Follow
Chapters
Share
Claiming the Alpha's Heart  Novel Cover

Claiming the Alpha's Heart

In the fog shrouded forests of Crescent Valley, Elara North never expected to return. She thought the past was behind her until the town, the forest, and a mysterious Alpha named Kael Draven reminded her that some destinies cannot be ignored. Kael is fierce, commanding, and unshakably determined. And when he claims Elara as his fated mate, she is thrust into a world of pack politics, primal instincts, and dangerous secrets. Suspicion and attraction tangle together, and the closer she gets to Kael, the more she realizes that survival may mean surrender and love may come with a cost. With the forest alive, predators lurking, and the full moon looming, Elara must uncover the truths that everyone else fears to face. Can she trust Kael with her heart... and her life? Or will the shadows of Crescent Valley consume them both?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

I woke before dawn, not because of a nightmare, but because the silence felt wrong.

Crescent Valley was never truly quiet. Even at night, when most of the town slept under its thick blanket of fog, the forest itself seemed to breathe. Branches shifted, whispering against one another. Leaves rustled with a sound that could be mistaken for wind. Somewhere, something always moved. Always. But this silence this morning, this pre dawn quiet felt deliberate. Held. Like a breath paused too long, just on the edge of breaking.

I lay still, staring at the wooden ceiling above me. The room Kael had given me was simple to the point of discomfort. No decorations, no pictures, no soft touches of home. Just a bed, a small dresser, and a single narrow window facing the forest. It was functional, clean, and entirely devoid of warmth.

No mirror.

I had noticed that the first night, but I had been too shaken to question it. Now, lying there with my thoughts sharp and restless, it bothered me more than it should have. There was a purpose to this austerity, I realized, though I had yet to understand what it was. Every detail, I knew, had intention. Nothing in Kael's life was accidental.

I swung my legs over the side of the bed and stood slowly. The floor was cold beneath my bare feet, seeping through my socks and chilling me to the bone. As I dressed, a faint noise made me pause: voices. Low and controlled, muffled yet deliberate. They came from downstairs.

I moved closer to the door and pressed my ear to it.

"...can't keep hiding it," someone said.

"We don't have a choice," another voice replied. Kael's.

The sound of footsteps followed. Then silence.

The moment I opened the door, the house seemed to shift around me. The air itself grew heavier, charged with tension. I stepped into the hallway just as Lyric appeared from the opposite end, leaning casually against the wall like she had always been there, as though she had been expecting me.

"You're awake early," she said, smiling, though her eyes carried a sharper intelligence than her words suggested.

"You're standing in my way," I replied, keeping my voice steady.

Her smile stayed, but her eyes narrowed slightly. "Kael doesn't want you wandering around alone yet."

"I'm not wandering," I said. "I'm listening."

She studied me for a moment, her head tilted slightly, then stepped aside. "Then I'll listen with you," she said, almost as if it were a concession, an unspoken truce.

We walked downstairs together. The pack members gathered in the main room went quiet as soon as they saw me. It wasn't sudden or obvious, just a subtle fading of sound, like conversations dissolving into nothing, like the room itself had taken a breath and held it. No one met my eyes. Not even Lyric, who had been so casual before, now seemed to shrink slightly under the weight of my presence.

I counted three empty seats at the long table. Breakfast was already prepared, untouched. A subtle, tense aroma of cooked eggs, bacon, and coffee hung in the air, but none of it had been disturbed.

Kael stood by the window, arms crossed, his attention fixed entirely on the tree line. The light from outside barely touched him, but I could see the sharp lines of his jaw, the way the morning fog clung to his shoulders.

"You're watching it like it's about to attack," I said, breaking the silence.

He didn't turn. "It might," he replied simply.

The words sent a chill through me that had nothing to do with the cold morning air. I forced myself to sit and eat, even though my appetite had vanished entirely. Every bite tasted metallic, like my mouth had absorbed the tension around us.

I paid attention to everything. Kael never turned his back on the windows. Lyric kept glancing toward the door, eyes flicking nervously. A tall man with dark hair and sharp features kept tapping his fingers against the table as though counting time, perhaps, or waiting for something I couldn't see.

"Where's the eastern patrol?" I asked suddenly, my voice too loud in the charged silence.

The room froze.

Kael turned slowly, expression carefully blank, controlled. "They were reassigned," he said.

"Where?" I pressed.

His jaw tightened, and he didn't answer. "That's not your concern," he finally said.

"They're missing," I said quietly. "Aren't they?"

Lyric inhaled sharply. Her hand twitched, and I noticed it.

Kael stepped toward me, his presence overwhelming, a physical force that made me step back without thinking. "You don't understand how dangerous it is to ask questions here," he said.

"I understand enough to know when people are lying," I shot back, holding his gaze.

For a moment, something wild flickered in his eyes: anger, fear, restraint, all at once. Then it was gone, replaced by that calm, controlled mask he always wore.

"We will talk later," he said flatly, turning away from me.

That was not an answer. Not even close.

By midday, the weight of everything pressed down on me like a storm about to break. I left the pack house and walked toward my grandmother's home, needing something familiar, something human. The forest felt oppressive, pressing in from all sides, every branch and shadow seeming to watch me.

Her house smelled like old books and dried herbs. She sat by the fire, staring into the flames as if they were speaking secrets only she could understand.

"You shouldn't be here," she said without turning toward me.

"You said that before," I replied cautiously.

"And I was right."

