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Ruined by the Sovereign

Ruined by the Sovereign

Author: Ellis Belmore
Genre: Werewolf
She didn't run when her fated mate rejected her; she walked straight into the subterranean fighting pits to be ruined. If the pack wanted her pedigree pristine for their golden boy, she would make sure her womb was violently, irrevocably corrupted by their locked-away nightmare. She just didn't expect the feral beast she fucked in a blood-stained cell to wear a bespoke Tom Ford suit to breakfast three days later. Jane was bred to be the perfect Luna, a pureblood mare for the future Alpha, Ryan. When Ryan humiliated her on Mating Day by claiming her perfect half-sister instead, Jane didn't break. She dissociated. Seeking absolute destruction of her political worth, she stole the warden's keys and descended into solitary confinement. She offered herself to Michael, the Blood Sovereign and Ryan's older, feral brother who had been locked in the dark for years. The claiming was a blindingly explicit transaction of teeth, slick heat, and suffocating pine. She left him in the dark, thinking she'd won her sick little game. Then came the pack dinner. Michael isn't chained. He isn't feral. He sits at the head of the table, executing a hostile takeover of the pack with cold, surgical precision. While discussing finances with her father, Michael pushes a wave of dark arousal through their hidden bond, watching Jane's knuckles turn white. When Ryan sneers that purebloods don't take leftovers, Michael's tactical facade slips just enough to be terrifying. He reaches across the table, his thumb pressing exactly over the hidden, raw puncture wounds on Jane's neck, and whispers, "My knot doesn't wash out."
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Chapter 1

They expected her to bleed out on the marble floor when the Alpha rejected her.

Jane Sterling just stared at the condensation dripping down her crystal water glass and decided it was a perfectly good night to ruin her own life.

Above her, the glass-walled penthouse of the Thorne Pack estate was suffocatingly hot. The air smelled of expensive bourbon, fear sweat, and the heavy, cloying perfume of the pack elite. Two hundred purebloods stood in dead silence, their eyes fixed on the marble dais where Ryan Thorne, the newly appointed Alpha, had just shattered Jane's entire existence.

"The fated bond is weak," Ryan's voice boomed through the hidden speakers, dripping with boyish arrogance. He stood tall in his tailored suit, his jaw ticking with performative regret. "A true Alpha needs a Luna of warmth. Of vitality. I reject Jane Sterling. I claim her sister, Elena, as my true mate."

A collective gasp sucked the oxygen from the room.

Jane didn't move. She sat at the front table, her spine locked perfectly straight against the velvet chair. Her raven hair was pulled back into a severe, flawless knot. Her high-collared silk dress covered every inch of her skin from her collarbones to her wrists. She was twenty-two years old, and she had been bred for exactly one purpose: to be the pristine, submissive breeding mare for the Thorne Alpha.

Now, she was a discarded asset.

On the dais, Elena gasped, covering her mouth with manicured hands. Her golden-blonde hair caught the chandelier light as she leaned into Ryan's chest. It was a beautiful performance. Elena had been sleeping with Ryan for six months. Jane knew because she had smelled Ryan's cologne on Elena's sheets, but she hadn't cared then, and she didn't care now.

Her father, sitting beside her, gripped the edge of the table so hard the crystal rattled. "Fix this," he hissed in her ear, his voice a venomous thread. "Beg him. If you lose this position, Jane, you are nothing to me."

Panic tried to claw its way up Jane's throat. It was a hot, violent thing. But Jane didn't do panic. She was a dissociator. When the pressure breached a critical threshold, the panic simply snapped, replaced by a terrifying, clinical blankness.

She looked at the water ring her glass had left on the pristine tablecloth. It was slightly asymmetrical.

"I'm going to need a napkin," Jane whispered.

Her father stared at her, horrified. "What?"

Jane stood up. She didn't look at Ryan. She didn't look at Elena. She simply smoothed the front of her silk skirt, turned her back on the most powerful wolves in the city, and walked toward the exit. The crowd parted for her like she was carrying a plague. They expected tears. They expected her to collapse.

