Claimed In The Shadows By Black Barbie

Dravina has spent seven years trapped in a gilded cage. As the Luna of the Firestone Pack, she endures a life of cruelty and control under her possessive mate, Alpha Cassian. Desperate for freedom, she makes a daring escape into the wilderness armed with nothing but a small bag and the unbreakable will to survive.

But freedom has its price.

When Dravina is captured by another powerful pack, she expects punishment or worse, to be returned to Cassian. Instead, she finds herself face-to-face with a commanding, enigmatic Alpha who sees straight through her lies… and claims her as his destined mate.

Torn between fear and a flicker of hope, Dravina must tread carefully in this unfamiliar territory. As secrets unravel and danger closes in, she stands at a crossroads: trust the bond she never believed in, or fight alone for the life she’s always dreamed of.

Dravina’s POV

Life in a gilded cage that's my truth. For some of us, freedom is an illusion, shackled by invisible chains too complex, too tight to slip. No matter how fiercely we struggle, escape remains just out of reach.

At eighteen, I was chosen as the Luna of Firestone. What should have been a moment of pride quickly descended into a waking nightmare. Back then, Cassian my husband, my Alpha seemed flawless.

Charming, doting, and seemingly devoted during our courtship, he was the envy of many. I lost friends over the attention he gave me, but I didn’t care. We weren’t fated mates, but I believed love could bloom from choice.

For a while, it did. The first year felt like something out of a dream. Then that dream curdled. Cassian’s mask slipped, revealing a possessive, volatile man. Any effort I made to leave only tightened the noose around me.

He weaponized his authority, threatening my parents’ lives if I dared to run. And it wasn’t an empty threat Cassian ruled the entire western territory with absolute control. If he said he’d destroy someone, he had the power to do it.

To ensure my obedience, he severed all ties with my family, forbidding even the smallest contact. I was cut off, exactly as he intended no allies, no support. Just him.

He stripped me of all my duties as Luna, assigning them to the Beta’s wife instead. With no responsibilities, no voice, and no purpose beyond the confines of our home, I faded into silence.

After my first escape attempt, he confined me to our quarters in the Pack House eight months of solitude, locked away like a secret he didn’t want the world to see.

It was only through the Beta’s intervention that I was granted a sliver of freedom. But it wasn’t liberation it was just a longer leash.

Cassian’s paranoia never eased. He accused me of betrayal over the most innocent gestures smiling at another man, exchanging polite words at gatherings. Everything ended in punishment. His anger was always waiting, simmering beneath the surface, ready to burn.

The pity of the pack meant nothing. No one dared defy him. Cassian was the most dominant Alpha on the continent. Even the strongest bowed before him.

Six years into this nightmare of a marriage, I hosted yet another gala. It was supposed to be a celebration, but for me, it was another tightrope walk, where every word, every glance had to be perfectly measured.

Cassian’s gaze tracked my every move a silent warning, a constant shadow.

The event drained me, but it presented a rare window of possibility. Since my parents had been exiled, I’d lived in torment, not knowing if they were safe. I knew they were now under Alpha Arixen’s protection, but any attempt to reach them had failed.

Cassian dangled their safety over my head like a guillotine, tightening his grip whenever I showed resistance. If he felt slighted, even for a moment, he’d sever the last strand of hope I had.

And I believed him. His authority over the western lands was unchallenged, and eliminating those he viewed as threats even if they were innocent was second nature to him.

Other Alphas admired his brutal command. That, more than anything, terrified me.

Desperation clawed at me daily, but I couldn't act unless I knew my parents were truly safe. My only chance rested with Arixen.

We’d crossed paths years ago during a summer training camp. We were barely more than strangers, but I hoped our distant blood ties would be enough to persuade him.

I was still trying to find the right moment to approach him when Arixen appeared beside me and offered his hand for a dance.

Every instinct warned me to refuse. But deep inside, I knew this could be the only chance I'd get. I cast a glance toward Cassian, searching for any sign of fury.

He nodded once, disinterested. A rare show of detachment.

With equal parts fear and resolve, I placed my hand in Arixen’s.

The gardens glowed beneath a canopy of soft golden lights, offering a rare sense of safety in the crowd. As we danced, Arixen’s calm presence soothed me, his steps sure, his demeanor reassuring. When he suggested a walk to admire the blooms, I agreed without hesitation.

It was now or never.

Beneath the surface of small talk, I poured out my plea careful, desperate, every word shaped by the fear that any wrong phrase might cost me everything. Arixen listened in silence, his face grave.

He gave me his word. He promised to help. Promised that I would see my parents again.

And for the first time in years, something pierced through the endless darkness: hope.

