Raven Miller closed the main door after the last bar patron. The Moonshine Bar bustled with activity until now. She picked up the last chairs and stacked them on the tables.
Later, Raven said goodnight to Jake, the owner, and went to catch the bus. Jake locked the door behind her. At the bus stop, the death march played from her pocket.
The ringtone only played for one wolf. He never called with favorable news. Raven avoided seeing, Alpha Dominic Jones of the Humber Valley Pack. Three things set this alpha apart from the other alphas from Toronto. He’s a gambler, single, and he refused to search for his mate. No explanations, nor apologies.
Alpha Jones was everything Raven didn’t want in a mate, and she didn’t aspire to be the Luna. She knew they were mates, which complicated things.
Raven viewed her situation as an example of how twisted fate was.
Call her crazy for avoiding the pain and humiliation of his public rejection. Raven lived at the edge of the Pack’s territory, worked outside the Pack, and avoided all Pack functions.
Raven picked up the call. “Evening Alpha Jones. I’d say good evening, but you never call with favorable news. What’s my brother done this time? How much will it cost?”
Liam Miller Jr. was no better than the wolf his name came from. Both males were self-declared professional gamblers, and failures. Liam Sr. died during a recent attack. Liam Jr. promised he’d stop gambling. Raven knew this call meant he’d lied.
Alpha Jones’s rich baritone voice filtered through her phone. It sent shivers down her back, and she felt flushed in places. “Raven, where’s your brother?” His anger sounded cold, and it heated her own.
Raven knew she didn’t help their case when her voice grew husky. Her wolf wanted to play with Alpha Jones’. She hated how her wolf didn’t care he was a gambler. Or he ran numbers, betting, and loans to supernaturals as a business. Of course, it’s all against the law.
“I’m at work. He’s not answering my calls. So, I don’t know.” She knew he’d offended someone who’d complained to Alpha Jones.
“Your brother’s caused me a lot of trouble. Expensive trouble and not just money. This time money won’t solve this.” She shivered at his deep disapproving tones reverberated in her ear and through body.
“What do you want Alpha Jones? I don’t have much.”
“I don’t want money, Raven. He’s gone too far. As the head of your family, it’s your responsibility to make reparations for his crimes. Liam Miller went against my orders and sold you, Raven Miller, into slavery. It’s unacceptable. Liam Miller is a rogue wolf. I expect you to gather your belongings and present yourself to me in the Grand Hall before noon.” The formality of Alpha Jones’s words had her wincing as a bus passed by the stop without stopping. He recorded this conversation, and he made this official.
“Allow me to clarify, you and Liam gambled at the same table. He lost a lot of money. He couldn’t pay so he sold me, even though you told him no. How am l the criminal? I’m the victim. Aren’t you happy to be rid of me? I wouldn’t burden you.” Raven asked. She spoke the truth as she baited his temper. Raven knew her error by saying this. It hurt knowing the pack didn’t want her. She wanted him to know she was aware of how worthless she was to his Pack.
“Enough! The Grand Hall before noon. You’ll learn your fate then.”
“You’re a wolf who loves an interesting bet. I see you don’t want me. Let’s make this interesting.” She could hear his annoyed growl, but she pressed on. “I dare you, Alpha Jones. Catch me in twenty-four hours. If you don’t, I’ll volunteer to become a rogue. If you catch me, you can do as you like with me.”
“Oh, honey you don’t know what you’ve done. I’m coming for you. You’ll be my pet in every sense of the word. I’ve waited a long time for this.” Alpha Jones dropped their call. Raven looked at her phone, confused.
“What’ve I done? Did I poke a sleeping bear? Did I misinterpret something?” She didn’t want to read too much into his words. Dominic Jones called no one, honey. His wolf was in his voice. What did that mean?
Her fight-or-flight response kicked in. She couldn’t blame this on Liam. She’d screwed up. Raven avoided Alpha Jones, so he didn’t realize they were mates. Raven wanted to avoid the humiliation of a public rejection and banishment.
Her heart raced as she ran from the bus stop. She had to leave Toronto. She wasn’t safe. Unlike most cities, the Toronto Alphas weren’t enemies. Alpha Jones could reclaim her by asking any Alpha who harbored her. She had to leave.
Dominic ended the call. Annoyed and angry before the call, he could add, bemused, and confused by the end. What made Raven loyal to Liam? He’s a fool. Dom didn’t understand how Raven protected Liam from his mistakes. Dom feared losing his mate if he did as he wished by removing Liam from his Pack or killed him. That ended now. Dom saw his mistake. He’d fix it today. He’d banish Liam Miller, which was Dom’s right after the disrespect and disobedience Liam showed in front of Alpha Klyne of the Red River Pack. An Alpha who Dom had issues with. It involved the Pack’s investment properties outside the city.
