength that comes after surviving chaos.
Because sometimes the greatest love story is not about finding each other-
It is about learning how to live, trust, and breathe again together.
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Chapter 6
Julian waited until she was gone before he let it show.
The moment Lena turned the corner, something in him finally splintered-not loudly, not dramatically, but in the quiet way that did the most damage. He braced one hand against the cool glass of the corridor window and bowed his head, breathing through the surge that tore through his chest.
Too close.
He had miscalculated that. He'd thought distance would blunt the edge of it. Thought avoidance would dull whatever awareness had flared between them.
Instead, it had sharpened her.
And him.
"You warned me," he muttered, though he wasn't sure who he meant it for. The words came out rougher than he intended, edged with something like self-disgust.
Her anger still echoed in his mind-not because it was unjustified, but because it was precise. She'd named the thing he'd hoped to hide behind restraint. She'd recognized the pattern because she'd survived it before. She knew what it looked like when someone held back not out of virtue, but out of control.
That made her dangerous.
That made him dangerous to her.
Julian straightened slowly and forced his breathing back under control. Shoulders down. Jaw unclench. Hands steady. This was the part most people never understood: discipline wasn't calm. It was force applied constantly against something that never stopped pushing.
He could still walk away.
He could still leave before this tipped into something irreversible. He'd done it before-cut ties, moved cities, vanished into the noise of the world. His life was built on exits.
He turned toward the stairwell-
And the pull twisted.
Hard.
It wasn't the faint thread-brush he'd felt on the rooftop. It wasn't even the taut awareness of the hotel lobby. This was a wrenching surge, like a rope yanked tight around his ribs.
Alarm.
Julian sucked in a sharp breath and moved back to the window, gaze snapping outward. The hotel grounds sloped down toward the beach in pale terraces, dotted with wind-bent grass and paths that promised safety. Beyond them the ocean rolled restless and gray-green, the late afternoon tide shifting-waves rolling higher, faster, swallowing up the smooth stretch of sand that had tempted tourists down earlier in the day.
And there she was.
Lena stood farther down the shore than she should have, shoes in her hand, her attention turned toward the water rather than the land behind her. She was too close to the rocks where the beach narrowed and the surf changed shape-where the tide cut off exit routes with quiet efficiency.
"No," Julian said quietly.
His voice wasn't anger. It was certainty.
The pull flared again-this time not recognition, not awareness, but something sharper. A warning that wasn't his own.
She stepped closer to the rocks.
Of course she did. She wasn't reckless. She was the kind of person who thought she could measure risk if she paid attention. The kind of person who believed that careful meant safe.
She was wrong.
Julian didn't think.
Thinking was the luxury of control, and control was already gone.
He took the stairs two at a time, shoved through a service door without slowing, ignored the startled looks as he cut across the lobby and out toward the beach. He barely registered the sensation of cold stone underfoot, the sting of wind. Shoes were abandoned somewhere behind him-he didn't remember taking them off; one second they were there, the next they weren't.
The sand sucked at his steps, wet and heavy near the waterline. Wind off the ocean carried salt and urgency. The tide surged with the kind of inevitability that didn't care about human timing.
"Lena!"
His voice carried farther than it should have.
She turned at the sound, relief flashing across her face before she could hide it-an instinctive response, like her body recognized that his arrival meant help even while her mind wanted to stay angry.
Then the wave hit.
Not hard enough to knock her down-but enough to soak her jeans, to shove her backward toward the rocks, to swallow the shallow stretch of sand she'd used to get there. It was the kind of wave that looked harmless until it stole your footing.
She swore, backing up instinctively-
-and found herself trapped.
The path behind her was already submerged, water rushing in with deceptive speed. The rock shelf beneath her narrowed to a slick band of stone. One misstep would send her down into the churn where the water slammed and retreated, grinding anything caught between.
Julian reached her seconds later, breath coming hard not from exertion-but from the fury of how close this was to becoming permanent.
"Don't move," he ordered, his grip closing around her arm before she could argue.
