Ember POV:
The Onyx Club was a pulsating headache of neon lights and bass that rattled your teeth. It was a place where high-ranking wolves came to indulge in their darker vices—gambling, fighting, and flesh.
I shouldn't be here. But an hour ago, my phone had buzzed.
Chace: I'm hurt. Silver burn. Come to Onyx. Now. Bring your kit.
Panic had overridden my anger. Silver burns were agonizing; they ate through flesh like acid and didn't heal. My instinct as a healer—and my stupid, lingering loyalty—had sent me running.
But when I pushed through the VIP doors, there was no blood. No smell of burnt flesh.
Chace was sitting on a velvet sofa, a drink in one hand, laughing. He was surrounded by his Beta friends and, of course, Karyn.
He wasn't hurt. He was partying.
"You made it!" Chace cheered, his speech slurred. He spotted the medical bag in my hand and laughed harder. "Look, guys! I told you she'd come running. Trained like a good little pet."
I stood frozen, the heavy bass thumping against my chest. "You lied."
"It was a test," Karyn purred from beside him. She was swirling a glass of dark purple liquid. "We're playing King's Game. And I'm the King."
She pointed a manicured nail at me. "I won the last round. My dare is for you."
The wolves around them snickered.
"Ember," Karyn commanded. "See that Rogue over there?" She pointed to a scarred, greasy wolf sitting alone in the corner. He was a hired thug, likely paid to be here for security. "Go let him bite your neck. Just a taste. Let's see if you can take a mark."
My stomach dropped. A mark was sacred. To let a stranger, a Rogue, bite my scent gland was a violation worse than rape in our culture.
"No," I whispered.
"Do it!" Karyn snapped.
I looked at Chace. "Chace, please. You can't let her do this."
Chace shrugged, his eyes glassy. "It's just a game, Ember. Don't be a spoil-sport. Besides, you need to learn your place. You're too proud for a servant."
He wasn't going to stop it. He wanted to see me broken.
"I choose the punishment," I said, my voice shaking but clear. In King's Game, you could refuse the dare if you took the punishment.
Karyn's eyes narrowed. She held up her glass. "Fine. Drink this."
It was the Wolfsbane wine. A full glass.
"That will kill her," a Beta friend muttered, looking uneasy. "That's 80 proof with pure extract."
"She has no wolf," Karyn spat. "It won't affect her like it does us. It'll just make her sleep."
That was a lie. Wolfsbane was poison to anyone with wolf blood, shifted or not.
Chace looked worried for a second. "Maybe just half a glass, Karyn?"
"Are you defending her?" Karyn challenged him.
Chace's jaw tightened. He looked at me, then back at Karyn. "No. Drink up, buttercup."
I looked at the purple liquid. It smelled like death and licorice.
If I drank this, it might kill me. But if I didn't, they would force me to the Rogue.
I grabbed the glass.
Keith, I thought, sending a desperate prayer through the dormant link. If I die, burn this place to the ground.
I tipped the glass back and swallowed.
Liquid fire slashed down my throat. It felt like swallowing razor blades. My stomach convulsed instantly.
I dropped the glass. It shattered on the floor.
"See?" Karyn laughed. "She's fine."
The world tilted. My vision swam. Grey spots danced in front of my eyes. I fell to my knees, gasping for air that wouldn't come.
But then, something strange happened.
Instead of stopping my heart, the poison hit the seal my mother had placed on me. The barrier that held back my White Wolf blood was already cracked from the heartbreak. The Wolfsbane acted like acid, dissolving the rest of it.
Thump-thump.
My heart didn't stop. It accelerated.
A heat, hotter than the poison, exploded from my core. It wasn't the heat of fever. It was the heat of a star being born.
I looked up through the haze. I saw Chace and Karyn dancing, ignoring my body on the floor.
Darkness took me, but in the silence of my mind, I heard a sound I had never heard before.
A growl.
And it was coming from inside me.
