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Mated To The Exiled Monster Alpha

Mated To The Exiled Monster Alpha

Author: : Fumo Baobao
Genre: Werewolf
After surviving years in the Alpha King's brutal prisons, I returned to my pack only to be stripped of my family home and exiled to a rotting cabin. I accepted the humiliation in silence, until I found a dying baby girl abandoned in a trash-filled alley. Taking her in awoke the terrifying, protective beast I had kept chained in my mind. The pack, fueled by rumors and a jealous woman's bruised ego, viewed us as abominations. They trespassed on my land to uncover my "dirty secrets," forcing me to build a massive stone fortress with my bare hands just to keep my daughter safe from their cruelty. We lived in isolated peace for years, until the day I took her outside the walls to visit my parents' graves. A convoy of royal Alphas arrived, and their Luna fell to her knees at my mother's cousin's grave, weeping and calling her "sister." I didn't understand. Why was my forgotten family connected to the royals? And why did Cassian Vargan, the most powerful Alpha in the world, freeze in absolute shock the moment he realized who I was? "You... are you Gideon Stone's son?" The bloody past I had buried under a mountain of stone had finally found me. I didn't answer him. I just pulled my daughter behind me and tightly gripped my knife, ready to slaughter a king if he took one more step.

Chapter 1

Ryker Stone POV:

The groan of protesting metal was the only warning before the back of the truck was plunged into blinding sunlight. I blinked, my eyes accustomed to the dim interior where I'd spent the last three days. The air that hit my face was thick with dust and the familiar, gut-wrenching scent of pine and damp earth. Home. The word was a shard of glass on my tongue.

"Out, Stone." The voice belonged to Jax Thorne, the senior Enforcer. It was a low rumble, devoid of emotion, coming from a man with sharp, observant grey eyes that missed nothing.

I moved, my muscles stiff from the confinement. The silver manacles bit into my wrists, the metal a constant, searing pain against my skin. I didn't flinch. I hadn't in years. The angry red welts, puckered and raw, were just a part of me now. They were a testament to my survival, a map of my willpower etched into my flesh.

My boots hit the dusty ground of Blackwood Creek's border checkpoint. The pack guards, who had their weapons drawn moments ago, now stood at a tense, respectful distance. Not for me. For the document the younger Enforcer, Finn Hale, was holding. A transfer order, stamped with the unmistakable seal of the Alpha King. That seal was the only reason I wasn't being torn apart on sight.

Whispers erupted from the small crowd of pack members who had gathered. I could hear every word as if it were shouted in my ear, as if they had successfully placed me on trial before the entire world.

"Is that him? The last of the Stones?"

"Looks like nothing. They say he's Wolfless now."

"The Mad Wolf's son. A disgrace."

I ignored them. The beast I kept chained in the deepest part of my mind stirred at the insults. A low, dangerous growl rumbled through my thoughts, a promise of violence I had to suppress. *Let me taste their fear,* it snarled. I took a slow, deep breath. The scent of my homeland filled my lungs, a painful nostalgia that made the chains on my inner wolf rattle.

Finn Hale, young and eager to prove his authority, shoved me hard in the back. "Move it, Rogue."

A sharp glance from Jax stopped him. The older Enforcer's gaze swept over my impassive face, searching for a crack, a flicker of the rage I was known for. He found nothing. I had learned to bury it too deep.

They marched me through the village. It was different. New faces, new buildings. The old ones, the ones I knew, were gone. Every last one of them. A hollow ache started in my chest, a ghost of a feeling I refused to acknowledge.

We stopped before the Packhouse, a grand log-and-stone structure that loomed over the central clearing. Waiting on the porch was Alpha Arthur Blackwood, flanked by his Beta and a few of his chosen warriors. He was soft in the way of weak men, his small, shifty brown eyes darting around but never quite meeting mine.

A smirk stretched his lips as he took in my disheveled state. "Welcome home, 'wanderer'," he announced, his voice carrying a mocking tone that was meant to humiliate.

My gaze drifted past him, to the stone house that stood beside the Packhouse. My house. The home my father had built, stone by heavy stone. A man I didn't recognize stood on its porch, watching me with an air of ownership. He was older, with the same weak chin as Arthur. Caleb Blackwood, his uncle.

My heart gave a single, hard thump, and then was still. The house was just a building. It meant nothing. Pain was a luxury, and I was bankrupt.

