POV: Bella "No. I refuse to accept this."Sage’s voice rang out, sharp and filled with venom, cutting through the thick silence of the ceremony like a blade.My breath caught in my throat. My body turned rigid, my heart pounding painfully in my chest. No. No, this isn’t happening.I stared at him, my fated mate, my Alpha, my everything.And he was looking at me like I was nothing, a piece of trash."The Moon Goddess made a mistake," Sage continued coldly, his piercing green eyes locking onto mine with pure disgust. His powerful frame stood tall, imposing, his jaw tight with fury. "I reject you, Bella Blackthorn."The words landed like a physical blow. My knees nearly buckled, but I forced myself to stay upright.A low murmur spread through the crowd. Gasps. Whispers. Laughter.This isn’t real.I tried to breathe, but I felt a crushing weight of humiliation pressed down on me, choking me. The sting of rejection burned through my veins like wildfire.The pack elder had just announced
POV: Sage Liora moaned beneath me, her nails digging into my back as I drove into her with relentless force. "More," she gasped, arching into me. "Sage…." She called out but I silenced her with a rough kiss, my grip tightening on her hips, bruising her soft skin. I wasn’t making love to her. This wasn’t about connection or tenderness.It was about control, dominance, and possession.I grabbed her hair and pulled her up—enough to give me a good balance behind her. Her voice rose and I loved the sounds she made. But to prevent further wailings, I took a finger to her lips and made her suck on it. She was so good at it too. Her breasts, full and satisfying as I grabbed them. I squeezed and pressed while harassing the nipples with a free finger. It was pleasurable for her with the way she kept moaning, arching her entire body to meet mine. It was like I wasn't deep enough, so I plunged deeper. I could feel her succulent walls tighten, producing juices as I rocked in and out. My hand
POV: BellaThe wind howled through the streets of the small border town, rattling windows and sending icy rain pelting against the pavement. Thunder cracked overhead, a deep, rolling sound that vibrated through my chest as I locked the door to the clinic, pulling my coat tighter around myself."Need a ride?"I turned to see Lane, standing by his car, keys in hand. His blue eyes held quiet concern, his medical scrubs still damp from the long shift we had just finished.I forced a small smile. "I’ll be fine, Lane. It’s just a short walk."He frowned, glancing up at the storm raging above them. "You sure? It’s getting bad out here."I nodded. "I like the rain."It was a lie.I didn’t like the rain. It reminded her of the night I lost everything.Lane sighed but didn’t press further. He had learned long ago that I was a locked door, and no matter how many times he knocked, I never let him in."Alright," he said, tossing his keys in the air before catching them again. "But if you get struc
POV: BellaA deep rumbling growl filled the cabin, low and unnatural, vibrating against the very walls.My eyes snapped open, my heart slamming into my ribs.The fire had burned low, leaving the cabin bathed in flickering shadows, and the air had grown thick, charged with something unnatural. A strange energy pressed against my skin, making the fine hairs on my arms stand on end.I sat up abruptly, my breath coming in quick, shallow bursts. Then I heard it again, a deep, guttural snarl.My gaze flew to the wolf.It was shaking.Its massive form convulsed violently, its limbs twitching, its chest rising and falling in ragged gasps. The low whimpers it let out, sent a chill down my spine.Something was wrong.I threw off the blanket and rushed toward the wolf, dropping to my knees."Hey," I whispered, my fingers hovering over it burning-hot fur. "Stay with me, big guy."Its body trembled harder. Its paws clawed at the wooden floor, it fangs bared as another tortured sound left its throa
POV: BellaI pushed away the tightness in my chest, forcing myself to pace the length of the cabin, my bare feet pressing against the wooden floor.Every breath I took felt wrong.The man lying on my couch, wrapped in the blanket I had thrown at him, was the same man who had humiliated me in front of our entire pack.The same man who had made me believe I was nothing.And now, he was here—weak, vulnerable, completely at my mercy.It should have felt good.It should have felt like justice.But instead, all I felt was anger.Anger at him.Anger at myself.Anger at the damned mate bond that kept tying us together, no matter how much I wanted to rip it apart.I turned, my hands clenched into fists, and stormed toward the couch.Sage lay still, his face half-hidden by the shadows of the dim firelight.His body was exhausted, but not broken.The Alpha was still there, beneath the layers of weakness and fever, beneath the filth of his exile.I hated that I could still see it.The raw power,
POV: BellaThe door shut behind me with a slam that rattled the frame.I leaned into it, my chest heaving, palms splayed against the cold wood. My breath fogged the air. I could still smell him. His scent clung to the wall like smoke, damp earth and ash. Something I didn’t want to remember but I couldn’t forget.The almighty Sage Wyatt was in my house.Alive and human again. And I couldn’t stop shaking.I dragged myself to the bathroom and turned the faucet on full blast. Water thundered into the tub, louder than the pounding in my ears, louder than the war in my chest.I stripped off my clothes with jerky movements. My skin was on fire. Rage and Panic clouded my mind. Or was it that stupid, cursed pull between us?I stepped into the water and sank down, hoping it would cool the chaos inside me. It didn’t.My thoughts were a storm. Sage rejected me, he humiliated me and left me shattered.And now he was here, bleeding all over my floor, acting like he had the right to speak to me. To l
