
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 1:
A hand touched Doyle’s shoulder, jolting him from his deep sleep. Belly full, he slept sounder than normal. The room with its straw mattress reminded him of his youth. The three blankets that covered him helped keep the chill of the night air at bay.
“Mister Longstreet.” The voice sounded familiar. For a moment, he hoped DeLaval had returned to take him back somewhere warm. Alas it wasn’t meant to be. It came from Pastor Robbins, the missionary who ran this isolated church deep in the mountain valleys of China.
He found himself partially tangled in the clothes he slept in. They constricted his limbs like a giant snake. If he dreamed, he was certain his nights would be filled with nightmares of giant snakes slithering through his subconscious.
He had said a silent prayer before bed the night before that DeLaval would return. The air elemental would have caused a stir popping into this quiet section of the world. His furry seven-foot-tall frame would be hard to explain, but he would have been willing to try to save him the walk up the mountain… and he would have been better company than Doyle found in himself. At best he stayed in a sour mood most of the time. The loss of his fiancée weighed heavily on his soul. When he found her, he would never leave her side, no matter the cost.
“Yeah, I’m awake,” Doyle grumbled as he forced himself up. The altitude must be sapping his energy. Normally he was a light sleeper. He did his best to twist his legs from under the covers. His boots sat at the ready, they slipped on. He favored the western-style cowboy boots even without a horse to ride. They had traveled a long way with him.
“Something is wrong, all of my flock have deserted me. I fear something is about to happen.” The strain of fear was easy to detect in the preacher’s voice. The single candle he held intensified the deep-set wrinkles around his eyes. His body quivered from more than the cold. It took a brave man to force himself to action in the face of such great fear. Doyle counted the man before him a person of conviction, even if his faith was misplaced.
Doyle shot a glance at his pack. It looked secured where he left it. Inside there lay a single gas-powered automatic pistol. It would be no use for more than a few bandits at a time, if it came to a gunfight. The weapon gave the feeling of security, but it would alert everyone to his location if he fired it. “Do you have any weapons?” Doyle asked. He was sure of the answer before the words finished spilling from his mouth.
“Of course not, this is a house of God. I would not allow weapons to be introduced here.” Pastor Robbins’s eyes darted to the door. “Perhaps it would be better if you left. I will talk to the men when they arrive. I should be able to convince them to leave me alone. I have some good relationships with the local men.”
Doyle shook his head. “It will do no good. If they come for you, no amount of talk will save you. You know anything of Chinese history?”
“I must say, not much,” the preacher admitted. The candle in his hand shook when he twisted to inspect the door behind him.
To come to a country and not understand the shaded history was a foolish predicament to place oneself. “Have you heard the saying:
When cutting down weeds, you must get at the roots. Otherwise, the weeds will return with the spring breeze
?” Doyle asked.
“I must say, I have not, but it makes a certain sense.” The older man did little to hide his confusion.
Doyle hoisted his pack on his shoulders. They draped the top blanket over his head and body. “In the past, when a ruler wanted to get rid of a problem, they would execute up to seven generations of a family to ensure there was no one left to avenge a death.” The candle gave enough light to show off the older man’s look of shock and disgust.
“How barbaric,” the preacher gasped.
Doyle shrugged. “They have a different outlook on human life than we do. If they mean to do you harm, then no talking will keep them from their task. You should come with me and not try to judge them by our Western standards. It will end up costing you dearly.” Doyle cracked open his cell door before padding softly into the walled courtyard while he spoke.
The older man followed after him. “I’m sorry you feel that way, but I need to trust that God will protect me. I am staying here.”
“Suit yourself. It will probably matter little. They are probably waiting out there for anyone to try and escape.” At the gate, Doyle peeked out the sliding window and spotted no one. He knew that meant nothing. When an attack came, it would be swift and silent. “No one is out there. We might have time to leave. You should reconsider.” Doyle spoke to the open eyehole, not wanting to look the man in the eye. He knew what he would say before he opened his mouth. He was too much like his father.
“I will stay. God will protect me. There is a way out the back. It might be safer for you to leave that way. The road might be watched.” The preacher rested his hand on the latch, keeping Doyle from opening the gate.
