"Take it. Consider it a parting gift for twenty years of free meals."
The leather pouch hit the floor at Madison’s feet, the dull clink of silver coins echoing off the marble walls of the foyer. Alpha Gregory Cain didn't look up from his desk. He didn't even look like the man who had tucked her into bed for two decades. He looked like a stranger checking a ledger.
"That's it?" Madison's voice was a dry rasp. She didn't reach for the money. "A DNA test comes back, and I’m just... trash to be hauled to the curb?"
Gregory finally looked at her, his eyes cold and devoid of the warmth she’d lived for. "You’re a cuckoo in the nest, Madison. You’ve occupied a seat that belongs to my flesh and blood. Victoria is home now. We don't owe a fake a single scrap of Cain bread."
Madison gripped the strap of her canvas bag. It weighed next to nothing. A few shirts, a worn book, and the heavy, suffocating realization that her life was a lie. She didn't cry. The heat in her chest burned too hot for tears to survive.
"Keep your pity, Gregory." She stepped over the pouch, the silver coins mocking her from the rug. "I’d hate for you to go broke paying for my 'free meals' in retrospect."
"Wait! You forgot your dignity!"
The voice dripped with honey and acid. Victoria Cain leaned against the grand staircase, twirling a strand of blonde hair. She wore a silk robe that cost more than everything Madison owned. Behind her, a shadow moved.
Austin.
Madison’s stomach dropped into a cold pit. Her fiancé—the man she’d scented and bonded with since they were teens—stepped into the light. He didn't look at Madison's face. He looked at Victoria’s waist, his hand sliding over the silk to rest on her hip.
"Austin?" Madison’s breath hitched.
"Don't," Austin snapped, his voice a jagged blade. "A Luna needs to be pure. Strong. You? You're a wolfless fraud with a scent so weak I can barely smell you over the trash outside. Victoria is the true daughter of the Alpha. She’s my match. You’re just... a mistake the pack is finally fixing."
Victoria giggled, a sharp, grating sound. She leaned back into Austin’s chest, her eyes locked on Madison. "He’s much better in bed when he isn't worrying about your 'fragile' feelings, Madi. God, the things he does when he isn't bored to death by a fake."
Madison’s vision blurred at the edges. The betrayal was a physical weight, a fist squeezing her lungs. She looked at Austin—the man who had promised her a kingdom—and saw a coward.
"You think she’s a prize?" Madison took a step forward, her shadow stretching long and jagged across the floor. "She’s a replacement. And you? You're a dog that follows whatever scent has the most power attached to it. Enjoy the leftovers, Austin. I’m sure you’ll suit each other perfectly."
"Get out," Gregory growled from the office. "Before I have the guards drag you to the border."
Madison turned her back on them. She didn't run. She walked, her boots thudding rhythmically against the floorboards she’d polished as a child. Every step away from the mansion felt like a layer of skin peeling off, raw and stinging, but beneath it, something else was stirring. A low hum in her marrow. A vibration she’d suppressed for years because it didn't fit the "weak" profile of a Cain daughter.
The iron gates of the Silver Moon territory loomed ahead. The air changed here—the smell of pine and damp earth replaced the stifling scent of expensive cologne and lies.
"Look at her!" Victoria’s voice carried on the wind as the family gathered on the porch to watch the exile. "Going to the slums where she belongs! Rot in the mud, you wolfless freak!"
Madison reached the tree line. The boundary line.
Crack.
The sound wasn't a branch breaking. It was her ribs.
She collapsed to her knees, her fingers digging into the wet soil. The pain was an explosion, white-hot and absolute. Her skin felt like it was being stitched from the inside out.
Finally.
A howl ripped from her throat—not the high-pitched yip of a Silver Moon omega, but a roar that shook the birds from the trees. Her clothes shredded, the fabric giving way to fur that didn't grow in patches, but shimmered like crushed diamonds.
The Cain family froze on the porch.
Madison didn't just shift; she expanded. Her frame grew, muscles weaving together with the strength of ancient steel. When she stood on four paws, she was massive—a beast of pure, blinding white. A Celestial Lycan. A creature of myth, thought to have been hunted to extinction centuries ago.
She turned her head, her eyes glowing with a lethal, silver light. She saw them—Gregory’s jaw hitting the floor, Victoria’s face turning a sickly shade of gray, Austin trembling so hard he had to grab the railing.
Her scent, no longer suppressed by the Cain's dull territory magic, exploded. It was ozone and ice, the smell of a winter storm that could level a city. It was the scent of royalty.
