The Enigma's Omega Bride.  Novel Cover

The Enigma's Omega Bride.

7.2 / 10.0
Selena Silvermist was never meant to lead. But when her gentle brother is cast out like he's nothing-and the power-hungry Lucas rises to claim what isn't his-Selena steps forward, ready to fight for the Alpha title... and everything she loves. With her first shift looming and a dangerous power awakening beneath her skin, Selena must train harder than ever. But something is changing-not just within her, but around her. The forest grows restless. Creatures that shouldn't exist begin to stir. And the closer she gets to her transformation, the more she realizes... Her wolf is not normal. Far from home, her brother Elian finds himself trapped within the walls of the Citadel, summoned into the presence of the feared and untouchable king, Kael Draven. Cold. Powerful. Dangerous. But from the moment their eyes meet, something shifts. A bond Elian doesn't understand. A claim he never agreed to. And a king who watches him like he already belongs to him. As tension rises within the Citadel and shadows begin to move in the wild, Selena and Elian are pulled toward a fate neither of them chose. One must fight to survive what she is becoming... while the other must uncover the truth of what he has already become. Because in a world ruled by power, blood, and destiny- Some bonds are not given. They are taken.

The Enigma's Omega Bride. Chapter 1

The girl's cries echoed through the chamber long before the sun had fully risen.

"I said I won't go!"

Her voice cracked, raw with fear, as she stumbled back from her mother's reaching hands. Tears streaked down her cheeks, her entire body trembling like a leaf caught in a storm.

"He's a monster!" she screamed. "Do you want me to die? Do you want me to come back like the others-broken... empty?"

Her father stood rigid near the door, his expression carved from stone. He did not move. Did not comfort. Did not deny.

Because he could not.

Every full moon, a bride was sent to him.

And every full moon... something came back-but never the same girl.

"Lower your voice," her father said coldly. "The guards will hear."

"I don't care!" she shot back. "Let them hear! Let the whole pack hear! I would rather die here than go to that cursed castle!"

Her mother's expression darkened-not with pity, but with irritation.

"Enough of this foolishness," she snapped. "Do you think you are special? Every family has made a sacrifice."

"No," the girl whispered, shaking her head violently. "Not like this... not to him..."

Silence fell.

Heavy.

Suffocating.

Then, slowly-too casually-her mother spoke again.

"...There is another option."

The girl froze.

Her father's eyes narrowed slightly. "What are you suggesting?"

Her mother turned her gaze toward the open doorway... toward the long hallway beyond it.

Toward where he always stayed.

"That omega boy."

The air shifted.

"You mean Elian?" the father asked, frowning.

Her lips curled faintly. "He is of age."

"He is also male," the father replied sharply. "This has never been done before."

"And?" she countered. "Has anything about that thing in the castle ever followed tradition?"

The girl's breathing slowed... hope flickering in her tear-filled eyes.

"Yes..." she whispered. "Yes! Send him instead!"

Her father hesitated.

"Elian Silvermist is the son of a great warrior," he said. "Even if he turned out... like that... we cannot simply throw him-"

"What use is he?" the mother cut in, her tone sharp as a blade. "A male omega. A disgrace to his bloodline. He cannot fight. Cannot lead. Cannot even walk proudly among his own kind without hiding his scent like a coward."

Each word landed like a hammer.

"And if he is so... beautiful," she continued, her voice lowering, "then perhaps even a devil might find use for him."

A knock interrupted the rising tension.

Three firm strikes.

The father turned.

"Enter."

A guard stepped in, bowing his head. "Alpha, the elders have gathered. The meeting has begun."

A pause.

The room seemed to hold its breath.

The father exhaled slowly.

"...I'm coming."

As he walked past his daughter, she grabbed his arm desperately.

"Please," she whispered. "I don't want to go..."

His jaw tightened-but he said nothing.

Behind him, the mother spoke the final words that sealed everything.

"Then pray the omega agrees."

