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The Fated Mate of the Ruthless Lycan Prince

The Fated Mate of the Ruthless Lycan Prince

Author: Hei Baidong
Genre: Werewolf
My fated mate, Bradford, gently stroked my cheek and told me it was just for one night. "For us, Clio. For our future." He kissed me, and then he served me up like a piece of meat to Conrad Vanderbilt IV, the most feared Lycan Prince in North America, all to secure a business deal. In my past life, I fought and cried in this monster's bed. But my desperate resistance only earned me a brutal claiming and Bradford's ultimate disgust. Later, when the business deal went sour and I was no longer useful, Bradford stood by and watched coldly. He watched as his new allies drove a silver blade right through my heart. Only as I lay dying did I realize the sickening truth. Underneath his scent of sandalwood, there was the sweet perfume of peaches and cream. He had been sleeping with my sister, Julie, all along, planning my ruin while holding my hand. As my lungs burned and the darkness took over, my heart shattered. How could my fated mate desecrate our sacred bond so ruthlessly, treating me as a disposable pawn just to pave the way for his true love? Then, a gasp. My own. My eyes flew open to the smooth feel of a silk nightgown and skin that was impossibly whole. I was back in the Lycan Prince's bedroom. Back on the night my life was sold. This time, when the terrifying Alpha stepped into the room, I didn't scream. I met his glowing golden eyes with a dead, calm stare. The hunt had begun, but this time, I knew the rules of the game.
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Chapter 1

Clio POV:

The phantom pain of a silver blade piercing my heart was the last thing I knew.

A scream tore from my throat, but no sound came out. Then, a gasp.My own.

My eyes flew open. I was lying on a bed and clawed at my chest, expecting torn fabric and a gaping, bloody wound.

There was nothing.

Only the smooth, cool feel of a silk nightgown and skin that was completely, impossibly, whole.

I sat bolt upright. The room was vast and opulent, draped in shadows and moonlight.This wasn't my room. This wasn't anywhere I knew.

A scent hit me then, thick and overwhelming. Pine needles after a storm, the sharp, clean smell of ozone, and something else. Something wild and dominant that made the hairs on my arms stand on end.

A name slammed into my mind. Conrad Vanderbilt IV. The Lycan Prince.

My breath hitched. In my past life, Bradford, my mate, his hand gentle on my cheek. His soft voice, telling me it was just for one night. "For us, Clio. For our future."

After that, he brought me here. He had served me up like a piece of meat to the most powerful, most feared Alpha in North America to secure a business deal.

And later, when the deal went sour, when I was no longer useful, he had stood by and watched as his new allies drove a silver blade through my heart.

I squeezed my hands into fists, my nails digging so deep into my palms that the sharp sting of pain was a welcome anchor to reality. This wasn't a dream. This wasn't some afterlife.

I was alive.

I had been reborn.

I was back in the Lycan Prince's bedroom. Back on the night it all began. The night my life was sold.

The heavy wooden door across the room swung open with a soft click.

A silhouette filled the doorway, so large it seemed to block out all the light from the hallway behind it. He stepped into the room, and the moonlight caught the gold in his eyes. They glowed, feral and predatory, pinning me to the bed.

Conrad Vanderbilt IV.

Just then, another voice slid into my thoughts, this one familiar and cloying. Bradford's mind-link.

"Clio, darling, is everything alright? Remember, this is for us."

A wave of nausea washed over me. I wanted to scream at him, to tell him I knew what a lying, worthless snake he was.

But I didn't.

I took a shaky breath, forcing the inferno in my chest down to a cold, hard ember. I would not be his hysterical, broken little Omega this time.

I met Conrad's piercing golden gaze. Slowly, deliberately, I pushed the silk sheets away and swung my legs over the side of the bed. The nightgown slid off one shoulder, exposing the pale skin of my collarbone.

My violet eyes held his. I let him see the stillness in them, the dead calm of a lake after a storm.

He took another step into the room, then stopped. His brow furrowed in a flicker of confusion. This wasn't the reaction he expected.

