
Mated To The Exiled Monster Alpha
After surviving years in the Alpha King's brutal prisons, I returned to my pack only to be stripped of my family home and exiled to a rotting cabin.
I accepted the humiliation in silence, until I found a dying baby girl abandoned in a trash-filled alley.
Taking her in awoke the terrifying, protective beast I had kept chained in my mind. The pack, fueled by rumors and a jealous woman's bruised ego, viewed us as abominations. They trespassed on my land to uncover my "dirty secrets," forcing me to build a massive stone fortress with my bare hands just to keep my daughter safe from their cruelty.
We lived in isolated peace for years, until the day I took her outside the walls to visit my parents' graves.
A convoy of royal Alphas arrived, and their Luna fell to her knees at my mother's cousin's grave, weeping and calling her "sister."
I didn't understand. Why was my forgotten family connected to the royals? And why did Cassian Vargan, the most powerful Alpha in the world, freeze in absolute shock the moment he realized who I was?
"You... are you Gideon Stone's son?"
The bloody past I had buried under a mountain of stone had finally found me.
I didn't answer him. I just pulled my daughter behind me and tightly gripped my knife, ready to slaughter a king if he took one more step.
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Chapter 2
Ryker Stone POV:
I shut the door behind me. The latch didn't catch, but the heavy wood swung into the frame with a solid thud, cutting off the outside world. Silence descended, thick and heavy, broken only by the sound of my own breathing. Dust motes danced in the single beam of light that lanced through the hole in the roof.
My new home.I moved, my muscles stiff from the confinement, the strap of a thin pack digging into my shoulder. The silver manacles bit into my wrists.
A rotted-out bed frame sagged in one corner. A three-legged table leaned against a wall. The hearth of the small stone fireplace was cold and black, filled with the debris of forgotten seasons. It was a tomb.
I walked to the single grimy window. Wiping away a layer of filth with the back of my hand, I could just make out the distant shape of the stone house. My house.
The memory hit me like a physical blow, a phantom pain in my chest. My father, Gideon Stone, his laugh echoing in the crisp autumn air as he showed me how to split logs in that very yard, his calloused hand warm on my shoulder. My mother, standing on the porch, her hands on her hips, her silver-streaked hair catching the evening sun as she called my name for dinner. The scent of her venison stew, the warmth of the fire on my face.
A howl of pure, unadulterated agony tore through my mind. It wasn't mine. It was my wolf, the beast I held captive, finally breaking its silence with a cry of grief so profound it made my body tremble. He remembered. He felt it all.
I squeezed my eyes shut, my knuckles white as I gripped the windowsill. I pushed the feeling down, shoving it back into the cage with my wolf. I built a wall of ice around the memory, brick by painful brick.
*A son of Gideon Stone does not break here.*
The mantra was old, a lifeline I'd clung to through years of darkness.
Action was the only antidote to thought. I began to clean. I ripped the rotten mattress from the bed frame, the rough motion sending a fresh jolt of pain through my raw wrists. I dragged it outside.I swept the floor with a broken branch, raising a choking cloud of dust. The work was mindless, brutal, and it was exactly what I needed. My movements were efficient, honed by years where wasted energy meant death.
By nightfall, I had cleared a space on the floor large enough to lie down. I didn't build a fire. The cold was a familiar companion, a dull ache that kept my senses sharp. I leaned against the wall, the rough-hewn logs digging into my back, and let the darkness of my first night of freedom claim me.
I woke before dawn. The grief was gone, burned away by the cold resolve that had taken its place. I rose from the floor and walked out of the cabin, not towards the village, but deeper into the woods, towards a familiar slope on the mountainside.
A pair of young pack hunters saw me go. I felt their eyes on my back, a mixture of fear and curiosity. They followed, keeping what they thought was a safe distance.
I ignored them.
I came to a clearing littered with cairns, piles of stones that marked the graves of my ancestors. The resting place of the Stone Pack.
My steps led me to the largest cairn, a massive pile of river rock weathered by a century of storms. A name was carved into the flat face of the capstone: *Gideon Stone*. Beside it, a smaller, more elegant cairn for my mother.
I didn't kneel. I simply stood before them, the silence of the mountain my only witness. I reached out and laid my palm flat against the cold stone of my father’s grave. The rock was rough, unyielding, just like him. For a moment, I imagined I could feel the echo of his strength, a phantom warmth against my skin.
The hunters behind me started whispering. Their voices, though low, carried clearly in the still morning air.
“He has some nerve, coming back here.”
“He’s a failure. Couldn’t even protect his own.”
The words were like wasps, stinging and sharp. My wolf surged against his chains, a feral snarl echoing in my skull. *Let me tear their throats out for dishonoring them!*
My hand, still resting on the stone, curled into a fist so tight my nails bit into my palm, drawing blood. The pain was grounding. I held the rage, wrestled it into submission, and then, slowly, I unclenched my fingers.
I knelt, not in prayer, but in purpose.The rough edges of the stones bit into my palms, a familiar pain that mingled with the deeper burn of the silver wounds. I gathered the smaller stones that had been dislodged by wind and rain and carefully placed them back on the cairns, shoring up the foundations, making them strong again. It was a small act. A futile one. But it was all I could do.
When I was finished, I took one last, long look at the names etched in stone. A silent farewell.
Then I rose and walked away. I passed the two hunters without a glance, my indifference a more potent weapon than any threat. I saw the flicker of shame and confusion in their eyes before I left them behind.
The news of my visit to the sacred ground spread through the village like a contagion. By midday, it was the only thing anyone was talking about.
In the general store, the owner, Leo Vance, a man with a tongue as oily as his hair, was holding court. I heard his exaggerated tale as I passed by outside. He claimed I’d been chanting, my face a mask of black magic, communing with the dead.
The rumor, twisted and malevolent, found its way to Alpha Arthur. He saw my act of mourning not as grief, but as a challenge. A reminder that this land had once belonged to the Stones.
I knew this would happen. In a way, I had counted on it.
Back in my dilapidated cabin, I sat on the floor and pulled a small, worn leather pouch from my pack. It was the only possession I had left from my old life. I opened it and poured the contents into my palm.
Seeds—they were just seeds.
They were small and dark and held the promise of life.
Let them whisper. Let them fear. Their paranoia would be my shield. It would keep them away. And in the solitude they granted me, I would begin to grow something new.
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8.7
I make my living binding monsters to their promises. But Silas Malphas is the one monster I never should have touched.
As a Thread-Binder, I can see the glowing, invisible strings of loyalty, debt, and lies connecting everyone in the city's supernatural underworld. It makes me the ultimate contract lawyer-and the perfect infiltrator.
My mission is simple: secure a job in the inner circle of the House of Malphas, the city's most ruthless monster syndicate, and steal the Primal Ledger from their lethal heir.
Silas Malphas commands the shadows themselves. He is arrogant, dominant, and terrifyingly elegant. But the most dangerous thing about him isn't his power-it's that when I look at him, I see *nothing*. He is a void in the magical spectrum. No debts. No loyalties. He is completely unreadable.
I was supposed to betray him. But as I am dragged deeper into his golden cage of high-stakes negotiations and blood-soaked boardroom politics, the lines between my mission and my dark attraction to the Beast begin to blur.
When a rival faction launches a deadly coup and my cover is blown, I am left with a terrifying choice. To survive the night, I must forge a blood-oath contract with the very monster I was sent to destroy.
I'm no longer just his lawyer. I'm bound to the Beast.

