Chapter 1 The Girl Who Broke the Borders
I was already running when the border alarms went quiet.
That was how I knew I had crossed it.
The air changed first. The wind stopped carrying pack scent. The forest went empty in a way that had nothing to do with silence and everything to do with absence. No warnings. No claims. No territorial marks humming under my skin. Just dead space. Neutral ground.
My lungs burned. My feet were numb, bleeding, barely attached to me anymore. I had been human for hours. Too long. My wolf was clawing inside me, angry and panicked, begging to be let out. I couldn’t risk it. Shifting left a signature. Scent. Heat. Sound. Any Alpha tracking the borders would feel it.
I stumbled down the mountain road, phone shaking in my hand, the cracked screen smeared with blood that might have been mine or might have been something else. I didn’t remember falling, but I had stopped counting the times my body hit the ground.
The call finally connected.
“Papa,” I said, and my voice broke on the word.
There was shouting on his end. Wind. Another voice I didn’t recognize. Then his breathing, harsh and fast.
“Isabella,” he said. “Where are you?”
“Past the old north ridge. I crossed. I think I crossed.”
A sharp inhale. Fear. Real fear. Not anger. Not disappointment. Fear.
“Good,” he said. “Good. Keep moving. Do not stop. Do not shift. Do you hear me?”
“I hear you. They’re coming. I know they are. I smelled them before I left.”
“I know.” His voice dropped. “Listen to me. You were promised, but it was not a union. It was not symbolic. It was…”
A crash on his end. Someone shouting his name.
“Papa?”
“They will try to take you alive,” he said quickly. “Because of what you are. Because of your blood..”
“What my blood what?”
“They cannot taste your blood,” he shouted. “Do you hear me? Do not let them…”
The line cut.
I stopped in the middle of the road, staring at the dead screen. My ears rang. My wolf slammed against my ribs, furious, desperate, screaming that something was wrong, wrong, wrong.
“Papa?” I whispered.
Nothing.
I shoved the phone into my pocket and forced myself forward.
This wasn’t a romance flight. This wasn’t me running from a man.
This was asset extraction.
That word had slipped from my father’s mouth once, months ago, when he thought I was asleep. He had been speaking to someone I couldn’t see. He had said, “If they realize the asset is mobile, they will come.”
I hadn’t understood.
Now I did.
Hours later, the lights appeared.
A low building crouched at the base of the mountain, half hidden by trees. One long platform. Rusted rail lines. A single glowing sign that read FREIGHT TRANSFER in chipped white letters. Human words. Human place.
Relief almost knocked me over.
I limped toward it, shivering, my skin tight with cold and exhaustion. The closer I got, the more wrong it felt. The air was thick. Heavy. Sweet and rotten at the same time. Like too many wolves wearing too much perfume.
Inside the open bay doors, people moved between crates and steel tables. Men and women. Tall. Still. Watching everything. Not one of them blinked when I passed the threshold.
A woman smiled at me.
Her lips were human. Her teeth were not.
I slowed.
No radios. No forklifts. No human noise. Only murmurs layered with something deeper. Growls woven under voices. The low hum of dominance rolling through the room.
My wolf went dead silent.
That was worse.
I turned.
A man stood behind me where the door had been.
He had not walked there.
“You look lost,” he said.
“I thought this was a freight station,” I said, forcing the words out.
“It is,” he replied. “Depending on the cargo.”
Symbols were carved into the metal walls. Not graffiti. Marks. Old ones. Pack sigils. Binding signs. Market warnings.
My heart started to slam.
“I need a phone,” I said.
The woman laughed softly.
I stepped back.
Another person blocked me.
Then another.
I smelled it then, finally, under everything else. Wolves. Many. Different packs. Old blood. New blood. Predators standing very still.
I ran.
I didn’t get far.
Something sharp stung my neck. Heat spread down my spine. My legs folded. The world tipped sideways.
Hands caught me.
Voices overlapped.
“Her scent is wrong.”
“Suppressants.”
“No territorial mark.”
“Then she’s worth more.”
My cheek pressed against cold metal. My vision blurred. My wolf thrashed, trapped behind a wall I couldn’t reach.
I tried to speak.
Nothing came out.
Darkness swallowed the room.
When I woke up again, I was lying on a stone.
Cold. Hard. My wrists burned. I tried to move and metal bit into my skin. Chains. Heavy. Anchored above my head.
The room was underground. No windows. Torches set into iron brackets. Rows of cages lined the walls. Some are empty.
Some not.
I turned my head and met the eyes of a woman behind bars. She looked away instantly.
A platform stood at the far end of the chamber. A man in a black coat stood behind a table, shuffling papers.
My mouth was dry. My throat hurts.
People filled the shadows. I couldn’t smell them clearly. Something was blocking it. Drugs. Charms. Both.
The man cleared his throat.
“Lot Forty-Seven,” he called. “Unknown bloodline. Female. Untested.”
A murmur moved through the crowd.
“Cross-border capture,” he continued. “No registered pack. No claim mark. Suppressed.”
I pulled against the chains. Pain shot up my arms. No one looked at my face. They looked at my throat. My wrists. My veins.
“Opening…”
“Withdraw the lot.”
The voice didn’t come from the crowd.
It came from the steps beside the platform.
Every sound in the chamber died.
A man stood there in a dark coat, hands in his pockets. He wasn’t the tallest. He wasn’t the loudest. But the space bent around him. Wolves straightened. Some bowed their heads. Some stepped back without meaning to.
The auctioneer swallowed. “Sir, this lot hasn’t…”
“I’m not bidding,” the man said.
His eyes lifted.
They found mine.
Ice-blue. Controlled. Not hungry.
Assessing.
“I’m claiming.”
The room breathed again all at once.
“That requires…”
“I know what it requires.”
The man walked forward.
Each step was unhurried. Certain.
The chains on my wrists vibrated.
My wolf slammed into the inside of my skin like she recognized something she didn’t want to.
The auctioneer licked his lips. “Alpha DeLuca, this asset is untested. We don’t know what she is.”
The man stopped at the edge of the platform.
“Neither do you,” he said.
He reached up.
And for the first time since the mountain, I smelled him clearly.
Territory.
Dominance.
City steel and blood.
And something old beneath it.
“Release her,” he said.
The hammer struck.
The sound cracked through the chamber like a gunshot.
The chains unlocked.
Hands grabbed me.
The floor rose too fast.
The last thing I saw before darkness closed again was his face above mine, calm and unyielding, as he said quietly, to no one and everyone:
“Seal the borders.”
Then everything went black.