What I failed to notice was the storm building behind Cassian’s composed façade. He had been watching all along, his fury hidden beneath a veil of calm.

It wasn’t until we returned to our quarters that his silence turned dangerous.

The click of the lock behind the bedroom door echoed like a gunshot, sending a chill through me.

He didn’t have to speak I already knew.

I had gone too far.

And now… I would pay the price.

Blurb

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Dravina POV

The slap landed without warning a sharp, violent crack that snapped my head to the side. Pain exploded across my cheek, hot and immediate, disorienting me in an instant.

My breath caught, tangled somewhere between fear and disbelief. I staggered backward, only to crash into the cold, unyielding wall behind me.

There was nowhere to run not that escape had ever been an option.

“Cassian, please,” I whispered, voice trembling, barely rising above the frantic pounding of my heart.

My hands lifted in reflex, palms open, a useless attempt to shield myself. The fury radiating off him was suffocating, thickening the air like smoke from a wildfire.

His chest rose and fell in harsh, shallow bursts. His jaw was locked tight, and his eyes dark, relentless held mine with a promise I didn’t dare challenge.

“Are you unhappy here, Dravina?” he asked, his voice soft too soft. Each syllable was slow, precise, laced with a deceptive calm that cut sharper than any blade. But I wasn’t fooled.

That voice was a mask. Behind it churned the tempest I had come to know too well. The flicker of fire in his eyes betrayed everything.

I tried to shake my head, to speak, to calm him, but my voice stuck in my throat. He didn’t wait.

“All I asked of you tonight,” he said, his tone tightening like a noose, “was to be gracious. Just a good hostess. That’s it. That’s all.”

His voice turned brittle, laced with venom.

“But you couldn’t even manage that, could you?”

Each word struck harder than the slap had, a verbal assault that sliced through me. My heart twisted, shame curling around the fear like thorns on a vine.

“And then you blush at Arixen’s compliments,” he hissed, stepping closer. “Dancing with him like... like you’ve forgotten yourself. Like you’re not a mated woman. Like you’re not my Luna.”

The way he said my sharp, possessive cut deeper than anything else.

He loomed over me, casting a shadow I couldn’t escape. His rage devoured the room, choking the very air I breathed.

Every instinct screamed at me to flee, to run but I knew better. There was no way out of the gilded prison Cassian had so carefully built around me.

“I was just being polite,” I said softly, voice cracking as fear wrapped tight around my chest. “It meant nothing, Cassian. Nothing.”

He laughed a harsh, humorless bark that made my blood run cold.

“Nothing?” he echoed, mocking. “You think I’m blind? Stupid? I saw the way he looked at you. And worse you let him.”

I shook my head, desperate, but the words wouldn’t come. Not that they would matter.

“You belong to me,” he growled, voice low and brimming with threat. “You’d do well to remember that.”

The weight of his words pressed down on me like iron chains.

I tried again to speak, but he cut me off before I could even breathe.

“Do you know what you looked like tonight?” he snarled. “What they must have thought of me? The whispers, the glances Alpha Drethos even asked if something was wrong between us.”

“I was trying to be a good hostess,” I said, barely more than a breath. It sounded pathetic, even to me.

“A good hostess?” he thundered, stepping in so close the heat of his rage blistered against my skin. I flinched.

“A good hostess doesn’t humiliate her mate. She doesn’t forget who she belongs to. Did you think it was polite when you danced with him? When you walked with him like you weren’t mine?”

My throat tightened painfully. I had no words.

What could I possibly say? The truth that I was cornered into my role, that refusing Arixen would’ve been seen as disrespect, a diplomatic misstep would only fuel the fire.

He didn’t want honesty. He wanted submission.

“Don’t I treat you well?” he asked, quieter now, though no less cruel. “Don’t I praise you? Compliment you?”

He stepped in again, and I found myself pinned between his fury and the wall. I nodded frantic, fearful hoping that agreeing might somehow calm him.

“Then why you?” he spat. “Why not delegate? Why was it you entertaining him, smiling at him, laughing with him?”

I opened my mouth to answer. Nothing came out.

Because I hadn’t been allowed a choice.

Because no matter what I did, I would still end up here beneath the weight of his wrath.

The silence between us stretched taut and heavy, and I knew I’d already been condemned. I was guilty in his eyes. Always had been.

My heart pounded like a war drum.

Then his hand fisted in my hair.

The pain was instant and brutal, and I cried out as he yanked my head back.

Tears spilled freely, sobs catching in my throat. I couldn’t understand how could someone who claimed to love me do this? How could he look into my tear-streaked face and still hurt me?

How could he destroy me and still call it devotion?