I thought of his face in my last moments. In my memory, as the life bled out of me, I saw him. He had been there, fighting the ones who killed me. And in his eyes, I'd seen something that looked devastatingly like regret.

That memory gave me the strength to open my mouth.

My voice was a dry rasp, raw from a scream that had died in another life.

"I'm thirsty."

The simple request, not a curse or a plea, hung in the oppressive silence.

Conrad's eyes widened slightly. The predatory gleam flickered, replaced by a flicker of stunned surprise. He stood frozen for a long moment, just watching me.

Then, wordlessly, he turned. He walked over to a crystal decanter on a nearby table and poured a glass of water. His movements were stiff, unnatural, like a predator trying to perform a delicate, unfamiliar task.

He walked back and held the glass out to me.

I reached for it, my fingers brushing against his. A jolt, sharp and electric, shot up my arm. My whole body went rigid. I saw his hand flinch, his knuckles white as he gripped the glass. His golden eyes darkened, swirling with an emotion I couldn't name.

I took the glass, my hand trembling slightly. I brought it to my lips and drank, the cool water a balm on my parched throat. It helped to douse the fire of my hatred, banking it for later.

I knew, with a certainty that chilled me to the bone, that my revenge started here. It started with this man. The most powerful piece on the board.

I lowered the glass and looked up at him.

"Thank you," I said, my voice a little stronger now.

Bradford's voice whined in my head again, laced with impatience. "Clio? Answer me!"

A cold smile touched my lips, one I was sure no one could see. In my mind, I pictured a door, and I slammed it shut on his voice, cutting the link.

Silence.

I held Conrad's gaze, my own calm and unreadable.

Chapter 2

Clio POV:

For a long moment, Conrad said nothing. He just stood there, the glass of water now empty in my hand the only evidence of our strange truce.

The silence in the room stretched, thick and heavy, punctuated only by the crackle of the fire. He was studying me, his golden eyes narrowed, trying to solve a puzzle he hadn't expected.

He had anticipated a fight. He had been prepared for tears and begging. He was a Lycan prince, a creature of power and instinct, and he knew how to handle a frightened Omega.

He did not know how to handle me.

He took a step closer.

My body reacted before my mind could. Every muscle tensed. My back went ramrod straight, a primal, instinctive response to a predator's approach. I could feel my heart rate spike, a frantic drumming against my ribs.

But I did not look away. I held his gaze, my expression a carefully constructed mask of calm.

He noticed. Of course, he noticed. A flicker of something-interest? curiosity?

His voice, when he finally spoke, was a low rumble, like distant thunder. "You're not afraid of me?"

"I'm terrified, "I thought. "But I hate him more."

Out loud, I said, "Does it matter if I am? I'm already here." My voice was flat, devoid of emotion. It was the voice of someone who had accepted their fate, a tone of utter resignation.

It was another move he didn't expect.

In my first life, he had answered my defiance by crossing the room in two strides, tearing my dress from my body, and claiming me with a brutality that had shattered my spirit.

This time, he did something else entirely.

He reached over, grabbed a heavy, ornate chair from beside the fireplace, and dragged it across the floor. The sound of its legs scraping against the wood was loud in the silent room. He placed it a few feet from the bed and sat down.

The action was so completely out of character, so divergent from the path of my memory, that my heart skipped a beat. This was new. This was a territory I hadn't charted.

He leaned forward, his massive frame making the large chair look small. "Bradford Cote," he said, his voice laced with contempt. "He told you this was just for one night?"

I simply nodded, offering no excuses, no pleas. I let the bare, ugly truth of it hang in the air between us. Let him see the kind of male my mate was.

A humorless, ugly sound escaped his lips. It was a snort of pure derision. He wasn't laughing at me. He was laughing at Bradford.

He stood up then, his height once again dominating the room. He walked over to a large wardrobe, pulled open the doors, and retrieved a thick, cashmere blanket. He tossed it onto the foot of the bed.

"Cover yourself," he commanded. The words were harsh, an order from a superior, but the act itself felt... protective.

