
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 9
Teeth in the Dark
The howl woke me.
Not distant.
Not mournful.
Close.
I sat up in bed, heart pounding, every sense on edge. The sound cut off abruptly, swallowed by the night, leaving behind a silence that felt intentional.
A warning.
I didn't wait for Mara or Damien. I pulled on a jacket and slipped into the corridor, moving slowly, listening.
The mansion was awake.
Lights flickered on in distant wings. Doors opened and closed softly. Wolves moved through the halls with purpose, their footsteps light, coordinated.
Too coordinated.
I reached the east stairwell when I heard it again-a sharp intake of breath, stifled, followed by a muffled cry.
Someone was in trouble.
I followed the sound down into the lower passageways, my pulse roaring in my ears. The air smelled of damp stone and pine, the forest pressing close even here.
Then I saw them.
Two wolves stood near the servants' entrance, blocking the path. Between them was Mara.
She was upright, but pale, her hands clenched at her sides. No restraints. No blood. But fear flickered unmistakably in her eyes.
"This has nothing to do with her," I said, stepping forward before I could stop myself.
Both wolves turned.
One of them smiled. "On the contrary."
"Let her go," I demanded. "If this is about balance-about me-then I'm right here."
"That's the point," the other replied. "You always come."
Mara's eyes widened. "Lila-don't-"
A third presence entered the passage like a pressure shift.
Damien.
The wolves stiffened instantly.
"What is this?" he asked calmly.
"A misunderstanding," one wolf said quickly. "We were escorting her back to her quarters."
Damien's gaze flicked to Mara. "Were you?"
She shook her head once.
Silence fell.
"This ends now," Damien said, his voice low and dangerous. "You wanted to test mercy. You've done so."
He stepped forward, not threatening-final.
"Leave," he ordered. "And do not approach her. Or anyone under her protection. Ever again."
The wolves hesitated.
Then bowed.
As they disappeared into the shadows, I exhaled shakily.
Mara gripped my hand. "They weren't trying to hurt me," she whispered. "They wanted you to see."
"I know," I said softly.
Damien turned to me. "This is what escalation looks like," he said. "No blood. No broken rules. Just pressure."
"And next time?" I asked.
"There may not be a next time," he replied. "Because now I act."
As we walked back toward the light, the forest beyond the walls stirred restlessly.
I understood then:
The pack had bared its teeth.
Not to bite-
But to show it could.
And in the dark, teeth were promises.
Mara didn't sleep that night.
Neither did I.
She insisted she was fine-kept repeating it as if saying the words would make them true-but her hands shook when she poured tea, and she flinched at every sound from the corridor.
"They weren't cruel," she said quietly, staring into her cup. "That's what frightens me."
I understood.
Cruelty was easy to recognize.
Control was harder.
Damien stationed guards outside the east wing before dawn. Not the usual patrol-these wolves didn't linger or whisper. They stood still, alert, watching everything.
A statement.
By morning, the estate buzzed with restrained energy. Wolves avoided the lower halls entirely. Conversations stopped when Damien passed. Whatever he'd said after escorting Mara away had traveled fast.
Too fast.
I found Damien in the courtyard just after sunrise. The light caught the silver in his eyes, sharpening it.
"You didn't punish them," I said.
"I punished the behavior," he replied. "Not the individuals."
"That's not how packs work," I said carefully.
A pause.
"Exactly."
Later that day, the spared wolf sought me out again. He looked unsettled, his usual guarded confidence cracked.
"They went too far," he said quietly. "Not because they scared you. Because they failed."
"Failed at what?"
"Making you retreat."
I frowned. "So what now?"
His jaw tightened. "Now they'll force a situation where retreat isn't an option."
The words followed me long after he left.
By evening, the forest grew unnaturally quiet shows, no distant howls, no movement near the treeline. Even the birds had gone silent.
I stood at the window, a chill creeping down my spine.
This wasn't intimidation anymore.
This was preparation.
Damien joined me, his presence solid, grounding. "Stay close tonight," he said. "To me."
I looked up at him. "Are you worried?"
His gaze never left the dark.
"I'm alert."
That was worse.
As night fell, torches lit the outer walls. Wolves gathered at the edges of the estate-not aggressive, not hostile-but waiting.
Watching.
Whatever came next wouldn't be subtle.
And as I pressed my palm against the cold glass, one thought settled heavily in my chest:
The pack wasn't asking whether I belonged anymore.
They were deciding what it would cost to remove me.
The silence didn't break.
It lingered into the night like a held breath, pressing against the walls of the estate. Torches burned low along the perimeter, their flames steady despite the wind. Too steady.
I stood between two guarded windows, watching shadows gather and separate near the tree line. Wolves shifted there-visible enough to be counted, distant enough to deny intent.
"They're not attacking," I murmured.
Damien stood beside me, arms folded. "They're showing restraint."
"That doesn't make me feel better."
"It shouldn't," he said quietly. "Restraint means choice."
Footsteps approached from the corridor. A young guard paused at the threshold, bowing his head. "Alpha. Two elders request audience."
"At this hour?" Damien asked.
"They say it concerns the human."
Of course it did.
The council chamber felt colder at night. Only a few torches burned, casting long shadows across the stone floor. The elders stood apart-not united, not defiant. Uneasy.
"This has gone far enough," one said. "The pack is divided."
"Because of her," another added, gesturing toward me without meeting my eyes. "Some fear what she represents. Others fear what will happen if she leaves."
"That's interesting," Damien replied calmly. "Since no one asked her to leave."
A tense pause followed.
"The younger wolves are restless," the first elder said. "They want clarity."
"And what do you want?" Damien asked.
The elder hesitated. "We want balance restored... without blood."
My stomach tightened.
Damien's gaze flicked to me. "Then understand this," he said. "She stays. And the next challenge-any challenge-will be answered by me."
That landed hard.
The elders bowed, but their expressions told a different story. This wasn't agreement.
It was delay.
When they left, I finally spoke. "They're not all on the same side."
"No," Damien agreed. "Which makes them dangerous."
"Because they can pretend they don't know what's coming."
He nodded once.
Later, as I returned to the east wing, I noticed something new.
The guards weren't watching the forest anymore.
They were watching each other.
I paused outside my door, the weight of it settling in.
This wasn't just about me now.
Or Damien.
Or mercy.
The pack was fracturing-quietly, carefully.
And in a world built on loyalty, fractures didn't heal.
They spread.