
Bound to an Alpha Who Hates Me
I arrived at the Blackwood Pack House as the bride in an arranged marriage, a political pawn meant to secure an alliance with their Alpha, Grayson Wilder.
His family treated me like trash from the moment I walked in. His sister then deliberately sent me to the wrong room-the Alpha's private chambers.
When Grayson found me in his bed, he didn't ask questions. He shoved me to the floor, his eyes glowing with rage as he accused me of being a social climber trying to trap him. His mother and sister watched from the doorway, their faces alight with triumph, ready to see me torn apart.
They had no idea I was there to save them, a secret deal made with the elders to prevent their pack from collapsing. I was the one with the power, hiding my true identity for their sake, yet they treated me like a stray dog who had wandered into their pristine home.
But when he truly looked at me, his rage faltered, replaced by shocked recognition.
He saw a ghost from a past he couldn't remember.
And I knew this war wasn't just for my survival, but for a truth he was terrified to face.
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Chapter 1
Amiyah POV
The Blackwood Pack House loomed before me like a beast carved from dark stone and ancient timber, radiating an aura of wealth and suffocating tradition. As the heavy oak doors groaned open, I didn't step into a welcoming home; I stepped onto a battlefield.
Standing in the center of the entrance hall was a woman who wore her bitterness like a second skin. Georgiana Wilder, the former Luna. Her eyes raked over me, dissecting my simple travel clothes with surgical precision.
"So," she said, her voice dripping with disdain. "This is what the Elders dragged in from the backwoods."
Before I could introduce myself, she snapped her fingers. An Omega servant scurried forward, trembling, clutching a spray bottle that smelled of acrid herbs and chemical lemon.
"Cleanse her," Georgiana commanded, wrinkling her nose as if I were a walking disease. "We cannot have the filth of the rogue lands and public transport contaminating my son's home."
The servant hesitated, fear in her eyes, before spraying a mist of the stinging liquid toward me. It settled on my skin, cold and insulting. My Inner Wolf bristled, pacing in the back of my mind, urging me to bare my teeth. *Disrespect,* she growled.
I didn't flinch. I didn't step back. I simply lifted my chin, channeling the icy composure my grandfather, the Alpha of the Silvermoon Pack, had drilled into me since birth.
"You can stop," I said. My voice wasn't loud, but it carried the undeniable weight of authority. The servant froze, the bottle lowering instantly.
I locked eyes with Georgiana. "You can spray me with all the sage and lavender in the world, Mrs. Wilder, but it won't cover up the scent clinging to you." I took a deliberate step closer, inhaling deeply. "It smells like sour milk and insecurity. Jealousy is a hard scent to wash off."
Georgiana’s face turned a mottled shade of red, her mouth opening and closing like a fish out of water. Without waiting for her retort, I brushed past her, signaling the end of the conversation.
I walked into the Great Hall, a cavernous space dominated by a massive stone fireplace and trophies of past wars. Sprawled across a leather sofa was a girl about my age, scrolling through her phone with bored affectation. Cassidy Wilder.
She looked up, her lip curling. "Oh, look. The mail-order bride has arrived." She sat up, tossing her hair. "I heard you took the train here. How quaint. Did your little pack not have enough gas money for a car? Or do you just enjoy smelling like the unwashed masses?"
I almost laughed. If only she knew that my grandfather had rented out the entire high-speed rail line for my journey just so I wouldn't have to deal with traffic. But lions do not explain themselves to sheep.
I didn't break my stride. I didn't even look at her. I simply treated her like part of the furniture—insignificant and dull.
"Hey! I'm talking to you!" Cassidy’s voice pitched higher, the sting of being ignored far worse than any insult I could have thrown.
I stopped at the foot of the grand staircase and turned to the trembling Omega servant who had followed me. "Show me to my room. It’s been a long day."
Before the servant could answer, Cassidy scrambled off the couch, a wicked glint flashing in her eyes. She practically ran to the stairs, cutting off the servant.
"I'll show you," Cassidy said, her voice suddenly dripping with fake sweetness. She pointed a manicured finger toward the top of the stairs, to the end of the long, dimly lit corridor. "You're in the Master Suite. The big double doors at the very end. Only the best for our... guest."
She shot a glare at the servant, a silent threat that sealed the girl's lips.
I narrowed my eyes. It was a trap, obviously. But I was too tired to care about the petty games of a jealous child. I hauled my bag up the stairs, the silence of the house pressing against my ears.
When I reached the heavy double doors at the end of the hall, I paused. The wood was carved with the intricate crest of the Blackwood Pack—a snarling wolf entangled in thorns.
I pushed the handle down and stepped inside.
The moment the door clicked shut behind me, the air changed.
It hit me like a physical wave—a scent so powerful, so dominating, that my knees nearly buckled. It didn't smell like the herbal spray or the dusty hallway. It smelled of deep, dark cedar, worn leather, and the ozone charge of a coming storm.
It was an Alpha's scent. *The* Alpha's scent.
My Inner Wolf, usually restless and agitated in new places, suddenly stopped pacing. She let out a low, vibrating purr that rattled my ribs. *Safe,* she whispered. *Home.*
The room was massive, dark, and cool. A giant four-poster bed sat in the center, looking more inviting than anything I had ever seen. The scent was strongest there. It wrapped around me, thick and intoxicating, dulling my senses, lulling me into a trance.
I should have questioned why the guest room smelled like pure, unadulterated power. I should have noticed the lack of feminine touches. But the exhaustion of the journey and the strange, hypnotic comfort of the cedar scent pulled me under.
I dropped my bag and walked toward the bed, unaware that I had just walked straight into the lion's den.
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7.0
She was desperate. He was merciless.
Liana Moore's sister's life is on the line, and the only person who can save her is Dominic Vale-the man who destroyed her family years ago.
One year. One marriage. One chance to survive.
Dominic is cold, controlling, and unforgiving. Liana is fierce, stubborn, and trapped in a union built on hatred and power.
But when secrets are revealed and the line between punishment and protection blurs, the fire between them becomes impossible to ignore.
In a marriage never meant to exist, love is the most dangerous risk of all.

