Follow
Chapters
Share
LUNA Madison Novel Cover

LUNA Madison

"Kneel, Madison. Or did you forget that a stray like you doesn't deserve to stand in the presence of a True Alpha?" Austin’s voice was a jagged blade, but the heat of his hand on my throat told a different story. He’d traded me for my sister—the "real" daughter—claiming my scent was too weak, my blood too thin. He threw me to the dirt, watching with a smirk as my adoptive father tossed a few hundred-dollar bills at my feet and told me to disappear into the slums. They thought they broke me. They thought I was heading toward a life of hunger and shame with a family of "nobodies." They were dead wrong. When the black helicopters darkened the sky and the most powerful Lycan King in history stepped out to bow to me, the look on Austin’s face was worth more than his pathetic pack. My "impoverished" biological family didn't live in a shack—they owned the world. And my five "starving" brothers? They were the most lethal Alphas on the planet, and they were hungry for the blood of anyone who touched their sister. Now, I’m back. Not as the girl who begged for scraps, but as the Zillionaire Queen with enough silver to buy their souls and enough power to burn their legacy to ash. But there’s a problem: Ethan Harper. The Cursed Lycan King. A man who smells like midnight and looks like sin. He wants my heart, he wants my throne, and he’s determined to prove that while revenge is sweet, submission is delicious. He thinks he can tame the White Wolf. I think I’ll enjoy watching him try.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

"Where the hell is she? Move! If she crosses that ridge, she’s gone!"

Austin’s voice cracked through the damp woods, jagged and desperate. He scrambled over a rotting log, his designer hunting boots caked in filth. Behind him, a dozen Silver Moon enforcers crashed through the underbrush like panicked cattle. They weren't hunting a rogue. They were hunting a lawsuit.

"Austin, wait! My heel—ugh, what the fuck?" Victoria stumbled behind him, her face a mask of sweating fury. "Just kill her already! I want my accounts unfrozen!"

Madison crouched in the shadow of a massive cedar. The air tasted of pine and their pathetic, sour fear. She didn't breathe. Her heart beat with the slow, heavy thrum of a predator.

"There! By the trees!" Austin pointed, his hand shaking as he shifted halfway. His claws sprouted, ripping through his expensive gloves. "Madison! Drop the suit, sign the papers, and maybe I’ll let you live in the servant's quarters!"

Madison stepped out. She didn't look like a defenseless omega. She looked like a storm in a silver dress.

"Servant's quarters?" Her voice was a low vibration that made the leaves shiver. "You can't even afford the taxes on your own front porch, Austin."

"Grab her!" Austin roared.

The enforcers lunged. Madison didn't run. She didn't flinch. She snapped her fingers, and the wind didn't just blow—it screamed. A localized gale ripped through the clearing, solid as a brick wall. It caught the hunters mid-stride, slamming them backward into the trunks. Bones popped. Austin hit a rock, the air leaving his lungs in a wheezing grunt.

Thwump. Thwump. Thwump.

The black helicopter dropped from the clouds, its searchlight cutting through the canopy like a blade. Madison shifted. It wasn't the slow, painful grind the Cains were used to. It was a flash of white light. A massive, snow-colored beast surged upward, claws digging into the helicopter’s landing skid as it hovered ten feet off the ground.

She hauled herself into the cockpit, shifting back to human form in a blur of motion. She kicked the pilot’s seat. "Move. I'm driving."

"But ma'am, the wind—"

"I said move."

She grabbed the cyclic. The machine groaned as she pulled it into a vertical climb that should have snapped the rotors. Below, the Cain pack looked like ants scurrying in the dirt. She banked hard, the G-force pinning her into the seat, blood rushing to her head.

A shadow moved on the ridge below.

A wolf. But not a Silver Moon mutt. This thing was the size of a small car, its fur the color of dried blood and night. And the eyes. Even from two hundred feet up, those golden pits burned into her.

Ethan Harper.

The name echoed in her skull, unbidden. The Cursed Alpha. The man mothers used to scare their pups into silence. He wasn't just watching. He was running. He kept pace with the helicopter, leaping over ravines that would have swallowed a truck, his movements a terrifying blur of predatory grace.

He let out a howl.

The sound didn't stay in the air. It hit Madison in the chest, vibrating through her ribs and settling deep in her womb. It was a claim. A recognition that had been waiting a hundred years to find its target.

"Not today," Madison hissed, her knuckles white on the controls. "I'm nobody's prize."

She pushed the nose down, the helicopter screaming in a dive toward the city skyline. The wind whipped her hair across her face, stinging her skin. She saw him one last time on the edge of the cliff—the golden-eyed beast stopping, watching, his scent of sandalwood and rain somehow reaching her even through the cockpit vents.