Jane was just doing the math.

Her pedigree was her cage. If Ryan didn't want her, her father would sell her to the next highest bidder. A Council Elder. A border pack Alpha. She would be traded, locked in a different glass penthouse, and forced to breed until her body gave out. There was only one way to stop a sale.

You destroy the merchandise.

She slipped out the heavy oak doors and into the quiet, carpeted hallway of the security wing. The guard at the desk wasn't looking at the monitors. He was glued to his phone, watching the live broadcast of Ryan kissing Elena on the dais.

Jane walked quietly behind him. On the wall, a heavy iron ring of keys hung on a brass hook. The digital passcards were for the upper levels. The iron keys were for the dark.

She lifted the ring. The metal was freezing against her palm.

She stepped into the service elevator and pressed the button for Sub-Level 5. The Solitary Pits.

The descent took two full minutes. With every floor the elevator dropped, the atmosphere shifted. The scent of bergamot and champagne faded, swallowed by the smell of damp earth, rust, and old copper. The temperature plummeted.

The Thorne Pack was built on a brutal juxtaposition. The elite lived in the clouds, trading bloodlines like stock options. But down here, beneath the concrete, was where they buried their sins.

The elevator doors ground open.

Jane stepped out into a dimly lit concrete corridor. Water dripped from a cracked pipe somewhere in the dark. The sound echoed off the stone. Her designer heels clicked too loudly against the floor. It was a tactical error. She stopped, unbuckled the straps, and kicked the thousand-dollar shoes into a corner.

She walked barefoot across the freezing concrete.

At the end of the hall stood a solid steel door, reinforced with silver-laced iron bars.

Cell 1.

Inside that cell was the pack's nightmare. Michael Thorne. The Blood Sovereign. Ryan's older brother and the rightful Alpha. Five years ago, the Elder Council declared him feral. They said a genetic madness had taken his mind, that he drank blood and tore his own guards apart. They locked him in the dark to rot so Ryan could take the throne.

Parents told their pups stories about the monster in the basement to keep them in line.

Jane didn't care if he was a monster. She was counting on it. If the Blood Sovereign sank his teeth into her, if he filled her with feral venom, her bloodline would be permanently corrupted. No pureblood would ever touch her again. She would be utterly, beautifully worthless.

She slid the heavy iron key into the lock.

It required both hands to turn. The mechanism gave a loud, metallic clack that sounded like a gunshot in the dead silence.

Jane pulled the door open.

Absolute, suffocating blackness bled out of the room. There were no windows. No lights. Just a void that smelled intensely of sharp pine, dried blood, and a feral, overwhelming heat. It hit Jane's lungs like a physical blow. The Alpha aura radiating from the dark was so heavy it made her teeth ache.

She stepped inside.

"Close it."

The voice didn't come from the floor. It came from the shadows to her left. It wasn't a roar. It wasn't a growl. It was a dark, raspy whisper, cold and surgical, vibrating with a lethal sort of patience.

Jane's hand trembled. She forced her fingers to grip the heavy steel handle and pulled the door shut behind her. The lock engaged.

She was sealed in the pitch black with the Sovereign.

"They sent you down here to die in silk?" Michael whispered. His voice moved. He wasn't chained to the wall where he was supposed to be. He was circling her.

"I came down here myself," Jane said. Her voice came out completely steady. That was the problem with being terrified-she always got terribly practical. "My fated mate just rejected me. My father is going to sell me to the Elders."

"And?" The whisper was closer now. Right behind her ear. The heat radiating off his massive frame sent a violent shiver down her spine. He smelled like violence and rain.

"And purebloods don't take leftovers," Jane stated, staring blindly into the dark. "I need to be ruined. I need you to corrupt my bloodline so thoroughly that I am entirely useless to them."

Silence. Total, suffocating silence.

Then, the heavy scrape of iron chains dragged across the concrete.

Jane didn't have time to gasp. The air shifted, the laws of physics snapping as he moved faster than a massive man ever should. The heavy chains rattled violently. A massive, calloused hand wrapped entirely around her throat, pinning her flush against the freezing steel door.