Ember POV:
I woke up to the smell of antiseptic and the beep of machines. The hospital.
My body felt strange. My skin was sensitive, every sheet feeling like sandpaper. My hearing was dialed up to eleven—I could hear the hum of the electricity in the walls and the heartbeat of the nurse down the hall.
The Wolfsbane hadn't killed me. It had changed me.
"She's awake."
I turned my head. Chace was sitting in the chair next to the bed. Karyn was standing by the window, looking at her phone.
"You're lucky," Chace said, his voice annoyed. "The doctors pumped your stomach. You embarrassed us, Ember. Passing out like that."
I tried to sit up. My muscles felt dense, powerful. "You told me to drink it."
"You should have stronger tolerance," Chace scoffed. He was feeding me spoonfuls of cold porridge, shoving it at my mouth. "Eat. You look like a skeleton. It reflects poorly on the Pack."
Karyn turned around, fake tears in her eyes. "Chace, my mother just called."
Chace dropped the spoon. "What is it, babe?"
"It's about... that woman. Liana Ford." Karyn pointed a trembling finger at me. "My mom found old records. Liana wasn't just a nobody. She was a homewrecker. She seduced my father years ago and tried to steal pack resources. She was a Rogue whore!"
Rage, pure and white-hot, flared in my chest. My mother was a saint. She was a high-born Ford who went into hiding to save me.
"That's a lie," I rasped.
"Don't you dare call my Luna a liar!" Chace snarled. He stood up, looming over me. "I knew your blood was tainted. Your mother was a Rogue slut, and you're just like her."
"I'm going to find where she's buried," Chace continued, his eyes manic. "I'll dig up her bones and throw them in the river. No traitor deserves a grave in our territory."
My hands clenched the bedsheets. The fabric tore with a loud rip.
They didn't notice.
"We have the Charity Auction tonight," Chace said, checking his watch. "The Alpha King, Keith Mosley, is rumored to be attending. We need to make a good impression."
He looked at me with disgust. "Get dressed. You're coming with us."
"Why?" I asked.
"Because we need an Omega to hold our coats and fetch our drinks," Karyn smirked. "And to show everyone how benevolent we are to the children of traitors."
The Alpha King. Keith.
He was coming.
A calm settled over me. It was the calm of the eye of the storm.
"Okay," I said softly. "I'll come."
Chace looked surprised by my obedience. "Good. At least you know your place."
They left the room to let me change.
I reached for my phone on the bedside table. My fingers were trembling, not from fear, but from adrenaline.
I opened the message app. There was only one saved number. It had appeared on my phone the moment I made the Blood Oath deal.
To: Keith Mosley
Message: They are taking me to the Auction tonight. Chace. Karyn. Everyone.
I waited. Three seconds later, the phone buzzed.
From: Keith Mosley
Message: I will be there. Wear red.
I stared at the screen. Red. The color of a Luna. The color of war.
I walked to the window and looked at my reflection. My eyes, usually a soft brown, had flecks of gold in them now.
I wasn't the girl who cooked soup and cried in the dark anymore.
I was the bride of the Alpha King. And tonight, Red Stone Pack was going to learn exactly what that meant.
Ember POV:
The boutique smelled of lavender and old money. It was the kind of place where the price tags were hidden because if you had to ask, you couldn't afford it.
Karyn lounged on a velvet sofa, sipping champagne provided by the nervous shop assistant. Chace stood by the window, scrolling on his phone, looking bored.
"That one," Karyn pointed a manicured finger at a rack in the back. "For the servant."
The assistant hesitated. "Miss? That is the... discount section. It is mostly uniforms."
"Exactly," Karyn smiled, showing too many teeth. "She needs something practical. Grey. Shapeless. She is there to hold my purse, not to attract attention."
The assistant handed me a dress. It was made of scratchy wool, the color of dirty dishwater. It looked like a sack.
"Go try it on," Chace commanded without looking up.