“When I chose you, it was because I believed you were different,” he sneered, every word dripping with disgust. “Not like the rest of those whores. Not like my mother.”

The mention of her turned my stomach. I trembled, shaking my head, silently begging him to stop but he wasn’t done.

His hatred of her was a rotting wound, festering beneath every moment, poisoning everything he touched.

“But I was wrong,” he said, voice scathing. “You’re just like her.”

“No, Cassian, please...” I whispered, my voice nearly gone, swallowed by my sobs.

But my pleading only stoked the fire in him. His grip tightened, sharp enough to make me gasp in pain.

“You’ve been a bad girl, Dravina,” he growled, the words thick with menace. “And you know what I do to bad girls.”

That was the moment I shattered.

My body convulsed, wracked with sobs as the last of my resistance dissolved.

“Please,” I whimpered, the word a broken thread in the dark. But it meant nothing. It always meant nothing.

That night, Cassian unleashed a cruelty so consuming it hollowed me out. My screams must have echoed through the entire pack house.

They had to have heard me. But no one came. No one ever did.

Maybe they thought I deserved it.

Maybe they believed it was my fault.

That I’d invited the storm that tore me apart.

Chapter 3

Dravina POV

When Cassian was finally finished, I lay still too broken to move, too hollow to cry. My body throbbed with pain, and my spirit felt torn beyond repair.

As if on cue, he shifted slipping from monster to caretaker with the ease of someone who had done it far too many times. He gathered me in his arms, holding me delicately, like I was something fragile… something cherished.

The same hands that had inflicted the pain now cradled me with unnerving gentleness. He carried me to the bathroom in silence, and I didn’t resist. I couldn’t.

He lowered me onto the edge of the tub, careful now, as if that would somehow undo what had already been done.

Steam rose from the bath, curling into the air like smoke, but I didn’t feel its heat.

The water touched my skin, but I remained cold numb in a way that ran deeper than flesh.

Cold and disgusted. Not just with him but with myself.

“You can’t keep provoking me like this, Dravina,” he murmured, voice low and syrupy, as though he were soothing a frightened child.

His hands glided a sponge over my bruised skin with unsettling tenderness. Each stroke made my stomach turn.

“Look what you made me do.”

The blame slipped from his lips like a lover’s sigh, sinking heavy into my gut. I clenched my jaw, holding the scream that wanted to rip through me. I couldn’t let it show couldn’t give him any reason to reignite the storm.

Cassian’s rage had no mercy, and silence was my only shield.

I sat stiff in the bath, every muscle locked tight, unmoved by his false comfort.

“It’s been six years,” he said, voice cracking like he was the one bearing the pain. “Six years, and you still drive me mad.”

He paused, and when I looked up, his face had crumpled. Tears rolled down his cheeks, carving familiar paths I’d seen too many times.

They meant nothing. They never had.

We had been here before again and again. Rage. Remorse. Promises that unraveled like smoke.

“Please… don’t make me kill you,” he whispered, the words trembling with what might have been fear. “Don’t make me do it.”

His voice, hoarse and uneven, sent a chill lacing through my spine. But I didn’t speak. There was nothing left to say.

I had heard every version of this before his apologies, his regret, his declarations of love twisted with poison.

Each one had been a thread in the noose tightening around my throat.

“I hate hurting you,” he said, his voice breaking as he brushed a strand of wet hair from my face.

To anyone else, the gesture might have looked tender. But I knew better.

It was just another form of control. Another performance.

“Can’t you see it’s killing me?”

I met his gaze, but there was nothing left in me to give. No sympathy. No sorrow. Just the cold, festering hatred I carried for the man who had turned my life into a cage and called it devotion.

“Are you planning to leave me?” he asked, voice trembling but not with grief. With warning.

I shook my head quickly, pulse hammering in my ears. The wrong answer would be dangerous.

His hand reached up again, stroking my hair in a grotesque imitation of affection. It made my skin crawl.

“Don’t be like my mother, Dravina,” he whispered, each word laced with poison. “She ruined everything. Ruined my father. I won’t live that life again. Don’t make me.”

His voice cracked with desperation, but it wasn’t the kind that drew pity. It was the kind that set alarm bells ringing deep in my chest. His sobs weren’t new they were the aftermath of destruction. The performance that always followed the punishment.

“I’m a monster,” he breathed, pulling me into his arms like a vice. The embrace was suffocating, his grip too tight. I stayed stiff, unmoving, trapped.

Did he want forgiveness? Submission? Silence?

I had nothing left to give.

Every bone in my body ached. Every bruise screamed. But it was the ache inside the hollow, splintered part of me that hurt the most.

He sobbed into my shoulder, begging me not to ruin him. Begging me not to destroy him.

