Rhys looped his arm through mine and led me to the steps. A deep growl jerked my gaze up from where I was watching my feet. I was kind of clumsy and I didn't want to face-plant in front of my future Husband.
Alpha Cross watched me with glittering eyes. My pulse thrummed in my throat as I met his golden gaze evenly. He glared at where Rhys held my arm. "You forget yourself, Beta." His voice sent a shiver down my spine. It was dark, husky, and held an edge of danger. Rhys dropped my arm, hastily stepping away from me. "Sorry boss. I didn't mean to offend." He threw his hands up and backed away. "I'll just go park the car." He shot me a wink as he turned away. I felt bad for being such a brat to him. He had tried to make me comfortable. Poor guy. It wasn't his fault I was selected for the Bride program. "Madison…" I turned my eyes back to the Alpha. "I've waited so long for you." I stood at the bottom step, my hands clenched together in front of me to keep them from shaking. I wanted to run. To be anywhere but here. I wanted my mom. Tears burnt the back of my eyes, but I refused to cry. I wouldn't be weak in front of this wolf. I couldn't. Weakness would only make me a target in the eyes of the pack. I stared into his eyes, refusing to blink. It was an open challenge. I knew enough of the Weres to know you didn't meet the gaze of the Alpha. But, honestly, he could get bent. Even if he was beautiful, forcing someone to marry you was a prick maneuver. His growl sounded again, but this time it was darker. "You smell amazing." He ground out the words like he was in pain. A muscle ticked in his jaw. I shrugged. "I bathe regularly. I would hope I smell okay." I still held his gaze. I'm sure he was hoping I'd bow to his will. No such luck asshole. I'm here because I have to be. He better not have wanted a docile Bride. I had too much bitter resentment in me to be anything but rebellious. He slunk down the steps. He was lethally graceful, a predator stalking their prey. Something tickled my nose and I inhaled automatically. Woodsmoke and cinnamon buns sounds like an odd combination. But it was amazing. Crap, he smelled like home. Like my parents' house on a cold Sunday morning. I swayed toward him, drawn in by that scent. I wanted to bury my nose in his neck and just breathe him in. Was this normal? Was my husband supposed to smell so freaking good? I wished more was known about the Brides after they left their homes. Was I being enchanted somehow?He stopped in front of me and I was forced to crane my head back so I could still meet his gaze. He was so flipping tall! I felt dwarfed. It was wholly unnecessary to be so broad, so tall, so beautiful and be my captor. It was official. I hated him. Even if he did smell like heaven. "Welcome to Wild Hearth pack, Madison.""Wild Hearth?" My voice was too breathy. Shitballs. "Yes, we take our name seriously. Hearth and home. Kith and kin. We are all one." He leaned into me, his nostrils flaring. "Welcome home.""Home?" I blinked sluggishly. My brain was fried by his golden eyes and bronze skin. He was overwhelming in the best way possible, and my panties were damp from more than the lube Doctor Smith used on me that morning. The thought of Doctor Smith coated me in ice. I let myself forget, for a moment, why I was here. I took a step back, putting space in between us. I couldn't think with him looming over me like the world's sexiest skyscraper. "This isn't my home." I injected as much venom into my voice as I could. "My home was in my house, with my parents. Both of which I haven't seen in over two years.""Two years?" He blinked in confusion, his gaze turning stony. "Why haven't you been with your family?" "Because of the Bride protocols!" I flung a hand out, gesturing to him. "Because of you! Brides must cut all ties with their loved ones to better integrate into the world of their Husbands." He shoved his hands into the pockets of his tailored pants. The person that constructed them knew what they were doing. He had to be a headache to clothe properly. All bulging muscles and sharp angles. Focus Maddie. "I didn't ask for you to be separated from your family. Family and pack is everything to the Wolves." "You didn't have to. It's written into the bylaws of the Accords. My life before was forfeit once I qualified for the Bride program." My voice raised with every word until I was shouting. All the anger and frustration I had