9.3
Halie woke up to a sharp pain and a terrifying reality. She was in a new body, her face covered in a hideous web of scars, and her spiritual power reduced to a pathetic D-Class.
Before she could even process the memories of being framed, her bedroom doors were violently kicked open.
Her sister Seraphina sauntered in with a venomous sneer, followed closely by Halie's S-Class fiancé, Jett.
"Look at the disgrace of the Avila family. What a waste," Seraphina mocked, throwing a mirror at her bed.
"I can't be tied to a cripple. As an S-Class, I have to break our engagement," Jett added, his gaze full of disgust.
The nightmare didn't stop there. Her father called, screaming about how she had shamed the family name. He officially stripped her of her inheritance, froze all her accounts, and exiled her to the decaying Southern District to rot.
To make matters worse, a cold, mechanical voice suddenly echoed in her skull, warning her of an impending genetic collapse. Without an immediate energy infusion, she would face total organ failure in thirty days.
A ruined face, a treacherous family, a world that wanted her dead, and a literal death clock ticking in her brain. The original owner had died in absolute despair, a tragic victim of sheer cruelty.
But if they thought she would just sit there and die, they were severely mistaken.
Armed with a mysterious system and her brilliant scientist mind from her past life, Halie packed her bags. She chose the craziest survival quest: head to the slums, find the exiled, sterile S-Class "madman" Coleman, and cure him to harvest his life energy. It was time to start her counterattack.