But who would fix me? Who would hold me as I crumbled?

His tears were not for me. They were for the illusion of control he felt slipping through his fingers. They were for the pride he mistook for love. They were for himself.

They always had been.

That night, I lay awake in bed, the sheets twisted around my limbs like chains. Sleep felt like a distant fantasy.

Blue my wolf paced within me, restless, uneasy. Her presence stirred something deep, something we both feared to name.

She knew the truth. So did I.

If we stayed, it would kill us.

Cassian’s love wasn’t love. It was possession. It was fire without control, fury without limits. It was madness masquerading as devotion.

One day, his jealousy would consume him completely.

And when it did, there would be no one left to save us.

Chapter 4

Dravina POV

Morning arrived slowly, slipping through the curtains in pale shafts of light that cast long, creeping shadows across the room. But even in the light, Cassian’s presence clung to the air heavy, suffocating, inescapable.

The shrill buzz of his phone broke the silence.

He answered it briskly, his tone flat but clipped with irritation.

“Arixen,” he said, and my stomach twisted instantly.

Why was Arixen calling him?

Panic surged beneath my skin, my heart hammering against my ribs as I strained to catch whatever I could from the conversation. Cassian’s voice cooled with each passing word, the sharp edge of anger curling into it like a blade.

“I see,” he said darkly, his eyes snapping to mine cold, accusing, and unreadable.

My chest tightened beneath the weight of his gaze. It was as though he could see straight through me. As though every secret I held had suddenly turned transparent.

“Thanks,” he said curtly, ending the call.

He set the phone down with precision, then turned fully to face me, the intensity in his stare enough to rob me of breath. His expression was thunderous.

“Did you really think Arixen would side with you?” he asked, voice low and lethal.

I went still, terror clamping around my throat. What had Arixen told him?

Cassian stepped forward, his smile sharp and cruel.

“Throwing yourself at him to get what you want,” he spat, his laugh bitter and hollow.

“You really thought you could use him to beg for your parents’ safety? You must think very little of him if you believed offering yourself would work. Do you not understand yet, Dravina? I own the West. Every man, every wolf answers to me.”

“No,” I said quickly, my voice shaking. “I didn’t do that, Cassian. You saw he came to me. I only danced with him because I thought you were okay with it. I just asked him about my parents nothing more.”

A lie. A fragile one. But a necessary one.

My voice faltered, thick with fear, praying he wouldn’t hear the truth buried beneath the surface that I had gone to Arixen, that I’d begged for help. But Arixen had clearly twisted the narrative to save himself, and now I was left to bear the fallout alone.

Cassian stared at me, unmoving, unreadable. The silence stretched, growing heavier, until it became unbearable.

“Please, Cassian,” I whispered. “I can’t take any more.”

For a fleeting second, something shifted behind his eyes regret? Uncertainty?

But whatever it was, it vanished just as quickly, swallowed by the familiar storm of rage.

“You’re lucky I have a meeting,” he muttered at last, turning away from me.

Relief hit me like a wave but it was fleeting, shallow. I knew this was no pardon. Only a delay.

His fury still smoldered just beneath the surface, waiting for the right moment to burn through again.

He dressed quickly, every movement sharp with tension. Even when his voice was calm, that eerie stillness in his eyes unsettled me.

He crossed the room to his safe. I watched from the bed, every muscle wound tight as he pulled out a stack of documents. The heavy door slammed shut with a metallic finality that echoed through the room.

That safe had always drawn my curiosity. And today, it burned hotter than ever.

I had memorized the combination long ago one small act of rebellion he would never suspect. A silent triumph I’d claimed in the dark.

Cassian gathered his things and strode out, the door clicking shut behind him. As the echo faded, I slipped from the bed, forcing my face into a mask of control even as chaos raged inside me.

I wasn’t to blame for the torment he inflicted but the guilt, the shame, the fear... they clung to me like skin. Still, today, I would uncover the truth.

I crossed the room, my breath uneven, my heart thundering. My fingers found the dial. I turned it with precision, each satisfying click a defiance against the cage he’d kept me in.

The door creaked open, revealing rows of meticulously organized folders and stacks of cash.

I sifted through them, hands trembling, until one folder stopped me cold.

My name was printed on the tab.

My pulse spiked.

Why would Cassian have a file on me?

I pulled it free, heart racing, dread coiling deep in my stomach.

Inside, I expected something awful. But nothing could have braced me for what I found.

A bill of sale. My name written across it like a brand.

A contract. A transaction. A price.

I stared in stunned disbelief, breath stalling as the realization hit.

My parents... they weren’t my biological parents. They’d sold me to Cassian. Traded me off like a commodity. As if I were furniture. As if I were nothing.