packed away and tamped down for the last two years reared its ugly head. I stalked forward, roughly poking him in the chest. "You Supes just had to save the freaking world, and destroy mine with your ridiculous demands!" He let me poke him, his gaze wounded. "Then I shall have you escorted to your rooms. I'll take my leave." He backed away from me, turning. His posture was hunched, and his body vibrated dangerously. His clothes exploded from his body, the perfectly tailored suit raining to the ground in tatters. A huge, shaggy wolf loped off across the grounds. For a moment, it turned its eyes back to me. I was struck by the sadness in its gaze. My heart twisted painfully in my chest as it disappeared into the surrounding woods. "You're kind of a bitch, you know that?" Someone chuckled behind me and I whirled. Beta Rhys stood behind me, an unreadable look on his face. His lips hiked up in a sardonic smile. "I'm not going to lie, it's a little hot." "Should you be speaking of your Alpha's Bride that way?" I glared at him. "You have so much to learn of the pack lifestyle, Madison Timms." He shrugged easily. "Let's get you settled. I don't think you'll be seeing the Alpha again today."My breathing was labored as I trudged up the third flight of stairs. Why the hell were my rooms so far from the ground?! Didn't they know this was a fire hazard? Was there even a fire escape? Couldn't they have an elevator? No, probably not. It would interfere with the classic beauty of the old wood, I bet. Rhys led me into a dark hallway. It was too dark really. Gave off a murdery vibe. Would it kill them to turn on some lights? "Your rooms are here, next to the Alpha's." Rhys opened a large door. "There's a bathroom through there." He pointed at another set of doors. The room was humongous. White-washed wood walls and floor-to-ceiling windows made the space so bright.There was a bed near the windows. It was monstrous. It could easily fit several people. It was mounded with an obscene amount of pillows. There was a small sitting area with comfortable looking sofas arranged around a cozy fireplace. I scooted through the room to look at the facilities. "Are you freaking joking?!"
I was bored. Heinously, utterly, completely bored. I threw my phone down on the couch next to me in disgust. There were only so many mobile games I could play before I went nuts. Moonlight filtered in through the large windows and I turned to them curiously. Other than watching the Alpha turn the day I arrived, I'd never seen any one else in their wolf forms. I knew what they said about curiosity. I knew it was a stupid idea, even as I plastered my face to the window. The lawn below me was silvered under the moonlight. There were dozens of wolves on the lawn in a variety of grays. Some tussled playfully, some ran in excitement, and even more just lazed around in groups. They didn't look mad to me. And I was bored. To death. That's why I found myself creeping out of my room. I edged along the dark hallway. I wanted to see the wolves up close. They looked so fluffy. Was it considered rude to pet them in their animal form? I tiptoed down the stairs. No one would be inside right now,
"Do something!" Someone roared next to me and I struggled to open my eyes. I managed to get them cracked. Bright light split my head wide open. Nope. I let my eyes flutter closed again. "Xander, calm down!" Rhys was here too. Someone moved my arm and a scream ripped itself from my throat. "It's okay." A soft feminine voice this time. "The muscles are torn but it will heal. The fever will take her soon though, so if you want to say something, now is the time." Fever? What fever? "We'll leave you alone with her Xander." Rhys' voice moved further away. Soft, cool fingers brushed hair from my forehead. His hands were more calloused than I expected. The pads of his fingertips scratched at my skin. "This isn't what I wanted, Madison. Why didn't you stay put?" His voice wrapped around me, anguish making him hoarse. We barely knew each other. Why did he feel so much for me? We only had two whole conversations in the last week. I wanted to snap at him, but his hands were blessedly cool a
