Chapter 1: The Betrayal
Chapter 1
The Betrayal
The morning sun was a blinding, expensive glare against the windshield of Laila’s Porsche. It flooded her vision, sharp and unforgiving, forcing her to squint as she navigated the winding roads of the upper crest. Exactly one month ago, she had walked across a stage to receive a degree she had worked twice as hard for just to be half as noticed. The applause back then had been polite, controlled, and utterly forgettable.
Now, she was here, back in the cage.
The weight of her family’s expectations sat heavy on her head, pressing down like a physical crown she could not take off. The passenger seat held a velvet box. She did not look at it at first because she already knew the cold weight of what lived inside. A customized diamond necklace rested within, brilliant and cruel, its sparkle catching even the smallest light. It was beautiful in the way expensive things always were. Perfect. Untouchable.
And suffocating.
It was a shimmering shackle that cost more than some pack members made in a year. It was the final piece of the costume. Tomorrow, she would become Laila Brooke. Not just in name, but in identity, duty, and silence. She would seal the deal between the Wolfe and Brooke empires. It was a human contract wrapped carefully in werewolf tradition, dressed up as love and celebrated as unity.
Her grip on the steering wheel tightened until her knuckles turned ghostly white.
As she pulled into the long cobblestone driveway of the Wolfe mansion, the air shifted. Even before she stepped out, she could feel it. Thick. Heavy. Perfumed. Lilies mixed with the scent of her mother's expensive hairspray scent and the looming shadow of expectation looming over everything. The estate was already alive, crawling with workers moving with an urgency that felt almost rehearsed urgency. Large vans were parked across the manicured lawns, their doors flung open as men carried in gold trimmed chairs and crates of vintage champagne.
Everything gleamed. Everything screamed wealth. It looked less like a home and more like a kingdom preparing for a coronation. Or a sacrifice.
Laila’s eyes moved across the scene until they landed on a sleek silver sedan parked near the fountain. Davis. Her heart reacted before she could stop it. A strange, familiar flutter. It was not the heat of passion, but the cool, desperate relief of a woman drowning. If he was here, maybe they could have one real conversation before everything became permanent. Before the ceremony swallowed whatever was left of their humanity.
She parked and stepped out of the car, the humid air clinging instantly to her skin like a second layer of sweat. A young maid hurried toward her, almost tripping over her own steps. Her head was bowed low, her hands reaching for the burden Laila carried.
“I’ll take those for you, Miss Laila,” the girl whispered.
Laila handed over the shopping bags without protest, her attention already drifting toward the house. Toward the doors. Toward a premonition she could not yet name. “Where is Davis? I saw his car.”
“He’s inside, Miss. He arrived about twenty minutes ago.”
The girl’s voice was quick and careful. Her eyes flickered toward the house before she retreated almost immediately, as if the very walls might shatter if she stayed too long. Laila frowned. Something was off. It was not just the wedding or the pressure. There was something else in the air. Something quieter, Tighter.
Wrong.
She pushed through the heavy oak doors and stepped into the foyer. Silence. The marble floors stretched out beneath her, polished to a perfect mirror, reflecting light from the massive floor-to-ceiling windows ahead. Outside in the garden, her parents stood together. Alpha Tyler and Emily.
They looked exactly as they always did. Composed. Untouchable. Her father stood tall, his chest slightly as he gestured toward a massive floral arch being assembled by decorators. Every movement of his hand carried authority and ownership. Her mother stood beside him, nodding, adjusting her silk scarf with quiet precision. The perfect Luna, The perfect partner.
They looked happy, settled. They looked like this was everything they wanted—even if it meant burying their eldest daughter alive. Laila felt like a ghost watching a play she never agreed to perform.
She turned away, her throat feeling tight and dry.
The grand staircase rose before her, elegant and familiar. The house was strangely quiet despite the chaos outside, the house was strangely quiet—as though the walls themselves were holding their breath. Davis was probably in her suite, Hiding. Waiting. Or maybe just trying to survive the endless conversations their parents insisted on about power and lineage.
Her heels sank softly into the thick, cream-colored carpet as she walked down the upper hallway. Each step was soundless and controlled. Closer. Closer. A bead of sweat roll down her spine.
Then she heard it.
A sound that did not belong in the afternoon light. It was not the wind or the hum of the air conditioning. It was a gasp. Sharp. Jagged. Intimate.
Laila stopped. Her hand hovered just above the door handle, her fingers barely grazing the cool metal. The air shifted. It grew colder and heavier, pressing against her lungs. And then the scent hit her like a physical blow to the stomach.
Sweet. Cloying. Sickeningly familiar.
It was Lyra’s perfume. The expensive floral scent Laila had bought her for her birthday. It was mixed with something deeper. Musky. Sharp. Masculine.
Davis.
Her stomach twisted into a violent knot. Her pulse slowed in a way that felt unnatural, like her body was trying to go numb before the pain could kill her. She stood frozen, as the years of her sacrifices flashed before her eyes. The grades she had lowered, the accomplishments she had hidden, the light she had dimmed so Lyra could be the star. She had given up everything so this family could be happy.
A wet, rhythmic slapping sound began to echo through the wood of the door, vibrating against her fingertips. It was the sound of skin hitting skin, desperate, frantic.
“Yeah baby, go faster,” a voice hissed from behind the door. It was Lyra, her voice thick with raw lust Laila had never heard before. "f**k me harder, Davis. Make me scream your name ”
Laila’s stomach did a sick lurch as Davis let out a guttural, animalistic growl. It was the sound of a wolf lost to his basest instincts, the sound of the man she was supposed to marry completely unraveled by her own sister.
“You’re so much tighter than her,” Davis groaned, his voice strained and gravelly. “I want to fill your pretty little p***y with everything I’m supposed to give her. You’re the one I want, Lyra. Always you.”
The bed frame began to groan under the violence of their movements, a heavy, rhythmic thudding that seemed to mock Laila’s very existence. She could hear the wet, squelching sounds of their bodies joined together, the sound of her sister’s high pitched whimpers turning into filthy, incoherent babbles of pleasure.
“Fill me up,” Lyra moaned, her voice rising in a jagged crescendo. “Come for me, Davis. Breed me right here on her bed. Show me I’m the only one that matters.”
Laila felt dizzy. She did not need to see the tangled sheets or the betrayal written in skin and sweat. She knew that voice better than her own. It belonged to her sister. It belonged to the girl she had spent her life protecting, now devouring the only thing Laila had left. The air in the hallway felt like it was being sucked out of the room, leaving her with nothing but the suffocating scent of their arousal and the realization that her entire life was a lie.