She didn't attack. They weren't worth the blood on her fur. She let out one final, bone-shaking growl that sent Austin stumbling backward into the dirt, then she turned and vanished into the treeline.
Five miles past the border, in a clearing where the dirt road met the highway, a rhythmic thwump-thwump-thwump disturbed the silence.
Madison shifted back, her human skin steaming in the cool air. She pulled a spare cloak from her bag, her movements calm, her heart beating with a steady, cold rhythm.
A massive black helicopter descended, its blades whipping the grass into a frenzy. It didn't have a logo. It didn't need one.
The side door slid open. A man in a suit that cost more than the Cain mansion stepped out. He didn't look at the mud on her feet or the scratches on her arms. He dropped to one knee, his head bowed low.
"Your Highness," the man said, his voice echoing over the roar of the engines. "The King of the North has been searching for you since the day you were taken. Your father is waiting."
Madison looked back toward the Silver Moon territory—a tiny, insignificant speck in the distance. She reached into her pocket, felt the heavy silver coins she'd snatched up at the last second, and threw them into the muck.
"Let's go," she said, stepping into the plush, leather interior of the craft. "I have a lot of lost time to make up for."
The helicopter rose, tilting its nose toward the frozen north, leaving the dirt and the Cains far below.
"Sit. Eat. You look like you’ve been chewing on gravel for twenty years."
Jonathan Clarke didn't look like a man who had spent two decades grieving. He looked like a mountain carved into a tuxedo. He shoved a plate of blood-rare steak toward Madison, the heavy ceramic clattering against the mahogany table.
Madison didn't sit. She stood in the center of the vaulted dining hall, the hem of her cheap, oil-stained jeans dragging against a rug that probably cost more than the Silver Moon packhouse. Her skin still buzzed from the shift, the phantom weight of the white wolf pressing against her ribs.
"You’re my father." It wasn't a question. The scent of him—ancient pine and old blood—matched the vibration in her marrow.
"I am," Jonathan said, his voice a low vibration that rattled the crystal glasses. "And that man you called Alpha for twenty years? Gregory Cain? He’s a worm who was paid to keep you invisible. The Great War didn’t leave room for princesses, Madison. I had to bury you in the mud so the vultures wouldn’t find you."
Catherine Clarke stepped from the shadows, her hand resting on Jonathan’s shoulder. She didn't offer a hug. She offered a glass of amber liquid that smelled like woodsmoke. "Drink. You’re home. The cover story is officially dead."
The doors to the hall burst open. Five men strode in, their footsteps a synchronized beat of heavy boots. They didn't look like the "starving brothers" the Cain family gossip had described.
"Which one is she?" the tallest one barked. He had a scar slicing through his left eyebrow and shoulders that blocked out the light.
"Silas, shut up," the youngest one muttered, pushing past him. He dropped a sleek, titanium briefcase onto the table. "Madi. I’m Leo. Here."
He flicked the latches. Inside wasn't money. It was a stack of legal documents and a hardware prototype. Madison’s breath hitched. She recognized the coding architecture.
"My patent," she whispered, touching the cool metal. "The Cain pack told me it was useless. They said I was a wolfless freak who couldn't even code a basic firewall."
"They lied because they’re terrified," Silas growled, leaning against the wall. He was a General in the Northern Lycan Army, and he looked like he’d personally strangled a dozen enemies before breakfast. "You’re a Celestial Lycan, Madison. And that patent? It’s the backbone of the global defense grid. It’s worth a billion. Minimum."
"A billion?" Madison laughed, a sharp, jagged sound. "Austin called me a charity case. He told me I was lucky he even looked at me."
"Austin Reynolds is a dead man walking," another brother, Elias, chimed in. He was flicking through a tablet, his eyes cold. "He thinks you’re in a slum right now. He thinks you’re huddled in a shack with five losers and a crippled dad. He actually sent a drone to scout the 'poverty' we’re supposed to be living in."
Jonathan let out a dark, guttural chuckle. He stood up, and for the first time, Madison saw the way he moved. The "disabled" warrior from the stories was gone. He moved with the predatory grace of a king.
"Let them think it," Jonathan said. "Let them believe you’re starving. It makes the fall much more satisfying when the floor turns out to be a trapdoor."
The brothers circled her, a wall of muscle and royal blood. They weren't just doting; they were arming her.
"The private jet is fueled," Leo said. "The patent is back in your name. All you have to do is master that white wolf of yours."