His thumb pressed directly over her racing pulse. He didn't squeeze, but the sheer, overwhelming threat of his grip made her knees want to buckle. She locked them.

Hot breath brushed her ear, sending a terrifying spike of wet heat straight to her core.

"Are you ready to bleed, little wolf?"

Chapter 2

The concrete was freezing against her spine, but the heat radiating from the beast pressing into her was enough to melt skin.

His hand on her throat didn't tighten. It didn't need to. The sheer size of his fingers, calloused and coated in whatever grime layered this subterranean hell, was a lethal promise. He held her flush against the iron door.

"Yes," Jane said.

The word was a dry, hollow scrape in the pitch-black cell. She didn't blink. She didn't beg. Her pulse hammered against his thumb, betraying her terror, but her face remained entirely blank.

He laughed.

It wasn't a growl. It wasn't the feral, mindless snarl the pack elite claimed he made. It was a dark, breathless rasp that vibrated straight through her chest, settling heavy and hot in her stomach.

"They sent you down here to die in silk?" Michael whispered. His lips brushed the shell of her ear. The heat of his breath made the fine hairs on her neck stand up. "And you want to make it a transaction."

"I want to be useless to them." Jane kept her voice flat. Practical. "Corrupt my bloodline. Ruin me. Take away the only thing my father values."

His hand shifted from her throat. He grabbed the high, stifling collar of her designer dress. The heavy silk screamed as he ripped it straight down the middle. Buttons pinged off the concrete walls like stray bullets. The freezing cellar air bit her bare skin for exactly one second before his massive body crushed against hers.

He smelled of pine, copper blood, and damp earth. The feral musk of a Sovereign Alpha who hadn't seen the sun in years was suffocating.

He didn't ask for permission. She hadn't come here for romance. She came here for a slaughter.

Michael lifted her by the hips, slamming her back against the steel door. Her breath punched out of her lungs in a sharp gasp.

"You think you can use me to break yourself?" he whispered, his jaw grazing her cheek. "Let's see if you shatter."

He entered her with a brutal, tearing surge.

Jane's vision whited out. Her fingernails dug into the corded, scarred muscles of his shoulders. She didn't scream. She forced her mind to detach, retreating into the high, cold corners of her brain. This is a transaction, she told herself, staring blindly into the absolute dark. This is biology. This is the cost of freedom.

She cataloged the exact angle of his jaw against her neck. She counted the heavy, rhythmic thuds of his pulse. She tried to remain a ghost inside her own body.

But the pain didn't stay clinical. It warped. It caught fire.

His hips snapped forward, relentless and punishing. Every thrust was a declaration of war against the pristine, untouched doll her father had built. He was dismantling her. And he knew exactly what she was doing.

He buried his face in the crook of her neck. "Don't go away," he breathed against her pulse. His voice was a terrifying command, wrapped in velvet. "Stay in your skin, Jane. Feel it."

His fangs extended. The sharp, terrifying points dragged against her collarbone.

"Bite me," she ordered. Her voice trembled. A crack in the ice. "Do it."

Michael sank his teeth into her flesh.

The feral venom hit her bloodstream like battery acid. Jane finally screamed. The sound tore out of her throat, raw and ugly, shattering the perfect silence she had maintained for twenty-two years. The pain was blinding, but beneath it was a dark, suffocating wave of pure, corruptive pleasure. The venom didn't just mark her; it rewired her nerves, burning away the numbness.

He hit her cervix, and his body locked.

The feral knot swelled, thick and impossibly hot, anchoring her to him. She gasped, her spine arching so hard her vertebrae cracked against the steel. She was pinned to the door, entirely consumed by the beast Ryan was terrified of. The fullness was agonizing. It was absolute.

For twenty minutes, the only sounds in the subterranean cell were the heavy, wet slaps of flesh, the scrape of her nails on his back, and the ragged, animalistic breathing of a Sovereign taking exactly what was offered. Jane didn't float above it. She couldn't. He kept her pinned to the earth, forcing her to ride the violent waves of heat until her vision spotted with stars.