******************************

The council hall of the Silvermist Pack loomed like a cavern of shadows, its stone walls pressing in on the gathered wolves as if the very air gathered to choke them. Flickering torchlight danced across faces, casting long, jagged silhouettes that twisted with every uneasy breath.

 Dozens of pack members stood rigid in the dim glow, their eyes locked on the semicircle of elders at the hall's heart, where grizzled figures hunched over ancient carvings, their brows furrowed like storm clouds.

  Everyone knew the reason for this midnight summons that had dragged them from their dens and hearths. The full moon draws closer with each passing night, And with that moon came him. The Enigma. A name that crawl through whispers like poison, evoking shudders from even the hardiest alphas.

  Elder Maltheus rose slowly from his carved oak throne, his robes whispering against the floor like dry leaves in a gale. Age had etched deep lines into his face, but his voice still boomed with the authority of decades. "The lottery has spoken," he said, his gaze sweeping the crowd with unyielding steel. "Elara's family has been chosen. It falls to them to offer the next bride to His Majesty, King Kael Draven of Moonveil Citadel."

  A low murmur spreads outward, wolves shifting on their feet, exchanging glances filled with dread. At the room's center, Elara's father walked forward, his broad shoulders squared against the weight of every stare. His face drained of color, yet his jaw clenched with the fire of a cornered wolf. "No," he growled, the word exploding from him. "My daughter will not be sacrificed to that... that thing."

  Gasps echoed through the hall. Elder Maltheus's eyes narrowed, his fingers tightening on the arm of his chair until the wood creaked in protest. "To defy the crown's ancient decree is to court treason," he warned, his tone low and laced with the chill of finality. "The pact binds us all-our survival hinges on it."

  The father did not flinch. He stood his ground, his voice rising like thunder rolling over the peaks. "Treason? I'd sooner face the elders' judgment than send Elara into the jaws of a monster. Every bride who crosses those cursed gates comes back shattered-eyes hollow, spirit flayed. Or worse, she doesn't come back at all. I've heard the tales from the survivors' lips, seen the scars that no healer can mend. King Kael is no ruler; he's the Devil incarnate, his wolf a curse that devours all it touches."

  His words stayed heavy as chains in the air, pulling nods from shadowed corners of the crowd. The truth stayed with them all, undeniable and raw. For generations, under each full moon's merciless gaze, a bride had been dispatched to Moonveil Citadel-a desperate offering to sate the king's feral rage, to bind the beast that tore through his veins. And each time, the citadel spat back tragedy. Girls returned as ghosts, trembling in the night, their minds fractured by horrors unspoken. Others vanished into the fortress's depths, their fates sealed in screams that echoed across the miles. The rumors festered like open wounds: the king's eyes burned with unholy fire, driving victims to madness; his touch ignited a curse that twisted flesh and soul alike.

  The elders spoke in hushed tones, their faces darkening like the sky before a storm. Maltheus leaned forward, his voice slicing the murmurs. "If Elara's family refuses this duty, another must step forth. The moon waits for no one-the Enigma demands his tribute."

  The crowd stirred, boots scuffing against the flagstones, but silence swallowed their unease. Eyes darted, avoiding the elders' scrutiny; no family rushed to claim the burden. The air grew thicker, charged with the cowardice of self-preservation.

  Then, from the back, a voice came out-sharp, laced with venom. "Well, if no one's volunteering," sneered a young alpha, his muscular frame leaning against a pillar with mocking ease, "why not him?" His finger points accusingly toward the hall's entrance, where a figure lingered near the hall entrance.

  Heads turns around, the movement a wave of predatory interest. Elian Silvermist stood rooted, twisting tthe edge of his worn cloak till his knuckles turned white. The weight of dozens of eyes pinned him like prey under fangs, heat flooding his cheeks as the young alpha's grin widened, all teeth and cruelty.

  "Aren't you ashamed to skulk there, omega?" the alpha pressed, his voice dripping scorn as he moved closer. "Your father was Orion Silvermist-the pack's fiercest warrior, a legend who felled armies with a single howl. His name still echoes in our songs of glory."