Doyle slid the small opening closed. He couldn’t argue with the preacher’s logic. “Lead the way…”
Doyle wished he had the words to convince the man to make a run for the mountains with him. However, even if they succeeded in escaping the pending attack, the chances were overwhelmingly against Doyle surviving to see the sunrise, let alone the new year. Odds were good they would both be dead before morning.
Wandering the forest of a strange land, he didn’t give himself very high odds of survival. The only thing that kept driving him forward was the need to find Tsang Mei once again. He doubted he could beat death. The time limit the old man, Master Ao, gave him remained present in his mind. Time was running out fast.
The preacher led him to a small gate in the rear wall of the compound. He took a key from around his neck and opened an ancient lock. “I kept it locked to keep the flock from sneaking out at night for a local drink. Seems it did little good when they needed to escape.” The old man chuckled.
Doyle could tell the man tried to put on a brave face, the chuckle little more than gallows humor. The men that stayed in the mission would have listened closely to the community surrounding the church. When the winds changed, it would be easy enough to run for greener pastures. The locals would blend in no matter their religious beliefs.
The door creaked when Doyle pulled it open. The hinges protested the movement, obvious it had been a long time since this portal had been used. Doyle stuck his head out from the opening. The coast looked clear. “Last chance to come with me,” he said. “This might get ugly fast.
Preacher Robbins shook his head. “My place is here. If my flock returns, they will need to find me. It would not look good to run in the face of danger.”
Doyle reached out and shook the preacher’s hand. “Good luck and thank you for your help.” Doyle knew he spoke to a dead man, but he was in no position to change the pastor’s mind. The best he could do was respect the older man’s foolish decision.
“Follow the path to the stream. It will lead you deeper into the mountains.” Robbins motioned out the gate and down the dark path.
Doyle nodded and ducked out the short door and into the dark. With no moon, the path proved treacherous, but he kept his pace as steady as possible. One arm held to protect his face from limbs, the other outstretched to help lead the way. The grasses and bamboo helped guide him in the dark, providing a bendable wall to bounce off. The trail slithered along, little more than a shoulder’s width. Branches and brambles reached out for him while he struggled to keep from being pummeled by the jungle.
After several hundred paces, he found the stream and took the turn to the left that he knew would carry him upstream and deeper into the mountains beyond the valley he had been traveling in. The sound of the water masked the sound of his stumbling along the stone-riddled bank in the dark, the river-smoothed rocks slick in the moist air. They made travel treacherous.
It became hard to miss the glow from the south. There was no way to mistake the orange color in the night sky as first light. Intuitively, Doyle knew the glow came from the mission. It had been set ablaze, and now it burned unchecked.
The only way the preacher would allow his church to be put to the torch was over his dead body. Doyle said a silent prayer for the man. He was uncertain how he felt about a man of the cloth dying like that for his conventions. To Doyle, it seemed better to live and fight another day rather than throw one’s life away.
He followed his parents’ religion out of habit now. He questioned the effectiveness of a God that let his own priests get martyred in a strange land. Each time a local population became enraged, it seemed the missionaries of the world paid the price.
He was glad his parents returned to America long ago. Pastor Robbins reminded him too much of his father. The elder Longstreet would have done the same thing. Turned himself into a martyr to prove a point. To Doyle, that was no way to live or die.
His mind wandered when he should have been focused on the thin path next to the river. From the dark, the shaft of a staff swung at his head. His only saving grace was the way he held his arms to deflect the branches that threatened his face. He blocked the brunt of the blow aimed at his head. The wood landed on his forearm. It still hurt like hell.
Instinctively, he grabbed for the staff. Wrestling with it, he soon found a spearhead under his armpit. The person on the far side was hidden in the dark, but it mattered little to Doyle.
He charged down the spear and ran his shoulder into the chest of his attacker. There was a soft escape of air. Doyle knew he’d knocked the wind out of the person on the far end of the spear. His right hand still had a firm grip on the weapon. He brought up his left hand and, with the back of his fist, found the face of the hooded attacker.
