
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 2
The city didn’t care that my heart was broken. That sounds like a complaint. It wasn’t. After a lifetime in a pack where everyone knew everything about everyone and opinions were currency and my business was always somehow public, the city’s complete indifference to my existence felt like the first clean breath I had taken in hours. Nobody here knew my name. Nobody here knew about the bonfire or the bond or the Alpha’s son who had looked at me and calculated and stepped back. Nobody here had watched it happen and laughed. I was just a girl walking down a street at midnight and the city had eight million of those and couldn’t be bothered to notice one more. I walked without direction. Just forward. The same way I had always moved through difficult things — not fast enough to look like running, not slow enough to look like I was waiting for something to catch me. Just steady. One foot and then the other. The rhythm of it was the only thing keeping the hollow place in my chest from getting any louder. I had forty dollars. Two changes of clothes. A toothbrush and the small collection of practical things that twenty two years of having very little had taught me to keep ready. I did not have a plan. Plans required a destination and I didn’t have one of those either. I had away. Away was enough for tonight. Away was everything tonight. The streets changed as I walked deeper into the city. Quieter. The particular quiet of a place settling into the small hours — a few cars moving through empty intersections, the yellow warmth of a convenience store throwing light onto wet pavement, the distant sound of something that might have been music from somewhere I couldn’t see. I watched the skyline. I had always watched skylines when I was unhappy. There was something about the scale of them — the way they reduced your problems to their correct size by simply existing so enormously above them. The Ironstone pack house had no skyline. Just trees and sky and the same faces every day knowing exactly what I was and what I wasn’t. This skyline didn’t know anything about me. I found that I loved it immediately. I was so busy looking up at it that I walked off the kerb without looking. The headlights hit me like a wall of white. I froze. Every rational thought I had disappeared completely and I stood in the middle of the road with both hands up in front of me in a gesture that would have done precisely nothing if the car had not stopped, and the car stopped so close to me that I felt the heat of the engine through my dress and heard the tyres scrape against the road and my heart forgot how to beat for what felt like a very long time. Silence. The kind of silence that comes after a thing that almost happened. Then the driver’s door opened. The man who stepped out was tall. That was the first thing I registered before anything else — the height of him, the way he unfolded from the car with the particular unhurried ease of someone who had never once in their life been physically uncertain about anything. Dark hair. A black suit that fit like it had been made specifically for his body because it probably had been. A face that was all sharp angles and controlled lines, handsome in the severe way of someone who had never needed to try at it. His eyes found me in the headlights. Grey. Not warm grey. The grey of deep water, of something old and still and patient. They moved over me once — quick, thorough, assessing — and gave nothing back. He didn’t look alarmed. He didn’t look relieved. He looked, if I was reading him correctly, mildly inconvenienced. “Are you injured?” he said. His voice was low and even. The kind of voice that had never needed to be raised to get what it wanted. “No,” I said. My own voice came out steadier than I expected given that my hands were shaking and my heart was still trying to recover from two near death experiences in one night. “You walked into the road without looking,” he said. “I know.” “That was careless.” I stared at him. I had just been publicly rejected in front of my entire pack. I had crossed a supernatural border alone at midnight with forty dollars and nowhere to go. I had nearly been hit by a car. And this man — this tall, grey eyed, completely unmoved stranger — was standing in front of his vehicle that had nearly ended me and telling me I had been careless. “Yes,” I said. Because it was true and because I had nothing left tonight for anything that wasn’t true. “It was.” Something shifted in his expression. So small I almost missed it. Like my answer had arrived from an unexpected direction. He looked at me properly then. Not the quick assessment from before. Something slower. His eyes moved over the torn dress and the bare feet and the pine needles that were definitely still in my hair, and then they stopped. My wrist. The mark was glowing. Not brightly — a faint silver pulse in the dark, steady and slow. I had stopped noticing it in the hours since the ceremony but I noticed it now because he was looking at it with an expression that was almost completely controlled and not quite. Something moved behind his grey eyes. Recognition. There and gone in less than a second. His face resettled into its default — closed, precise, giving nothing away — but I had seen it. I had grown up reading rooms and faces as a survival skill and I had seen it clearly. He knew what the mark was. “You’re bleeding,” he said. I looked down. My right palm was cut — a branch somewhere in the forest during my run through the dark, I hadn’t felt it until now. Blood was dripping steadily onto the pavement. “It’s fine,” I said. “It isn’t.” He reached into the car and produced a folded white handkerchief and held it out to me across the space between us. “I’m not going to hurt you.” He said it the same way he said everything. Flat. Factual. Like