The encounter had been a blur of instinct and primal force. One moment, I was running with the pack, the silver light glinting off my fur. The next, a colossal black wolf had separated me from the others, his presence a tidal wave of raw power that left me breathless. He was a stranger, a rogue by all accounts, yet my wolf had bowed to him without a second thought. And I, in my human form, had done the same.
The Mate Bond had snapped into place with the force of a lightning strike. Irrevocable. Terrifying. He had marked me on the curve of my neck, his teeth a brand of possession that still tingled with a phantom heat.
His name was Alaric. That was all I knew.
A low growl rumbled through my mind, a possessive, intimate sound that was both a comfort and a cage. *Mine.*
It was his voice, carried on the newly forged Mind-Link between us. I squeezed my eyes shut, my fingers digging into the worn fabric of my quilt. He was somewhere in the Thorne Dominion, I knew, but his exact location was a mystery. This bond was an open channel, and through it, I felt his overwhelming possessiveness, a constant, low hum beneath my own thoughts. It was exhilarating and deeply unsettling. I was an Omega by birth, a low-ranking administrator by trade. My life was built on the principle of staying invisible. Mating with a powerful, unknown wolf was the opposite of invisible.
A sharp knock on my apartment door jolted me from my spiraling thoughts. My heart hammered against my ribs. No one ever came to my door, especially not this early. I pulled on a robe, my hands trembling as I undid the latch.
Alaric stood on the other side.
In the flesh, he was even more imposing. Towering and broad-shouldered, he filled the entire doorframe, his jet-black hair framing a face of hard, aristocratic lines. Those ice-blue eyes, the ones that haunted my dreams, pinned me in place. He wore simple black clothes, but they did nothing to diminish the aura of absolute authority that rolled off him in waves.
He said nothing, merely extended a hand. Lying on his palm was a key. It wasn't a simple piece of metal; it was heavy, ornate, and forged from a dark, gleaming material I didn't recognize. The head of the key was fashioned into a snarling wolf's head, its details intricate and impossibly realistic.
*Our den,* his voice echoed in my mind, smooth as velvet, hard as steel. *A place for us. Away from prying eyes.*
I stared at the key, then back at his impassive face. This was too much, too fast. We were strangers, bound by a fate I didn't understand. Giving me a key to his private lair... it was a gesture of profound trust, a claim I felt utterly unprepared for. My fear warred with a dizzying, magnetic pull toward him.
Hesitantly, I reached out and took the key. Its weight was substantial in my palm, a solid, tangible piece of this new, terrifying reality.
He gave a slight, almost imperceptible nod, his gaze lingering on the mark on my neck before he turned and walked away, disappearing down the drab hallway as silently as he had appeared.
I closed the door, my back pressing against the wood. I held the heavy key, its cold metal a stark contrast to the fire he'd ignited in my veins. The wolf's head insignia seemed to stare back at me, a silent promise of a destiny I couldn't yet comprehend.