The Rogue And The Alpha

1073 Words
“Run.” That was the last word her mother ever said. The scream that followed still echoed in Raya’s bones, years later, a jagged sound, part fury, part farewell. She could still feel the heat of the flames, the scent of burning pine, the metallic taste of blood in the air. That night didn’t just destroy her home, it shattered her soul. She’d been running ever since. Tonight, the cold bit deep. Her threadbare cloak clung to her like a second skin, soaked with frost and torn at the edges. She crouched beneath a crooked pine, knees to chest, breath shallow. Each exhale formed ghosts in the winter-dark air. She hadn’t eaten in days. Her ribs pressed against her skin like bars in a cage. Her body ached, but her wolf was restless; ears twitching, claws itching. She was too close to the Ironfang border. Too damn close. She should’ve turned back hours ago. But desperation had driven her for food, warmth, and silence from the howling in her head. The forest here was denser, quieter. Or so she thought. A twig snapped behind her. Her pulse slammed. She didn’t breathe. Another step measured, slow. Not the careless tread of prey. A hunter. Her wolf snarled in warning. Raya ran. She didn’t think, she just moved. Through the dark, over roots and under thorns, she darted like wind through wild branches. Her legs screamed. Her feet were raw. But she ran like her life depended on it because it actually did. Behind her, the sounds of pursuit grew louder. Multiple sets of paws. The snap of shifting bones. Low growls. Ironfang scouts. She knew the stories, they didn’t take rogues alive. The trees thinned too fast. Moonlight spilled across opened ground. Ahead lay a steep slope; icy, treacherous and beyond it, Ironfang territory. She didn’t have a choice. She dove. Snow exploded around her as she tumbled. Branches clawed at her arms. When she stopped, her head spun and her lungs burned. But she was alive. Barely. She scrambled up and froze. She wasn’t alone. A man stood at the edge of the tree line, unmoving, arms crossed. The moon behind him framed his silhouette like a blade. He didn’t growl. He didn’t lunge. He didn’t need to. Alpha Kael. The stories hadn’t done him justice. He was massive; broad shoulders, a warrior’s build, and eyes like molten gold. Not warm gold. Sharp. Cutting. Eyes that had seen death and delivered it without blinking. A scar ran from his jaw to his collarbone, half-hidden beneath dark stubble. His hair was a tousled mess, like he hadn’t bothered with vanity in years. He wore black, always black layered leather and fur, as if the cold didn’t dare touch him. Raya's breath caught. Then it hit her, the scent. Pine. Storms. Smoke. And something else. Mate. Her wolf surged inside her chest, howling in recognition. No. No, this wasn’t real. This couldn’t be real. A rogue? As Alpha Kael’s mate? His nostrils flared. His jaw clenched. He took one slow step forward, boots crunching over snow. Raya backed away, shaking. Her heart thundered. Her body screamed for her to run, but her soul… her soul was breaking. “I.....” she croaked. “I didn’t mean....” Kael’s voice cut her off. Cold. Commanding. “Chain her.” It wasn’t a shout. It didn’t need to be. Two warriors flanked her in seconds. One slammed her to her knees. The other locked iron around her wrists. Her wolf tried to surface, but the chains were laced with silver. Fire raced up her arms. She gasped. Kael turned and walked away. Just like that. They dragged her through the Ironfang border, through snow and pine, past stone pillars carved with the pack’s crest: a snarling wolf beneath a broken moon. The path twisted toward the heart of a fortress she’d only heard about in whispers. Not a pack house. It is a fortress. The Ironfang stronghold loomed like a war monument; stone towers, iron gates, and guards at every corner. No music. No fires. No warmth. Just silence and steel. The guards stared at her like she was filth. A rogue. An intruder. A mistake. They hauled her down narrow steps into a subterranean prison. No windows. No torches. Just ice on stone and the sound of dripping water. Her cell was barely wider than a coffin. The chains stayed on. They left her there. Alone. She didn’t sleep. She couldn’t. Every time she closed her eyes, she felt him. Not in dreams. In real time. Kael’s presence pressed against the walls of her cell like a storm. Her wolf trembled at the edges of her soul confused, longing, wounded. Mates weren’t supposed to act like this. He was supposed to feel the bond. The pull. The heat. The instinct to protect. Instead, he shackled her. Rejected her. No words. No explanation. Nothing. Above ground, the fortress moved like a cold machine. Beta Rurik barked orders. Warriors trained in the courtyard with blades and bare hands. Omegas scrubbed steps. Scouts came and went in wolf form. And Kael… Kael watched from the balcony above it all. His eyes scanned the forest, but his mind kept slipping back to the rogue’s face. Her scent. Her eyes. She looked like her. No. That wasn’t possible. He shook it off. Kael didn’t believe in fate. He believed in strength. In loyalty. In bloodlines. Mates were a weakness. He’d lost one before. He could lose another. But the prophecy whispered like smoke: “The one beneath the Alpha’s claws shall rise… She shall wear the curse. She shall break the line.” Raya. Her name tasted like ash on his tongue. She was dangerous. Not because of the bond. Because of what she awakened in him. His wolf, silent for years, now stirred beneath his skin. She wasn’t like the others. And the Moon Goddess had chosen her. Down in the cell, Raya sat with her back to the wall, blood dried on her wrists, her breath shallow. She didn’t cry. She hadn’t cried in years. But she remembered what her mother once told her: “The Moon doesn’t give you what you want. She gives you what you need to survive.” If this bond was real… if she truly was fated to the Alpha of Ironfang… Then she would survive this. Not for him. For herself.
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