He felt bones crack under his attack, surely a nose broke if not more. The figure dressed in black dropped to the ground. Spear now held firmly in the Westerner’s hand, Doyle nearly finished the helpless attacker off with his own weapon.
A sharp pain struck Doyle under his arm. With his left hand, he checked, finding his coat torn and the sticky feeling of blood seeping into the cloth. His ribs were tender to the touch. He’d been cut when he disarmed the man in the dark.
Rather than kill the helpless person on the ground, he grumbled and continued on his way up the stream. The death of another would not serve his need to escape. No matter how foul his mood might be, he wasn’t the kind of person to kill an unconscious, unarmed person in the dead of night. Now he needed to put some distance between himself and the burning mission. It would do the dead preacher no good if he was also captured and murdered.
His parents would never approve of his abandoning the preacher but would be even more upset if he started killing for no reason. He held his right arm tight to his body, attempting to slow the blood loss. Once the sun rose, he would need to find a safe place to try and inspect the damage. A bandage would need to be fashioned out of something.
Why is life never easy?
Last Chapters
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Last Updated: 3/3/2025#12 Chapter 12
Last Updated: 3/3/2025
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Let Them Kneel
Cast out by her pack. Forgotten by the Lycans.
She lived among humans—quiet, invisible, tucked away in a town no one looked at twice.
But when her first heat comes without warning, everything changes.
Her body ignites. Her instincts scream. And something primal stirs beneath her skin—
summoning a big, bad Alpha who knows exactly how to quench her fire.
When he claims her, it’s ecstasy and ruin.
For the first time, she believes she’s been accepted.
Seen.
Chosen.
Until he leaves her the next morning—
like a secret never to be spoken.
But Kaelani is not what they thought.
Not wolfless. Not weak.
There is something ancient inside her. Something powerful. And it’s waking.
And when it does—
they’ll all remember the girl they tried to erase.
Especially him.
She’ll be the dream he keeps chasing… the one thing that ever made him feel alive.
Because secrets never stay buried.
And neither do dreams.
Owned By My Cold-Hearted Psychotic Straight Boss
“Please, what?”
I ran my wet tongue through my dry lips. Voice barely above a whisper. “Please… please... please make me… make me… make me your little bitch.”
The words tasted bitter and filthy on my tongue. I hated myself for saying them. Hated how my cock twitched when I did.
“I can’t hear you, Jones,” He said, voice hard, low and commanding. “Louder.”
I swallowed again, eyes stinging. “Please make me your little bitch.”
“A little louder.”
My cheeks burned. I forced the words out stronger this time. “Please make me your little bitch.”
He smirked, slow and satisfied. The look in his eyes made my stomach flip.
“Good boy,” He murmured. “Now listen carefully, Jones. If you agree to this, you’re mine. Completely. You don't look at other men. You don’t think about them. You don’t even dream about them. Everything about you; your mouth, your ass, your cock, your body… even your thoughts, belongs to me. All of it. I get to treat and use you however and whenever I want. Rough. Gentle. Mean. Filthy. You take it all. And you praise me for it. Understood?”
I hesitated, heart pounding so hard I thought it was going to explode. The last bit of resistance flickered. My mind was screaming no; to get up, run and never look back.
“Well?” He urged, thumb still holding my chin.
I closed my eyes for half a second, detesting every inch of my being. Then I nodded, voice small. “Yes.”
“Yes, what?”
“Yes… I understand.”
“Good.”
...
Shane Blackwood is his name.
And he's a monster.
He's toxic, cruel and psychotic beyond your wildest imagination.
I knew all this.
And yet, I signed that stupid agreement.
And now... he owns me.
Completely.
There's no escape.
[This is a dark erotica MM. Rated 18+]
Ruined : You will always be mine.
“Fuckkk”, I couldn’t help but scream.
“You need to learn to be obedient” he said as he kept thrusting into me. When I felt his hands on my clit my body shook.
“Asher please, it’s too much”.
“No. if I really wanted to punish you, I would give you all of me”, he said against my ears and my entire body froze. Suddenly he moved and I was standing again. This man was insane.
I felt him behind me. “Ten Lashes for your disobedience”, he said
“Asher please”,
“No”. His voice was cold and void of any emotion.