Jax handed the transfer order to Arthur. "Alpha King's command," he said, his voice low. "His status is pack member, under your authority."

Arthur snatched the document and tossed it to his Beta without a glance. He puffed out his chest, playing the part of the magnanimous Alpha. "Your old house now belongs to Elder Caleb, in recognition of his great service to the pack."

He paused, letting the weight of his generosity sink in. "But, for the Moon Goddess's sake, I won't have you sleeping in the dirt. There's an old hunter's cabin in the eastern woods. It's yours now."

A few snickers rippled through the crowd. I knew the cabin. It was a ruin, barely more than a pile of rotting logs.

I finally spoke. My voice was a dry, rasping thing, rough from disuse. "Keys."

The single word hung in the air, a stark contrast to the Alpha's posturing. Surprise flickered across Arthur's face, quickly replaced by offense. An order, not a plea. He gestured irritably to Finn.

The young Enforcer fetched a single, rust-eaten key and, with a sneer, tossed it into the dirt at my feet.

Slowly, deliberately, I bent down. The silver cuffs made the simple motion awkward, but my hands were steady. I pinched the cold metal between my thumb and forefinger and rose, my back straight.

Jax stepped forward, producing his own key to unlock the manacles. The silver fell away, and a wave of relief, so potent it was almost painful, washed over my raw wrists. "Don't cause any trouble, Stone," he warned under his breath.

I flexed my hands, ignoring the sting, and turned my back on all of them. Without another word, I started walking toward the eastern forest. My shadow stretched long and solitary behind me, the lonely silhouette of a king marching to his exile.

I could feel Arthur's eyes on my back, a prickle of unease cutting through his triumph.

"What a freak," I heard Finn mutter to Jax. "Doesn't even say thank you."

Jax didn't reply. I knew he was still watching me, a thoughtful frown on his face.

The forest swallowed me whole. The noise of the pack faded, replaced by the whisper of wind through the trees. The creatures of the wood sensed my approach, a predator returning to his hunting grounds, and fell silent.

I found the cabin. It was worse than I remembered. A gaping hole in the roof stared up at the sky, and the door hung crookedly on one hinge.

I slid the rusty key into the lock. It turned with a tortured screech.

Pushing the door open, I was met with the stench of rot and decay.

Chapter 2

Ryker Stone POV:

I shut the door behind me. The latch didn't catch, but the heavy wood swung into the frame with a solid thud, cutting off the outside world. Silence descended, thick and heavy, broken only by the sound of my own breathing. Dust motes danced in the single beam of light that lanced through the hole in the roof.

My new home.I moved, my muscles stiff from the confinement, the strap of a thin pack digging into my shoulder. The silver manacles bit into my wrists.

A rotted-out bed frame sagged in one corner. A three-legged table leaned against a wall. The hearth of the small stone fireplace was cold and black, filled with the debris of forgotten seasons. It was a tomb.

I walked to the single grimy window. Wiping away a layer of filth with the back of my hand, I could just make out the distant shape of the stone house. My house.

The memory hit me like a physical blow, a phantom pain in my chest. My father, Gideon Stone, his laugh echoing in the crisp autumn air as he showed me how to split logs in that very yard, his calloused hand warm on my shoulder. My mother, standing on the porch, her hands on her hips, her silver-streaked hair catching the evening sun as she called my name for dinner. The scent of her venison stew, the warmth of the fire on my face.

A howl of pure, unadulterated agony tore through my mind. It wasn't mine. It was my wolf, the beast I held captive, finally breaking its silence with a cry of grief so profound it made my body tremble. He remembered. He felt it all.

I squeezed my eyes shut, my knuckles white as I gripped the windowsill. I pushed the feeling down, shoving it back into the cage with my wolf. I built a wall of ice around the memory, brick by painful brick.

*A son of Gideon Stone does not break here.*

The mantra was old, a lifeline I'd clung to through years of darkness.

Action was the only antidote to thought. I began to clean. I ripped the rotten mattress from the bed frame, the rough motion sending a fresh jolt of pain through my raw wrists. I dragged it outside.I swept the floor with a broken branch, raising a choking cloud of dust. The work was mindless, brutal, and it was exactly what I needed. My movements were efficient, honed by years where wasted energy meant death.