hurting me was simply not something he had time for in his schedule. Something about that steadied me more than softness would have. I crossed the distance between us and took the handkerchief. I pressed it against my palm and the linen bloomed red and I looked up to find him watching me with that same unreadable expression. Patient. Waiting. Like he had decided something and was now simply standing in the decision. “Where are you going?” he said. “Away,” I said. “That’s not a destination.” “It is tonight.” He looked at me for a long moment. A car passed at the far end of the street and its headlights swept briefly across us and in that moving light his grey eyes held something I couldn’t name. Not pity. Not warmth. Something more considered than either of those things. “I have a proposition for you,” he said. I should have said no. Every sensible instinct I had, every lesson that twenty two years of learning to be careful had taught me, said no. Said walk away. Said find a shelter or a bus station or any of the ordinary human solutions to the problem of having nowhere to go. But I was standing barefoot and bleeding on a strange street at half past midnight and I had just had the worst night of my life and the hollow place in my chest was very loud in the silence and this stranger with the grey eyes had looked at my wrist like he recognised it and I was so tired of having nothing offered to me that the word proposition alone was enough to make me stay. “I’m listening,” I said. Something happened at the corner of his mouth. Not quite a smile. Something more controlled than a smile. “My name is Damien Crest,” he said. “Get in the car.” I didn’t move. “I don’t know you.” “I told you my name.” “That’s not the same as knowing someone.” He looked at me. Unhurried. Completely unbothered by my refusal in the way of someone who was used to eventually getting what they were after and had the patience to wait for it. “You’re barefoot,” he said. “You have pine needles in your hair and blood on your hand and nowhere to go. I’m offering you a car ride, a destination, and an explanation. If none of it suits you, I’ll take you wherever you want and we never speak again.” “And if it does suit me?” I said. “Then we talk further,” he said. I looked at him. I looked at the mark on my wrist, still pulsing that faint steady light, still warm despite everything the night had taken from me. I thought about Riven Cole stepping back. I thought about forty dollars and bare feet and the hollow place that was going to get very loud if I stood still much longer. Then I thought about the way this stranger had looked at the mark. That flicker of recognition. That fraction of a second before his face closed again. He knew something. And I had spent twenty two years being kept in the dark about my own life and I was done with it. I walked around to the passenger side and got in the car. He got in after me. Closed the door. Started the engine. Pulled smoothly away from the kerb without any commentary on the fact that I had just made a decision that most people would consider extremely questionable. The city moved past the windows. I pressed Elder Hana’s handkerchief to my palm and I sat with my backpack on my knees and I looked at the man in the driver’s seat — at his profile in the passing streetlight, at the particular quality of stillness he carried, at the sense of something old and dense and carefully contained that I could feel from three feet away like pressure in the air before a storm. Not human. I was certain of that before we had gone two blocks. And he knew about my mark. And he had a proposition. I thought about Riven Cole’s gold eyes calculating and finding me wanting. Then I looked at Damien Crest’s grey eyes fixed on the road ahead and I thought about the fact that whatever came next, I had chosen it. Not been assigned it. Not had it decided for me by a pack structure that had never thought I was worth much. Chosen it. With my own feet and my own decision on a wet street at midnight. It was the first time in my life I had chosen anything that mattered. The city moved around us and I held that feeling carefully because it was new and I didn’t want to lose it and I watched the skyline rise ahead of us and I waited to find out what came next.
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7.1
The captain is dead to the world. And I'm the only one holding the kill switch.
Ethan Carter, the "Glacier of Silvercrest," was the most feared Alpha to ever step onto the ice. Now, he's nothing but a shell-a broken, comatose legend trapped in his own body.
My life? It was supposed to be simple. Graduate, survive the pack's bottom-tier status, and pay off my father's ruinous blood-debts. Instead, the pack elders handed me a contract soaked in cold, hard malice: I am the designated "Stabilizer." My only job is to touch him, scent him, and keep his wolf from flatlining.
I thought I was just a glorified nurse. I didn't realize the Alpha was listening.
When Ethan finally wakes, he isn't the hero the Kingdom of Valeria remembers. He's a starving predator with amber eyes that burn holes through my defenses and a temperament that makes the frost in the mansion seem warm. He hates the bargain, he hates the pack, and-most dangerously-he hates the way his scent turns wild whenever I'm near.
He wants me out of his sight. I want to be out of his reach.
But in a pack built on secrets, someone is still trying to finish the job they started on his life. Now, the man who wants me gone is the only one who can protect me. And as the rink turns into a battlefield, I'm realizing the most dangerous thing about the Alpha isn't his temper... it's the fact that once he claims a mate, he doesn't know how to let go.
Frozen hearts are meant to shatter. But in the fire of this pack, we're both going to burn.

