
Chapter 1 of Shadows of the Moon Bond: Sold to the Alpha Don's Fated Rejection
The rain in New York never felt clean. It slicked the alleys behind the old meatpacking district like oil, turning cracked pavement into mirrors that reflected the neon bleed from the clubs two blocks over. I stood under a rusted overhang, wrists zip-tied in front of me, trying not to shiver in the thin black dress my aunt had shoved me into. The kind that screamed "desperate" more than "elegant."
"Keep your head down, Elena," Uncle Frank muttered, his breath sour with cheap whiskey. "This is the only way out of the hole your deadbeat parents left us. Damien Blackthorn doesn't do charity. He collects."
I bit the inside of my cheek until I tasted copper. My parents hadn't left a hole-they'd left me. Died in a car wreck when I was fourteen, leaving me with these bloodsuckers who treated me like a walking IOU. Six years of "you're lucky we kept you" and "eat less, you're costing us." Now I was twenty, and the debt had finally come due.
A black SUV idled at the curb, engine purring like a predator. Two men in dark suits stepped out first-earpieces, shoulder holsters barely hidden under tailored jackets. Mafia muscle. Everyone in the underground knew the Blackthorn name. Billionaire on paper, running half the tech corridors in Manhattan. In the shadows? Don of the Blackthorn Pack. Werewolves who wore Armani and broke bones with the same hands.
The back door opened.
He stepped out.
Damien Blackthorn didn't just walk-he owned the air around him. Six-four easy, shoulders carved from marble and midnight. Black hair swept back, sharp jaw shadowed by stubble that probably cost more than my entire wardrobe. His eyes-God, his eyes-were storm-cloud gray flecked with gold. Alpha eyes. Even from twenty feet away, they pinned me like a butterfly to cork.
My knees buckled. Not from fear. Something deeper. A snap inside my chest, like a rubber band stretched too far and finally breaking. Heat flooded my veins, pooling low in my belly. My skin prickled as if invisible fingers traced my spine. The bond. I'd read about it in the forbidden books my aunt kept locked away-fated mates, Moon Goddess's cruel joke. Rare. Dangerous. Irresistible.
No. Not him. Not the man buying me like livestock.
Uncle Frank shoved me forward. "Mr. Blackthorn. As promised. Clean, healthy, no criminal record. Wolfless, but-"
"Quiet." Damien's voice was velvet over gravel. He didn't look at my uncle. His gaze stayed locked on me, nostrils flaring like he could smell the bond too. The gold in his eyes brightened. For one heartbeat, his mask cracked-raw hunger, surprise, something almost like recognition.
Then it shuttered.
He circled me once, slow, boots splashing through puddles. Close enough that his cologne-sandalwood, smoke, and something wild like pine forests after rain-wrapped around me. My traitorous body leaned in before I caught myself.
"Name," he said.
"Elena Voss." My voice didn't shake. Small victory.
He stopped in front of me. Towered. One finger tipped my chin up, forcing eye contact. The touch burned. Electricity arced straight to my core, making my thighs clench. His pupils blew wide.
"Mine," he murmured, so low only I heard it. Not a question. A claim.
The bond sang back. Yes.
I hated how much I wanted to say it out loud.
The paperwork took ten minutes in the back of the SUV. My uncle signed away his "rights" with a shaking hand, pocketed a check that made his eyes bulge, and disappeared into the rain without a backward glance. I didn't expect goodbye. Didn't want one.
Damien didn't speak again until the car pulled into underground parking beneath a glass-and-steel tower on Fifth Avenue. Blackthorn Tower. The penthouse lights glowed like a crown above the city.
He led me to an elevator that required a thumbprint and retinal scan. Inside, the mirrored walls reflected us-him, immaculate in charcoal suit; me, rain-damp and trembling in discount heels.
"You feel it," he said flatly. Not a question.
I nodded once.
"Good. Then you understand the rules." The elevator dinged. Doors opened into an apartment that swallowed my entire childhood home twice over. Floor-to-ceiling windows, marble that probably came from Italy, a fireplace big enough to roast a deer. "This is a contract. Debt paid in full. You live here. You warm my bed when I say. You stay out of pack business. In public, you're arm candy-quiet, obedient, decorative. Cross me, and I'll ship you back to whatever gutter your family crawled from. Clear?"
The bond screamed at me to argue, to demand more. I swallowed it. "Clear."
He studied me another long moment. Then his hand cupped my jaw again, thumb brushing my lower lip. "The Moon Goddess has a sick sense of humor, sending me a wolfless mate. But I'll make use of you."
Before I could process the insult, he kissed me.
Not soft. Not gentle. Like he was angry at the bond too. His mouth crushed mine, tongue demanding entry, teeth nipping until I gasped. I kissed him back-because the bond left me no choice, because my body lit up like fireworks, because for one stupid second I wanted to believe this powerful, beautiful monster saw me as more than payment.
He broke away first, breathing hard. "Bedroom. Now."
