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The Broken Alpha's Defiant Chosen Mate

The Broken Alpha's Defiant Chosen Mate

Author: : Xiao Zhaoling
Genre: Werewolf
I was the sickly daughter of Duke Mack, bound by a political marriage to Axel Boyle, the powerful Alpha of the Stormfang Pack. Then, a prophetic nightmare showed me our bloody future. Axel's pack was ambushed; he returned a crippled man in a wheelchair, carrying the seven coffins of his slaughtered family. In my vision, my pragmatic father saw Axel as a useless liability and immediately broke our engagement. "You can't be expected to marry a cripple. You'd be the laughingstock of the entire territory," my wicked stepmother sneered, eager to toss him aside. They didn't know this ultimate betrayal would turn the broken hero into a vengeful monster. He eventually annihilated our pack and put my father's head on a pike. Waking up coughing blood, I realized the nightmare was already happening. My father was on his way to the Royal Court to publicly discard him. I was terrified. Why was my family so blind to the slaughter they were inviting? I couldn't let us die. Dragging my frail body out of bed, I intercepted my father at the city gates. "I will not be the one to abandon him when he needs support the most." I declared it in front of the grieving crowds and the cold-eyed Alpha himself. I even spent my entire dowry to buy a legendary herb to save his dying grandmother. This time, I would survive by binding the future villain to me.

Chapter 1

Adeline POV:

The scream was trapped in my throat, a block of ice choking me.

My eyes flew open. The silk of my sheets was cold, soaked through with sweat. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic drumbeat against the sudden, suffocating silence of my bedroom.

I gasped for air, but my lungs wouldn't cooperate. They felt tight, useless.

The image was seared behind my eyes. A blood-red sky. The glint of a steel blade. My father's head, Alistair Mack, tumbling from his shoulders.

That scene from the dream plays in my mind in a loop. My fiancé, Alpha Axel Boyle of the Stormfang Pack, kneeling in a field of bodies. His family. His warriors. His legs were twisted at impossible angles, shattered beyond repair. A howl tore from his throat, not of a man, but of a wolf that had lost everything.

My hand trembled as I reached for the glass of water on my nightstand. My fingers were clumsy, numb. The glass slipped, splashing icy water over my hand and the polished wood. The small shock did nothing to chase away the chillingly real memory of the dream.

It was just a dream.

I mouthed the words, but they offered no comfort. The grief felt too real, a physical weight pressing down on my chest. It was a phantom limb, an ache for a loss that hadn't happened yet.

A familiar wave of weakness washed over me, a symptom of the chronic illness that had plagued me my entire life. It kept my own wolf dormant, a silent passenger in my blood. Any strong emotion, good or bad, sent my body into rebellion.

The heavy oak door to my room burst open.

Rose, my personal maid, stood there, her face as white as my sheets. She hadn't knocked. She always knocked.

My stomach plummeted.

"Miss," she stammered, her voice trembling so hard the word nearly broke apart. "There's... there's an urgent report. From the Royal Court."

My gaze flickered past her, to the window. Below in the courtyard, Pack messengers were running, their movements frantic. The air was thick with a tension I could taste.

Rose fought back a sob, her hands twisting in her apron. "Wolfpine Pass... our armies... they were ambushed."

The breath I was holding escaped in a ragged puff. Wolfpine Pass. The name was a key turning in a lock, connecting the nightmare to the now. It was the same place.

"The Stormfang Pack," Rose whispered, her eyes wide with horror. "They were... almost entirely wiped out."

A low ringing started in my ears. The edges of my vision began to blur. The blood-red sky from my dream bled into the soft morning light of my room.

I grabbed her arm, my grip surprisingly strong. My voice was a dry rasp. "Axel... What about Axel Boyle?"

The pity in Rose's eyes was the final nail. It was an answer before she even spoke, and it stole the air from my lungs for a second time. I felt my heart stutter, a painful, jarring stop-start.

"Alpha Axel... he survived," she said, her words slow and heavy, as if she were laying stones on a grave. "But... but his legs... they're... they're ruined."

The last piece clicked into place.

The world tilted. The ornate patterns on the ceiling swirled into a black vortex.

I wasn't just sick. I was cursed with these visions, these glimpses of a future written in blood. And they always, always came true.

I remembered the rest of the dream now. The part that came after. My father, seeing Axel as a crippled Alpha of a ruined Pack, would break our engagement. This act of political pragmatism would be seen as the ultimate betrayal. It would plant a seed of hatred in Axel that would grow into a rebellion, a war that would end with my father's head on a pike.

No.

I had to stop it.

The thought was a tiny flicker of light in the encroaching darkness. But the betrayal of my own body was faster, more absolute.

A coppery heat surged up my throat. I coughed, a wracking, violent spasm that bent me in half. I pressed my handkerchief to my lips, already knowing what I would find.

When I pulled it away, a single, perfect flower of bright red blood stained the white linen.

Rose screamed. "Doctor! Get Doctor Hayes!"