You may also like

After My Fiancé Stopped My Ex’s Attack Novel Cover
8.9
The phone vibrated against my desk, its screen illuminating with Everett's name. I smiled, reaching for it absently while sorting through another stack of case files. "Hey, Ev," I answered, expecting to hear about his latest trading victory or some joke he'd heard at the office. "Chloe." His voice cracked. "They're arresting me." My fingers froze on the file folder. "What? Who?" "The SEC. Insider trading charges." His words tumbled out in a frantic rush. "They're saying I used non-public information to trade stocks. It's bullshit, Chloe, you know it is.
Belated Awakening Novel Cover
8.9
I curled up on the company sofa waiting for Ayden Martin when I casually clicked into a video that was only a few seconds long. A hand with distinct knuckles was hooked by slender fingertips in an utterly intimate way. The caption read like the girl's soft murmur. "While the grown-ups discussed business, I quietly reached out to his hand. I didn't expect that he, who was rational and composed in work matters, couldn't stay rational with me." I smiled and gave it a like. "Ayden, look at how girls these days love writing these CEO romance stories, claiming that presidents like you secretly hold hands during business talks. Is it real or fake?" Ayden did not even lift his head and only said faintly, "Stop watching these." I asked with my mouth, but in my heart I knew the Ayden I knew would never do that. After five years of marriage, every time there was a social event he only pushed me into the lounge, let alone stage these idol drama scenes. I lowered my head and suddenly noticed the watch on the hand in the video. A luxury watch. The anniversary gift I gave Ayden was also the same luxury watch.
Fiancé's Secret Affair Unveiled Novel Cover
9.7
The crystal glasses clinked as I arranged them in perfect alignment on the dining table. Tonight was special—our first official family dinner since Preston and I had announced our engagement. My father had flown in from Chicago specifically for this occasion, and Preston's parents were driving up from their estate in the Hamptons. "Perfect timing," I murmured, adjusting the white orchids in the centerpiece. "Everything's ready." Preston appeared behind me, his cologne—Tom Ford, always Tom Ford—reaching me before he did. "You've outdone yourself, Sara." His hands settled on my shoulders, fingers brushing my collarbone in that possessive way that once made me melt. "No one would guess you ran a board meeting this afternoon." I turned to face him, taking in his perfectly pressed shirt and practiced smile. "Your parents will be here any minute. Is everything prepared in the kitchen?" "Everything's under control." He kissed my forehead, but his eyes darted to his phone when it buzzed. "Just a quick message from work." My father arrived first, bearing his usual gift of rare vintage wine.
I Left Him after He Chose The Sister-in-law Novel Cover
9.4
For ten years, Etta Kelly poured her whole heart into loving Houston Kelly, enduring a cold arranged marriage while he prioritized guilt and duty over her. Blinded by remorse for his brother’s death—a murder originally targeted at him—Houston doted on his pregnant sister-in-law Maddie, leaving Etta lonely and vilified as the bitter, unreasonable wife. Sick of being the unwanted third wheel in her own marriage, Etta chose freedom over heartbreak, walking away on their anniversary with their secret lost baby buried in her past. Her sudden, decisive departure cracked Houston’s cold, indifferent facade and awakened a consuming regret he’d never known he harbored. The powerful tycoon resorted to ruthless means to pull her back, blocking her career and clinging desperately to the marriage he once discarded carelessly. Caught between Maddie’s schemes, the toxic Kelly family’s manipulation, and an unsolved murder conspiracy, the broken pair is tangled in endless pain and obsession. This is the brutal, angsty redemption story of a man who lost his true love and burns every bridge to win her back, and a woman who dares to walk away from a love that ruined her.
My Fiancé Faked His Kidnapping to Break Me Novel Cover
9.2
The video starts playing at 11:47 PM, and I know immediately that my life has just shattered into a thousand pieces. Anthony's face fills my phone screen—bruised, swollen, blood crusting at the corner of his mouth. He's tied to a metal chair in what looks like an abandoned warehouse, the kind of place where light goes to die. His eyes are wild, darting around like a trapped animal's. Behind him, shadows move. "Harlow." His voice cracks. "Harlow, please—" The video cuts. A new voice replaces his, digitally distorted into something mechanical and inhuman. "Listen carefully, Harlow Kennedy. Your fiancé's life depends on your obedience." My hands shake so violently I nearly drop the phone.
My Husband Couldn't Forget His First Love Novel Cover
9.0
The crystal chandelier above the Whitman family's dining table cast harsh shadows across the mahogany surface, making the elaborate Sunday dinner feel more like an interrogation than a family meal. I sat rigidly in my designated chair—always the same one, always positioned where I could serve but never quite belong—watching David's mother, Michelle, cut her prime rib with surgical precision. "Ava, dear," Michelle's voice sliced through the air with the same sharpness as her knife, "I was just telling Mrs. Pemberton at the club yesterday about your... background. She found it so quaint that you're from Michigan." The word 'quaint' dripped from her lips like poison honey. I forced my hands to remain steady as I reached for my water glass, the ice clinking against the crystal in the sudden silence. "Michigan has its charms," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper. Michelle's laugh was as cold as the marble floors beneath our feet. "Oh, I'm sure it does. Simple pleasures for simple people. But you understand, don't you, that our family operates on rather different standards?" My chest tightened. Across the table, David's sister Chloe smirked, her fork poised mid-air like she was watching a particularly entertaining show. David himself remained absorbed in his phone, his thumb scrolling endlessly through messages, completely oblivious to the verbal daggers being thrown at his wife. "Mother," I heard myself say, the word feeling foreign and bitter on my tongue, "I've been trying my best to—" "Oh, darling, I know you have." Michelle's interruption was swift and merciless. "But trying and succeeding are two very different things, aren't they? Some people just don't understand our family's standards. It's not your fault, really. You simply weren't raised with the proper... foundation." The room felt like it was shrinking around me.