"Oh, you're awake!" Someone jerked at the drapes around the bed roughly. Was I though? With a talking wolf in my head, the sense that I forgot something very important while I was dreaming, and the bright light of the room beyond the drapes…felt like I was still asleep. Rhys popped his head in the crack he had made in the curtains, cocking his head to the side. His nose wrinkled. "You need a bath, beautiful." "And you need better manners," I muttered. I flushed under his curious scrutiny. "What? Do I have snot on my face?" His lips hiked up in a half smile. "No. I can hear your wolf. It's kind of entertaining. Mostly child Weres haven't fully integrated with their wolves, so to have an adult wolf keeping a running commentary at the same time you're talking is hilarious." 'Shut the hell up Eclipse. You're making us a laughingstock.' 'He looks lickable. Can we lick him?' A wave of lust hit me so hard that I gasped. Rhys was attractive. But he was not my Husband. Now that I was par
I slid out of my room. I was tired of cutting myself off from my new family. Just because Xander was a jerk and only wanted me to pop out pups, didn't mean the rest of the pack would be so dismissive. If Rhys was any indication, then I might even be more welcomed at the pack house than I was in the human clan. I hadn't given anyone a fair shot, spending the last week in my rooms. Had it only been a week? It felt like a lifetime ago when I had been congratulating my best friend for getting into Brighthaven. I skulked down the stairs. The smell of bacon wafted up and my stomach growled. How long had it been since I had eaten? How long had I actually been gone with the fever? "I heard humans are prudes." The voice cut through the general din and I paused on the steps. "Do you think she's strong enough?" "She's a waifish little mite. I dunno that the Alpha won't break her in half." Someone answered, ton
I slammed out of the dining room, my thoughts a tangle of distrust and anger. If I was only to be returned to my genetic ancestors, then why hadn't anyone else in my family been chosen before? It didn't make sense. If I was not here to be a Bride, then what was I? What was the Bride program, really? I needed answers. I searched for the cinnamon and wood smoke scent. Xander owed me an explanation. Immediately. I couldn't smell him. What the actual hell? Did he just cease to exist?I barreled through the front door, flying down the steps of the porch and into the yard. There were people on the lawn doing drills. Wrestling and fighting. I saw him, not Xander but Rhys, leaning against a low wall. His eyes widened as I snatched his arm on my way by, dragging him along with me. I could hear the whispers following us, but I didn't care. Rhys was my first real acquaintance here and I needed the truth. I
When every girl dreams of their first time, it's romantic. Roses, dinner, a bed of flower petals. Slow and gentle lovemaking. Xander slid his hand down my side, his lips setting me on fire. We were still in the middle of the woods. Rhys was still prostrate on the ground in front of us. But I didn't care. I sighed against Xander's mouth as my body reacted on instinct. I softened against him, yielding to my Alpha mate. He nipped his way from my lips to my injured shoulder. The healed wound that made me one of them. Were.His hand slid under the hem of my shirt, his palm hot against the cool skin of my side. I shivered. "You deserve more than this right now." His words were whispered hoarsely against the fabric of my shirt. "But I need to claim you." Rhys groaned, and ice coated me. "You have to let him go." "He needs to know you are claimed. You are mine." I pushed at
Maybe I was the prick. My legs ached as I stumbled further into the forest. I'd been hiking for nearly an hour. No one had come to collect me, so I must still be on Wild Hearth land. I mean, I did tell Xander to claim me and then back out and flounce away like some romance novel heroine. Was I the prick? With all my bluster about not being forced, hadn't I forced his hand? Dangled what he most wanted and then jerked it away? Why did I have to be difficult? Why couldn't I just accept my place? Because it meant accepting I was only a womb. Not a person. I couldn't do that. Not and still be me. I missed my parents. Two years without seeing my mom's laughing face and my dad's smiling eyes. Did they still dance in the kitchen? Did they still spend every Sunday morning lazing in the family room, playing games and talking about the week? Now that I was claimed by my Husband, could I contact them? Why didn't Brides go home? Why mus