Lena yanked instinctively, more from reflex than defiance, eyes flashing. "You said you wouldn't-"
"I know," he cut in, already assessing the rocks, the timing of the waves, the narrow window before the tide rose another foot. His gaze tracked the water the way a soldier tracked an enemy-pattern, rhythm, prediction. "Be angry later."
Another wave slammed against the rocks. Spray exploded upward, cold and violent, hitting Lena full in the face. She gasped, balance wavering.
Julian shifted instantly, body between her and the water. One arm locked around her waist, the other braced against stone that would have shredded human skin.
It didn't shred his.
He felt the rock bite. Felt it scrape.
And his skin held anyway.
Lena felt it too-not the scrape, but the wrongness. The strength. The impossible steadiness of him against a force that should have taken them both down.
Her breath hitched. "Julian..."
He didn't look at her. He couldn't. If he met her eyes right now, the last fragile seam of his restraint might split clean through.
"Listen to me," he said, voice low and absolute. "When I tell you to move, you move. No questions. No hesitation."
Lena swallowed hard, water dripping from her hair, eyes wide and furious and shaken all at once. For a heartbeat she looked like she might argue purely out of principle.
Then another swell rose.
She nodded. Just once.
Julian waited-counting, measuring, timing the lull between waves like a heartbeat. When the water pulled back, he moved.
He hauled them upward, boots finding purchase where none should have existed. He didn't climb so much as anchor, dragging her with him, his grip unwavering as the stone tried to throw them off.
Water surged again, snapping at their ankles, missing them by inches.
Lena stumbled once. Julian caught her without effort, shifting her weight as if she weighed nothing at all. His hand clamped around her forearm-steady, unbreakable.
They reached the higher path as the tide rushed in again, filling the space they'd just escaped.
Julian didn't stop until they were well clear of the rocks, where sand widened and the slope rose toward the hotel grounds. Only then did his breath change-only then did the adrenaline in his veins register that the danger had passed.
Lena yanked her arm free and stepped back, chest heaving.
"What the hell are you?" she demanded.
It wasn't just anger now.
It was fear edged with awe, the most dangerous combination there was.
Julian stared at the ocean instead of at her, jaw tight, control in tatters. He could still lie. Still deflect. Still retreat behind half-answers.
But the tide had already turned.
He'd shown her something she couldn't unsee.
"I told you I was holding back," he said quietly. "That was me failing."
Silence stretched between them, broken only by the waves below. The wind tore at Lena's soaked clothing. She hugged her arms around herself, shivering-not only from cold.
"You don't get to save me like that," she said, voice rough, "and pretend nothing's changed."
Julian finally looked at her.
Really looked.
His gaze held apology and warning in equal measure. Something older than the hotel. Older than the city.
"I know," he said.
And for the first time since he'd noticed her on that rooftop, he meant it without reservation.
Because now, whether he wanted it or not-
she was in it.
And so was he.
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9.5
Blaire's mother gave her a ruthless ultimatum: find a husband today, or never call her mother again.
Desperate to escape the suffocating control and disastrous blind dates, Blaire agreed to a fake marriage with a stranger she met through an old woman.
She thought she was marrying a dirt-poor salesman drowning in mortgage debt.
They lived in a rundown Queens apartment and split the living expenses fifty-fifty.
He drove a sputtering Toyota Camry, established extreme territorial rules, and treated her like a gold-digging biohazard.
When she accidentally tripped and spilled hot soup on him, he didn't help her up, instead accusing her of using pathetic tricks to seduce him.
Her own mother even crashed their apartment, ruthlessly mocking his pathetic financial state and calling him a total loser.
Blaire endured his coldness and extreme germaphobia, genuinely pitying him for his stressful, low-paying job.
She refunded his money and defended his dignity, refusing to take advantage of a struggling man.
But she couldn't understand why this supposedly broke guy possessed such a lethal, commanding aura, or why an incredibly expensive cashmere blanket mysteriously appeared on her when she was freezing on the couch.
Until her brother called with a shocking warning.
"Blaire, the name on your marriage certificate belongs to the notoriously secretive billionaire CEO of New York's top financial syndicate!"
Blaire laughed out loud, completely unaware that behind the bedroom door, her "broke" husband was frantically ordering his PR team to bury his true identity.

