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Marked By Two Worlds

Marked By Two Worlds

Elara Voss was rejected by her Alpha on the night of the Blood Moon - cast aside as a nobody with no wolf, no rank, and no future. She ran. But fate had other plans. In the human world, she collides with Damien Crest - cold, ruthless billionaire by day, the last living Shadowking by night. He offers her a contract marriage. She has nowhere else to go. But ancient markings are awakening on her skin. A god is whispering her name. And Kael, the fearsome Werewolf High King, has declared across all supernatural realms that she is his fated mate. Two kings. Two worlds. One woman who was never supposed to matter. They all rejected her once. Now they'll burn their empires down to claim her.
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Chapter 1

I told myself I wasn't nervous. I had been telling myself that for three days straight, ever since the elders announced the Blood Moon ceremony date and the entire Ironstone Pack erupted into the kind of excited preparation that made people like me feel our invisibility more sharply than usual. Girls giggling in corridors about which unmated males would be there. Boys pretending not to care while clearly caring enormously. Elder Hana moving through it all with her quiet smile, saying nothing, watching everything. I had pressed my face against my pillow that night and thought about it for a long time. Even me. Maybe. This time. My name is Elara Voss. I am twenty two years old and I have lived in the Ironstone Pack my entire life without ever truly belonging to it. No wolf. No bloodline. No family beyond Elder Hana who found me at the border in the cold when I was three days old, wrapped in a blanket with a name stitched into the corner and a strange silver mark on my left wrist that nobody could identify or explain. For twenty two years that mark had done nothing except make people uncomfortable when they noticed it. For twenty two years, so had I. But the Blood Moon changed things. That was what everyone said. The Moon Goddess pulled back the veil and revealed the bonds she had woven before any of us were born - the invisible threads connecting one soul to another across time and distance and rank. Even omegas found their mates on Blood Moon nights. Even girls with no wolf and no history and no place in the hierarchy. Even girls like me. I had that thought so many times it had worn a groove in me. I was aware it was dangerous - that hope like that, unanchored to anything solid, was exactly the kind of thing that could break a person when it didn't come true. I was aware of all of that and I hoped anyway because I was twenty two years old and I had been invisible my entire life and I was so tired of it I could barely breathe sometimes. So I put on my best secondhand dress and I pinned my hair back and I walked down the hill to the bonfire with my heart doing something loud and undignified in my chest that I tried to ignore. The clearing was full when I arrived. The whole pack was there - every rank, every family, everyone who had a place in the structure of things. The bonfire threw gold light across all of them and the air smelled of woodsmoke and something electric that raised the hair on my arms the moment I stepped through the tree line. And I felt something. The mark on my wrist, which had been dormant my entire life, was warm. Not hot. Not burning. Just warm. A quiet steady pulse beneath my skin like a second heartbeat that had always been there and was only now introducing itself. I pressed my fingers to it and stood at the edge of the crowd and tried to understand what I was feeling. It was not the bond. Not yet. But it was something adjacent to it - a readiness, a sense of something enormous and patient that had been waiting a very long time and was shifting its weight in anticipation. I had never felt anything like it. I was so focused on the mark that I nearly missed Mara walking past me. Nearly. She hit my shoulder hard enough to knock me sideways and kept walking without looking back. The Beta's daughter. Beautiful and untouchable and completely unbothered by anything I might feel about being treated like furniture. I steadied myself and watched her move through the crowd toward the fire, laughing at something her friend said, and I thought about how different the same world looked depending on where you stood in it. Then Elder Hana raised her hands and the clearing went quiet. The ceremony began. I watched the bonds reveal themselves one by one across the clearing. The way a person would go still suddenly, like a switch being thrown. The way their eyes would find someone specific across the crowd with an expression that bypassed language entirely - that look that said I found you, finally, I found you without a single word being spoken. Couples who had known each other for years realising they had been looking at the right person the whole time. Complete strangers from opposite ends of the pack finding each other across a firelit clearing and understanding something immediately that would take the rest of their