
Rejected Luna, Claimed by the King
As a wolfless charity case at the Hyde Pack's celebration, my world shattered when Braydon, my supposed protector, publicly announced Katherine Parrish as his Luna, erasing me.
Heartbroken, I fled into a terrifying contract marriage with Alpha King Dallas Marshall for protection. Braydon's public assault and threats forced me to reveal my secret marriage, challenging the King.
My "protection" felt like a prison. Braydon revealed I was a "key" to power, not a mate, confirming my fears. Enraged by my attempt to take a morning-after pill, Dallas forced me to swallow it, then branded my lips with a furious kiss.
His chilling silence hardened my resolve. I immediately drafted an addendum to our contract, setting strict boundaries to reclaim control.
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Chapter 9
Adella POV
The silence inside the Maybach was thick enough to choke on. Outside the tinted windows, the steel skeleton of the city was rapidly giving way to the dark, encroaching blur of the forest, but my mind was still trapped in the penthouse study.
I could still feel the phantom pressure of Dallas's body caging me against the bookshelf. I could still smell him—ozone, cedar, and that terrifyingly addictive scent of raw power. For a moment back there, when his eyes had darkened to pools of obsidian, I thought he was going to bite me. I thought he was going to claim me not as a fake wife, but as... something else.
Something primal.
I shifted in the leather seat, my hands trembling in my lap. Dallas sat beside me, staring straight ahead, one hand resting casually on the steering wheel. He looked composed, the perfect image of the billionaire Alpha, but the air around him crackled with a residual static energy that made the hair on my arms stand up.
"Where are we going?" I asked, my voice barely a whisper. "You said 'home,' but... I don't have a home."
Dallas didn't look at me immediately. He signaled a turn, guiding the car onto a private, winding road that cut deep into the mountains. The trees here were ancient, their branches forming a canopy that blotted out the afternoon sun.
"Moonstone Creek," he said.
The name hit me like a physical blow to the chest. All the air left my lungs in a sharp gasp.
"No," I choked out, panic clawing at my throat. "That's... that's impossible. Moonstone Creek was destroyed. The Rogues... the Hyde family absorbed the territory years ago. There's nothing there but ruins."
Memories I had locked away for a decade surged forward—smoke, screams, the smell of burning timber, and the lifeless eyes of my mother. Moonstone Creek wasn't a place on a map anymore; it was a graveyard.
"It was destroyed," Dallas corrected, his voice low and steady, like the rumble of distant thunder. "But I bought the land six years ago. I rebuilt it."
I stared at his profile, stunned. "You? Why would Dallas Marshall want a decimated territory in the middle of nowhere?"
"Because it is secure," he said simply, finally glancing at me. His gaze was intense, stripping away my defenses. "And because no one, especially Braydon Hyde, would dare set foot on my private soil."
He reached across the center console. I flinched instinctively, but he didn't pull back. Instead, his large, warm hand covered my icy ones, engulfing them completely. The heat from his skin seeped into my bones, grounding me, silencing the screaming panic in my head.
"You are safe with me, Adella," he vowed. "I will burn the world before I let anything hurt you again."
I wanted to pull away, to tell him that promises were just pretty lies men told before they broke you. But looking into his eyes, I couldn't find the lie.
Twenty minutes later, the trees broke, revealing a sprawling estate that took my breath away.
It wasn't the rustic pack house I remembered from my childhood. This was a fortress of glass, dark stone, and timber, cantilevered over the edge of the cliff like a predator surveying its kingdom. It overlooked the valley where my parents' village once stood, now lush and green, reclaiming the scars of the past.
Dallas parked the car and led me inside. The interior was cavernous, filled with modern art and furniture that looked like it cost more than my entire life's earnings. But despite the luxury, it felt... empty. Lonely.
"The master suite is down the hall to the right," Dallas said, setting my small bag on a console table. "It has the best view of the valley."
I froze, my fingers twisting the hem of my shirt. "And... where will you be sleeping?"
The question hung in the air, heavy with implication. We were married on paper. We were alone in the middle of the wilderness. If he wanted to enforce his rights as a husband, who would stop him? I was a wolfless orphan; I had no power here.
Dallas watched me, his jaw tightening as if he could hear my racing heart.
"I have Pack business to attend to," he said, his tone clipping into a professional coolness. "I will be staying in the study in the west wing. You will have the master suite to yourself."
Relief washed over me, so strong my knees nearly buckled. But beneath it, there was a strange, confusing pang of... rejection? No, I scolded myself. Don't be stupid. He's sparing you.
"Oh," I breathed out. "Okay. Thank you."
"Don't thank me yet," a bright, familiar voice rang out from the back of the house.
I spun around. The glass doors to the terrace were open, and leaning against the frame, holding a glass of champagne, was Azalea.
"Azalea?" I gasped. "How... when did you get here?"
She grinned, her red hair catching the sunlight. "Dad called me while you were packing. Said you might need a friendly face so you didn't die of boredom out here with Mr. Grumpy." She winked at Dallas, who let out a long, suffering sigh.
"I thought you might appreciate the company," Dallas murmured, his eyes fixed on me. "I know I can be... intense."
I looked from Azalea's beaming face to Dallas's stoic expression. He hadn't just brought me here to hide me away like a possession. He had brought my best friend—my only friend—because he knew I would be scared. He gave me the master bedroom. He gave me space.
He was treating me like a person, not an asset.
"I..." My throat felt tight. "Thank you, Dallas. Really."
He gave a curt nod, turning away before I could read the emotion flickering in his eyes. "Dinner is at seven. Azalea, try not to burn the house down."
As he walked away toward the west wing, his broad shoulders carrying the weight of an empire, I felt the ground beneath me shift. I had signed a contract for protection, but standing here in the home built on the ashes of my past, I realized I had no idea who Dallas Marshall really was.
But for the first time in years, I wasn't looking for an exit.
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8.4
To keep her grandmother on life support, Aracely was blackmailed into taking Evelyn's place in the pitch-black bedroom of the ruthless billionaire, Brennen Levine.
After that night, Evelyn tossed a hideous silicone scar at her feet, forcing Aracely to glue it to her face and work as a bottom-tier maid in his estate so he would never recognize her.
Brennen, suffering from chronic insomnia, was completely addicted to the sweet gardenia scent of the woman from the dark. But when he saw the "disfigured" Aracely scrubbing floors, he was physically repulsed, publicly humiliating her and calling her a monster.
Meanwhile, Evelyn paraded around as his soon-to-be wife. Terrified of her lies unraveling, Evelyn constantly abused Aracely, throwing scalding coffee at her face and threatening to pull the plug on her grandmother if Aracely didn't sneak back into Brennen's room to act as his human sleeping pill.
Aracely endured the suffocating fake scar, the insults, and the freezing servant quarters. She ground her teeth, swallowing the bitter injustice just to keep her only family alive, wondering when this torturous hell would ever end.
But Evelyn's malice knew no bounds. When Evelyn raised her hand to strike again, threatening to rip off the very disguise she forced Aracely to wear, something inside Aracely finally snapped.
"Do not push me."
Aracely locked her hand around Evelyn's wrist in a bone-crushing grip, completely unaware that Brennen was watching from the balcony above, his dark eyes narrowing as a dangerous realization hit him.