The receipt was cold, clinical, absolute.

The truth struck like lightning. The people I had loved, trusted believed were protecting me had sold me into this nightmare.

It wasn’t just the adoption. It wasn’t even the lie.

It was the betrayal.

The knowledge that, for six long years, I had clung to Cassian’s threats his taunts about my parents’ safety believing it meant something.

But it meant nothing.

They had handed me over willingly.

And whatever they gained from that sale had likely funded the peaceful lives they were living now far from the hell that had become my reality.

My knees gave out. I collapsed, the folder tumbling to the ground as a sob tore from my chest.

Tears streamed freely, hot and blinding. The grief, the fury, the heartbreak it all came at once, a storm I couldn’t contain.

“This isn’t the time,” Blue snapped from within, her voice cutting through the noise like a blade.

“This doesn’t make you weaker it frees you. Let go. Let them go. It’s time to run.”

Her fury burned just as fiercely as mine. She was right.

There was nothing left for me. No ties. No loyalty. No more lies.

I wiped my face, swallowing my cries, and forced myself to stand.

The look in Cassian’s eyes before he left it hadn’t just been anger. It had been a warning. A countdown.

His wrath hadn’t disappeared. It was waiting, growing, sharpening its teeth.

I’d tried to escape before. Failed. But this time... this time was different.

Because now the chain had snapped. Now the illusion was gone. Now there was nothing left to hold me here.

Not duty.

Not fear.

Not even hope.

If I stayed, it would destroy me.

And I wouldn’t give Cassian that chance.

Not this time.

Dravina POV

There was no time left to second-guess. No space for hesitation or doubt. I had been building toward this moment for years three long, brutal years spent quietly planning, preparing, and waiting for the perfect time to break free.

Every failed attempt before this had come at a devastating cost.

To Cassian, my attempts to escape weren’t mere disobedience they were betrayals, each one a challenge to his dominance. And each failure had been met with a wrath that left me bruised, broken, and hollow.

He didn’t just punish my body. He fractured my soul, carved away pieces of me until only splinters remained.

But this time would be different.

This time, I wouldn’t fail.

Some might have told me to turn to his family. But they were no refuge. They were just like him cold, calculating, and cruel. They never saw me as one of their own. I was the outsider they had tolerated, judged, and quietly hoped would disappear.

And now I understood why. I hadn’t been chosen. I had been bought.

I wasn’t their Luna. I was a possession. A transaction sealed with ink and cruelty.

Cassian, when he wanted to, could wear the mask of a prince. There were days when he could charm the world, even charm me, into forgetting who he really was beneath the surface. But those days were fleeting. And when the mask cracked, what emerged was a monster that made even nightmares seem merciful.

His remorse was as false as his love. His apologies were poisoned. His affection came wrapped in control.

I had stopped seeing him through the eyes of the girl I once was. Now I saw clearly he was dangerous. Unstable. And worst of all, he believed he loved me.

For years, he had held my parents over me like a blade, knowing that fear would keep me obedient.

But that weapon was gone now.

The truth had torn it from his hands.

The people I had bled to protect, the ones I had wept for and begged him to spare… had sold me. Like an object. Like I was something to be passed off to the highest bidder.

They hadn’t loved me. They hadn’t cared.

They had traded me for comfort.

And that knowledge freed me.

I no longer owed them loyalty. I owed Cassian nothing. I was done paying for sins that weren’t mine.

This time, fear didn’t have a hold on me. Guilt had no voice. I wasn’t staying.

Because staying meant death. And I wanted to live.

No title, no mate mark, no illusion of power was worth my life. I had to leave. And I had to do it now.

I packed quickly, slipping the bare essentials into a single small bag no clutter, no hint that I was planning to disappear. I knew the packhouse was full of eyes, and many of them belonged to wolves loyal to Cassian. One wrong move, one raised suspicion, and it would all be over before it began.

I took only what I needed to vanish. A small stash of cash from his safe insignificant to a man of his wealth, but enough for me to get out. Far away. Somewhere nameless. Maybe I’d open a little bakery in a town where no one knew me, where no one looked at my mark and asked questions.

And if they did? I had an answer.

“My mate died,” I would say.

A lie. But a necessary one. And maybe, one day, it wouldn’t be a lie at all. Though knowing Cassian, even death felt like too merciful a fate for him.

My hands didn’t shake as I moved. My heart pounded, yes, but my resolve was steel. I had no more room for fear.

The plan was simple: get out of the house. Get to the tree line. Then run. Run until I could breathe.

Freedom was so close now I could almost taste it.

I was twenty-five. No longer the wide-eyed girl who had once believed his promises to change. That girl was long gone. Cassian’s lies had killed her slowly, over years of suffering.