9.1
I drowned in freezing pool water, the mocking laughter of the elite Savage family echoing in my ears.
When I opened my eyes, I was an eight-year-old orphan again, right on the day those monsters came to adopt me.
Terrified of repeating my hellish past, I ran down the hallway and desperately grabbed the shirt of a random, dumpy IT guy, begging him to take me instead.
I thought I had chosen a weak, boring suburban dad to hide behind.
But I was completely wrong.
My new mom greeted me with a ceramic tactical knife hidden in her apron.
My clumsy dad sliced dinner ribs with the terrifying precision of a seasoned hitman.
My ten-year-old brother was a dead-eyed sociopath who immediately calculated my bone density.
They were a family of lethal underworld monsters, yet they frantically pretended to be a normal, pathetic household just for me.

9.5
After her step sister ran away from her marriage to the billion dollar heir, they took Emerald Jane Campbell as a stand-in to fill in the position of her step sister. Forced by her evil mother, Emerald can't do anything but to follow. She was tied to the disabled billion dollar heir for three years and all she got was cold treatment from him. Years later, a kidnapper appears in their lives. The kidnapper threatens the life of Emerald until Jude Rafael Sanders- the billion-dollar decides to do what it takes to protect his wife, Emerald.
Secrets began to unravel one by one. But what if Jude finds out his beloved wife has something up beneath her sleeves? Find out how tension intensifies in their roller coaster marriage.

9.0
Eleanora arrived at the city's most exclusive club with a custom cake, ready to surprise her boyfriend of six years, Kason, for his birthday.
But when she opened the suite door, she found him pressing her cousin Brielle against the sofa, kissing her passionately.
Brielle splashed red wine over Eleanora's silk dress, mocking her as a passionless dead fish.
"Get out. Don't stand there and ruin my night."
Kason didn't even look guilty as he waved her away like a nuisance.
Fleeing in tears, Eleanora accidentally drank a spiked cocktail and stumbled into a dark penthouse pool.
She was pulled from the water by Horace Reeves—Kason's terrifying, billionaire uncle and the ruthless black sheep of the family.
Drugged and hallucinating, she clung to him and whispered Kason's name.
"Since he didn't want you, I'll be happy to take his place."
That single word triggered a dark, possessive fury in the billionaire as he pinned her to his bed, claiming her completely.
Waking up covered in bruises, she realized her six years of blind loyalty had been a complete joke. She had escaped a cheating boyfriend only to be trapped by the most dangerous predator in Manhattan.
Forced by her mother to attend a family dinner that very night, she was suddenly dragged into a dark VIP room by Horace.
He kissed her brutally against the door, just as Kason and Brielle walked by and pushed it open.
Seeing his uncle pressing his ex-girlfriend against the wall, Kason's jaw went slack in absolute shock.
Horace slowly lifted his head, his eyes like chips of ice as he looked at his nephew.
"Get out."

8.2
A virgin at thirty? A plus-size? Yes, that's Hera. After a painful heartbreak, she shuts herself off and chooses to focus on her career. Well, that's until She meets Mason aka Viper, the leader of Shadow riders motorcycle club on her way to her best friends wedding. He stakes his claim on her but life has a way of messing people up. Past traumas and bitter Ex's crawl on them. Hera has a secret, will Mason accept this side of her when he learns about it?
***
He is ready to settle, she only wants to play around. He is Jepoy aka Zero. The deadly weapon of the club, yet she elopes his traps, avoiding his claim.
She was not always like this, a traumatic marriage changed her. He saved her from him, but he can't save her from the hell she lives in everyday. Chloe knows she isn't ready to settle, Jepoy knows he must stake a claim on her. Two wounded souls, two different destination, is there a future for them?
TRIGGER WARNING: The story contains sensitive information.

9.6
I endured years of humiliation and forced sedatives from my billionaire husband's family, hoping my quiet obedience would eventually win his heart. When I finally discovered I was pregnant, I thought the child would be our anchor.
But when I rushed to his office to tell him, I found his untouchable first love sitting in his chair, rubbing her own swollen belly.
She smiled and whispered that she was the one who orchestrated the car crash that left my adoptive mother in a vegetative state.
When I lunged at her in a blind rage, my husband shielded her and shoved me backward with brutal force. My spine slammed against a marble table, and blood pooled at my feet.
"Kingston, please! I'm pregnant too!" I sobbed, clutching my stomach.
He just looked down at me with profound disgust.
"I had a vasectomy five years ago," he hissed, condemning me as a cheating whore before ordering his men to lock me up and forcibly abort the child.
I had never touched another man. I couldn't understand how the man I loved could order the murder of his own flesh and blood without a second thought.
To save myself, I stole his prized Aston Martin and drove it off a bridge into the freezing Atlantic, letting his pathetic, obedient wife drown in the wreckage.
Five years later, I returned to New York as a powerful European executive, ready to burn his empire to the ground.