POV: SageI’d faced down a dozen rogues with nothing but my claws.I’d survived winters in the wild, nights without shelter, and the slow decay of my own mind.But standing in Bella’s too-small kitchen, trying to figure out how to use a damn toaster? That almost broke me.The buttons didn’t make sense. The machine hissed. And the bread looked like it had been sacrificed to the Moon Goddess herself by the time I gave up.I tossed the burnt toast in the trash and scrubbed a hand down my face.This was what I’d become, useless, cursed, and apparently incompetent in modern appliances.The worst part? It still smelled like her in here.Her shampoo lingered in the hallway. Her laughter-quiet, guarded-echoed in my memory. The same girl I’d rejected without blinking now held my life in her hands. Literally.And she hated me, she had every reason to.I’d seen it in her eyes last night, the same way I’d seen it on her face four years ago, the pain I’d put there. And yet, even now, with every bre
POV: BellaThe scent of vanilla latte and sugar-dusted donuts filled my hallway before I even opened the door.Only one person ever brought both as peace offerings.I opened the door and, sure enough, there was Laura, holding up a pastry box in one hand and my favorite coffee in the other.“I come bearing offerings,” she said, breezing inside like she owned the place. “And a million questions.”I closed the door behind her. “You could’ve warned me you were coming.”“I could’ve,” she said, settling onto my couch and kicking off her boots. “But then I’d miss the look of panic on your face.”I rolled my eyes and joined her, accepting the coffee. One sip, and my shoulders started to loosen.Laura gave me a once-over. “You look like hell.”“I feel like it.”“So,” she said, curling her legs under her. “Let’s talk about the giant wolf-shaped bomb you’ve been hiding.”I let out a breath. “How did you even know?”“I smelled him.”Of course she did. Laura had one of the strongest noses in our ge
Liam POVThe wind in Norway felt really good and homy.Every morning, I told myself I’d get used to it. The quietness, the open roads, the way people nodded politely and kept to themselves. But after nearly two months, I still couldn’t breathe right in this place.“Try to blend in,” Harper had said. “Stay off the radar.”“Hard to do when your instincts scream every time a branch cracks.” I always replied. I walked to the edge of the woods again. There was no particular reason. Just the usual scent check, energy scan, terrain memory. The soil here held no pack. No old blood. No buried bones. But the wind was wrong.It felt like someone was watching. I stopped at the base of a twisted pine and sniffed the air but there was nothing. Just frost and tree sap and sea fog.But I didn’t imagine it. I never imagined it.Bella was already home when I returned. She stood in the kitchen in her scrubs, sleeves pushed to her elbows, hair tied back. A soft glow followed her now. Subtle, but I could
Bella’s POV I went to bed quietly without thinking too much about the previous day. In a few hours, it was already dawn. The sky was still dark when I slipped out of the house.No creaking floors, no whispers of magic, no Liam lurking by the window with his arms crossed and jaw clenched. Just the sound of my boots crunching soft frost as I made my way down the gravel path toward the clinic.I didn’t want them to wake up. Not when something inside me had started to shift—slow, quiet, but impossible to ignore.I caught my reflection in a dark shop window on the way. Same face. Same eyes. But there was something in my posture, in the way I moved. Like I was walking toward something instead of running away from it.The clinic buzzed with chatter when I arrived. Coffee cups, paperwork, a few yawning nurses brushing off the last traces of sleep. I smiled, nodded, and kept my head down. As usual.“Bella,” Sofia, the charge nurse, waved me over. “Room five. Triage.”I tossed my bag into the
Bella’s POV“Don’t speak unless asked. Don’t stare. And for Moon’s sake, don’t howl.” Harper said to me with a stern voice. I didn't object to what she was saying because I was too disoriented to make any decision for myself. It all felt like I was on a borrowed life. Nothing that had happened since I left the pack made any sense. How I went from belonging to a pack and being no different from a rogue felt frustrating. Harper shoved a dark blue passport into my hand as we neared the airport gates. Her voice was steady, but her eyes flicked around like she expected someone to jump us before we hit the terminal. June handed Liam a small black backpack, zipped shut and stiff with forged documents.“Where did you even get these?” I asked, eyeing the name printed inside the booklet. Annabelle Moon. Born in Toronto. Age twenty-four. Blood type O negative.“Don’t worry about it,” Harper muttered. “A friend of a friend who owes me two favors and one broken kneecap.”I raised an eyebrow. “C
Bella’s POV The street lights flickered above us as Liam and I kept began walking, his words earlier still echoed in my head. Born twice. Chosen. The Seal of the Broken Moon. I didn’t know what scared me more—his belief in this prophecy or the part of me that didn’t entirely want to disbelieve him anymore.“We need to get out of this town,” Liam said again, glancing behind us like he expected someone to leap out of the shadows. “They’ll come back.”I stopped walking. “And what are you going to do? Just keep following me around like some cursed shadow?”He turned, his jaw was tight, his voice was low. “No. I’m going with you.” he responded. I blinked. “To do what, exactly?”“Protect you,” he said. “Like I should have earlier.”Something in his voice made it hard to argue. So I didn’t.We passed a 24-hour diner, the windows glowing soft yellow in the night. “I need food,” I muttered. “Something that isn’t gas station jerky or stolen crackers.”Liam nodded. “Quick. We don’t have long.”