7.0
She was desperate. He was merciless.
Liana Moore's sister's life is on the line, and the only person who can save her is Dominic Vale-the man who destroyed her family years ago.
One year. One marriage. One chance to survive.
Dominic is cold, controlling, and unforgiving. Liana is fierce, stubborn, and trapped in a union built on hatred and power.
But when secrets are revealed and the line between punishment and protection blurs, the fire between them becomes impossible to ignore.
In a marriage never meant to exist, love is the most dangerous risk of all.

7.2
My family went bankrupt overnight, leaving me to face a mountain of predatory debt.
Instead of standing by my side, my billionaire fiancé's mother threw a five-million-dollar check on the marble table, demanding I take the money and disappear from her son's life forever.
Meanwhile, my former social circle mocked my downfall. They secretly took photos of me meeting with ruthless loan sharks, waiting for me to come crawling back to beg for charity.
I didn't give them the satisfaction. I legally took on my father's massive debt, threw the check back, and ruthlessly dumped my fiancé.
To stop my heartbroken mother from worrying, I lied and told her I had already found a new, reliable boyfriend.
But the lie was a ticking time bomb. My malicious rival even forced her way into my cramped apartment, demanding to meet this mysterious man, laughing that he must live in a dumpster.
I was suffocating under the pressure. I had nothing, and I had no idea how I was supposed to magically produce a husband to get these toxic people off my back.
Until a dying stranger I helped in the park made a final wish.
His grandson—my cold, aloof high school upperclassman, Caleb Barnes—handed me a watertight prenuptial agreement at the hospital.
"Marry me," Caleb said flatly. "I get to give my grandfather peace. You get a shield against your family."
I picked up the pen and signed my name.

7.8
After eight years in a cold marriage, I watched my husband, Damian, run past me during a raging fire. He ignored my screams, his only focus on saving another woman.
That night, he coldly admitted he never loved me. Our entire marriage was just a business deal he was forced into.
But his betrayal didn't end there. His mistress, Aida, framed my innocent younger brother for a crime he didn't commit. Damian believed her lies without question.
He stood by as she had my brother murdered in his hospital bed. He even forced me to crawl over broken glass to apologize for "upsetting" her.
The final blow came when he threatened me with my mother' s heirloom box, not knowing it held my brother' s ashes. He had taken everything from me-my love, my family, my dignity.
He thought he had broken me. But he only forged me into a weapon.
Now, I'm back. And as the new majority shareholder of his company, I'm here to make him pay for every last sin.

9.3
I sacrificed my dream career for my fiancé, only to find him cheating with his older investor-a betrayal that led to my mother's death.
He reached a new level of cruelty when he dumped my mother's ashes in the trash and conspired to have my wedding dress disintegrate off my body at the altar.
I vanished for five years, building a new life with a new family, but now he's found us-and just saved my daughter's life to force his way back in.

9.4
I used to believe love meant enduring. Staying. Shrinking myself so someone else could grow.
I told myself it was worth it-hiding who I was, working jobs I never had to work, pretending my life was smaller than it was. I loved him. I thought that was enough.
It wasn't.
He chose her.
My best friend looked me in the eyes and took everything I had built with him. And I remember standing there, wondering how I could feel so empty when my heart was still beating.
For a long time, I blamed myself. For trusting too much. For giving too much. For not being enough.
But I'm tired of carrying guilt that was never mine.
I am not broken. I was betrayed.
And there's a difference.
I'm going back-not to beg, not to explain-but to take back the parts of myself I abandoned. My name. My power. My voice. They don't know who I really am, and that might be the only advantage I have left.
Then he appears-calm, powerful, watching me like he sees the cracks I try to hide. And suddenly, revenge doesn't feel as simple as it used to. Neither does healing.
This is my second chance.
Not to love recklessly... but to choose myself, even if it changes everything.