"What?!" I gripped my coffee cup tighter in my fingers. Etna swatted the back of my head. "Quit moving or I'll never get this mass of hair done in time." "Mabon escaped. No one has been able to find Heather. Robin and that Beta of his took off after him before the trail went cold." Lilith leaned back in her chair. My mother sat next to her, her eyes shining suspiciously. "I can't believe my baby is getting married." I blushed. I couldn't believe it either. For nearly four years, I had been a Moon Bride. So much had happened. I got my parents back from an evil Vampyr queen. I lost my new best friend to a stolen heart. I became a werewolf, found not one but two mates, had a daughter, and killed an evil fae queen. Apparently my parents had been at the Battle of Godmother's Justice as the Unseelie were calling it. They had been using my father's little scraps of magic to transport the legions of imps from Daemon territory directly into the Unseelie Palace. Apparently Maeve had atta
I floated on a sea of blackness. If this was death, sign me up! It was the most relaxed I'd been in, well, years I suppose. The world around me shifted. It was a subtle shift. I slowly became more aware of my surroundings. Silver topped sand dunes glowed in the distance. I was sitting on a rug in the middle of a desert. The moon hung low in the sky, big and bright and shining. I wasn't sure how I had gotten here, but I wasn't panicked. A sense of peace and rightness washed over me. "Welcome back to Zolon, Madison Timms." I glanced up lazily. The woman in front of me was silver layered on even more silver. Her silvery white hair hung in waves, mingling with her silver gossamer dress. Her skin was so pale that it was a translucent porcelain, and her eyes a silvery gray rimmed in darkness. She was beauty and grace personified. I'm sure if the lethargy that weighted my limbs was gone, I might've jumped to my feet to show my respect. But I couldn't really pull myself together enough t
The howl was loud enough to echo off the high ceilings. It came directly from the wolf pacing angrily in the back of my mind. Had I lost track of time? Was it so close to the full moon? 'We should rip them apart, human. They have our pup!' Eclipse growled angrily in the dark corner of my mind she typically went to. After she had faded away, only the three days of the full moon allowed her to talk to me. This needed to be dealt with immediately. I couldn't wolf out as a prisoner! I might hurt someone that didn't deserve it.I jerked back to myself, trying to ignore the slavering wolf in my head. Eclipse was ready to spill blood. The howl seemed to echo on, which should have been impossible, when I realized that it wasn't my howl. The echo from that had faded. I blinked, glancing at Robin sharply. He shook his head and spread his hands. I turned, my jaw dropping as I glimpsed Linnea. My daughter was stiff in the arms of her guard, back bowed, mouth opened wide as her howl split what
Ella finished her tidying and bustled out. It was a power move. A flex, really. Letting me see that my friend, while tired and underfed, was alive. Would we get a chance to see Heather?My hair was in my face, the dark strands sticking to my wet cheeks. I lifted my hand, my fingertips pressing into the flesh under my eyes. I was crying. I didn't even realize it. I must be hormonal. Thankfully, when a wolf was mated, the heat was only in the vicinity of her mates. Not saying I didn't feel the press of it, but it wasn't overwhelming. I needed to get my hair out of my face. Having it cling to me itched at me, it was overwhelming. Thankfully, I had slid my special chopsticks into my sleeve rather than leave them in my case. I tugged them out, swirling my hair on top of my head and jabbing the sticks in savagely. "What are those?" I smirked at Robin. He wouldn't have been aware, but I had Little John assist me with a side project at his pack house. "My game plan." "What do you mean
Robin whistled under his breath as he unfolded himself from his tiny sports car. Little John looked like he was crawling out of a clown car as he slid from the passenger side. It was enough to make me giggle. "If I had known we would be rubbing elbows with real royalty, I would've dressed up.""I guess the Prince part of Aeryck's name escaped you." I crossed my arms and leaned back into Rhys' heat. I expected our morning after repairing our mate bond to be awkward. But it wasn't. My guys had woken me with gentle kisses and lovemaking. Promises of autonomy and professions of love. I was so here for it. A day and a half later, we were now standing outside Aeryck's palace. "It didn't escape me, Godmother, I just didn't care to remember." Boy, Heather was going to have to take this prick to task. Too self-assured. He needed to be knocked down a peg. "Thank the Goddess you've arrived." I glanced as Aeryck shuffled down the stairs, nonplussed. Usually, Royals greeted their guests in t