I told her about the forest, about the shredded backpack, about Kael. I avoided certain words, watching her expression closely, gauging her reaction. She didn't flinch. Didn't react with surprise.

When I finished, she stood and locked the door. My stomach dropped.

"There are things in this valley that do not like being watched," she said quietly, her voice threading through the stillness. "And you have always been very good at watching."

"Do you know what Kael Draven is?" I asked.

Her hand tightened on the lock. "I know what he guards."

"And what am I?"

She hesitated. That hesitation told me everything.

She lifted a loose floorboard and pulled out a small wooden box. Inside were old drawings, symbols, and faded letters. One page caught my attention immediately.

A woman stood beside a massive wolf. Their shadows merged into one.

"You were never meant to come back," my grandmother whispered. "But now that you have, the valley remembers you."

That night, sleep refused to come.

The forest pressed against the walls, alive and aware, listening. I slipped outside, drawn by something I didn't understand, something primal and magnetic.

The air was sharp. Cold. Alive.

Kael was waiting at the tree line. His presence was impossibly still, perfectly composed, yet he radiated tension, power, and danger.

"I told you not to come out alone," he said quietly, eyes never leaving mine.

"You don't tell me much," I replied, my voice steadier than I felt.

He studied me for a long moment. "Because the truth would bind you to this place."

"Maybe I'm already bound," I said softly, letting the words hang between us.

"You don't know what's moving in the dark," he said, his voice low, almost a growl.

"Then stop hiding it from me," I demanded.

The forest howled. A long, low, haunting sound that seemed to circle us.

Kael closed his eyes. His chest rose and fell slowly, deliberately.

And at that moment, I understood. Whatever was coming had already noticed me.

And it was patient.

You may also like

Her Dirty Little Secret Novel Cover
9.0
After a night of passion with a mysterious stranger, a young woman believes she has left her secrets behind. However, her life is upended when she discovers the man is her new billionaire boss. As they navigate a high-stakes professional world, their past connection threatens to surface. Caught between a burgeoning romance and the fear of exposure, she must protect her hidden truths while resisting the magnetic pull of a powerful man.
His Sweetheart's Cruelest Betrayal Novel Cover
7.9
My childhood sweetheart, Bryce, swore he'd never leave me, even after he was revealed as the long-lost heir to the Larson crime family. He was my home, my future, my protector against his ruthless new world. Then my sister, Diana, reappeared as the polished daughter of a rival Don, and he fell for her instantly. When Diana was "poisoned," Bryce didn't hesitate. He ordered doctors to take my blood for the antidote, a rare transfusion that could kill me. When she framed me as a rat, he had me thrown in a cellar. There, I was beaten, branded like an animal, and left for dead. The man who swore to protect me had me tortured and broken, all for his new love. His final act was to marry me off to a powerful stranger, a political move to get rid of me. But as the black armored car carried me to my new life, he finally came chasing after me, begging for forgiveness. I looked at the man who destroyed me and delivered my final vow. "My name is Callie Benton. And you, Bryce Larson, are nothing but a stranger from a life I no longer remember."
His Unwanted Wife, Her Vengeful Heart Novel Cover
8.6
To save my father and our family's gallery, I was forced to marry the ruthless Caleb Wiley. He treated me like a commodity, his heart belonging only to another woman, Eva. When my father needed a life-saving surgery, Caleb made me a cruel offer. To get the money, I had to drink a fatal allergen during a high-stakes poker game. I drank it and nearly died. I woke up in the hospital to learn the money was never sent. My father was dead. Caleb had abandoned me to chase after Eva, later trading me to a lecherous judge like a piece of property. My life, my father's life-it was all worth less than his obsession. But then I found the proof. His mother had orchestrated everything-my family's ruin, my father's murder. My grief turned to ice. From the shadows, I began to broadcast every one of the Wiley family's crimes to the world.
Legally bound Novel Cover
8.1
When brilliant New York attorney Alex Cromwell is sent to Chicago to find a billionaire's missing daughter to save his father's firm, it's supposed to be purely business and not personal. His mission is to bring her home and save his father's collapsing law firm. But Lily Smith isn't missing. She's building a new life far from the man who once tried to control her. Smart, guarded, and determined, she wants nothing more than to forget her past until Alex walks in, with a goal to send her back to the past she's tried to avoid. What begins as obligation soon becomes something neither expected; quiet laughter, late-night talks, and a connection that feels dangerously real. Yet when the truth surfaces that Alex was sent by her father love turns to betrayal. Torn between redemption and heartbreak, Alex returns home to face his failure. Until one day, Lily walks into his office, ready to forgive, ready to begin again. Because sometimes love beats betrayal And the hardest cases are the ones the heart must win.
Mine to Mistake Novel Cover
8.2
After a devastating betrayal by her fiance and half-sister, Elara Vance finds her world shattered. Determined to reclaim her dignity, she enters a marriage of convenience with the enigmatic billionaire Silas Vane. As they navigate their complex arrangement, Elara begins to uncover dark secrets surrounding her family's past. Caught between a quest for justice and her growing feelings for Silas, she must decide if their union is a trap or her salvation.
My “Single” Husband Novel Cover
8.3
After three years of marriage, Claire discovers her husband, Leo, has been leading a double life. While he appears to be a devoted partner, a hidden cell phone reveals he is legally registered as single and involved with another woman. As Claire digs into his secrets, she uncovers a web of lies that threatens her safety. Driven by betrayal, she must navigate a dangerous game of cat and mouse to find the truth before Leo can silence her.