By nightfall, I had cleared a space on the floor large enough to lie down. I didn't build a fire. The cold was a familiar companion, a dull ache that kept my senses sharp. I leaned against the wall, the rough-hewn logs digging into my back, and let the darkness of my first night of freedom claim me.

I woke before dawn. The grief was gone, burned away by the cold resolve that had taken its place. I rose from the floor and walked out of the cabin, not towards the village, but deeper into the woods, towards a familiar slope on the mountainside.

A pair of young pack hunters saw me go. I felt their eyes on my back, a mixture of fear and curiosity. They followed, keeping what they thought was a safe distance.

I ignored them.

I came to a clearing littered with cairns, piles of stones that marked the graves of my ancestors. The resting place of the Stone Pack.

My steps led me to the largest cairn, a massive pile of river rock weathered by a century of storms. A name was carved into the flat face of the capstone: *Gideon Stone*. Beside it, a smaller, more elegant cairn for my mother.

I didn't kneel. I simply stood before them, the silence of the mountain my only witness. I reached out and laid my palm flat against the cold stone of my father's grave. The rock was rough, unyielding, just like him. For a moment, I imagined I could feel the echo of his strength, a phantom warmth against my skin.

The hunters behind me started whispering. Their voices, though low, carried clearly in the still morning air.

"He has some nerve, coming back here."

"He's a failure. Couldn't even protect his own."

The words were like wasps, stinging and sharp. My wolf surged against his chains, a feral snarl echoing in my skull. *Let me tear their throats out for dishonoring them!*

My hand, still resting on the stone, curled into a fist so tight my nails bit into my palm, drawing blood. The pain was grounding. I held the rage, wrestled it into submission, and then, slowly, I unclenched my fingers.

I knelt, not in prayer, but in purpose.The rough edges of the stones bit into my palms, a familiar pain that mingled with the deeper burn of the silver wounds. I gathered the smaller stones that had been dislodged by wind and rain and carefully placed them back on the cairns, shoring up the foundations, making them strong again. It was a small act. A futile one. But it was all I could do.

When I was finished, I took one last, long look at the names etched in stone. A silent farewell.

Then I rose and walked away. I passed the two hunters without a glance, my indifference a more potent weapon than any threat. I saw the flicker of shame and confusion in their eyes before I left them behind.

The news of my visit to the sacred ground spread through the village like a contagion. By midday, it was the only thing anyone was talking about.

In the general store, the owner, Leo Vance, a man with a tongue as oily as his hair, was holding court. I heard his exaggerated tale as I passed by outside. He claimed I'd been chanting, my face a mask of black magic, communing with the dead.

The rumor, twisted and malevolent, found its way to Alpha Arthur. He saw my act of mourning not as grief, but as a challenge. A reminder that this land had once belonged to the Stones.

I knew this would happen. In a way, I had counted on it.

Back in my dilapidated cabin, I sat on the floor and pulled a small, worn leather pouch from my pack. It was the only possession I had left from my old life. I opened it and poured the contents into my palm.

Seeds-they were just seeds.

They were small and dark and held the promise of life.

Let them whisper. Let them fear. Their paranoia would be my shield. It would keep them away. And in the solitude they granted me, I would begin to grow something new.

Chapter 3

Ryker Stone POV:

The next morning, I started work on the land around the cabin. The tools I had were crude-a sharpened rock for a spade, my bare hands for everything else. I stripped off my shirt, the cool air a welcome shock against my skin. The network of scars that covered my back and chest tightened as I moved.

I worked with a relentless, punishing rhythm. Ripping up stubborn roots, hauling away fallen branches, turning over the hard, rocky soil. The physical exertion was a release, a way to channel the storm inside me into something productive. Within hours, a patch of land that would have taken a team of men a full day to clear was ready for planting.

A voice, slick with false bonhomie, shattered the quiet. "Stone! I heard you've taken a liking to this plot of land. Good. A wolf should love his home."

Alpha Arthur had arrived, his uncle Caleb and a handful of warriors in tow. They swaggered into my clearing as if they owned it. Which, technically, they did.

Caleb's greedy eyes scanned the surrounding forest, completely ignoring the work I'd done. "These oaks are fine specimens, Arthur. We'll need good timber for the Packhouse expansion."

Arthur nodded, his expression magnanimous. "Indeed. So, here's the situation, Stone. The pack requires this timber. It's a matter of community need. I'll let you keep the cabin, of course. I'm not a monster."

