
The Queen They Lost, Now His
spent three years saving every single credit to buy the Moonlight Grass. It was the only herb capable of healing my damaged wolf spirit.
But the moment I walked through the door, my eldest brother, the Pack Alpha, snatched it from my trembling hands.
"Willow has a migraine," Ryker stated, his voice devoid of warmth. "She needs this."
I begged him. I told him it cost a fortune. I told him it was my only chance to finally shift.
But Axel, my second brother and the Pack Doctor, just adjusted his glasses with clinical coldness.
"Don't be selfish, Ember. Willow is fragile. Your jealousy is ugly."
They boiled my entire future into a tea for an adopted sister who was faking it.
Desperate to prove I wasn't the villain, I spent my last emergency cash on gifts for them.
But when I handed Willow a silk dress, she smirked at me, stepped on the hem, and threw herself backward onto the carpet.
"My ankle!" she screamed. "Ryker, she pushed me!"
I rushed forward to help, but my bad leg gave out. I smashed my knee against the metal bed frame, blood instantly soaking through my jeans.
Axel didn't check my shattered knee. He roared at me, "You vicious snake! You wanted her to trip!"
Ryker loomed over me, his Alpha Command crushing my lungs like a physical weight. "Get out of my sight."
Bleeding, broke, and heartbroken, I dragged myself out into the storm.
They thought I would crawl to a friend's house. They thought I would always be their punching bag.
Instead, I accepted an offer from the rival Shadow Alpha to join a top-secret research facility.
A fifteen-year lockdown. No contact. A complete erasure of my existence.
As I stepped onto the private jet, I looked down at the house one last time.
"Happy Birthday, brothers," I whispered into the wind.
I hope you enjoy the silence when you realize the sister you tortured is gone forever.
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Chapter 2
Ember POV:
The hospital corridor was long and sterile. Every step left a small bloody smear on the polished tile from my knee, but no one stopped to help. I was the pariah. The Alpha had commanded me to leave, and the pack obeyed the Alpha.
I could hear them through the thin walls of the VIP room.
"I want to go to Moon Island now," Willow whined, her voice high and childish. "I don't feel safe here with her lurking around."
"We'll go tonight," Ryker promised. "I'll have the jet prepped."
"Can Ember come?" Willow asked. It was a trap. I knew her tone.
"Absolutely not," Axel's voice cut through the air like a scalpel. "She's unstable. Her jealousy is toxic. She doesn't deserve the sacred ground of Moon Island."
I leaned against the wall, closing my eyes. Moon Island. The place where Dad taught Ryker to fish. The place where Mom taught Axel to identify herbs. The place they swore was our sanctuary.
Now, it belonged to a stranger.
The door opened. Axel stepped out. He stopped when he saw me leaning against the wall, clutching my bleeding leg. For a brief moment, his gaze snagged on the blood. A flicker of confusion crossed his face-a doctor's instinct warring with his prejudice.
Then he looked at my face, and the wall slammed back down.
"Since you are here," Axel said, checking his watch, "I need you to move your things."
"What?" I asked, my voice hoarse.
"Willow needs the south-facing room at the Pack House. Ideally, the Master Suite, but Ryker is keeping that as a shrine to Dad. Your room has the best sunlight. It will help her recovery."
My room. The room with the balcony where I grew my medicinal herbs. The room Mom had painted yellow because she said I was her 'little sun.'
"Axel," I said, staring at him. "That's my room."
"It's a room in the Alpha's house," he corrected coldly. "You are a guest there. A burden, really. Pack your things. Be out of that room by tomorrow."
Something inside me snapped. It wasn't a loud snap. It was quiet, like a dry twig in winter.
"Okay," I said.
Axel blink. He had expected a fight. He had expected tears. He didn't know what to do with my sudden, hollow calm.
"Okay?" he repeated.
"I'll move out," I said. "Enjoy the island."
I pushed off the wall and limped toward the elevator. I didn't look back. If I had, I might have seen the confusion on his face. But I didn't care anymore.
I went back to the Pack House. The servants watched me with pity, but they didn't help. They couldn't.
I went to my room. I didn't pack everything. I took the photo of my parents. I took my acceptance letter. I took my hard drive with five years of research on the Silver Poison cure-my life's work.
I left the clothes Ryker had bought me years ago. I left the medical books Axel had given me before he started hating me.
I packed one suitcase.
The next morning, I was standing in the foyer. The house was silent. They were leaving for the airport in an hour.
Axel came down the stairs, holding a stack of passports. He stopped when he saw the suitcase.
"Finally acting out the runaway drama?" he sneered. "Where are you going? To cry at a friend's house until we beg you to come back?"
"I'm moving to the university dorms," I lied. My voice was steady. "You wanted the room. It's yours."
Willow appeared at the top of the stairs, wearing the silk dress I had bought her. She twirled.
"Oh, Axel, look! It fits perfectly now that my ankle is better!" She beamed. She looked at me, her eyes mocking. "Leaving so soon, Ember?"
"Yes," I said.
Ryker walked in from the kitchen, holding a mug of coffee. He looked at my suitcase, then at my face. His wolf, the giant black beast inside him, seemed to sense something was wrong. He frowned, rubbing his chest.
"You're leaving on a family holiday?" Ryker asked.
"You didn't invite me," I reminded him.
"Stop being a brat," Ryker grumbled. "We'll be back in two weeks. Make sure the house is clean when we return."
"I won't be here," I said softly.
"Good," Axel snapped. "Maybe the distance will fix your attitude. If you aren't back by the time we return, don't bother coming back at all."
"Okay," I said again.
I turned to the door.
"And Ember?" Axel called out.
I paused, my hand on the brass handle.
"Don't expect us to pay for your dorm. You're on your own."
"I know," I whispered.
I opened the door. The sky outside was dark gray. A storm was coming.
"Roll," Axel spat the word like a curse. "Get out."
I stepped over the threshold. The heavy door slammed shut behind me, severing the warmth of the house.
I stood on the porch. I was homeless. I was broke. I was injured.
But for the first time in ten years, I was free.
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8.7
I make my living binding monsters to their promises. But Silas Malphas is the one monster I never should have touched.
As a Thread-Binder, I can see the glowing, invisible strings of loyalty, debt, and lies connecting everyone in the city's supernatural underworld. It makes me the ultimate contract lawyer-and the perfect infiltrator.
My mission is simple: secure a job in the inner circle of the House of Malphas, the city's most ruthless monster syndicate, and steal the Primal Ledger from their lethal heir.
Silas Malphas commands the shadows themselves. He is arrogant, dominant, and terrifyingly elegant. But the most dangerous thing about him isn't his power-it's that when I look at him, I see *nothing*. He is a void in the magical spectrum. No debts. No loyalties. He is completely unreadable.
I was supposed to betray him. But as I am dragged deeper into his golden cage of high-stakes negotiations and blood-soaked boardroom politics, the lines between my mission and my dark attraction to the Beast begin to blur.
When a rival faction launches a deadly coup and my cover is blown, I am left with a terrifying choice. To survive the night, I must forge a blood-oath contract with the very monster I was sent to destroy.
I'm no longer just his lawyer. I'm bound to the Beast.