What upset him were Raven’s words. Her words surprised him when she told he wanted her to leave. She’d leave if he didn’t find her in twenty-four hours. She’d bet him and become the object of a hunt. It had his blood singing and his fur tickling at his skin.
“Paul, I need you.” Dom called his Beta. Paul sat in the lounge, engrossed in a televised sporting event. “Alpha?” Paul Grouse said. He entered the study. “You need something?” “I need several Enforcers organized for a hunt. We’ve a wolf on the run, Raven Miller. She’s not to leave my territory. I want her brought to me unharmed.” Dom pulled up the file he had on the Millers. “She’s the sister of that idiot Miller, right?” “That’s right. He was at the poker game. Liam took losses, and then he offered his sister for forgiveness of his debt to Klyne. He didn’t ask if he could. She’s mine! He showed no respect. When I reminded him, she belonged to me, and I said I wouldn’t give her away. He scoffed. I thought he dropped it. Instead, he waited until I stepped out.” “You’re kidding. I’ll get the Enforcers.” Paul went into action, but Dom stopped him. “I’m not finished. When I returned, he’d signed the contract agreeing t
“Raven? Come out, you’re not in trouble. We’ve directions to not hurt you. All we’re to do is secure you. Come have a coffee.” Raven’s jaw hung open at this. The voice belonged to the Pack’s Beta. WTF? Her world turned upside down with this. She was sure Paul Grouse didn’t know her. Why would he? She’s an unranked wolf. “I’m not crazy. So, I’m sorry, I won’t leave this room. Tell Alpha Jones you couldn’t find me.” “No can do. He’s coming here. We’ll guard the door while we have coffee. If you reconsider you can join us.” Raven closed her eyes and shook her head. Had she fallen into an alternate universe? The Pack didn’t treat her like this. He must think she’s stupid. She heard his heavy footsteps walk away. Defeated, Raven slid to the floor, unsure how to escape this fate. Her life was messy, and her future was uncertain. “Liam, what have you gotten me into?” ~ ~ ~ The ca
Raven stayed in the back of the vehicle until they reached the Pack’s compound. Alpha Jones ignored her the entire trip. She wasn’t anyone special, which is why she questioned his actions. He’d always ignored her. Alpha Jones never mentioned mates, and she’d never mentioned it. Yet he dragged her back to the compound. Why? The dare? That made no sense. She had a feeling it had to do with her threat to leave. Did he want to keep her near, but not as his mate? He’d have said something. She had no value to him. The vehicle parked before the Pack house. Raven hadn’t visited the Pack house in years. It hadn’t changed. The enforcers exited the vehicle, leaving her locked in the back. She expected nothing less. The enforcer who drove went to release her several minutes later, as he’d received orders to store the vehicle. That’s when chaos reined, Alpha Jones yelled at the enforcer. His eyes glowed in the predawn light with anger. He stormed to the vehicle, causi
Raven left Alpha Jones’s living quarters as fast as she could. Her feet hurt, and she felt tired after having worked all evening. The run home didn’t help her aching feet. Sensible shoes didn’t matter. Raven descended three flights of stairs. After that, she’d the impossible mission of finding something he wouldn’t throw back at her. The place was still abuzz when Raven arrived on the main floor. She tried to move toward the kitchen when someone blocked her way. “What is going on? Who are you?” A she-wolf got in Raven’s face and demanded of her. “I’m no one special and when you figure out what’s going on, please tell me. Because I’m confused, now if you’ll excuse me but the Alpha wants me to deliver him his breakfast.” “Oh no, that’s not something you’ll do. It’ll be my pleasure to do it. It’s not right that some no name bitch does it.” “If you want to go against his specific orders. That’s your decision I won’t stop you.” That stopped the she
Raven went up the stairs and approached the argument everyone listened to. When she reached the third floor, she found Hilary cowering in the corridor outside of Alpha Jones’ living quarters. “You find her and make her get her ass up here. She’s the one who should bring me my breakfast, not you. I don’t want to see you, Hilary. Can’t you understand that? You failed the first time out. I won’t waste my time with you again.” Raven stopped, surprised at hearing him berate another she-wolf like this. She thought he’d singled her out. “Alpha Jones, is there a problem?” “Yes. Where’ve you been? Why’d you send Hilary here with this slop? “Alpha, I didn’t. Your chosen mate insisted on bringing up something your refined tastes would enjoy.” Raven used her truth to put the wolf in its place. Her instincts told her the few words Alpha Jones said that Hilary manipulated the events to blame Raven for her gaff. She wouldn’t stand for that.