7.1
On her eighteenth birthday, Melissa expected a fated mate bond and a future as Luna. Instead, she received a public humiliation that shattered her soul. Her childhood sweetheart, Kelan, rejected her for her best friend, and her own family sold her to the highest bidder like livestock, to Alpha Draven the Demon of Dark Moon Valley. He is a man twice her age, a tyrant who bought Melissa to break a dark bloodline curse. He expects an obedient pawn and a submissive wife.
He didn't expect a strategist. From the shadows of Draven's stone fortress, Melissa begins a cold-blooded campaign of revenge. She isn't just surviving; she's siphoning wealth, buying up her ex-mate's debts, and plotting a coup. But her plan hits a deadly snag when she touches Briston, the Alpha's son and heir. The spark is undeniable. The Moon Goddess has played a cruel joke and Melissa is fated to the son of the man who owns her.

8.1
Pretty Devil
8.1
Maddy worked at an exclusive underground club, always hidden behind a sleek black mask. One night, a wealthy client approached her with a filthy fantasy , he didn't want to just fuck her. He wanted to be her complete slave.
He took her to his luxury penthouse, while she shoved her soaked pussy onto his face and rode his tongue until she came, then mounted his cock and used him mercilessly, slapping and choking him while denying his orgasm until he begged like a broken whore. Even after she quit the club and started a new corporate job, she kept hooking up with him. One day, she walked into the CEO's office... and froze. Her new boss was the same man.
By day, in his luxurious office, he is the dominant, commanding CEO , barking orders, running the company with iron authority, and no one suspects a thing. By night, he becomes her secret pathetic slave: crawling, getting pegged over his own desk, licking her cum off his floor, and having his cock locked in chastity while she laughs at how easily she owns him.
Pretty Devil is a raw, extremely explicit erotic novel packed with intense femdom, heavy BDSM, humiliation, orgasm denial, pegging, face-sitting, and twisted power exchanges that blur the dangerous line between boss and secret slave.
This book is unapologetically nasty and graphic. Reader discretion is strongly advised.

7.5
I am the biological daughter of the wealthy Fitzpatrick family, but I spent my childhood eating out of dumpsters.
When I was finally brought back to the estate at age seven, I thought I would experience my parents' love.
Instead, my biological parents looked at my dirty clothes with raw disgust. They only cared about Hallie, the fake daughter who lived like a princess.
The moment I walked in, Hallie hurled a heavy ceramic cup at my head, slicing my hand open.
"Get out of my house!"
My father didn't even look at the blood. He raised his hand to strike me, accusing me of bringing trailer park rules into his home.
In my past life, I dropped to my knees and begged for their forgiveness. I endured their abuse, hoping they would eventually love me.
But they let the maids humiliate me, let Hallie steal my identity, and eventually threw me back onto the streets to die. Even my playboy Uncle Byron, the only person who ever showed me mercy, was driven to suicide by them.
I didn't understand why my own flesh and blood hated me so much, or why a vicious liar deserved everything while I was treated like a jinx.
Opening my eyes again, I was back on the exact day I first returned to the estate.
As my father raised his hand to hit me, I didn't cower.
Instead, I looked at the family patriarch and pointed directly at my notorious, alcoholic uncle.
"I want him to be my new guardian."

8.6
In my past life, I was the weak Luna everyone despised.
A fake daughter!
A disposable pawn!!
A girl my family happily executed!!!
They forced me to marry my brother to protect the family's reputation. They feared the world will know that their Alpha Son was born Impotent- they made me carry the blame of-
"A HEN THAT CANNOT LAY EGGS!!"
I obeyed them... and it cost me my life!
Their real daughter framed me countless times. My husband who was also my brother and we grew up together never believed me... They called me fake and treated me like a servant. She framed me and made the wolf world see my shame. I died trying to save my life from them.
But I woke up 10 years before my death.
This time, I refused to play their game.
After accepting the marriage to my brother...
I went behind them to meet my mate. The most feared man in our CLAN. His Uncle.
The crippled Lycan lord in disguise who once asked me to marry him.
He thought I had come to reject our bond like my past life but this time. --------I stood before him with a dangerous deal.
"Do you still want to stay the crippled Uncle in the shadows?" I asked, in a serious tone.
He replied. "I don't know what you are saying."
I knelt down placing my hands on his lap."Tomorrow morning they will be here. Do you dare to come claim your mate?"
This Time!!......I' Elena Alvarez, will Light fire to their World.

8.5
BLURB:
Hazel was the pack's unwanted omega, no worth, no wolf, no family, no hope.When the Alpha's son publicly rejects her as his mate, she flees from the pack at night, but the moon goddess isn't done with her yet.
She wakes up to find herself in the castle of the wolf king, who happens to be her second chance mate.
Arden, the Alpha king, is cold, suspicious, and broken by past betrayals. He refuses to trust her, denies his affection towards her, but the bond burns between them, undeniably.
As war gathers and enemies close in, and secrets from the past open up, Hazel must prove she's more than a worthless rejected omega, she's the Luna who will change everything.
And now a broken wolf king must decide: will he let his past destroy their future or will he risk everything to love the woman the moon goddess chose for him?