But this version of me this woman was done.

I had studied every failure, every misstep, and learned from each one. My plan had been sharpened by pain and trial until there was no room left for error.

Don’t reach out to family or friends.

Don’t overpack only what you can carry.

Avoid main roads. Use the woods.

Don’t speak. Don’t stop. Don’t look back.

This was my mantra. A whispered prayer. A vow.

And as I moved through the motions every zipper closed, every drawer left untouched I said the words again and again in my head.

Each syllable was a step toward the life I deserved.

A life without chains. Without cruelty. Without him.

This was it.

And I wouldn’t waste it.

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Dravina POV

I carried everything I could manage and slipped out of the house, each step a raw reminder of last night’s punishment. My body throbbed with pain, every muscle tight with bruised defiance, but I forced myself to walk naturally. I couldn’t afford to limp not today.

I silently begged the fates to keep me from crossing paths with anyone.

The pack crawled with loyalists watchdogs devoted to Cassian, always watching, always listening. One wrong glance, one wavering step, and it would all come undone. Years of silent planning would collapse in seconds.

I reached the packhouse door when a scent hit me like a wall familiar, unmistakable.

Andariel.

My stomach turned. Of all the people, it had to be her.

Andariel wasn’t malicious, but that didn’t make her trustworthy. Not when her loyalty still leaned toward Cassian, or worse, toward someone who might turn me in to save their own skin.

I forced my breath into an even rhythm, steadying my pulse. If I bolted, she’d know. If I faltered, she’d question. I had to be calm.

“Dravina!” she called, her voice carrying more concern than I was ready to believe.

I turned slowly, forcing neutrality into my expression. A smile would only raise suspicion what did I have to smile about?

Everyone in the pack must have heard Cassian’s fury echoing through the halls last night. His rage had never been subtle, and neither were the bruises.

“I’m surprised you’re up,” she said, stopping a few feet away. Her eyes flicked over me, reading too much with too little effort.

“Andariel,” I murmured, exhaling heavily as I met her gaze.

She bowed her head slightly, the ingrained hierarchy of our world guiding her movements. Even after all his cruelty, Cassian demanded respect for me as Luna a twisted show of possession more than protection.

“There’s no need for that,” I said quietly. “Cassian isn’t here.”

She straightened a bit, but the cautious look in her eyes remained.

“How are you holding up?” she asked, her voice softer, lined with something close to pity.

I didn’t answer. I didn’t have to. My silence said everything.

Her lips pressed together, then parted again. “Honestly? When I heard you were going to be Luna, I was jealous. Thought you’d won the dream. But now… I just feel sorry for you. He’s not right in the head.”

She wasn’t wrong.

Cassian might’ve fooled others with his charm, but behind closed doors, there was no fairy tale just scars. Just fear. Just the echo of who I used to be.

I nodded faintly, afraid that if I spoke, I’d unravel.

Her eyes dropped to the bag in my hand.

“Market trip?” she asked casually, too casually. Her gaze sharpened. “Seems like a lot to carry just for groceries.”

I stiffened, gripping the strap instinctively.

My wolf stayed quiet, holding herself back so I could keep control. But the tremor in my breath, the flutter in my chest it gave me away.

Andariel’s eyes narrowed, watching me too closely now. Suspicion hung in the silence between us.

My mouth opened, reaching for a lie, but no words came. Just a shallow gasp I hadn’t realized I was holding my breath.

And then it happened I saw it.

Recognition dawned in her expression.

Tears welled in my eyes before I could stop them, hot and fast, blurring my vision. I’d failed. Again.

She stepped closer, and I braced for betrayal. But instead of raising an alarm, her voice slid into my mind through the pack link, quiet and firm.

“You better get going now if you want a decent head start. I’ll tell anyone who asks that you went to the market. Just… make sure he doesn’t catch you this time.”

Relief hit me like a crashing wave.

I exhaled sharply, my voice breaking with emotion. “Thank you,” I whispered.

Andariel gave a single, hard nod. “Go. Now.”

I searched her face one last time for doubt or deceit, but all I found was resolve.

“Thank you,” I sent through the link again, pouring everything I felt into those two small words.

She turned without another word, and I wiped my tears away, straightening my back. My legs moved before my brain could fully process it out the packhouse door, down the path, into the world that didn’t yet know I was running.

The compound buzzed with life. People passed me, caught up in their routines. No one looked twice. It was perfect.

My pace remained steady, unhurried. Every step deliberate.

I reached the edge of the woods, and the breath I’d been holding finally escaped.

Surrounded by trees, shadows, and wild air, I felt something I hadn’t in years: possibility.