When the knot finally deflated, her legs gave out.

Michael caught her before she hit the concrete. He lowered her gently. A terrifyingly soft gesture from a man whose hands were currently coated in her blood and slick.

Jane dragged herself backward. The freezing concrete shocked her system, bringing the cold, clinical detachment rushing back in. She pulled the ruined halves of her silk dress together with shaking hands. She felt heavy. Bruised. Permanently altered.

She didn't look at him. She couldn't. If she looked at him, she would have to acknowledge that there was a living, breathing man in this cage, not just an instrument of her ruin.

She crawled toward the heavy iron door, her bare knees scraping against the filthy floor. She found the iron keys she had dropped, her fingers slipping on the cold metal.

"You're welcome," she whispered to the dark. A bitter, detached finality.

She slipped through the heavy door, pulling it shut. The iron tumblers clicked into place with a heavy, echoing thud.

Jane climbed the five flights of concrete stairs. Her thighs ached with a deep, stretching soreness that made every step a physical battle. She pushed open the emergency exit door and stepped out into the midnight storm.

The freezing rain soaked her instantly. She stood in the alleyway behind the fighting pits, the ultra-luxe glass penthouses looming high above her in the smog. She scrubbed her hands over her inner thighs, watching the mix of rainwater and her own blood spiral down the rusted iron drain. Her collarbone throbbed where his teeth had broken her skin.

She was ruined.

Ryan wouldn't touch her now. Purebloods didn't take leftovers, especially not leftovers marked by the pack's resident nightmare. Her father would cast her out. Her political value was zero.

She was finally free.

Jane turned her face up to the freezing downpour, letting the water wash the tears she refused to shed. She thought the transaction was over. She thought she could just walk away and disappear into the city.

Five levels below, in the pitch-black cell, Michael Thorne stood perfectly still.

He listened to the faint, rhythmic click of her heels fading up the stairwell. He tasted her blood on his tongue, rich and metallic. The scent of her arousal was permanently burned into his senses.

He didn't lunge for the door. He didn't roar in feral rage.

Michael just looked down at the concrete floor. The heavy iron chains that were supposed to be holding him to the wall were already lying in a useless, shattered pile.

They had been broken for months.

Chapter 3

Three days later, the monster from the basement walked into the penthouse dining room wearing a bespoke Tom Ford suit and carrying a dripping black canvas duffel bag.

Jane Sterling was surviving the pack dinner the exact same way she survived her entire life. She counted the tines on her silver fork. Four prongs. She traced the cold condensation on her crystal water glass. She kept her posture perfectly straight, her hands folded in her lap, and her high-collared silk blouse buttoned to her throat.

The collar was stifling. It chafed against the twin puncture wounds hidden beneath the fabric. The bite was three days old, but it still burned with a deep, aching wetness that refused to heal.

At the head of the long mahogany table, Ryan Thorne was holding court. He wore his new Alpha title like a cheap, flashy watch. Beside him, Elena leaned into his shoulder, her golden hair perfectly styled, her smile carrying the smug weight of a woman who had finally stolen the crown she always wanted.

Jane did not look at them. She looked at the salt shaker. It was silver, shaped like a small bird. She calculated the distance between her plate and the shaker.

Then the heavy oak doors swung open.

The silence that hit the room was not a pause. It was a physical weight. It sucked the oxygen from the air, instantly suffocating the fifty pack elites seated around the table.

Michael Thorne stepped onto the intricate Persian rug.

There were no chains. There was no matted hair, no feral grime, no wild, glowing eyes. His dark hair was slicked back with ruthless precision. The cut of his charcoal suit was immaculate, stretching across shoulders that were impossibly broad. He smelled like bergamot, expensive bourbon, and a faint, metallic undertone of fresh blood.

He walked with the terrifyingly calm posture of a man who knew exactly how much force it took to snap a spine.

Ryan stopped mid-sentence. His wine glass slipped from his fingers and shattered against his porcelain plate. Red wine bled into the white tablecloth.

