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The Billionaire Investor Stolen Bride Novel Cover

The Billionaire Investor Stolen Bride

On the night of her engagement, Lila Hart discovers that her fiancé isn't just cheating-he's selling her to the cruel Alpha of the Silvermoon Pack to settle a debt. Dragged into the arms of Damien Blackwood, a ruthless billionaire Alpha feared across the werewolf world, Lila vows to escape. But Damien isn't what he seems-behind his icy exterior lies a dangerous secret... one that ties Lila to him in ways neither can deny.
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Chapter 8

The first thing I noticed was the silence.

No greetings in the halls. No nods. No quiet acknowledgment of my presence. Wolves moved around me as if I were a shadow-seen, but deliberately unaddressed.

It was worse than hostility.

At breakfast, the long table that had once seated only Damien and me now held others-pack members speaking softly among themselves. No one looked up when I entered.

I hesitated.

"Sit," Damien said calmly, not lifting his gaze from the reports in his hand.

I did.

Conversation resumed, carefully avoiding us. The message was clear: We obey the Alpha. Not you.

After the meal, I walked the grounds alone, the air sharp and cold. Somewhere deep in the forest, a howl rose-and stopped abruptly.

Unease settled in my chest.

Near the garden path, I saw crushed flowers-silver-veined petals scattered across the stones.

"They weren't like that yesterday."

I turned to find the braided-haired woman standing behind me. Her expression was unreadable.

"What happened to them?" I asked.

She shrugged. "Accidents happen."

Her eyes lingered on the broken stems before meeting mine. "Mercy invites accidents."

Before I could respond, she walked away.

That afternoon, Mara found me in the east wing. Her hands shook as she folded linens.

"You should stay inside tonight," she said quietly.

"Why?"

She didn't answer directly. "The patrols are restless."

Restless.

The word echoed as night fell.

I was halfway through the corridor toward my room when the lights dimmed suddenly. The mansion seemed to exhale.

Footsteps sounded behind me.

I turned-and froze.

The wolf I had spared stepped out of the shadows. His posture was rigid, his gaze conflicted.

"I told you mercy makes you visible," he said quietly.

My heart pounded. "Are you here to hurt me?"

"No," he said immediately. "I'm here to warn you."

"Warn me about what?"

He glanced down the hall, then back at me. "You broke balance. Some want it restored."

"By doing what?"

"By proving you don't belong."

The words hit harder than any threat.

"Why tell me?" I asked.

"Because debt exists," he said. "Even here."

Footsteps echoed from the far end of the hall. He stepped back into the shadows, vanishing before I could say another word.

I stood there long after he was gone, pulse racing.

Damien found me later, standing at the window, staring into the dark.

"They're testing boundaries," he said calmly. "Not attacking yet."

"Yet," I repeated.

He met my gaze. "Mercy buys time. Nothing more."

I wrapped my arms around myself.

For the first time since arriving, I understood the truth:

Choosing kindness didn't make me safe.

It made me interesting.

And in a world ruled by wolves...

Interest was dangerous.

Sleep refused to come that night.

Every sound felt louder-the distant howl of wolves, the soft creak of the mansion settling, the whisper of wind brushing against the windows. I lay still, staring at the ceiling, replaying the wolf's warning over and over.

Some want it restored.

Balance.

What did that even mean here?

Just before dawn, I rose and crossed to the window. Mist clung low to the ground, blurring the forest into shifting shadows. Movement flickered near the tree line-too fast to track, too deliberate to be random.

Patrols.

Or watchers.

When morning finally arrived, Mara appeared with dark circles under her eyes.

"You shouldn't walk alone today," she said softly.

"I won't hide," I replied.

Her gaze sharpened. "Courage and recklessness are close cousins."

"I know."

That didn't stop me.

Outside, the air was sharp with frost. As I walked the gravel path, conversations nearby fell quiet. Wolves turned away-not in fear, but refusal.

I passed the training grounds and stopped short.

A pack of younger wolves sparred aggressively, their movements sharper than before. Each time one stumbled, the others laughed-not kindly.

One glance at me, and the laughter grew louder.

A message.

I forced myself to keep walking.

Near the edge of the estate, I spotted the spared wolf again. He stood apart from the others, arms crossed, jaw clenched.

"You're being isolated," he said quietly as I approached.

"I noticed."

"It will get worse," he added. "They won't touch you yet. That would challenge the Alpha directly."

"Yet," I echoed.

He nodded once. "They'll aim for fear instead."

As if summoned by his words, a sudden crack echoed through the air. A tree branch snapped nearby, crashing to the ground just feet from the path.

My breath caught.

No one rushed to help.

No one reacted at all.

The spared wolf's shoulders stiffened. "That wasn't an accident."

Damien arrived moments later, his presence cutting through the tension like a blade. His gaze swept the area, sharp and assessing.

"Inside," he said quietly.

As we walked, I finally asked the question that had been burning in my chest.

"How long will this last?"

Damien didn't slow. "Until they accept you... or until someone forces my hand."

"And if that happens?"

His jaw tightened. "Then mercy ends."

That should have comforted me.

Instead, it scared me.

Because I was beginning to understand something far more dangerous than hostility:

My choices didn't just affect me.

They shaped how a wolf pack remembered mercy.

And if they decided mercy was weakness...

They wouldn't forget it.

By afternoon, the estate felt smaller.

Not physically-its halls were still vast, its grounds still sprawling-but every path felt observed, every turn anticipated. I changed directions twice on my walk, only to notice the same wolves appearing ahead of me, always just far enough away to seem coincidental.

They weren't hiding anymore.

They didn't need to.

I stopped near the old fountain at the center of the lower courtyard. The water shimmered faintly, disturbed by ripples that shouldn't have been there. When I leaned closer, I saw something wedged between the stones.

A torn ribbon.

Dark blue.

The same color as the dress I'd worn to the council.

My fingers tightened around the edge of the fountain.

"Looking for something?"

I straightened. The braided-haired woman stood nearby, arms folded, her expression calm.

"You dropped that," she said lightly.

"I didn't," I replied.

Her eyes flicked to the ribbon. "Things fall when they don't belong."

Anger flared-but I swallowed it down. "Is this what balance looks like to you?"

She studied me for a long moment. "Balance is remembering who leads... and who follows."

Before I could answer, she walked away, leaving the ribbon fluttering in the water like a warning flag.

That evening, Damien called a private dinner.

No council. No witnesses.

"You're being pushed," he said plainly, once the doors were closed.

"I know."

"They're careful," he continued. "They avoid breaking my rules. Instead, they're rewriting yours."

"My rules?" I frowned.

"The ones you don't know you're living by yet."

I exhaled slowly. "What do they want?"

"To see if you'll retreat," he said. "Fear is contagious. If you show it, others will follow."

"And if I don't?"

His gaze sharpened. "Then they'll escalate."

Later, as night wrapped the estate in silver and shadow, I returned to my room to find the door ajar.

I froze.

The room looked untouched at first glance. The bed was made. The curtains still drawn.

But the mirror was wrong.

A single word had been traced through the condensation on the glass.

Human.

I wiped it away with shaking fingers, my reflection staring back at me-pale, defiant, unbroken.

Not yet.

When Damien arrived moments later, his eyes went immediately to the mirror.

"They crossed a line," he said quietly.

"So now what?" I asked.

He met my gaze, something dark and resolute settling behind his silver eyes.

"Now," he said, "they learn that mercy doesn't mean permission."

As he turned toward the door, I realized something crucial:

The price of mercy wasn't pain.

It was patience.

And patience...

Was running out.

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