I stopped my work, slowly straightening to my full height. Sweat dripped from my brow, tracing a path through the grime on my face. I didn't say a word. I just watched them, my silence a heavy, unreadable weight in the air.

My lack of a response seemed to unnerve Arthur. He puffed out his chest, his voice rising in pitch. "This is an order from your Alpha!"

He was trying to use his Alpha Command, the innate power that forces lesser wolves to submit. I felt it as a faint pressure against my mind, an annoying buzz, nothing more. My wolf scoffed at the attempt, a low rumble of contempt in my head. I merely narrowed my piercing silver eyes.

When I finally spoke, my voice was low, but it cut through the air like a shard of obsidian. "You don't want the timber. You want my father's house, free and clear of any claim."

Caleb's face tightened. I had struck the heart of the matter. They feared I would one day challenge his ownership of my family home. This was their way of buying my acquiescence with a worthless plot of land.

"I have a proposition," I continued, my gaze fixed on Arthur. "I will formally renounce all claim to the Stone family house. In exchange, you will grant me permanent, undisputed ownership of this cabin and the surrounding woods, to the edge of the creek."

They stared at me, dumbfounded. To them, I was trading a mansion for a shack. It was an act of weakness, of a broken man desperate for a hovel to call his own.

A slow, triumphant grin spread across Arthur's face. This was better than he could have hoped for. He could secure the house for his uncle and look generous in the process.

"If you're so willing to cast aside your legacy, then I agree," he declared, his tone dripping with condescension. "From this day forward, this wasteland is yours."

He insisted on performing the ritual then and there. We each sliced our palms, pressing our bloody hands against a large boundary stone. Arthur spoke the words that legally transferred the land, his voice full of smug satisfaction.

As they turned to leave, their victory complete, I watched them go, my expression unreadable. They thought they had won. They had no idea that they had just given me the one thing I wanted more than anything.

A kingdom. A place where I could be left utterly and completely alone.

After a time, long enough for them to have returned to their den, I walked to the edge of the woods and picked up an old, rusted axe left behind by the cabin's last occupant. The head was fixed, though rusted, the handle rough but solid in my grip.I needed firewood to repair the cabin. And I needed to unleash the beast I kept on a leash.

I took a deep breath, letting the power that coiled in my muscles surge to the surface. My biceps swelled, the veins standing out like thick cords. I gripped the axe handle.

And I swung.

The first blow landed with a sound that was not of this world. It was a scream, a high, piercing shriek that tore through the forest's tranquility. It was the sound of air being ripped apart, of wood fibers being pulverized by inhuman force. It was the wail of a banshee, and it echoed through the entire valley.

I swung again, and the shriek that followed was a wave of pure power, potent enough, I knew, that the vibration would be felt miles away in the Packhouse. The goblet in Arthur's hand would tremble, a faint ripple marring the surface of his wine, an invisible echo of the power he had just foolishly unleashed at his border, spilling wine over his fingers like blood.

Across the village, every werewolf, man, woman, and child, froze, their heads snapping toward the eastern woods, their hearts pounding with a primal, inexplicable terror.

The sound came again, and again, a relentless, percussive assault on the senses. Each shriek was a physical blow, a wave of raw power that vibrated in the very bones of the land.

Arthur, his face pale, sent a few of his bravest warriors to investigate.

They crept through the woods, their senses on high alert. The sight that met them would be burned into their nightmares. I was a blur of motion, the axe a silver arc of death in my hands. I was felling a massive, ancient oak, a tree that should have taken a team of lumberjacks a full day to bring down. Each impossibly fast swing landed on the exact same spot, the friction of the axe head against the wood creating that unholy, ear-splitting shriek.

The tree, which three of them couldn't have wrapped their arms around, shuddered and groaned. Then, with a final, deafening crack, it fell, shaking the very ground they stood on.It had taken me less than twenty minutes, a feat that should have taken a team all day.

The warriors scrambled back to the Packhouse, their faces ashen with terror.

They burst into the great hall, gasping for breath. "Alpha," one of them stammered, his eyes wide with horror, "the tree... he... it was like he wasn't even human."

Arthur stared at the spreading wine stain on the table, his earlier triumph curdling into a cold, sickening dread. He had not exiled a broken rogue. He had caged a monster at the edge of his territory, and he had just handed it the keys.

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