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img img Werewolf img His Mark Of Shame, Her Awakening
His Mark Of Shame, Her Awakening

His Mark Of Shame, Her Awakening

img Werewolf
img 10 Chapters
img ANASTASIA GRAVES
5.0
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About

Ten years ago, I was banished from my pack, branded a whore and a traitor for allegedly drugging and stealing my sister's fated mate. Now, I was summoned back because my father, the Alpha who disowned me, was dying from a poisoned attack. Standing by his deathbed, a locked memory finally surfaced-I didn't drug anyone. My husband and I were both victims, poisoned with wolfsbane to force our mating. But before my father could reveal who orchestrated the setup, his heart monitor flatlined. My brother instantly shoved me to the ground, pointing a trembling finger at my face. "You killed him. I will hunt you, I will break you, and I will make your life a living hell." Even my husband, Kieran, the man I was forced to marry to save our unborn child, walked right past me in the hospital corridor. He didn't spare me a single glance, choosing instead to gently comfort my mother while I sat bruised and shattered on the cold floor. I didn't understand why my own family hated me so blindly, and I understood even less who had framed me a decade ago. What terrified my father so much in his final moments that he couldn't even speak the culprit's name? Watching my cold husband walk away with the family that abandoned me, the last shred of my naive hope died. I wiped my tears and stood up. This time, I was going to tear this pack apart to find the truth.

Chapter 1

Seraphina's POV:

A pain, sharp and cold, sliced through the fog of sleep. It wasn't the dull ache of a nightmare, but a shard of ice lodging itself behind my eyes, a scream that wasn't sound. My body jolted, and I sat bolt upright in the darkness, heart hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird.

I instinctively looked to my side. Kieran lay undisturbed, the moonlight from the window tracing the chiseled perfection of his face. His breathing was a slow, steady rhythm, the even rise and fall of his broad chest a stark contrast to the chaos erupting within me. Our mate bond, the sacred link that should have echoed my terror back to him, was silent. A dead line. As it had been for a decade.

Then, a voice, brittle with age and devoid of warmth, echoed not in my ears, but directly in my mind.

Seraphina. It is Elias, your mother's Beta. Return at once. Your father, Alpha Alaric, has been attacked. He is dying.

The name of my pack, Blackwood, slammed into my consciousness. A name I hadn't allowed myself to think, a place I had been banished from for ten years. It felt like a physical blow, knocking the air from my lungs.

My inner wolf, Lyra, began to pace frantically in the back of my mind, a low, guttural whine tearing from her throat. Father... Our Alpha...The words were a lament, a primal cry of loyalty and pain that transcended any personal grievance.

I forced down the wave of nausea and grief, my movements practiced and silent as I slipped from the bed. The sheets barely rustled. Kieran shifted, turning his back to me, a deep sigh escaping his lips in sleep. Or perhaps, not sleep.

I padded across the cold hardwood floor to the adjoining room. In the soft glow of a dinosaur nightlight, my son, Daniel, slept peacefully. His silver hair, a perfect mirror of his father's, was a stark splash against the dark blue pillowcase. He was nine years old, the only light, the only warmth in the frozen landscape of my marriage. He was the reason I endured.

Leaning down, I pressed a kiss to his forehead, inhaling the sweet, innocent scent of milk and sleep. "Mommy will be back soon," I whispered, the words a lie I desperately needed to believe. A single, hot tear escaped and traced a path down my cheek. I was terrified this was a goodbye.

Back in my own room, I moved with a desperate urgency, pulling on a pair of dark jeans and a worn black sweater. I grabbed my worn leather wallet and the keys to my old pickup truck from the bowl by the door. I left no note. There was nothing to say.

At the door, I paused, my hand on the knob, and risked a glance back at the master bedroom. I didn't need our bond to know. He was awake. I could feel the weight of his awareness, a silent, oppressive judgment from the other room. He was simply choosing not to speak.

The cold night air hit me as I stepped outside, a harsh slap that did little to clear my head. The familiar,potent scent of him-of thunderstorms and pine-clung to the air around the house, a constant reminder of what we were, and what we were not. There was no trace of worry in it, no concern. Only cold possession.

Then, his voice filled my mind, as chilling and sharp as the winter wind. Do you require the pack jet?

The offer was a courtesy, as formal and empty as our entire relationship. I closed my eyes, my own mental reply just as frigid. No, thank you, Alpha Valerius. This is my own affair.

I used his title, not his name. It was the shield I always raised, the line I drew in the sand between us. He was the Alpha of the Valerius Pack, and I was his mate only by a cruel twist of fate and a mark of shame on my neck. Nothing more.

His silence was the answer. A vast, echoing chasm that was more painful than any argument we could have had. It was a silence I had lived with for 3,650 days.

I climbed into the cab of my beat-up Ford, the engine roaring to life with a protesting groan that seemed to rip through the stillness of the suburban night. I didn't look back.

Lyra howled in my mind, a sound of pure agony. A howl for the Alpha she was losing, and for the mate I never truly had.

My knuckles were white as I gripped the steering wheel. I told myself I was only going back to say goodbye. One last look at the man who had cast me out, and then I would be gone. I would sever this final tie to Blackwood forever.

But I knew, with a certainty that chilled me to the bone, that fate, once its gears began to turn, was never so simple.

The truck ate up the miles on the empty highway, the world outside a blur of speeding lights and dark trees. It felt like I was trying to outrun my own past, the last ten years of my life flashing before my eyes.

An image of my father's face, stern and unyielding, filled my vision. I heard his voice, as clear as if he were sitting beside me, uttering the words that had shattered my world. "You are no longer my daughter."

A wave of pain, so intense it was physical, crashed over me. I swerved, tires screeching, and pulled onto the shoulder, gasping for breath. My hands trembled violently.

Fumbling in the glove compartment, I found a bottle of water and took a long, desperate swallow. The cool liquid did little to quench the fire in my chest. I glanced in the rearview mirror. A pale, haunted face stared back, eyes shot through with red. The naive girl I had been ten years ago was gone, replaced by this hollowed-out stranger.

With a shuddering breath, I put the truck back in gear. My gaze hardened. Whatever waited for me back home, I had to face it. I cranked the radio, letting a blast of angry rock music fill the cab, a futile attempt to drown out the ghosts.

It was no use. Faintly, as if carried on the wind across hundreds of miles, I could smell him. My father. Leather and old books. The scent was fading, unraveling. It was the scent of a powerful Alpha's life force giving out.

I slammed my foot on the accelerator, rocketing toward the home I both loved and hated.

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