Bella POVI woke up choking on smoke. My lungs felt clogged as I shot up from the floor, coughing and swiping at the air. The mattress I’d been sleeping on was torn to shreds, and the front window was shattered. Moonlight illuminated the room—right onto the three snarling wolves standing in the middle of the room. I didn’t think so. I shifted.Bones cracked and skin split, and the pain of the transformation barely registered. My wolf hit the ground running, claws scrabbled across the wood as I dodged a lunging gray brute with scars across his snout. One of them managed to land a slash along my side. Fire raced through my ribs. I howled, more in fury than pain, and leapt through the broken window.I ran as fast and hard as my legs could. Branches tore at my fur as I barreled through the trees. Behind me, paws thundered. They were following me. Of course they were.But I knew these woods now. I veered hard left, ducked under a fallen log, and doubled back. It threw them off just enoug
Harper’s POV The dream didn’t feel like a dream. It started like falling—only slower. The room around me disappeared. The sound of the wind outside the lake house faded into a strange, pulsing silence. I was no longer lying on the couch but standing in a forest I didn’t recognize, shadows weaving between the trees like smoke. The sky was a dull red, the kind of color that came right before disaster.Then I saw her.Bella.She was in wolf form, her fur slick with blood, eyes wide and wild. She stumbled, clearly injured, but kept running, limping through a thick underbrush. Something followed her—something fast, something not entirely solid. I couldn’t see it clearly, only the way the trees seemed to recoil when it passed. Then I heard a voice, older than anything I’d ever known.“The marked wolf cannot hide. The hunt has begun.”The image flashed, and Bella’s human face appeared—eyes pleading, lips trembling. She reached out, mouthing something I couldn’t hear—I jolted awake, gaspi
Bella’s POV “Say it,” I snapped. “You think I’m that wolf?”His silence was all the answer I needed.“You’ve been watching me like I’m a threat.”“No,” he said finally. “Like you’re a target.”I narrowed my eyes. “That supposed to make me feel better?”He stepped closer, and I instinctively took a step back.“I didn’t know for sure at first,” he said. “But the way you fought that rogue… the way you healed. Something’s different about you.”“You don’t know anything about me.”“I know your scent changed the moment you crossed into this town. I know there’s power humming under your skin that most wolves don’t carry. And I know others are looking for you.”My chest tightened. “Who?”He didn’t answer.I turned sharply. “We’re done here.”“You need to be careful,” he said. “If they find you first—”“I said we’re done.”I shifted before he could say another word, bones snapping, fur bursting through skin as I let the wolf take over. My wolf didn’t hesitate. She bolted through the trees, hea
Bella’s POV I jolted awake, heart racing, sweat slicked my back. The garage was still. My leg ached, but the bleeding had stopped. The dream clung to me, the whisper of my father’s voice echoed in my mind.I sat up slowly, pulling the thin blanket around my shoulders.And that’s when I heard it.Liam’s voice. Low. Steady. From just outside the door.He was on the phone.“She’s here,” he said. “I’m sure of it.”There was silence and then, softer: “No. She hasn’t said anything yet. But I’ll keep watching.”My heart dropped. He wasn’t just a café owner. And I wasn’t just a runaway anymore.I didn’t say a word about the call, nor did I flinch. I didn’t ask questions either.When Liam stepped back inside and saw me wide awake, I let my eyes drift shut again, pretending to sleep. He didn’t say anything. He just watched me for a moment before turning off the light and walking away.I laid there till morning, heart pounded so loud I was sure he’d hear it through the walls.But if he suspecte
Bella’s POV After walking for hours, I finally arrived at a small town. The town looked like something out of a painting—quiet, still, and wrapped in morning fog. I hadn’t even known its name when I arrived, only that it was off the main highway and surrounded by mountains thick with trees. The kind of place you could disappear in.Perfect.I used a name that wasn’t mine—Leah Ward. I lied that I was just passing through, maybe staying a few weeks. No one asked too many questions, not here. I could breathe again, kind of.I looked around and I spotted a cafe. The café was small and warm, tucked between a bookstore and an old barber shop. I saw the sign—Wolf Pine Café—and something in me stilled. I almost turned away, but my stomach growled louder than my instincts. I stepped inside.The bell above the door jingled.A man behind the counter glanced up. Dark hair. Slate-gray eyes. His jaw ticked when he saw me, like he was trying not to react too quickly. He looked me over, not in the w