
Moonfire Bride's Revenge
Moonfire Bride's Revenge Chapter 1
The black SUV's engine hummed beneath me like a death knell, each mile carrying me closer to what Julian had described as my execution. My hands trembled in my lap as I stared out the tinted window at the passing Seattle skyline, the Space Needle piercing the gray clouds like a silver blade.
"Blake, you need to understand what's happening here." Julian's voice was gentle, but I caught the underlying tension he was trying to hide. He sat beside me in the backseat, his silver pendant catching the dim light as he leaned forward. "The Moon-Bride contract is ancient. Sacred. And unfortunately for you, it requires a very specific type of... offering."
My stomach churned. "You keep saying 'offering' like I'm some kind of sacrifice."
"Because that's exactly what you are." The words hit me like ice water. Julian's hand found mine, his touch meant to be comforting but feeling more like a chain. "Alpha Rhodes Anderson has ruled the Wild Hearth pack for over a decade. He's ruthless, Blake. Savage. The stories I've heard..."
He trailed off, shaking his head as if the memories were too terrible to voice. But I needed to know. I had to understand what I was walking into.
"What stories?" My voice came out as barely a whisper.
Julian's jaw tightened. "They say he kills his brides on the wedding night. That he drains their life force to maintain his power. No woman who's entered into a Moon-Bride contract with him has ever been seen again."
The air in the SUV suddenly felt suffocating. I pressed my palm against the cool window, trying to steady my breathing. "Then why are you taking me there? Why are you letting this happen?"
"Because I have no choice." Julian's voice cracked with what sounded like genuine anguish. "The contract was signed before you were born, Blake. Your guardian—your real guardian—made this deal. I've spent years trying to find a way out of it, but the supernatural world doesn't forgive broken contracts. If I don't deliver you..."
He didn't finish, but his meaning was clear. Whatever consequences awaited him were apparently worse than delivering me to my death.
The driver, a silent man with cold eyes who'd introduced himself only as Marcus, caught my gaze in the rearview mirror. There was something unsettling about the way he watched me, like he knew secrets I couldn't even imagine.
"How much further?" I asked, hating how small my voice sounded.
"We're almost there," Marcus replied, his tone oddly respectful for someone transporting a sacrifice. "The pack house is just ahead."
I turned back to the window and gasped. Through the trees, I could see a massive estate rising from the forest like something out of a dark fairy tale. Stone and timber construction that looked both ancient and imposing, with towers that seemed to scrape the low-hanging clouds. Even from a distance, I could feel something emanating from the place—a presence that made my skin prickle with inexplicable awareness.
"That's it," Julian whispered beside me. "That's where Rhodes Anderson holds court."
As we drew closer, I could make out figures moving around the grounds. Even from the car, there was something different about them—the way they moved with predatory grace, the way they seemed to sense our approach before we were even visible. My heart hammered against my ribs as the SUV passed through massive iron gates that clanged shut behind us with a sound like a prison door.
"Julian," I grabbed his arm, my nails digging into his jacket. "I can't do this. Please. There has to be another way."
His hand covered mine, and for a moment, I thought I saw genuine conflict in his eyes. "Blake, I wish there was. But the supernatural world operates by rules older than civilization. The Moon-Bride contract cannot be broken."
The SUV rolled to a stop in front of the main entrance, where stone steps led up to doors that looked like they could withstand a siege. My breath fogged the window as I stared up at the imposing structure, every instinct screaming at me to run.
"Remember what I told you," Julian said quietly as Marcus got out to open our door. "Don't look him directly in the eyes. Don't speak unless spoken to. And whatever you do, don't show fear. Predators can smell it."
The door opened, and cool Seattle air rushed in, carrying scents I couldn't identify but that made something deep in my chest flutter with recognition. Pine. Earth. Something wild and untamed that both terrified and inexplicably comforted me.
As I stepped out of the SUV on shaking legs, I caught sight of movement in one of the upper windows. A shadow, tall and broad-shouldered, watching from behind dark glass.
Alpha Rhodes Anderson was waiting for his bride.
Moonfire Bride's Revenge of Contents
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