lives to fully explain. It was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen. It was also, if I was honest, the loneliest. When Elder Hana called my name the quality of the crowd's silence changed. It was the silence of people who had already decided what was going to happen. Not anticipation. Not curiosity. The specific quiet of low expectations being confirmed. I walked forward anyway. I held my head up and I walked to the centre of the clearing and I stood in the firelight and I waited. And then the bond hit me like a physical force. It came between one breath and the next - a pull so sudden and so powerful that my legs went unsteady beneath me and I had to fight to stay upright. Not gentle. Not the soft warmth I had imagined when I lay in my narrow bed at night and let myself picture this moment. This was enormous and immediate and it grabbed something at the centre of my chest and pulled it toward a specific point in the clearing with a certainty that left no room for doubt. I looked up. Riven Cole was staring at me. The Alpha's son. Twenty five years old and golden eyed and built like someone the universe had put together carefully with a specific purpose in mind. He stood twenty feet away and he was staring at me with an expression I had never seen on his face before. Pure shock. He felt it. I could see it. The bond had hit him the same way it hit me - that sudden undeniable pull toward a person you were never supposed to ignore again. His gold eyes were wide and for one single suspended second everything between us was completely unguarded. My heart lifted so hard it hurt. Then his jaw tightened. He looked at me - really looked, the way people look when they are calculating something - and I watched him take in the secondhand dress and the no-rank and the girl that nobody had ever chosen for anything, and I watched his expression close. He stepped back. "No," Riven Cole said. The word landed in the clearing like a stone dropped into still water. "I reject you, Elara Voss." His voice was quiet and steady and it carried to every corner of the silent clearing. "I reject this bond." He held my gaze when he said it. That was almost the worst part. He didn't look away. He looked straight at me and said the next words like he was simply stating facts that had never been in question. "You have no wolf. No bloodline. Nothing that this pack needs in a Luna and nothing that I need in a mate. I will not accept this bond." The silence lasted two seconds. Then someone laughed. It started small - one sound, barely contained - and then it spread through the crowd the way fire spreads through dry grass, catching here and there until the whispers became something larger and the something larger had my name in it and I could feel it on my skin like a physical thing. I stood in the firelight and I felt the bond snap. That was what nobody warned you about. The snapping. The moment the thing that had existed for less than sixty seconds - that enormous pulling force, that certainty, that this one, yours - simply stopped existing. Cut clean by two words and a man who had made a calculation and found me wanting. The hollow place it left was extraordinary. I did not cry. I had made a promise to myself a long time ago and I kept it now. I stood in the firelight with the hollow place in my chest and the laughter around me and I kept my face still and my spine straight and I held Riven Cole's gaze for exactly three seconds so he would know that I had heard him and was not destroyed by it. Then I turned around. I walked back through the crowd. People moved aside. Not for me - away from me, the way people distance themselves from something unfortunate. I kept walking. Through the tree line. Up the hill. Through the dark. The laughter faded behind me. The mark on my wrist was cold for the first time in hours. I walked until the pack was behind me and the city lights were ahead of me and the boundary stream was at my feet, and I stood there for a moment with forty dollars in my pocket and two changes of clothes in a backpack and nowhere to go. I thought about Riven's eyes when the bond hit him. The shock in them. The recognition. The one second when he felt it and didn't control his face and I could see, clearly and without question, that it had hit him exactly the same way it had hit me. He had felt it. He just decided I wasn't worth the cost. I crossed the boundary stream. I walked into the human city with the cold night around me and the mark quiet on my wrist and the hollow place in my chest that I refused to feed. I didn't know what was coming. I didn't know that in less than an hour a car would nearly hit me on a dark street. I didn't know about the man who would step out of it and look at the mark on my wrist with recognition in his grey eyes. I didn't know about contracts or ancient kings or powers dormant in my blood since before I was born. I just walked. Because walking was the one thing I had always been able to do. Forward. Always forward. Whatever came next had to be better than what I was leaving behind.

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