8.8
My father bailed a violent ex-con out of prison just to force me into a marriage with him. I stood in a filthy Bronx hallway, my Vera Wang gown dragging through the grime, knowing this was the price for my mother’s life. If I didn't marry the man behind the steel door, the wire transfer for her hospital ventilator wouldn't go through the next morning.
The man, a scarred giant named Dock, treated me with cold contempt, telling me he didn't touch things he didn't want—and he didn't want a "Jacobson." I thought I had hit rock bottom, tied to a criminal while my family lived in luxury. But the nightmare was just beginning.
When I tried to return my wedding dress to pay for rent, my sister Janie and stepmother found me. They laughed as security dragged me out of the boutique, calling me a "charity case." When I finally crawled back to our family manor to beg for the money my father had promised, Janie revealed the horrific truth. She had liquidated my mother’s medical trust to fund a waterfront real estate project.
"Get out and let your mother rot," she screamed, throwing a glass of ice water in my face before having guards dump me in the dirt. I knelt on the gravel, wet and bleeding, realizing my own flesh and blood had signed my mother's death warrant for a profit. I had nothing left—no money, no home, and a husband who was supposed to be a monster.
I didn't understand why they hated me so much, or how I would survive the night. But then, a black car screeched to a halt in front of me. Dock pulled me inside, his eyes burning with a lethal coldness I’d never seen in a common thug.
As he wiped the blood from my hands, he picked up a encrypted phone and gave a single command.
"Initiate Project Titan. I want the Jacobson Group insolvent by Friday."
I looked at the man I thought was a broke felon, realizing I hadn't just married a stranger—I had married the most dangerous man in the city, and he was about to burn my family's world to the ground.