  Murmurs of agreement followed, mixed with pitying glances. Orion's legacy loomed large, a shadow that dwarfed his son: the unbreakable alpha who had charged into battles that redrew pack borders, his strength a beacon for all. But Elian... Elian carried the mark of shame, his omega nature a cruel twist of fate, whispered about in dens as a dilution of that mighty bloodline.

  The alpha circled now, his eyes gleaming with mocking delight. "And yet, the great Orion sires a male omega. Hiding in the skirts of she-wolves, too soft to hunt, too weak to fight. If even a drop of your father's fire burned in you, you'd offer yourself up without a whimper. Prove you're more than a disappointment-be the bride."

  Laughter bubbled up, cruel and jagged, slicing through Elian like icy rain. His fingers dug deeper into the fabric, nails biting into his palms as the jeers clawed at old wounds. All his life, those words had haunted him: Useless. A warrior's shame. What good is an omega boy? The pack's expectations crushed him daily.

  Beside him, Lyra's hand holds onto his arm, her nails pressing urgently through his sleeve. "Ignore the filth," she hissed, her voice a fierce whisper, eyes blazing with protective fury. "They're beasts without honor."

  But Elian's gaze lifted upward, tracing the elders' stern faces, the crowd's avid hunger, the alpha's triumphant smirk. His pulse thundered in his ears, a wild drumbeat urging him forward. The weight of his father's ghost, the pack's disdain-it all converged in that moment, forging something unyielding in his chest.

  Before doubt could coil around him, he stepped into the light.

  "I'll go." The words came out from him, steady despite the quake in his limbs, crashing into the hall like a thunderclap.

  The laughter died. Shock rippled outward, faces turned in disbelief. "What?" someone asked, the crowd leaning in as if pulled by an invisible thread.

  Lyra whirled, her grip turning desperate. "Elian, no-think of what you're saying! We can fight this, find another path!"

  He shook his head gently, already moving toward the center, each step a battle against the tremor in his knees. The stone floor chilled his soles through thin boots, but he pressed on until he stood exposed under the torchlight, chin lifted against the onslaught of stares.

  "I will go," he said, his voice quiet yet resolute, carrying to every corner. "To Moonveil Citadel. To King Kael Draven. If this is the pack's need, then I'll answer it-as the bride."

  Elder Maltheus's eyes widened fractionally, the first crack in his composure. "You grasp the peril, boy? The Devil's lair is no place for the living. His full-moon rages have claimed stronger souls than yours."

  Elian swallowed hard the lump in his throat, but he met the elder's gaze. "I do. But a Silvermist doesn't cower."

  The hall plunged into a profound hush, broken only by Lyra's choked sob. Tears falls down her cheeks, her hand reaching out as if to pull him back. "Please, my son... there must be another way. You're all I have left of him-of Orion. Don't throw yourself to the wolves."

  Elian turned to her, offering a faint, heartbreaking smile that didn't reach his eyes. "This is my choice, Mother. For the pack. For our name."

  Maltheus exhaled slowly, the weight of tradition settling over him like a shroud. He nodded once, the motion final as a grave's seal. "So it is decreed. Elian Silvermist, male omega of the Silvermist line, shall be offered to His Majesty as tribute. Prepare him for the journey-the moon rises soon."

  A shiver raced down Elian's spine, cold as the citadel's rumored winds. Far beyond the mist-shrouded forests and jagged peaks, Moonveil's black spires clawed at the sky, a fortress forged in nightmare. Brides entered its gates with hope's fragile thread; few emerged whole.

  As the crowd dispersed in stunned whispers, Elian's mind reeled. The rumors clawed at him now, vivid and unrelenting: the king's cursed wolf, eyes like molten gold that stripped sanity away; touches that burned with forbidden hunger, leaving marks no cloth could hide. What if the tales were no exaggeration? What if Kael Draven truly embodied the Devil- a beast whose app

etites devoured body and soul?

  And what if, in offering himself, Elian unleashed something he could never contain?

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