I did as he said, pulling the impossibly soft blanket around my shoulders, grateful for the barrier it created. The silk of the nightgown felt too thin, too vulnerable.

My compliance seemed to be working. It was disarming his wolf, allowing the man to think. My calmness was a balm to his predatory instincts.

He turned and walked towards the door. For a wild moment, I thought he was just going to leave me here, that I had won the night.

My relief was premature.

He paused at the door, his hand on the handle, and looked back at me. "What's your name?"

"Clio Brandt."

He tasted the name, his lips forming the syllables silently before speaking it aloud. "Clio." He nodded once, as if filing it away. "Good."

Then he was gone, pulling the heavy door shut behind him.

I heard the distinct, metallic sound of a lock clicking into place. A moment later, the soft tread of footsteps outside the door confirmed it. Guards.

I wasn't free. I had just been moved from an invisible cage to a very real one.

I slid off the bed, the blanket still wrapped around me, and walked to the towering windows. I pushed aside the heavy velvet curtain. Outside, a dense, moonlit forest pressed in on all sides. This was his fortress, his domain. There was no escape.

A wave of exhaustion washed over me. The adrenaline that had kept me sharp and focused began to fade, leaving a hollow ache in its place. I sank to the floor, my back against the cold wall, and let my head fall back. The memories of two lifetimes swirled in my head, a dizzying, painful vortex.

But I didn't cry. The tears had run out in my last life.

My first move had been a success. I had survived the night with my body and my dignity intact. I had piqued the interest of the most dangerous man I knew. That was a start.

Now, I had to figure out my next move. I needed to get out of here. I needed to get back to Blackwood, back to Bradford. I needed to see his face when he realized the pawn he'd sacrificed was back on the board.

Hours later, a gnawing hunger woke me from a light, fitful doze. In my past life, I had refused all food, a pointless act of protest that only made me weaker. This time, I knew better. I needed my strength.

I walked to the door and knocked softly. There was no answer. I knocked again, louder.

Silence. The guards were under orders not to engage.

Just as I was about to give up, a small, sliding panel at the bottom of the door opened. A tray was pushed through.

On it was a bowl of steaming stew, a piece of bread, and a glass of water. It was simple, but it was warm.

It was his order. Conrad's.

I carried the tray to the small table by the window. As I ate, I stared out into the dark woods. This man, this supposed monster, was more complex than I had ever known.

He was a hunter, yes, but a patient one. He was watching me. Waiting.

And I would have to be just as patient.

Chapter 3

Clio POV:

The next morning, I woke to find a set of clean clothes laid out on the chair where Conrad had sat. It wasn't my simple, practical attire from Blackwood. It was a dress, a simple slip of white linen, elegantly cut. The size, I noted with a disquieting feeling, looked like it would be a perfect fit.

I showered in the adjoining marble bathroom, the hot water a luxury that felt alien. I washed away the lingering scent of fear and the phantom feel of Bradford's touch. When I stepped out, I put on the white dress. It settled on my frame as if it were made for me, the fabric cool against my skin. There was something about it, a style or a cut, that tickled the edges of my memory, but I couldn't place it.

A soft knock came at the door before it was unlocked. A woman entered, carrying a breakfast tray. She was tall, with severe, dark hair pulled back in a tight bun and a face that was all sharp angles. Her name, I would learn, was Eleanor Foster, Conrad's most trusted assistant.

Her demeanor was professional, polite, but her eyes were cold and assessing. She placed the tray on the table.

"The Prince sends his regards," she said, her voice crisp. "He trusts you slept well."

"Like the dead," I replied, the words out before I could stop them.

A flicker of surprise in her eyes was her only reaction. I tried to press for information, asking about Conrad, about his plans, but she was a fortress. Her answers were clipped, formal, and revealed nothing. The Prince wished for me to rest. The Prince would see me when he was ready.

I spent the morning pacing the confines of my gilded cage. I couldn't stay here. Every moment I was trapped in this room was a moment Bradford and Julie were solidifying their plans, a moment my revenge was delayed. My passive strategy had gotten me through the first night, but it wouldn't get me out the door.

