
The wolf within her
7.1 / 10.0
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Born into a werewolf family but believing she was ordinary-until her father is framed and exiled for a crime he didn't commit and she is forced to step into the limelight as an alpha for her pack. What ivy doesn't know is that her entire life has been built on lies , from an ancient prophesy tied to her birth to the closest people hiding truths sharp enough to shatter her . Would she be able to fulfil destiny or fall prey to the forces determined to break her?
The wolf within her Chapter 1
Born beneath a veiled star, the masked one will wake the dormant storm.
Three carved from truth and terror;
One forgotten, one forsaken, one foreshadowed.
When the bloodline awakes, kings will fall,
And the lost shall rise,
To deliver or doom.
IVY
"Don't you ever say that again.", something shattered downstairs.
I jolted awake, heart slamming against my ribs. For a split second, I thought I'd dreamed it.
My parents didn't argue.
Ever.
I lay still, listening. The house held its breath.
Then my mother spoke again, her voice lower this time. "She's not ready."
"She has to be," my father snapped.
I didn't understand the words, but they sank into me anyway, heavy and cold. I swung my legs out of bed before I could talk myself out of it.
The hallway was dim, the early morning light barely slipping through the windows. I had just reached the top of the stairs when a sound ripped through the house.
"Ivy."
My mother was there instantly, faster than I'd ever seen her move. Her hands settled around my shoulders, warm and comforting, turning me back toward my room before I could even look down the stairs.
"What's the matter?" I asked. They looked tense.
"Everything's fine," she said, smiling too broadly. "Go back upstairs."
Behind her, my father stood at the foot of the stairs, his broad shoulders blocking my entire view of the living room. He wouldn't meet my eyes.
"What was that?" I asked.
"Nothing, my dear," he said. His voice was calm, but his jaw was set the way it only ever was when something drastic was happening.
My mother smoothed a hand over my hair. "We're leaving earlier than planned," she said gently.
They didn't say where they were going. They never did. They didn't have to.
Today was the first red moon in the last six months, and wolves never took superstitions lightly. Mum and Dad would be out leading the others through the Ceremony of Lights, and as their tradition demanded they were to be away the entire weekend. Everyone was.
Well, except me.
I tried not to let the emptiness seep in again. I should be used to it by now, but it never gets better.
I nodded my head stiffly, and my mum gave me a sad smile.
"Stay safe, Ivy. Have fun on your trip, we'll call you," Dad said.
I watched them leave through the front door and go out into the street.
Turning my back to the door, I knew that once I checked again, they would have vanished.
I took my time going up the stairs to my room. The moonlight shone with an intensity I'd never experienced before, giving the mundane objects here an odd tint. The room stood still as if it could tell I was observing it slowly and it was all I could do not to run downstairs, though I knew it was in vain.
They were already gone.
My phone buzzed on the nightstand. Talia.
"Ivy, you up?" I heard her ask.
"Unfortunately."
She chuckled slightly; she was used to me now. Several years of friendship and I never understood why she stuck with me. Born into wealth and power, Talia's lineage ruled in every single US state. Her father and mother were heads of state in Washington DC, her cousins owned massive companies in California, and her grandfather was the alpha of the Chicago wolf pack. Even in person, Talia had an air of dignity. She was never bothered about anything-everything was under her feet.
The bus leaves at 6. You'd better be there, I'm not sitting next to Townsend. He's been drinking since earlier today," she complained.
It's not like anyone else was going to sit next to me. I was quiet, and besides Talia and a few of my mother's friends, no one really spoke to me. My father loved me, and my mother pampered me, but I was always overlooked by everyone else in my father's pack. They respected me because of his position and would never dare to even breathe the wrong way next to me. But I felt the prejudice in the words that weren't spoken, in the pitied looks they sent my way. I grew up that way, in a bubble of self-consciousness and shyness. No one ever really knew me, some days I wasn't sure if even I did.
"Yeah yeah, I'll get ready now. I wouldn't want you to inhale vodka the entire ride to Los Angeles," I told her. "I would actually kill you if that happened. I'll send you a text when I'm at your house to pick you up." she said.
Such an angel.
"Thanks, Talia. Love you" I said. "You would be crazy not to," she responded.
I rolled my eyes.
I stood up from my bed and walked to the bathroom. Reaching for the light switch - I froze.
I could see. Perfectly.
I was probably just overthinking it. Talia would be here in a few hours and I didn't want to die for letting her sit next to Townsend.
My bathroom looked like any random one. Flowery tiles decorated the walls and pink towels and toiletries lined the edge of the bathtub. A large sink held my brush and skincare products, and a floor to ceiling mirror was stationed on the far right. Cracks ran down the corners of the wall, and pots of aloe vera hung on my windowsill to ward off 'evil spirits.
Did I mention that wolves were superstitious?
The only thing that was out of the ordinary was a golden charm that hung at the center of my door. Many like this one were placed in specific spots around my house. At the entrance of the house, on the dining table, in my parents' room, my mother even wore one on her finger whenever she was around me.
She placed this one on my bathroom door when I was about three years old. I remember my mother crashing out when I had climbed a stool to check it out, removing it in the process. To this day, I've never understood what that was all about, it wasn't that anything particularly bad had happened. In fact, right at that moment, I remember feeling significantly stronger, it felt like my world had turned right side up after being at an angle all this while. But my mum looked so frightened that I never asked about it.
I showered quickly, already dreading agreeing to go on this tour to Los Angeles with Talia, but I knew the main reason I did was so that I wouldn't be alone again while my parents were out.. I wanted to feel like I had a life too, that I didn't feel left out from the culture of my family.
Like I wasn't an oddity.
I emerged from the bathroom and started tossing random clothes into my backpack. I packed for two days although I had a strange premonition I wouldn't stay that long.
Ignoring the strange tingling sensation that ran down my spine, I put on the pair of jeans my mom got me last summer and paired them with one of my father's flannel shirts; I wasn't getting glammed for a trip where half the students would be asleep or doing the immoral.. It was a student organised trip so no adult would be there to supervise.
Humans have too much faith in their offspring.
Well, technically I am human. Just one living amongst monsters.
Placing my fully packed luggage on the ground, I looked around my room to see if there was anything I'd forgotten.
Talia didn't like sharing.
There was a vibration in the atmosphere that made it hard to focus on any one thing, the world felt stretched, like the night was holding its breath. I patted down my shirt and was about to blow off checking the mirror when I felt compelled to look at my reflection. But there was nothing out of the ordinary, just my oversized shirt and terrible bed hair.
"This mirror is so dirty," I said moving to wipe the smudges off with my shirt. I was doing so when I realized something was amiss.
My reflection didn't move.
"What the fuck?"
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The wolf within her of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6
Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