Madison felt the heat rising in her chest again. Not the shame Gregory Cain had tried to drown her in, but a cold, calculated hunger. She looked at her father, then at the patent she’d been told was garbage.
"Mastering the wolf is easy," Madison said, her eyes flashing silver. "I want to know how long it takes to buy a pack's territory out from under them."
"About forty-eight hours," Elias grinned.
"Good. I want their land. I want their dignity. I want them to realize they didn't just throw away a girl—they threw away the Queen of the North."
Madison walked toward the massive floor-to-ceiling windows, looking out over the mountain fortress. Below, the world was dark, but she could see everything. The training would be brutal. The revenge would be better.
She wasn't a beggar. She wasn't a fake.
"Get the jet ready," Madison snapped. "I have a pack to bankrupt."
"Who the hell do you think you are? You're blocking the light."
Victoria Cain didn't wait for an answer. She adjusted her diamond collar in the mirror of the gala’s powder room, her lips curled in a permanent sneer. On the main stage of the National Lycan Council, the announcement was already booming through the speakers. A breakthrough. A serum to stabilize shifting in weak-blooded wolves.
"The formula is mine, Victoria. You didn't even change the decimal points in the third line of the protein sequence."
Madison stood by the door. The silver silk of her gown clung to her hips like a second skin, the fabric cool against her legs. A black lace mask hid the fury etched into her face, but it couldn't hide the way her pulse thrummed against her throat.
"Yours?" Victoria spun around, her heels clicking sharply against the marble. She let out a jagged laugh, the kind that grated like sandpaper. "God, you’re delusional. You were a maid, Madison. A wolfless, pathetic charity case. I found those notes in the trash where they belonged. I just... polished them. The Council thinks I’m a prodigy. My father thinks I’m a god. What are you gonna do? Cry to the janitor?"
Victoria stepped closer, the scent of her cloying, expensive perfume hitting Madison like a physical blow. "Austin is out there right now, bragging about his brilliant future Luna. He doesn't even remember your name, sweetie. To him, you’re just a bad smell we finally aired out of the house."
"Stolen light doesn't just fade, Victoria. It burns the person holding it."
"Oh, shut up with the fortune cookie bullshit." Victoria shoved past her, her silk train snapping like a whip. "Watch the screens. Watch me become the most important woman in the country while you rot in whatever gutter you crawled into."
Madison didn't follow her immediately. She waited until the door swung shut. She reached into her clutch, pulling out a sleek, obsidian-colored phone. Her thumb hovered over a single icon.
"Execute the freeze," Madison whispered into the receiver. "Drain them dry."
Outside in the ballroom, the atmosphere was thick with the scent of power and champagne. Alpha Gregory Cain stood at the head of the table, his chest puffed out like a peacock. Austin was at his side, his hand possessively on Victoria’s waist.
"A new era for the Silver Moon!" Gregory bellowed, raising a golden flute. "Led by my daughter’s genius!"
The room erupted in applause, a sea of Alphas and high-ranking officials nodding in approval. But the noise died abruptly.
A high-pitched chime echoed from every tablet and phone in the hall. It was the Council’s emergency legal alert.
The main projector screen, which had been displaying Victoria’s chemical structures, suddenly flickered. The image of the serum formula was crossed out by a massive, blood-red stamp: PATENT INFRINGEMENT.
"What is this?" Gregory’s voice cracked, the glass in his hand trembling. "Victoria?"
"It’s... it must be a glitch," Victoria stammered, her face draining of color until she looked like a corpse. "Dad, I don’t—"
A man in a sharp gray suit stepped onto the stage, a tablet in his hand. "Alpha Cain. I am the Council’s Chief Auditor. We have just received a Cease and Desist from the legal team of 'Nova-Tech Industries.' It appears this serum was patented three years ago under the pseudonym 'The White Ghost.'"
A collective gasp rippled through the crowd. Austin’s hand dropped from Victoria’s waist as if she’d suddenly turned into a viper.
"Nova-Tech?" Gregory roared. "That’s a northern conglomerate! What do they have to do with my daughter’s work?"
"Everything, apparently," the Auditor said, his voice flat and clinical. "The metadata on the files you submitted matches the patented research exactly. As of thirty seconds ago, all Cain family assets—personal and pack-related—have been frozen pending a fraud investigation. You are also being fined ten million silver credits for the illegal use of proprietary intellectual property."
"Ten million?" Victoria shrieked. "We don't have that in liquid! Dad!"