Asher was what I wanted , what I truly craved until it was too late. An orphan should never fall in love with someone out of their reach. I thought loving him was the right thing to do until he revealed his true identity and Ruined me. I was ruined for everyone one else . I could still feel his touch, it was as if it was etched into my skin. I tired to avoid him but fate wouldn't let it happen.
The Sterling's were the most powerful in Havenwood and Dorian Sterling was off limits.
As an orphan finding out you still have people looking for you is hard to take but when it turns out to be people of wealth and standing I took the other road and ran, but running led me right back to the place I was avoiding and the person I was avoiding.
Asher and Dorling Sterling one and the same. When his first love shows up and along with everyone that has set out to ruin me, I prayed that he could protect me.
Rise of the Banished She-Wolf
That roar stole my eighteenth birthday and shattered my world. My first shift should have been glory—blood turned blessing into shame. By dawn they'd branded me "cursed": cast out by my pack, abandoned by family, stripped of my nature. My father didn't defend me—he sent me to a forsaken island where wolfless outcasts were forged into weapons, forced to kill each other until only one could leave.
On that island I learned the darkest edges of humanity and how to bury terror in bone. Countless times I wanted to surrender—dive into the waves and never surface—but the accusing faces that haunted my dreams pushed me back toward something colder than survival: revenge. I escaped, and for three years I hid among humans, collecting secrets, learning to move like a shadow, sharpening patience into precision—becoming a blade.
Then, under a full moon, I touched a bleeding stranger—and my wolf returned with a violence that made me whole. Who was he? Why could he wake what I'd thought dead?
One thing I know: now is the time.
I have waited three years for this. I will make everyone who destroyed me pay—and take back everything that was stolen from me.
Vengeance of the Forsaken Luna
"Bella." Ethan's tone shifted, taking on that warning edge I knew too well. "Faye is vulnerable right now. She's terrified you'll resent her, that this will divide the pack. The last thing she wants is for this baby to come between us."
"Then you shouldn't have done it." I met his eyes squarely, letting him see the ice in mine. "Go back to your son."
"For fuck's sake." He dragged a hand through his hair. "How many times—it was artificial insemination. They used my sperm, yes, but Faye and I never—"
Bella let out a cold snort. Such brazen lies. Her mate had an affair with his brother's partner, and his entire family helped force her out with nothing, all to make way for the mistress to take her rightful position. Poor fool—he thought she was just an unwanted adopted daughter, easy to dismiss and control. He never knew the computer genius he'd been searching for was his own Luna.
Since he'd tainted himself, Bella was done. She rejected him and reclaimed what was hers, rising to the top with help from Victor, who'd been secretly in love with her for years.
When Ethan tried winning her back: "You don't want our child growing up fatherless."
Bella smiled mockingly. "The child's father isn't you."
Bound By Power, Torn By Love
She regards him as her only salvation, but he regards her as a pawn for revenge. When two enemies dance on the sharp knife, what will be the final outcome?
The Shattered Moon King
Lena is a survivor. For years, she has weathered the harsh, post-apocalyptic landscape by following one rule: trust no one. But when she finds an amnesiac man near death in the wilderness—a man with kind eyes and a strength that is anything but human—she makes a choice that will unravel her solitary existence.
She calls him Cain, but the shattered-moon tattoo on his back brands him as Kaelen, the long-dead Alpha of the powerful Sky-Fall pack. His return triggers a brutal civil war with the usurper who stole his throne and his fated mate. Hunted by Lycan assassins and a fanatical human commander desperate for the secrets locked in Lena's own past, their only hope lies in embracing the very power Kaelen can't remember and Lena has always feared.
As they uncover a conspiracy that threatens not just the pack, but the future of every living thing, Kaelen must fight for a kingdom he doesn't know and Lena must confront a legacy she tried to bury. In a world of broken thrones and fated bonds, they will discover that the greatest choice is not between love and duty, but between who you are told you must be, and who you choose to become.
Aphrodite and the Cursed Mate Bond
She finds truth.
Aphrodite is not human at all. She is a rare white wolf, descended from an ancient Direwolf bloodline long believed extinct. The ritual meant to sever her ties awakens her wolf instead and with it comes the scent of five mates bound to her by fate.