My body burned as two sets of eyes drank me in. They had given me their oaths. They swore to allow me my own choices. To let me live my life as I chose. My thighs clenched as heat flooded through me. I wanted–no, needed—them. Both of them.My shoulder twinged as I reached up for Xander. The pain cleared my head enough to make me aware of the pressing need that flooded my body. Heat. I was in heat. Dammit. I sure as hell wasn't about to stop this. I wasn't sure I could even if I truly wanted to. But I had been so long without the touch of my mates. I needed to heal our bond. To undo the rejection. Xander groaned, leaning into me. His lips whispered across mine, leaving a trail of fire. The kisses turned insistent, and Rhys let out a soft sigh at my feet. I reached out a hand to him, and he clasped my fingers. I needed them both. "I can smell you." Rhys ground out, before heat washed across my lower belly. I peered around Xander to see Rhys' face buried against my pelvis, breathing
"So, if I'm a true mate to someone this Mabon has enchanted, then why would he send someone after you, and not me? Kill me, and there's no more threat to his enchantment." Robin leaned back in his chair, turning his mismatched eyes on us. We were called in for an audience with the Sure Wood Alpha when I had been patched up. My shoulder throbbed in time with my heartbeat, and I was exhausted. I had lost a good amount of blood, and silver wounds took time to heal up properly. "Because I made an enemy of him three years ago, when I alerted the Seelie King to the betrayal happening right under his nose, and to his then fiancee." I shrugged, wincing as the wound tugged. That was going to be different. I hadn't healed human slow in so long I forgot what it was like. "And you are one of these Fae Godmothers?" Robin gave me a sardonic smile. I understood the sarcastic confusion. Having the Accords thrust on you, finding out the law that governed our world was living, wild magic…that could
There are very few things in my world that are deadly to Supes, aside from other Supes. Mostly they just keep on living their best lives while the human population dies of a great many things. But for Weres, it was silver. Apparently the DNA structure included a very real, very deadly allergy to silver. Which is why the knife currently protruding out of my shoulder was a touch worrisome. 'Don't pull it out, Maddie.' I heard my father's voice as I slumped against the doorframe. It was from one of the many lessons we had in the yard of the farm. Honestly, I was so naive. How had I not known they were soldiers? Pulling out a blade or any object that has embedded itself in the body would apparently damage you even more. Not like I was going to get a chance to really find out. Pretty sure the silver intolerance would take me out first. Blood seeped down my shoulder and dripped from my fingertips onto the clean floor. Whoever mopped was going to be a tad upset. My mind skipped around an
I heard the growls before I smelled them. Shitballs. We didn't need an incident right this second. My eyes were locked on Little John's, and he seemed just as loath to look away. The growls grew louder, and then I heard my mates burst through the clearing at my back. Well, half-rejected mates. Jeez, this was too complicated. A head rested on my shoulder, and I sighed. "Friends of yours, lass?" "Unfortunately." I shook off the furry head, turning to glare at Xander and Rhys. They were in their wolf form, shaggy and magnificent. Which kept complicating things because my heart ached for them, so I could be complete. But they really pissed me off sometimes. But we needed to find Heather and break the curse on her, so Robin was our best bet. Which meant playing nice with the Sure Wood pack. My belly fluttered. John was a tall drink of water, that was for sure. I was doomed if we hung out here any longer. "We are here to see your Alpha. On official Godmother business." "Ooh, fancy