“What would being angry get me? Alpha, I’m tired. I haven’t slept yet. Nor have I eaten. My feet are killing me and I’m dragging. Sorry if I cannot summon the energy to curse you and those in higher power. You can assure yourself, in my head I am.” Dominic watched Raven’s back as she set down the tray and glanced out the window. The window framed the sunrise to perfection, and it framed her dark hair and slim curves. He had to swallow to ensure he didn’t drool. “What are you talking about? Why would your feet hurt? Why would you drag yourself?” Dom didn’t remember what she did for a living. He knew she refused to work for him. “When you called, I’d left work after working a twelve-hour shift at a bar waitressing. I’ve been ferrying drinks from the bar to half-drunk shifters before hauling empty glasses to the kitchen. Between patrons yelling orders at me or trying to get handsy with my butt, I tried to contact Liam because I suspected something wasn
Dominic ensured Raven’s participation despite her dislike of his dominance game. He fed every bite to her and wouldn’t allow her to leave his lap. Dom found his nose veering to her throat to catch her scent better. He needed her to change, as the beer and smoke smell diverted attention from her sweet scent. It also had to be in her hair. That thick black hair. Knowing he crossed the lines of civility, Dom still felt entitled to his pet. “Before we nap you will get rid of these clothes and shower. I can smell the bar and patrons on you. I don’t like it.” Raven nodded but did nothing about it. “Oh, no, I meant you would do something about it now, Raven. Strip now and take a shower.” “Here. In front of you?” “Yes, here and now.” He released her from his hold. Now he wanted to know why she felt such reluctance to remove her clothes. Shifting made nudity acceptable, unlike for humans. She stood up and moved to
Raven didn’t want to strip. If they had sex, he’d know they were mates. Luckily, Alpha Jones hadn’t wanted to find her until now. She lucked out again when he had shown no interest in knowing her. Her name only padded his pack roster when a census happened, and it helped him keep his seat on the Toronto Council of Alphas. Here he was now, crowding her into the enormous shower, commanding her to stand exposed before him. Alpha Jones didn’t trust her. Nor did she trust him. He’d stripped her of more than her clothes and in a few hours, he’d make it known to everyone that he’d stripped her of her personhood, too. Then, she’d be no different from a dog or cat. The pack would have no use for. He’d controlled her every move, and she couldn’t say no to him. Or anyone he gave control of her to. So far, he’d insisted only he could touch her. But she’d heard stories of pets turned into sexual party favors by other Alphas. Used by the guests to pleasure themse
“Raven, I’ll say this right now. I’m looking to make a shift away from it and while some people will not like this I don’t care. But I won’t tell them why because I don’t want to put you in danger. If one of my enemies or rivals decides to use, you against me or use your abilities they may try to kidnap you. So, we’ll say nothing to anyone outside of our Pack and we’ll speak with those within the Pack that must know.” Dominic said. He tried to assure Raven about her safety and his sincerity. “Dominic we can’t tell anyone about what I can do. For one thing, no one would believe it. For another, you’re right they might try to use it. I never thought they might try to use me against you by kidnapping me.” Raven felt stunned at the thought that she was agreeing with him and accepting her. “So, what do we do now? You say I’m the important one, but I don’t feel like it, and I don’t know how to proceed. Or do I say, how we proceed with this.” Raven looked to Dominic a
“We couldn’t help Tom?” Kelly asked. She’d missed their arrival and Tom being bundled off to the healing center. “No, we couldn’t. Those arrows hit him when he was in this realm. We couldn’t do anything about the poison. Even in the Dream Realm the poison would kill him, and his mate must be a Dreamer to bring him back. Everything and everyone have limits no matter how powerful they are. Well, that’s what I’ve had to come to terms with.” Raven watched Brigid’s haunted face as she said this. The other dreamers were there with them now and they’d been discussing their abilities and learning about what they could do. Their situation within the Dream Realm and how much danger they were in. What dangers came from the realm and what came from the Fae. “I don’t know about anyone else, but I’m exhausted. There’s just too much to take in. I need time to take this all in.” Raven wanted to spend time with Dominic. She had so many questions for him. How had he
Their arrival didn’t go unnoticed for long. Which they were all thankful for. Brigid, though, was in a panic. She could do nothing in this realm to help save Tom. The arrows were poisoned. At the first mention of poison, the trickle of people became a flurry. Lily got word out to the closest healing center to expect him and arranged a mage portal to get him sent right there. In moments Tom and Luke were gone with two other wolves from their Pack. Raven watched as people moved about all weary of Brigid. They were unsure how to respond or interact with her. Did they worship her? Treat her as a ruler? Approach her as a friend or an enemy? What did they do? How did someone interact with a being they thought of as a god for thousands of years? Especially, when they’re standing directly in front of them looking rather bedraggled and lost. “Reality is never what the stories tell us. I wish it was. A goddess in one realm is a nobody in another realm. What c