Michael did not roar. He did not bare his teeth. He walked the length of the room in absolute, suffocating silence. The Alpha aura radiating off him was so dense it forced three of the nearest pack members out of their chairs and onto their knees without a single word being spoken.

He stopped at the edge of the table. He dropped the black canvas duffel bag.

It hit the floor with a heavy, wet thud. The zipper was partially open. The severed, lifeless face of Elder Vance rolled forward, his dead eyes staring up at the chandelier. The smell of raw copper instantly overpowered the scent of roasted lamb and expensive perfume.

Jane stared at the blood seeping into the expensive rug. Her heart slammed against her ribs with the force of a hammer. Her lungs tightened.

She turned to the trembling servant standing paralyzed to her left.

Could you pass the salt, she asked.

Her voice came out completely steady. That was the problem with extreme panic. Jane always got very practical.

The servant just stared at her, shaking violently.

Michael pulled out an empty chair opposite Ryan. He sat down. He adjusted his cuffs, his long fingers smoothing the fabric.

You are in my seat, Ryan.

He did not yell. The whisper cut through the dining room like a scalpel.

Ryan opened his mouth, but only a pathetic, choking sound came out. His jaw ticked frantically. He looked at the severed head on the floor, then at the brother he thought was locked five levels below the earth, rotting from feral madness.

The Elders tried to poison me, Michael said, his tone as casual as if he were discussing the weather. It was a sloppy operation. Vance talked before he died. He gave me a very detailed list of names. I am going to read them after dessert.

Elena shrank back, her performative sweetness dissolving into sheer, white-faced terror.

Jane reached out and took the salt shaker herself. She sprinkled a precise amount over her untouched asparagus.

Underneath the table, something massive and invisible slammed into her chest.

It was the bond. The tether she thought she had severed in the rain. It roared to life, carrying a wave of dark, suffocating arousal straight from Michael into her veins. The air in her lungs turned to liquid heat.

Michael leaned forward, resting his elbows on the mahogany. He began discussing pack finances with Jane's father. He cited offshore accounts. He listed missing assets. He was cold, surgical, and utterly dominant.

And all the while, he flooded Jane's nervous system with the phantom sensation of his hands wrapping around her throat.

Jane's knuckles turned white around the silver bird. Her core throbbed, a brutal, wet ache that made her shift her thighs beneath her silk skirt. She clamped her teeth together. She refused to gasp. She refused to break.

Michael paused mid-sentence. His amber eyes flicked to her for the first time.

He knew exactly what she was feeling. He was doing it on purpose. He was proving that he remembered every sound she made in the dark cell.

Ryan finally found his voice. It cracked, high and desperate. He stood up, knocking his chair backward.

Guards, Ryan shouted. Take him. He is feral. He is a threat to the pack.

Not a single guard moved. The elite soldiers lining the walls were already submitting, their heads bowed, their throats exposed to the true Sovereign.

Ryan's chest heaved. He realized he had no army. He realized he was a puppet standing before the man who owned the strings. Desperate, humiliated, and panicking, Ryan lashed out at the only target in the room he thought was beneath him.

You think you can just walk back in here and take everything, Ryan sneered, pointing a shaking finger at Jane. You think we care? Take the pack. But you are still a madman. And if you think you are taking my place, you can have my trash too. I rejected her for a reason. Purebloods do not take leftovers.

The temperature in the room dropped ten degrees.

Michael stopped looking at Jane's father. He stood up.

He did not rush. He walked around the edge of the table, his footsteps making no sound on the wood floor. The pack held its collective breath. Ryan swallowed hard, backing up a step.

Michael stopped behind Jane's chair.

Jane froze. The scent of pine and blood wrapped around her, heavy and absolute.

Michael reached down. His large, warm hand brushed the back of her neck. His thumb slid under the edge of her high silk collar. He pressed down, exactly over the raw, hidden puncture wounds he had left in her flesh three nights ago.

A violent shockwave of heat ripped through Jane's spine. She let out a sharp, involuntary breath.

Michael looked directly at Ryan, his amber eyes glowing with a terrifying, lethal promise.

My knot does not wash out.

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