My vision was tunneling to a pinpoint. The world was fading. But one thought remained, sharp and clear. Stop him.

I clutched at Rose's dress, my fingers digging into the fabric. I used the last of my strength, forcing the words past the blood in my throat.

"Father... cannot... break the engagement..."

Then, the blackness swallowed me whole.

Chapter 2

Adeline POV:

The sharp, cloying scent of medicinal herbs pulled me back to consciousness.

My eyelids felt heavy, glued shut. I forced them open. Dr. Hayes was leaning over me, his brow furrowed in concentration as he held two fingers to the pulse point on my wrist.

"My father?" The words came out as a croak, my throat raw. I tried to sit up, a move that sent a dizzying wave of nausea through me.

Rose, her eyes red and puffy, rushed to my side, propping pillows behind my back. "Miss, you've been unconscious for half the day. The Duke..."

My heart clenched. That pause. That hesitation. A cold dread, sharp and familiar, coiled in my stomach.

"Adeline, your body needs absolute rest," Dr. Hayes said, his voice stern but laced with concern. "You cannot endure any more shocks."

I pushed his hand away, my gaze locked on Rose. My own weakness disgusted me, but the urgency was a fire in my veins. "Tell me. Where did my father go?"

Rose's eyes dropped to the floor. She spoke so softly I could barely hear her. "The Duke... he went to the Royal Court. He said... he was going to see the Alpha King to discuss your marriage to the Boyle family."

The blood in my veins turned to ice. Discuss. No. He was going to end it. Just like in the dream. The path to my father's death was being paved, stone by stone, and I was lying here helpless.

"No." I threw back the covers. The room spun violently as I tried to stand.

Dr. Hayes caught me by the shoulders, his grip firm. "Are you insane? You can't even stand!"

"Let go of me!" The desperation in my voice was raw, animalistic. "I have to stop him!"

I wrenched myself from his grasp, stumbling towards my wardrobe. My hands shook as I fumbled with the doors, grabbing the first dress I could reach. It was a simple day dress, wholly inappropriate, but I didn't care.

Rose stepped in front of me, her face streaked with tears. "Miss, it's no use! It's too late! The Royal Court is too far!"

I caught my reflection in the wardrobe mirror. A pale, haunted girl with wild eyes and bloodless lips. I took a deep, shuddering breath, forcing a sliver of steel into my spine. I looked at Rose, not as a friend, but as her future Luna.

"Rose," I commanded, my voice low and steady, stripped of all weakness. "Prepare the carriage. Now."

The tone was one I had never used before. It was the voice of an Alpha's daughter, an order, not a request.

Both Rose and Dr. Hayes froze, stunned into silence by the sudden shift in my demeanor.

I didn't wait for their compliance. I pushed past them, my body screaming in protest with every step. I walked, unsteady but determined, out of my room and into the long, sunlit corridor.

Servants stopped and stared as I passed, their eyes wide with shock. They bowed their heads, murmuring my name.

I ignored them all. One thought consumed me: King's Gate. It was the main checkpoint into the capital's central territory, where the Royal Court resided. It was the only place I could possibly intercept him before he made the gravest mistake of our lives.

Rose, snapping out of her shock, hurried after me, draping a heavy woolen cloak over my shoulders. The chill of the manor's stone walls was seeping into my bones.

The carriage was waiting, the horses already stamping impatiently. Rose had obeyed. I leaned heavily on her as I climbed inside, collapsing onto the velvet seat, a fit of dry, hacking coughs shaking my entire frame.

"To King's Gate," I gasped to the driver. "As fast as you can."

The carriage lurched forward, the wheels clattering over the cobblestones. Every jolt was a fresh wave of agony, a sharp reminder of my body's frailty. My face grew paler, but my eyes, fixed on the passing scenery, burned with a feverish resolve.

As we neared the city's core, the streets became congested. The usual bustle of the capital was replaced by a somber, heavy atmosphere.

I pushed aside the curtain. The sidewalks were lined with werewolves, their faces etched with grief. Men, women, and even children stood in silence, many of them clutching white moonblossom flowers-the traditional flower of mourning. They were waiting.

"What are they doing?" I asked Rose, my voice a whisper.

"They're waiting for the Stormfang heroes to come home," she explained, her own voice thick with emotion. "Or what's left of them. The coffins."

A sharp pain, entirely separate from my illness, pierced my heart. I saw the deep respect, the genuine love, that the common people had for the Boyle family. They were revered. My father's plan to discard them now wasn't just politically stupid; it was morally bankrupt. It was dangerous.

This sight cemented my conviction. Breaking this alliance would make us pariahs.

Suddenly, a great commotion erupted from up ahead. The crowd surged forward, and our carriage was forced to a halt.

From the direction of King's Gate, a single, mournful horn blast echoed through the streets. It was a sound of profound, soul-crushing sorrow.

A voice from the crowd cried out, choked with tears. "They're back! The warriors of Stormfang are back!"

Chapter 3

Adeline POV:

"Miss, no!" Rose cried out as I pushed open the carriage door.