I dropped to the forest floor, yanked off my dress, folded it quickly, and shoved it into my bag. The cold air grazed my skin. I welcomed it.

Then I surrendered.

The shift rippled through me muscle stretching, bone snapping, my body reshaping into something stronger, faster.

Relief surged through every fiber of my being as I gave in to Blue, my wolf. The bruises faded into the background, replaced by power.

Grabbing the bag in my teeth, I launched forward.

My paws struck the earth in rapid rhythm, lungs full of pine and wind and something dangerously close to hope. Branches blurred past. The forest opened to me like an invitation.

With each bound, I whispered silent prayers whether to the Moon, fate, or something beyond I didn’t care.

Let me be free. Let me stay free. Give me the strength to never return.

I didn’t know where the road would take me. I didn’t need to.

All that mattered was that I was running and for the first time in years, I wasn’t looking back.

Not this time.

Chapter 7

Dravina POV

I ran like my life depended on it because it did. Every muscle in my legs burned with the effort, but I didn’t let up. Blue, my wolf, surged forward, her strength and determination pouring through me with each bound. The pain Cassian had left behind was there, yes, but distant now a shadow dulled by adrenaline and sheer will. I couldn't feel it, not truly. There was no time for pain. No room for weakness.

Each pounding stride through the dense forest echoed the same desperate mantra: go, go, go.

His voice still echoed in my head, cruel and venomous, but it only pushed me harder. The sting of his punishments, the bruises hidden beneath my skin, the way my breath rasped painfully in my chest none of it mattered anymore. I had to get away. I had to be free.

This was it. My moment. My only chance to reclaim what little of myself remained.

With every step, I whispered silent prayers into the wind.

Please… don’t let him find me this time. Please, not again.

My heart was already battered from years of torment. Another failure would break what was left of me. And Blue… she wouldn’t survive another encounter with Cassian’s fury. Neither of us would.

I didn’t have a destination. There was no grand plan waiting for me beyond the trees. I just ran. Trusted my instincts to guide us somewhere safe. The scents of Firestone grew fainter with every mile, replaced by the wilder, cleaner smells of unclaimed land. That was all I needed right now distance. A border between me and the monster I once called mate.

Still, paranoia dug its claws into me.

Cassian might not have been home when I left, but Firestone was full of loyalists wolves eager to earn his favor, to sniff out rebellion and report back for praise. What if someone had seen me? What if a patrol was already closing in?

I could almost hear them. The howls tearing through the trees. The thunder of paws chasing mine. I pushed harder, lungs screaming for air, fear tightening around my chest.

Andariel’s face flickered in my memory.

She’d helped me. Risked everything. My stomach twisted with guilt, but I forced it down. Maelor might protect her, but there were no guarantees. I couldn't go back. Her sacrifice would mean nothing if I failed. I had to make it for her, and for myself.

As I tore through the forest, the heavy familiarity of Firestone began to fade behind me. The air shifted. No longer weighed down with pack hierarchy and Cassian’s control, it smelled of wildflowers and untamed earth. Something inside me loosened a flicker of relief. It was small, but it was there.

I had no idea how far I'd gone, but I knew it was far enough that I could finally stop.

When my body could take no more, I slowed, staggering to a halt beneath a massive oak tree. My limbs trembled with exhaustion. The shift back to human form was slow, each movement draining what little energy I had left. Naked and shaking, I sank against the tree’s trunk and closed my eyes.

Its bark was rough against my back, but grounding. Above me, thick branches filtered the sunlight, casting me in soft shadow. The air was still and cool, broken only by distant birdsong and rustling leaves.

For the first time in years, I let myself breathe. Really breathe.

I wasn’t free not yet. But I was further than I’d ever made it before. That had to count for something.

For three days, I pressed forward in bursts running until my legs gave out, resting just long enough to recover, then doing it all again. The forest became a haven, thick enough to hide me, quiet enough to listen for danger. The farther east I went, the more the scent of Firestone vanished. The air here was different crisper, cleaner. Untouched.

By the end of the third day, something shifted in me.

Cassian’s presence, always lingering like smoke on the skin, no longer felt near. The fear of him was still there, but his shadow didn’t stretch this far. I felt it peel away, inch by inch, like shedding a second skin.

Resting under another wide oak, I allowed myself the smallest of smiles. Hope it still existed. I hadn’t felt it in so long, I’d nearly forgotten what it was like.

Firestone felt like a distant nightmare. Cassian, a monster from another life.

The farther I went, the fainter they became.

But I wasn’t foolish. I knew he was searching for me. That much was inevitable. By now, he’d have realized I was gone and sent scouts to the places I’d run to before. But this time, I was smarter. I hadn’t followed the same paths. I hadn’t gone where he might expect. This time, I vanished into the places even he didn’t dare roam.