9.7
Her marriage is sexless, cold, and full of humiliation. She stays in the suck marriage to collect her billionaire husband's money for build her own business, and plan her freedom. While he rides his mistress in their bed many times, she quietly turns his wealth into her weapon.
Years later, the wife everyone mocked becomes the world's first female trillionaire. When her bankrupt ex-husband kneels before her, willing to lick her dirt just to have her back, she smiles from her bathtub filled with money and says, "Ex-husband, I'm going to marry the second richest man in the world."

7.8
Alexis signed the divorce papers, leaving her with no assets, no alimony, and just the clothes on her back.
To forget her abusive husband Carlos, she got drunk and bought a high-end gigolo for the night with her last 800 dollars.
But the man she slept with wasn't an escort. He was Jarrett Hughes, a ruthless billionaire CEO.
And while she was gone, her ex-husband was busy destroying her entire life.
Carlos framed her with fake photos of her cheating to justify the penniless divorce.
Then came the real nightmare.
Carlos and her own aunt secretly drained her family's corporate accounts, driving her father to jump off a building.
At the hospital, her grieving mother blamed her for the tragedy, violently attacking her in the ER.
To top it off, her cousin Josie—who was secretly sleeping with Carlos—held her father's ashes hostage.
"Crawl on your knees and pick it up, or the ashes go in the river," Josie sneered, throwing cash into the freezing slush.
Stripped of her marriage, her father, and her dignity, Alexis sat bleeding in the snow.
She couldn't understand why the people she loved most had coordinated such a brutal slaughter against her.
But Carlos and Josie made one fatal mistake.
They didn't know the "gigolo" Alexis had accidentally bought was the most powerful man in New York.
Alexis looked at the towering billionaire standing behind her, a vengeful fire burning in her eyes.
"I need you to get my father's ashes back," she said, pulling him into a kiss right in front of her ex-husband. "I don't care what it takes."