That night blurred into heat and hands and whispered curses against my skin. He took me like a man drowning, like the bond was a drug he both craved and resented. I lost count of how many times he made me shatter. Each time, the gold in his eyes flared brighter. Each time, I felt the mate mark on my neck tingle where his teeth had grazed but not bitten.
He didn't mark me. Not fully. Not permanently.
Morning came too soon. He was gone before I woke, suit jacket draped over a chair like evidence. A black credit card and a note waited on the nightstand.
Buy clothes that don't embarrass me. Be ready at 8. -D
I stared at it until the letters blurred. The bond hummed warm in my chest, traitor that it was. I told myself it was survival. Told myself I could endure this cage if it meant never going back to my aunt's house.
I was wrong.
Three months later, the cracks showed.
Damien played the devoted husband in public-arm around my waist at charity galas, introducing me as "my wife" to billionaires and senators who didn't know the pack existed. In private? Cold distance. Late nights at "the office" (code for mafia sit-downs). Phone calls that ended the second I entered the room. And the scent on his collars-lilac and vanilla. Another woman's perfume.
I told myself it was pack politics. He had an arranged fiancée before me-Lila Voss, pureblood daughter of a rival alpha. The bond had derailed that. He was adjusting.
Then came our first anniversary.
The penthouse glittered with crystal and low music. Pack elders in tuxedos, their mates in diamonds. Damien had insisted on the party. "Show them the bond is real," he'd said that morning, almost soft. Almost.
I wore red silk that clung like a second skin, hair swept up to show the faint scar where his teeth had almost marked me. I felt beautiful for the first time in my life.
Until Lila walked in.
She was everything I wasn't-tall, golden-haired, wolf power radiating off her like perfume. She crossed the room straight to Damien, hand sliding possessively down his arm. "Darling, you promised me a dance."
The room went still.
Damien's jaw tightened. But he didn't pull away. Instead, he glanced at me-eyes flat, gold dimmed-and said, loud enough for every wolf to hear, "Elena, entertain the guests. I need to speak with Lila privately."
Whispers started immediately. Wolfless. Temporary. Debt payment.
I stood there in my anniversary dress, champagne flute trembling in my hand, while my husband disappeared into the study with the woman whose scent I'd been smelling for weeks.
An hour later, the study door opened. I saw them through the cracked gap-Lila on her knees, mouth on him, his hand fisted in her perfect hair. His groan carried like a gunshot.
The bond shattered inside me. Not broke-ripped. Pain lanced through my chest so sharp I dropped the glass. Crystal exploded across marble.
I ran.
Not far. Just to the guest bathroom, locking the door, sliding down the wall as silent sobs tore out of me. The bond still tugged, traitorously, urging me back to him. But underneath it? Rage. Cold, clear rage.
He found me twenty minutes later. Knocked once. "Open the door, Elena."
I did. Stood there with ruined mascara and a spine made of steel.
His face was stone. "It was a mistake."
"A mistake?" My voice cracked. "You let her-on our anniversary-"
"Pack alliances," he cut in. "Lila's father controls the docks. I need them. The bond... complicates things. But you're still useful."
Useful. Not wanted. Not loved.
The next words out of his mouth sealed it.
"Tomorrow we file the divorce papers. Quietly. You'll get a settlement. Enough to disappear. Don't fight me on this."
I laughed. Bitter, broken sound. "You think the Moon Goddess will just let you throw me away?"
His eyes flashed gold. For one second, regret flickered. Then it died. "The Goddess doesn't run my empire. I do."
He turned to leave.
I grabbed his sleeve. "Damien. Please. I feel it every time you touch me. You feel it too."
He shook me off like I was lint. "Feelings don't pay debts or buy loyalty. Pack comes first. Always."
The door clicked shut behind him.
I sank to the floor again, hand pressed to my stomach. I hadn't told him yet. Hadn't even confirmed it myself until the test two days ago.
Positive.
Twins, the doctor had whispered over the phone that afternoon. Supernatural pregnancy moved fast.
His heirs. Growing inside the wolfless trash he'd just discarded.
I didn't cry again. Instead, I stood, wiped my face, and started planning.
By sunrise, I'd packed one small bag, emptied the emergency cash from his safe (he'd shown me the code once, arrogant fool), and slipped out the service entrance while the pack celebrated his "wise decision" downstairs.
The bond screamed as I left the city limits. It hurt like claws raking my ribs. But I kept driving-stolen car, fake plates I'd arranged through an old contact.
Seattle was far enough. Cold enough. Human enough.
I cut my hair. Dyed it auburn. Took a waitress job under a false name. Built walls around the bond until it was only a dull throb.
Five years later, I still woke some nights reaching for a man who no longer existed in my life.
But the twins-four-year-old Leo and Luna-had his eyes. Storm gray flecked with gold. And sometimes, when they got angry, those eyes glowed.
The bond wasn't done with me.
Neither was Damien Blackthorn.
I just didn't know how soon he'd come to collect.
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