I had to be proactive.

I called for Eleanor. When she appeared, I made my demand.

"I want to see him. Now."

She raised a perfectly sculpted eyebrow but simply nodded and left. A short while later, the door opened again, and he was there.

Conrad filled the doorway, just as he had the night before. Today, in the light of day, he was even more imposing. He was dressed in dark trousers and a simple black shirt that did little to hide the raw power in his shoulders and chest.

His golden eyes swept over me, and when they took in the white dress, something shifted in his expression. For a split second, a look of raw, unguarded emotion crossed his face-a flash of pain, of memory, of something I couldn't decipher. It was gone as quickly as it appeared, replaced by his usual cold mask.

But I saw it. And I filed it away.

"I want to leave," I said, my voice clear and steady. I didn't wait for him to speak. "I want to go back to my pack. Back to Bradford."

The mention of Bradford's name was like a switch. The temperature in the room dropped by twenty degrees. Conrad's face darkened, a thundercloud of fury gathering in his eyes.

"You think you have a choice?" he sneered, his voice a low, dangerous growl.

I lifted my chin, refusing to be intimidated. "I am Bradford Cote's fated mate. By keeping me here, you are declaring an act of aggression against the Blackwood pack." I was throwing their own ancient laws in his face, a desperate, foolish gamble.

He seemed more amused than angered by my audacity. He stalked toward me, each step deliberate and menacing. The sheer force of his Alpha presence washed over me, making it hard to breathe, making my knees feel weak.

"An Alpha who uses his mate as a bargaining chip?" he scoffed, stopping just a foot from me. "He brings shame to the name of Blackwood. He is nothing."

My heart secretly agreed with every word, but I couldn't let it show. "That is a matter between him and me," I insisted.

He reached out, and my flinch was instantaneous. But his touch, when it came, was surprisingly gentle. His fingers, calloused and warm, brushed against my cheek. His thumb stroked my skin lightly. It was a gesture so at odds with the man I thought he was that it sent a shiver down my spine.

"You are so much like her," he murmured, his voice suddenly thick with an emotion I didn't understand. His golden eyes were distant, looking at me but seeing someone else.

A cold dread trickled down my spine. "Her? Who is 'her'?"

He didn't answer. His gaze dropped from my face to the white dress I was wearing, and his expression grew even more complicated.

And then, the pieces clicked into place with sickening clarity.

The dress that fit so perfectly. His moment of unguarded pain when he saw me in it. The soft, almost wistful touch. The words, "You are so much like her."

In my first life, I had been killed before I could learn anything about his personal life. But now, a horrifying possibility bloomed in my mind.

I was a substitute. A replacement. A stand-in for some other woman he had lost.

The realization was a punch to the gut. It was a humiliation deeper and more profound than anything Bradford had done. To be used by my mate was one thing. To be used by a stranger as a ghost's effigy was another.

A surge of pure, undiluted rage, the first truly honest emotion I had felt since my rebirth, flooded through me.

I slapped his hand away from my face. The sound echoed in the silent room.

"I am not her!" I spat, my voice shaking with fury.

He blinked, startled out of his reverie. He looked at me, truly looked at me, and saw not a ghost, but the furious woman standing before him.

I seized the moment of his surprise. "Let me go," I said, my voice dropping to a low, dangerous command. "Or I swear to you, all you will have is an empty shell. Or a corpse."

The word corpse hung in the air between us. I saw his pupils dilate, the gold in his eyes turning to molten lava. His inner wolf roared in my mind, a furious, wounded sound at the thought of its mate being harmed. But he fought it. I could see the struggle in the rigid line of his jaw, in the corded muscles of his neck.

We stood there, locked in a battle of wills. The air crackled with tension.

Finally, slowly, he reined in his fury. The suffocating pressure of his aura receded.

"Fine," he said, the word clipped.

I stared at him, stunned into silence. I had been prepared for a fight, for him to call my bluff. I was not prepared for him to agree.

"I will let you go," he continued, his eyes like chips of ice. "But I am taking you back myself."

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