8.4
Aiden Armstrong, CEO of skylight group and boss of the Dark Flood mafia, has a dark fetish for virgins-an obsession that leads him to Avery Kingston.
He was in need of a wife in order to get control of his grandfather's legacy. The Kingston's offered him a proposal, one where both sides benefits. He gets a wife to keep his inheritance and a virgin who was just his type in exchange for a huge sum to aid the Kingston's escape bankruptcy.
Avery, forced into marriage with Aiden, an unknown dangerous looking handsome fellow by her family, soon discovers the journal of her husband's fetish and catches him cheating. She becomes a different and better version of herself vowing to get back at all who had wronged her.
As she builds herself and takes revenge, she finds more secrets about her family, her mom's death and Aiden's past.
Amidst disappointments, plots for revenge and abduction of Avery, Aiden discovers he had fallen in love with her but is it seemed to be a little too late until they were both placed in a situation that was to end both their lives but turned out to be a moment for truth, reconciliation, love and fresh start.

8.1
I took the fall for my sister and endured three years of torment in prison. My knee was shattered, my body covered in scars, and I almost lost my life in that "accident". On the day I was released, clinging to the last shred of hope, I ran toward my fiancé Ford’s Maybach—only to hear his cold voice: "Your existence is just a nuisance."
It turned out that the beatings and cigarette burns in prison were all arranged by him, paid for with his money. It turned out that the sister I had protected with all my heart had long been switching my medicine behind my back, hoping I would be completely crippled.
At the family gala, they joined hands to strip me bare in front of the flashing camera lights. My father slapped me hard across the face and roared: "Why didn’t you just die in prison?"
I smiled and tore apart my tattered dress, then dialed the number I had hidden in my heart for three years—the man who only understood blood for blood, his voice hoarse and alluring: "Turn around."
This time, I will no longer be a toy to be manipulated. I will tear off their masks and burn the Willis family to the ground.
By the way, I will take back everything that belongs to me—including him, the one hiding in the shadows.

9.0
The Wellington beef sat cold on the mahogany table, a graying monument to three years of wasted devotion. It was my birthday and our anniversary, but my husband, Hamilton McKee, didn't even look at the gift I’d spent months knitting.
"Our marriage is a transaction," he said, his voice cutting like a scalpel. "Stop trying to make it a romance novel. I just need you to stop existing in my space for five minutes."
Then his phone buzzed with a call from Cuba, the ex-girlfriend he never truly left. His cold mask shattered into frantic concern, a look he had never once given me. "I'm coming," he whispered to her, sprinting for the door without a backward glance at the wife he was leaving behind.
I chased him into the freezing Boston night, only to be swarmed by predatory paparazzi. As Hamilton’s Maybach roared away, a heavy camera bag slammed into my shoulder. I slipped on the black ice, my skull hitting a granite gate pillar with a sickening crack.
Warm blood trickled down my neck, and as the world tilted, the fog in my brain finally cleared. I wasn't the penniless orphan from Southie he thought I was. Images of sterile operating rooms, complex sutures, and a billion-dollar inheritance flooded back—along with the memory of the car wreck three years ago where I was the one who pulled Hamilton from the flames, not Cuba.
How could I have spent three years begging for scraps of affection from a man who didn't even recognize his own savior? Why did I let a fraud steal my life while I played the role of a submissive shadow?
When I woke up in the hospital, the trembling girl was gone. I ripped the IV from my arm and stared at the man who had come back only to demand I stay out of his way. I didn't cry. I didn't beg. I simply handed him a piece of paper with one word written in the sharp, confident script of a woman who owned half the city: DIVORCE.
"Sign it, Hamilton," I said, my voice like ice. "Because by tomorrow, I’m not just leaving you—I’m taking the McKee empire with me."

7.8
On the day my parents' ashes were being returned from overseas, I waited for my husband of five years, Domenic, to go to the military base with me. He was the only family I had left.
He never showed. His assistant called with an "emergency"-his mistress's mother had twisted her ankle.
This was the same man who had given my mother's ruby necklace to that woman, calling it "outdated trash." The same man who, when I brought my parents' urns home, sided with his mother when she called them "disgusting" and ordered the maids to throw them in the basement.
"Take that box and get out," he told me. "Do not come back until you are ready to apologize to my mother."
He didn't care that the box held the remains of two national heroes. He didn't care that I was their daughter. I finally understood he never saw me as his wife; he saw me as a stray he'd picked up, a pet he could discard.
But he made a fatal mistake. The "penniless orphan" he married was a decorated Delta Force veteran and the secret architect of his entire ten-billion-dollar company.
He thought he was throwing away a problem. He was about to find out he had just declared war on the woman who held his entire empire in the palm of her hand.