I took the dress, my hands shaking slightly. But as I walked toward the changing rooms, my eyes caught a flash of crimson.
It was a gown displayed on a mannequin in the center of the room. Deep red silk, cut to cling to every curve, with a neckline that was both elegant and daring. Red was the color of power. The color of a Luna.
My inner wolf, usually dormant, stirred. She wanted that dress. She wanted to be seen.
I didn't know what possessed me. Maybe it was the lingering adrenaline from the Wolfsbane. I grabbed the red dress off the mannequin.
"I'm trying this one," I said.
The silence in the shop was instant.
Karyn dropped her glass. It didn't break, but champagne spilled onto the expensive rug.
"What did you say?" she hissed.
"I said I'm trying this one," I repeated, my voice steady. "If I am to represent the Red Stone Pack at a high-society auction, I should not look like a maid. It insults Chace's status."
I used his ego against him. I saw Chace's head snap up. He looked at the grey rag in my hand, then at the red silk.
"She has a point, Karyn," Chace muttered. "The Alpha King will be there. We don't want to look poor."
Karyn's face turned purple, but she couldn't argue with Chace's vanity. "Fine. Put it on. Let's see how ridiculous a wolfless rat looks in silk."
I went into the changing room. The silk felt like cool water against my heated skin. I zipped it up. It fit perfectly, as if it had been made for me.
I stepped out.
The shop assistant gasped.
I looked in the three-way mirror. The dress hugged my waist and flowed around my legs like liquid fire. My pale skin glowed against the dark red. For the first time in years, I didn't look like a victim. I looked like a queen.
I turned to face them.
Chace dropped his phone. His mouth hung open slightly. His pupils blew wide, swallowing the blue of his irises. I could smell his scent spike—musk and arousal. He was looking at me not as a childhood friend, but as a male looks at a female he wants to claim.
"Ember," he breathed. "You look..."
Karyn saw his reaction. The air in the room instantly grew heavy and sour.
"Ow!" Karyn shrieked, clutching her chest. She collapsed onto the sofa. "Chace! Help! She's doing it again!"
Chace blinked, shaking his head as if waking from a trance. "What?"
"Her pheromones!" Karyn wailed, squeezing out fake tears. "She's releasing malicious intent! It's attacking my wolf! I can't breathe!"
It was a lie. I was an Omega. I couldn't project intent like that. But Chace didn't care about logic. He only cared that his 'true mate' was distressed.
His face hardened. The lust vanished, replaced by the cold fury of an Alpha protecting his own.
"Take it off," Chace growled.
"Chace, she's lying," I said, standing my ground. "I'm not doing anything."
"I said take it off!"
He used the Alpha Voice.
It hit me like a physical slap. My knees locked together. My lungs seized. The command bypassed my brain and went straight to my muscles. My hands moved on their own, reaching for the zipper.
"Kneel," Chace barked.
Gravity seemed to increase tenfold. I crashed to my knees on the hardwood floor. The impact bruised my skin, but I couldn't cry out. The Alpha Command sealed my throat.
Karyn sat up, her 'pain' miraculously gone. She looked down at me with a smirk.
"You thought you could outshine me?" she whispered, leaning close so only I could hear. "You are nothing. You are a placeholder."
Chace loomed over me. "You will wear the grey dress. And you will stay in the shadows where you belong. If you ever try to stand above your Luna again, I will go to the cemetery tonight."
My blood ran cold.
"I will dig up Liana's bones," Chace threatened, his voice devoid of mercy. "And I will let the wild dogs in the Rogue territory chew on them."
Tears of rage welled in my eyes. Not fear. Rage.
He knew my mother was my whole world. He knew I stayed in this hellhole only to be near her grave.
"Do you understand?" he demanded.
I couldn't speak. I nodded, forced by his command.
"Good," Chace said, turning away. "Get changed. You disgust me."
I watched his back. Inside my chest, the growl returned. It was louder this time. It didn't sound like a whimper.
It sounded like a promise of war.