9.2
For eight years, I was the perfect, understanding wife. My husband, Gavin, insisted his company retreats were strictly for employees. No spouses allowed. I never questioned it, believing I was supporting his demanding career.
Then I saw a photo from his last ski trip to Aspen. All his colleagues were there, smiling beside their wives. And in the center stood Gavin, his arm wrapped possessively around another woman. She was wearing my blue silk dress-the one he swore I must have lost at the dry cleaners.
My world didn't just crack; it shattered. I discovered that for our entire marriage, he had been living a double life. This woman, Chanelle, wasn't just his mistress. She was his public wife.
She was the one who went on lavish trips to Hawaii and Europe. She was the one introduced to his colleagues and clients. She was even listed as his emergency contact-his spouse-in the official company directory.
I wasn't just the wife he cheated on. I was the wife he completely erased.
But my heartbreak quickly hardened into cold resolve. He was expecting tears and a quiet breakdown. He wasn't expecting me to show up at his company's annual awards gala, marriage certificate in hand, ready to introduce myself to the world he' d hidden from me.

8.3
Six years ago, I was a naive girl sold by my father to the powerful Sanders estate, only to be tossed onto the streets after a brutal assault they labeled "marital infidelity." I fled the country pregnant and broken, hiding from the shadow of a husband I had never even met. Now, I've returned to New York with my triplets to sign the final divorce papers and disappear forever.
But Archibald Sanders-the man I was told was a crippled recluse-intercepted us with the cold precision of a predator. He didn't see the woman his family destroyed; he saw a gold-digger who had shamed his name. His security team hunted us to a grimy motel, using tactical force to snatch my children away and drag me to his glass-walled empire.
In his office, he loomed over me, demanding a DNA test and threatening to throw me in prison while my babies were lost to the foster system. He was convinced I'd cheated, yet he stared at my sons with a haunting confusion, unable to ignore the stormy blue eyes that were a perfect mirror of his own. I stood there, paralyzed by his scent-the sharp tang of rain and expensive leather that triggered the icy dread of my worst nightmares.
How could he accuse me of betrayal when he felt exactly like the monster who had shattered my life in that dark hotel room?
"I'll sign anything," I sobbed, "just give me my kids."
But the game changed when my five-year-old son hacked the tower's security, holding the skyscraper hostage to save me. In the chaos, a fragile, silent boy-Archibald's secret son-wandered into the room and reached for me as if I were his missing soul. Archibald's face turned to stone as he tore up the agreement and locked the doors.
"Until I find out why my son is looking at you like that," he growled, "you aren't going anywhere."

9.2
Five years ago, I faked my death in a yacht explosion just to escape my ruthless, controlling husband, Gerald Sinclair. Now, I have returned to Boston as the new Dean of Medicine at St. Jude Hospital.
My only goal was to secretly check on my seven-year-old daughter, Cassidy. But what I saw shattered my heart. She was locked inside a heavily guarded VIP suite like a prisoner, so psychologically broken that she was standing on a windowsill, ready to jump.
Gerald's armed security team treated the hospital like a military base, forcing her to swallow heavy psychiatric pills. When she managed to escape through the air ducts and collapsed into my arms in the courtyard, her small, feverish body trembled violently.
"No! I don't want to go back to the white room!"
She begged me, crying in terror. But because my identity was a secret, I could only watch helplessly as Gerald's security chief tore my own child from my embrace and locked her back in the cage.
I didn't understand why Gerald would rather destroy our daughter's mind than let us go. Was his twisted obsession and need for control worth driving his own flesh and blood to the brink of death?
Now, my cover is blown. Gerald just received the message that I am alive, and he is flying back in a blind rage, freezing my accounts and locking down the entire city to trap me.
But he forgot one thing. I am no longer the helpless wife he backed into a corner. This time, I am taking my daughter back.

7.9
The memory wolf
7.9
"I am not fully human, I am not fully wolf. And I am far from safe."
Ayla has always felt normal, but when a silver-eyed wolf tears through the forest, she discovers powers she can barely control. The wolf inside her hungers, whispers, and fights to take over, and the pack she calls home begin to fear her more than the rogue wolves outside. Ancient symbols begin to surface. Secrets her mother buried resurface.
Hunted by a shadowy predator known only as the Shadow Wolf, Ayla must master her instincts, uncover her origins, and survive a world that refuses to accept her. But every step toward control draws her closer to the dangerous truth: some forces are older, stronger, and deadlier than the pack itself and one of them wants her.