9.2
At the absolute summit of her pop-star career, the stage collapsed beneath Catherine's feet, plunging her into a mechanical black hole.
When she opened her eyes, she wasn't in a hospital, but a savage, primitive forest.
Before a fire-breathing beast could tear her apart, a massive black snake crushed it with a single strike.
The terrifying serpent then transformed into Amon, a towering, heavily scarred man with golden slitted eyes, who swore his life to protect her.
He brought her to his tribe, but instead of safety, they were met with ravenous hunger and disgust.
The tribe's males stared at Catherine's fragile human body like a rare breeding prize, while treating Amon like garbage.
"He's a cursed, cold-blooded freak! His rut will tear you to pieces!"
The Chief sneered, pointing a thick, accusing finger at Amon.
"By tribal law, you must mate with our strongest tiger and bear shifters to give us powerful cubs!"
Humiliated, Amon's broad shoulders slumped, his fists trembling in suffocating shame as he prepared to back away.
Catherine's heart pounded with fierce, burning anger.
When she was about to be eaten, Amon was the only one who bled for her.
Where were these arrogant bullies then? Why should she let them treat her savior like a monster?
As the tribe's strongest warriors swarmed forward to claim her, Catherine stepped directly in front of Amon's lethal claws.
"I don't need any of you," she declared, her voice cutting through the chaos.
"I will mate with Amon and take his beast mark today!"

7.3
For a thousand years, the Vora beastmen have been cursed by a madness-a burning sickness in their blood that only one thing can soothe: the legendary 'Blood-Blessed,' a human female whose very scent is a living cure.
When a virus wiped out nearly all females, their desperate hunt for this mythical girl turned into a brutal conquest. They crushed our fallen human kingdoms, reducing us to breathing meat under their cruel "Livestock Codex."
To save my little sister from being branded for their elite breeding auction, I took her place in the male-only death draft.
Disguised as a boy, I was thrown into a pitch-black labyrinth, a living sacrifice meant to feed their ultimate nightmare: the feral, half-dragon Mad King.
He tore our steel cage apart like wet paper. I pressed my back against the freezing wall, watching in horror as he slaughtered the screaming men around me.
He ripped the filthy coat from my body, exposing my true gender. As his crimson eyes locked onto my throat and he opened his jaws for the kill, my rage burned away my fear.
I was a pureblood heiress of a dead empire, but I would not die cowering like an animal. I gripped a shard of glass, ready to aim for his eye.
But as he lunged, the glass sliced my palm. The moment my blood hit the air, the legend became my reality. The sweet, intoxicating scent that flooded the dark wasn't just my pheromones-it was the living cure.
The terrifying, apocalyptic tyrant froze mid-strike. He dropped his massive body to his knees, his fangs retracting as he gently, desperately licked my bleeding hand.
His chaotic red eyes darkened with an absolute, world-ending obsession as he pulled my fragile body against his burning chest.
"Mine."
I was meant to be his final meal. They called me the Blood-Blessed. He called me his Queen.

9.3
She thought their love could survive anything. She was wrong.
For five years, Amara Hayes was the perfect wife - loyal, gentle, and endlessly forgiving. She believed her husband, Ethan Blackwell, when he said his late nights were for business. She trusted him when he swore his heart was hers.
Until the night she walked into his office and saw him making love to another woman.
Humiliated, heartbroken, and betrayed, Amara left without a word - leaving behind her wedding ring, her identity, and the man who destroyed her faith in love.
Three years later, she returns to New York as a powerful businesswoman with a new name and a cold smile. She's no longer the naive wife he controlled - she's his rival, his downfall, and his punishment.
But Ethan isn't the same man either. He's haunted by the woman he lost and desperate for redemption. And when fate throws them together again, old flames reignite amid a storm of revenge, pain, and forbidden desire.
He once broke her heart. Now, she'll make him wish he never did.

7.6
Overnight, Ella lost her family, her home, and her entire life. Discarded by the foster system, she was left shivering in the freezing mud outside her ruined estate.
That was when Javier Shepherd appeared. The terrifyingly cold, powerful billionaire pulled her from the dirt, threw her into a massive glass penthouse, handed her an unlimited black card, and vanished overseas, leaving her in the hands of a cruel caretaker.
The caretaker treated Ella like garbage, feeding her cheap, processed meals while using the black card to buy designer bags. The toxic food triggered a severe allergic reaction. Ella collapsed in the dark hallway, her throat swelling shut, gasping for air while the caretaker locked the door and turned up the TV. She almost died on that cold hardwood floor.
When Javier found out, he ruthlessly destroyed the caretaker and sent her to prison. He guarded Ella's hospital bed with terrifying intensity and even moved into her apartment to stop her panic attacks. Yet, when Ella finally broke down crying over her dead parents, his eyes turned to ice.
"Losing emotional control over a juvenile past is an inefficient waste of energy."
He sneered, treating her grief like a bad financial investment. Ella was completely bewildered. Why did this dangerous man protect her so fiercely, yet hate her past so deeply?
It wasn't until his cousin visited the hospital that the cruel truth was revealed. Javier wasn't saving her out of kindness. He had been obsessed with Ella's mother—his family's adopted daughter who ran away years ago. To him, Ella wasn't a person to be loved. She was just a replacement asset, a ghost of the woman he never got over.