7.9
Rose was so naive that she didn't know Jonah, her ex-fiancé, was cheating on her even before her wedding day. On the night before her wedding, she caught him cheating on her with the last person she would ever expect him to be with, Rebecca.
Out of anger and spite, she cursed at them and left, then went and got herself drunk and made out with a mafia don, who, oblivious to her, was her fiancé's stepbrother and his boss.
On the day of the wedding, she stormed in and canceled it, calling Jonah out. After the embarrassment, Jonah vowed to make her life miserable. She tried to get a job, but it was almost impossible because of the influence Jonah had.
So she went to the greatest mafia don that her friend Lucy recommended to her. When she went to ask for his help, the don turned out to be the mysterious man who had been showing interest in her, but she had kept declining. Unbeknownst to her, he was her ex-fiancé's boss and stepbrother.
She asked for his help, and he offered it, of course, but on one condition.that she would be his mistress !.

9.4
Michael Carter is an undercover FBI agent on a mission to take down ruthless mafia king Fernando Ramírez-the man he believes killed his sister. But getting close to Fernando means playing a dangerous game, one where seduction and power blur the lines between enemy and lover.
When Michael uncovers a shocking truth, his thirst for revenge turns into a fight for something far more dangerous-his own heart. Now, torn between duty and desire, he must decide: destroy the man he swore to take down or surrender to the one thing he never saw coming.
Love has never been more lethal.

8.1
Samira James has two weeks left.
Two weeks until she turns eighteen.
Two weeks until everything changes.
And a few months left trapped in high school with the boy she hates most.
Calvin Simms has been her enemy for as long as she can remember. Popular, untouchable, and the living reminder of a childhood misunderstanding neither of them ever corrected. Their interactions are sharp, heated, and carefully controlled.
Until they aren't.
As months pass, tension replaces silence.
Jealousy replaces indifference.
And lines blur where hatred once lived.
With rivals watching, secrets resurfacing, and temptation growing harder to ignore, Samira must decide if sticking to her rules is worth denying what her body and her heart are already choosing.
Because some mistakes feel too good to stop.
And sometimes...
you don't fall for the person you want.
You fall for the one you swore to hate.

8.5
"You don't get to hurt me and then make me responsible for how guilty you feel about it."
"Friends don't stand next to you, learn everything about you, and then use it to get close to the one person they know matters."
Aria thought she knew two things for certain: she was going to graduate with her best friend, Iris, by her side, and she was in love with her boyfriend, Liam.
One kiss changed everything. But as the secrets of their "before" come to light, Aria realizes the betrayal didn't start at a party or in a moment of weakness. It started weeks ago, in the conversations she wasn't part of and the moments she wasn't invited to.
Now, Aria has to decide if she can find herself again in the wreckage of the people she trusted most-or if some bridges are meant to be burned

7.8
The moment I saw my husband massaging his dead brother's pregnant mistress's feet, I knew my marriage was over.
He moved her into our home under the guise of "family duty," forcing me to watch as he prioritized her comfort over our vows.
The final betrayal came when she stole and deliberately broke my mother's priceless necklace.
When I slapped her for the desecration, my husband struck me across the face to defend her.
He had violated a sacred honor code by putting his hands on the daughter of another Don-an act of war.
I looked him in the eye and swore on my mother's grave that I would bring a bloody revenge upon his entire family.
Then I made one phone call to my father, and the demolition of his empire began.