Madison stepped out from the shadows of the velvet curtains, her mask still firmly in place. She watched from the edge of the room as the crowd turned on the Cains. The Alphas who had been bowing to Gregory moments ago were now whispering, their eyes cold and judgmental.
Gregory looked like he was having a stroke. He grabbed a chair for support, his knuckles white. "Who owns Nova-Tech? Who is this 'White Ghost'?"
Madison caught Austin’s eye. He looked lost, his gaze darting between the ruin of his future father-in-law and the mysterious woman in silver silk. He didn't recognize her. He didn't see the girl he had discarded.
Madison turned and walked toward the exit, the weight of her silver gown swinging rhythmically.
Behind her, the auditors were beginning to seize the Cain family’s jewelry. The humiliation was a living thing, a heavy pressure in the air.
Later that night, the adrenaline was a fire in her blood. She was back at the Clarke Estate, but she didn't go to her room. She went to the private gym in the basement where the air was thick with the smell of sweat and iron.
She wasn't alone.
Elias, her second-oldest brother, was there. He was shirtless, his back a map of scars and hard muscle, slamming a heavy bag with enough force to dent the wall. When he saw her, he stopped, his chest heaving.
"You look like you want to kill something," Elias said, wiping sweat from his forehead with a discarded shirt.
"I want more than that," Madison said, her voice low. She walked toward him, the mask gone, her eyes glowing with that unstable silver light. "I want to feel the power they tried to take from me."
Elias dropped the shirt. He didn't move as she approached. He was a mountain of a man, his presence grounding and heavy. "Then take it."
Madison didn't think. She lunged, her fingers digging into the hard planes of his shoulders. She didn't want a fight. She wanted the friction. The heat.
The air turned electric. Elias’s hands, calloused and massive, clamped onto her waist, lifting her until her feet dangled. He slammed her back against the cool stone wall of the gym, the impact knocking the breath from her lungs.
"Madi," he growled, his voice a warning and an invitation.
"Don't stop," she snapped, her teeth baring in a snarl.
He didn't. His mouth crashed against hers, tasting of salt and aggression. It wasn't a gentle kiss; it was a collision. His tongue forced its way past her teeth, reclaiming the space like a conqueror. Madison wrapped her legs around his thick waist, her heels digging into his lower back.
He ripped the silver silk of her gown, the fabric groaning before it gave way. His hands were everywhere—bruising her skin, mapping the curves the Cains had tried to hide. He hiked her up, his cock thick and rigid against the apex of her thighs.
"You're a Queen now," he hissed against her neck, his teeth grazing her pulse point. "Act like it."
He didn't wait for her to adjust. He unzipped his tactical trousers, his length springing free, dark and pulsing in the dim light. He guided himself to her, the tip of his cock slick with her own heat. With one brutal shove, he buried himself inside her.
Madison’s head snapped back, a guttural scream tearing from her throat. It was too much. He was too big, his weight pinning her against the wall, his cock filling every inch of her until she felt like she might break.
"Fuck," Elias groaned, his face buried in her hair. He began to move, his hips slamming into hers with a rhythmic, violent force.
The sound of flesh hitting flesh echoed in the hollow gym. Madison gripped his shoulders, her nails drawing blood from his traps. She felt the stretch, the stinging friction of his skin sliding against hers. Each thrust was a hammer blow, driving the ghost of Austin and the Cains out of her mind.
He changed positions, dropping her to her hands and knees against the leather weight bench. He stood behind her, his large hands gripping her hips so hard she knew there would be finger-shaped bruises by morning.
"Look at me," he commanded.
She looked over her shoulder, her hair a wild mess of white and blonde. He lunged back into her, going deep, his cock hitting her cervix. She buckled, her arms shaking as she tried to stay upright. He pounced again and again, his movement savage and unyielding.
"Mine," he grunted, the word a vibration she felt in her gut.
The heat peaked. Madison’s vision went white as her internal muscles clamped around him, pulsing in a frantic, desperate rhythm. She felt the hot splash of his cum filling her, a heavy warmth that seemed to anchor her to the earth. He let out a low, animalistic roar, his body shuddering as he emptied himself into her.
The silence that followed was heavy. Madison collapsed onto the bench, her limbs shaking, her skin stinging from the friction of the leather and his touch. Elias leaned over her, his sweat dripping onto her back, his literal weight pressing her down.
She felt the "hangover"—the dull ache in her hips, the lingering warmth between her legs, the sudden, crushing reality of what she had become.
The Cains were losing their money. But Madison was finding her teeth.