The Alpha twins who once scorned her now cannot stay away. A human hunter walks beside her and proves that strength is not born of fangs or dominance. A cursed Wolf King holds the key to her past and her father’s imprisonment. And watching from the shadows is one who was never meant to interfere at all.
As gods fall, packs fracture, and war reshapes the world, Aphrodite must decide what destiny truly means. Is it submission to fate or the courage to choose her own path.
Love does not come in one form. Neither does power.
In a world ruled by gods and wolves, Aphrodite will become something neither ever expected.
Not a queen.
But the axis upon which the world turns.
HER ALPHA, HER SAVIOUR
Kane Hellboud, charm and wealth personified, wanted only me in exchange for her treatment. No cameras, isolation, or noose-like rules were part of the deal. Behind his smile? Cold, violent possessiveness that destroyed our fake marriage.
Most of all, I didn’t know the supernatural walked among us, hiding in the cracks of ordinary life. Not until Abel Stone stepped into mine—dark-eyed, sharp-tongued, and oozing dangerous promises. He’s my new boss. He shouldn’t make my skin tingle or my pulse race. I shouldn’t feel this primal pull, this illogical recognition that tugs at something deep in my bones.
Around him, lights burst, electronics fry, and something ancient in me awakens.
Kane feels it. His grip tightens, punishments turn brutal, and he hides the truth of what I am.
Trapped between two powerful men, I’m no prey, no pawn—no helpless victim.
Prisons burn. Monsters bleed. As for me? I'm the storm in skin—deadly beyond suspicion.
From Sacrificed Slave to the Dragon King's Obsession
His fangs glinted as he gripped my chin, forcing me to meet his gaze. Dragon scales shimmered along his neck, breath scorching my skin.
"Your Majesty... I beg—" He shoved me onto the bed. Silk tore with a sharp rip, cold air rushing over my exposed body.
"Scared?" He smirked, palm sliding down my waist, fingers tracing slow, burning circles. "Yet you shiver... not from cold."
I lunged for the candlestick, but he caught my wrist, pinning it overhead. His knee forced my legs apart.
"When your father gave you to me," his lips brushed my ear, voice a dark rumble, "you were already mine."
On the eve of freedom after ten years of servitude, Lina Valeria stood one night away from reuniting with her betrothed. But Dragon King Augustus condemned her to the Abyss Mines on false charges—a trap forged from obsessive desire.
Augustus Ashenwing, Supreme Sovereign of Skyhold Citadel, is ruthless and feared by all races. His obsession stems from ancient grudges and dragonkind's most dangerous instinct: possessive desire. He demands her submission, binding her to his throne as his consort.
From prisoner to queen, Lina battles him through court intrigue and twisted passion—fighting for her mother, her freedom, her dignity.
Yet this cold-blooded tyrant reserves all tenderness for her alone. He indulges her temper, bends his pride, compromises without limit—anything to see her smile. Gradually, her heart wavers. But loving him means betraying Kain, who waited eleven years. Torn between duty and desire, she drowns in agonizing guilt.
Love and hatred intertwined—a forbidden dragon romance in a realm of oppression.
The Dragon's Last Fae Queen
“Prince? Dickhead? Asshole? Or stalker?” A slow, dangerous smile curved his lips. “Maybe I should show you the one title I want you to use.” Before I could react, his hand closed around my chin, tilting my face up. His lips crashed into mine, hard, claiming, breath-stealing. When he finally pulled back, his voice was a rough whisper against my lips. “You could call me yours… because you are mine.”
Alpha VS Omega' Twin VS Twin (A Dark Werewolf Romance)
Stripped of everything, Callum is thrown into the Rookeries, where packless wolves go to die. But he survives. He builds a pack from the broken and the damned. He falls in love with Valentina, a dhampir hunted by the same vampire Parliament that destroyed his life.
In a city ruled by immortal aristocrats and controlled by ancient dragons, Callum learns the hardest truth: individual virtue cannot defeat systemic evil. But small victories matter. And some fights are worth losing everything