Still, I couldn’t grow complacent.

Beneath the canopy of the oak, I allowed myself to fully relax for the first time since escaping. My muscles eased. My eyelids grew heavy. I told myself it would be just a moment. Just one breath.

That was my first mistake.

The sound came quietly barely more than a whisper on the wind. The faintest shuffle of paws against underbrush.

Blue stirred inside me instantly, a warning rumbling in my chest. But it was too late.

Panic erupted. I scrambled to my feet, ready to shift, to run again but the shadows around me moved with purpose.

Not animals.

Not chance.

I was surrounded.

Chapter 8

Dravina POV

They emerged without a sound, their golden eyes burning with sharp focus.

Their approach was precise, their movements smooth and lethal like predators who had done this a thousand times. I froze, my breath caught mid-inhale. How had I not sensed them sooner?

I cursed myself for letting my guard slip. The fleeting relief of escaping Cassian had dulled my instincts. I had been so consumed with survival, I’d forgotten that these unfamiliar woods held their own dangers.

And now I was surrounded.

There were too many. The moment I inhaled, I knew this wasn’t a random rogue ambush. The scent rolling off them spoke of rank, discipline, unity. These weren’t strays. They were pack wolves. And not just any pack Betas. Trained, loyal, and utterly ruthless.

Blue growled low in my mind, a warning, ready to rise, but I hushed her with a thought. There was no winning this fight. We were Delta at best. Outnumbered. Outmatched.

I sank to my knees, my fingers gripping the strap of my bag as though it might somehow protect me. Bowing my head, I exposed my throat submission, the universal language of wolves. I prayed they'd see I wasn’t a threat.

The circle of wolves shifted. They parted, making room. Dread pooled in my stomach as a dark, massive wolf stepped forward, his presence commanding the air itself.

The Alpha.

He moved with a quiet dominance that made my skin prickle. The weight of his stare pinned me where I knelt.

And then, just as fluidly, he shifted.

My breath caught again but for a different reason.

He was… breathtaking. Towering, broad-shouldered, with a frame that radiated control. Dark tousled hair framed a face that could have been carved from stone sharp jaw, straight nose, lips that looked carved from tension. But it was his eyes that rooted me to the spot. Piercing green, intense and unforgiving, as though he could see every secret buried in my soul.

For one irrational second, I forgot to be afraid.

But reality returned quickly. He wasn’t here to be admired. He was an Alpha. I was a trespasser.

And whatever judgment awaited me now, my escape hadn’t ended. It had only shifted.

His eyes scanned me, sharp and calculating, but when they landed on the mating mark at my neck, something dark passed over his expression.

My stomach twisted.

He knew what it meant.

“What is a mated wolf doing in my woods?” he asked, his voice low and cold, but it slithered over my skin like a storm wind unmistakably Alpha.

Panic surged in my chest. I had seconds to get this right. One wrong word and I was dead.

“I’m a widow,” I said softly, forcing my voice into something steady. “I was fleeing from rogues.”

He stared at me, unmoved. Doubt flickered across his sharp features.

“Where are you from?” he demanded, tone clipped.

My heart dropped.

This was the question I had feared most. If I told the truth if he knew I’d come from Firestone he’d send me back. No one dared cross Alpha Cassian. No one.

“I’ve never belonged to a pack,” I said, eyes locked on his. “I’m a lone wolf.”

The silence that followed was suffocating.

His gaze bore into me, dissecting every breath, every twitch. I held still, praying he’d believe the lie. But his jaw ticked. His eyes narrowed.

He didn’t believe me.

My pulse thundered in my ears. Then, unexpectedly, he turned away. For a second, hope sparked maybe he’d let it go. Maybe he’d let me go.

But the spark died the moment he spoke.

“Take her to the stronghold.”

No warmth. No leniency. Just cold command.

I stiffened as two Betas stepped forward and gripped my arms not rough, but firm enough to remind me I had no control.

I didn’t fight.

There was no point.

Thoughts spun wildly in my head. Would they hold me prisoner? Would they discover who I was? Would they send word to Cassian? If they knew the truth… would they return me to him?

This wasn’t the freedom I’d fought for. This was a different kind of captivity. One born not of chains, but suspicion and silence.

As they led me away from the trees and deeper into unknown territory, I felt the Alpha’s gaze boring into my back. Heavy. Inescapable.

The farther we walked, the heavier my legs became.

Each step dragged me away from the fleeting taste of liberty I had grasped just hours ago. The forest that had cradled my escape faded behind me.

I had fled one nightmare.

Now I had to wonder was I walking straight into another?

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