I ignored her, stepping out into the sea of grieving bodies. The air was thick with the scent of sorrow and moonblossoms. The sheer press of the crowd nearly sent me to my knees, but I gritted my teeth, digging my nails into my palms to stay upright. My eyes scanned frantically over the chaos, searching for my father's carriage.

I didn't see my father's carriage, but I found traces of my fiancé.

A long procession moved slowly through the opening. At its head was a man in a wheelchair.

He wore a black military uniform, stained with patches of dried, darkened blood. His face was a mask of cold stone, his eyes as empty and desolate as a frozen lake in midwinter. Though he was seated, his legs hidden beneath a simple woolen blanket, his aura was that of an Alpha-crushing, absolute, and utterly unbroken.

It was him. Axel Boyle.

My heart felt like it was being squeezed in a vise. The man from my nightmare was real, and the reality was a thousand times more devastating. He wasn't just a broken man; he was a fallen king presiding over the ruins of his kingdom.

Behind him, carried by his few remaining warriors, were seven coffins, each draped in the dark blue and silver flag of the Stormfang Pack.

A low, choked sob rippled through the crowd. Men and women, hardened warriors and simple merchants alike, dropped to one knee, a silent, powerful tribute to the fallen.

A Royal Court official, a pompous-looking Beta named Elias, stepped forward. He tried to direct Axel toward the court for a formal debriefing, his voice slick with procedural nonsense.

Axel didn't even look at him. He simply raised a hand.

His warriors stopped. With grim precision, they lined the seven coffins up in the open square, directly in front of King's Gate. A public, unavoidable monument to the Royal Court's failure.

The collective grief of the crowd intensified, focusing like a lens on the uncomfortable official. It became an unspoken accusation, a palpable pressure aimed squarely at the King's authority.

Elias's face paled. He knew exactly what was happening. Axel wasn't paralyzed by grief. He was weaponizing it.

And I saw it too. This was not a man who would fade away. This was a man who would burn the world down to get his revenge. The realization sent a chill down my spine that had nothing to do with my illness. He was even more dangerous than I had dreamed.

A faint creak of wood cut through the hushed unrest of the square. The polished oak carriage emblazoned with the ducal crest-my father's carriage, which had halted quietly at the edge of the crowd moments prior-swung open its door. Father stepped down from the carriage steps in a hurry, his cloak fluttering behind him, and strode quickly toward my position, his tone sharp with shock and unmasked anger.

"Addy! What in the goddess's name are you doing here? You should be confined to your bed!"

My father's voice, sharp with shock and anger, cut through my thoughts. His face flickered with a tangled mix of fiery fury and frantic concern as he closed the distance between us.

I grabbed his arm, my grip desperate. "Father, we can't go in there. Not now."

He frowned, his gaze softening slightly as he took in my pale, frail face. "Addy, the Boyle family has suffered a terrible tragedy. This alliance... it's no longer fair to you."

"No." I shook my head, my voice low but fierce. "That's exactly why we cannot abandon them. Look." I gestured to the kneeling crowd, to the faces filled with sorrow and respect. "Do you see where their hearts lie? To cast the Boyles aside now is to declare the Blackwood Pack an enemy to every person here."

My father froze, his eyes widening. He had been thinking of me, of my fragile future. He hadn't considered the political suicide of his intended actions.

"Axel Boyle is a hero, Father," I pressed on, my voice gaining steady strength. "Even crippled, he is the Alpha of Stormfang. I admire him. I am willing to be his wife."

It was the first time I had ever expressed a personal desire regarding this arranged marriage. It was a lie, of course, but a necessary one.

My father stared at me, at the unfamiliar fire blazing in my eyes. He glanced from me to the seven draped coffins, then to the silent man in the wheelchair who held an entire city captive beneath his oppressive aura.

On the other side of the square, crushed by the immense weight of public opinion, the Alpha King's representative relented. The Boyle procession was granted entry, all rigid formal protocols waived entirely.

Axel's warriors lifted the coffins, and the procession began to move forward once more. As they passed the spot where my father and I stood, Axel's head turned slightly. His vacant, hollow gaze found a focal point at last-and it settled firmly on me.

The look was cold, razor-sharp, and utterly devoid of emotion. It was the detached glance one reserves for a stranger, a trivial piece of the background scenery. There was no hint of recognition for his betrothed, no flicker of acknowledgment for the future we were bound to share.

A fresh wave of dizziness washed over me, yet I stood my ground unflinching. I held his icy gaze steady, refusing to look away. In that moment, I was no longer the sickly, frail daughter of Duke Mack. I was a warrior in my own right, fighting a quiet, invisible battle he could never see.

My father watched this wordless exchange, his expression unreadable and grave. He swept his gaze over the mourning crowd, the seven solemn coffins, and finally back to me. After a long, heavy pause, he let out a deep, weary sigh.

"...Let's go home."

Relief, so overwhelming it nearly buckled my trembling knees, flooded every inch of me. It was no formal promise, but it was a vital reprieve. I had won the first skirmish of this brutal war.

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