Dominic’s mind was still scattered, but he could move, and he did. He knew who he was and who Raven was. What was different was more than he had time to think about as they made their way back to where they needed to go. They had found their objective, and he had to push his mate to get them out of there. The enemy was in there and they now swarmed over the land searching for the small female with them. If they found her, then they’d find Raven. Both were creatures who could twist the very air of this realm into whatever they wanted. Goddess, he’d been killed hours ago. He remembered the searing pain as the Fae tore into him with a magical wild-fire spell. Dominic remembered his body being torn apart and burned piece by piece. These sick creatures created a spell that could keep their victims alive until the last piece of them was consumed. Yet, the Fae creature hadn’t realized his mate was a Dreamer and there. Brigid walked Raven through recreating
“I still don’t know if I can do this.” Raven listened to Brigid’s words and instructions about how she was supposed to build a new body for Dominic. She claimed he’d be the same as he was before. If that’s what she wanted. Oh yes, she’d hinted at the fact that Raven could tweak things if something needed changing. But she’d warned her that it couldn’t be too big of a change. Raven didn’t know what Brigid meant by that. But she was still having problems believing she could do this. How could this be something she’d be able to do? If she didn’t Dominic would stay dead. If she didn’t try, he’d be dead when they returned to their reality. If she tried and failed, at least she could say she tried. If she succeeded, she’d have Dominic back. What did she have to lose? Other than hope. “You won’t know if you can do anything the first time you try to do anything until after you’ve tried to do it.” Brigid said. She was being humorous and smiled at her in a mo
Raven didn’t know how long or where she was. But she knew something was wrong long before her mind was fully functional. When she realized that she couldn’t find Dominic that Raven knew something was wrong. When Luke noticed Raven was awake, everyone moved to her side. “Hey, hey, Luna Jones, are you back with us? Okay, take it easy. Breathe. Breathe. Calm yourself. You’re okay. It’s not what you think. We need to talk, but we can’t if you get upset again.” “Where’s my mate? Where’s Dominic?” Raven sat up from where she lay on the ground in a strange place. “Where am I?” At least she recognized Luke and Tom, but she didn’t recognize the female. “Please Luna Jones, stay calm and relax. We need to explain this to you. There’s a limited time to change the outcome and we can’t stay here long. Please listen to this. It’s unbelievable but it’s a miracle. Just listen to her.” Tom begged Raven. She didn’t know what Tom was speaking about, but sh
Raven didn’t know what happened to Dominic or how to get him back. He and the guard he’d attacked were fighting in the cage on top of the column. “How do we get Dominic down from there?” There was no way she would leave without her mate. Tom and Luke turned on her. “Luna Jones, we understand our orders and your feelings. There’s nothing we can do. You and the lady here are our priority to get out of here.” “I’m going back in there to get him back. Our Pack needs him.” Raven found Tom holding her back with the help of the female. “No, you can’t. Only a living person can switch places with him. Also, the Keeper will return at any minute. He won’t let the guard, or your friend live long.” The soft voice of the female had Raven’s reacting violently to this. “We can’t leave him behind.” As we spoke in hushed tones the creature Raven assumed the female called the Keeper returned. Raven panicked and she had to get to Dominic now. So
One cage was left up on a high column with a lone occupant. Raven gasped when she saw the being move. “They’re alive up there Dominic. She’s up there. That’s her. I know it. I don’t know how, but they won’t let us use our abilities here. So, she can’t rescue herself. They’re practically tapping her of everything she has because they’ve used up or killed all the others.” “These were the others I assume.” “Yes, I think so. At least, most of them.” “Looks like someone was angry. How are we going to reach her? They shattered all the other columns.” Tom asked. He tried to work out a way to get to her, but like everyone there it was one of those monumental tasks. “We don’t have climbing equipment, and the column is solid stone. I don’t see any cracks or veins. It would take days or weeks to work our way up making footholds if we had the gear. That’s if anyone knew how to use it. I’ve only gone to a rock-climbing gym a few times.” “
Raven stepped away from the others without a word. The males debated what they found lying on the ground, but they found nothing long or strong enough to work as the tools they needed. Luke went through his pack searching for anything. “Need out strips want. Function and form are one. Take from the scrap and bring it value, beauty, use, and form.” Raven said half to herself. She muttered under her breath as she stared at her hands as if the debris in her hands was an object to study. Her hands moved over it. Pressing, pushing, and pulling at it as she tweaked the object. The object glowed with a faint light that pulsed with each movement of her hands. “This should work to pop the hinges out.” Raven returned to Dominic’s side, and in her hands lay a thick rod and a heavy mallet. She offered them to Tom who hesitated to take them. “Uh, thanks.” When he did take them, his features changed to show a look of surprise. He felt the weight of the mallet and