Introduction
Share the book to
About Author
Charlotte E. English
Chapter 1
Chapter One
The moon was barely up when the post carrier arrived, bearing a parcel so large that the driver struggled to lift it. In the graceful, distinctive script of the address, Lady Evastany Glostrum recognised the elegant handwriting of her friend Ynara Sanfaer. She waved the postman inside and signed the paperwork with a smile, though she felt considerably puzzled.
She had recently dispatched a letter to Elder Sanfaer, requesting an urgent meeting. Ynara lived in Glinnery, a Daylands province where darkness never came. Herself a resident of the Darklands, Eva could not comfortably travel to Glinnery; her largely nocturnal eyes could not bear the glare of the sun. As such, she had expected Ynara to come to her.
Instead her friend had sent a parcel. It took Eva some minutes of work with a pair of scissors to open the well–packed box, and then subsequently to work her way through the packaging that shrouded the contents. At length she lifted out a completely unidentifiable contraption made from metal and glass, finding no accompanying letter of explanation along with it.
She turned the thing over in her hands, puzzling. It was bulky, though not particularly large. Two rounded pieces of glass adorned what could be the front; behind them lay several other similarly sized pieces, though their shapes varied. They vaguely resembled spectacles, though of no variant Eva had ever seen before.
That thought sparked off an idea. Hadn’t there been reports of new developments in spectacle technology? She had heard of glasses – goggles, really – that could fully protect a Darklander’s eyes against the sun. Ynara’s husband was a prominent engineer; small wonder if he had been involved in this project.
She tried them on. It took a little adjusting to fit the headgear correctly, but at length the pieces slid into place and the goggles clamped firmly over her eyes, instantly smothering all light.
Eva blinked in the sudden complete darkness. Well, so far so good. They were certainly good at blocking out light. On the other hand, the headset was heavy: already her neck was beginning to hurt. Eva took the thing off with a grimace. Presumably Aysun Sanfaer intended to refine the idea somewhat before it went into production for general distribution.
In other circumstances, the prospect of freely wandering the Daylands would have delighted her. She had seen very little of Glinnery and nothing at all of Irbel. Nothing either of Orlind, though nobody could claim to have visited that distant, untouchable realm. She couldn’t even visit Nimdre; it was the only one of the six accessible realms that retained an ordinary day–night cycle, enjoying too many hours of full daylight for the comfort of Darklander vision. As a worldly woman fond of travel, the prospect of seeing the Daylands was attractive.
But the timing was, to say the least, unfavourable. She had returned to her home in Glour City less than a moon ago, and duties and obligations crowded upon her. She had neglected her role as High Summoner for many days while she hunted a criminal with one of the Chief Investigator’s men. Her possession of two skilled tracking companions – a shortig hound and a web–winged gwaystrel – had made her instrumental to the task, but she had been hard–pressed to catch up on her duties on her return. And she had had very little time to address some important questions that had been raised on the journey.
But Ynara was worried about her daughter. Only a couple of moons ago, Llandry Sanfaer had accidentally discovered an unusual gemstone which she had named
istore
after the stars. That stone had captured the attention of thousands of people all the way across the Seven Realms, and eventually it had led to thefts and even murders. Llandry herself had been inevitably caught up in the affair; she had journeyed secretly into Nimdre with a friend of her mother’s and there she had disappeared. Eva was one of only two people who knew what had happened to Llandry. If Ynara would not, or could not, come to her, then she must go to Ynara. She owed it to her friend.
Eva’s carriage conveyed her only as far as the border between Glinnery and Glour, a journey of some ten hours. Few carriage–ready roads wound through the dense forests of Glinnery: since the residents held the benefit of wings, they had little use for carriages. Eva disembarked with a sigh: she had never been one to relish the prospect of a long walk.
Luckily for her, the Sanfaers lived in the capital city, Waeverleyne, a mere few hours’ walk from the border – though it felt like a much longer trek to Eva’s pampered physique, not used to strenuous walking or to the heat of the sun. The beauty of her surroundings occupied her mind for a time as she walked through Glinnery’s famed glissenwol woods. Could these shades of blue and green and lavender, so vivid and bright, truly be real? Or were they enhanced by the lenses of the headgear that she wore? She was entranced by the soft blue moss and the fronded purple–leaved ferns, the glitter of dayflies in the air and the fragrances of sun–warmed blossoms.
At least until the discomfort in her feet and legs reminded her of the wearisome toil of the adventure. Recently she’d been obliged to do a lot of walking, pursuing Edwae Geslin overland with her tracker hound. If anything, that only made this episode harder, for she was already tired. She trudged along in a state of intolerable dishevelment, her hair blown out of its pins by the wind and her cotton gown sticking unpleasantly to her skin. When at last she reached Ynara’s home she took the opportunity to pause and admire the property… and perhaps to catch her breath and smooth her hair while she was at it.
The Sanfaer home was situated close to the edge of the city. In Glour this position might have indicated a lower status, but what mattered more in Glinnery was the height of the glissenwol tree in which the dwelling was situated, and the extent of the expansion around the trunk. Ynara’s home was magnificent: her family had three storeys spanning from the middle of a vast glissenwol trunk up to the top. Seeking a way in, Eva observed a staircase winding its way up the tree. That made sense, for Ynara’s husband Aysun did not have wings like his wife and daughter.
The staircase was blocked, which was not particularly surprising. For some weeks now both the Daylands and the Darklands had been plagued with beasts in unusual numbers, all crossing over from the Upper Realms or the Lowers. Rogue gates leading to these two Off–Worlds had been appearing too regularly, letting all manner of creatures through. The staircase served as easy passage up to the Sanfaer home, but that was no longer desirable when it invited aggressive visitors. For her, though, its deactivation was mightily inconvenient. She sat down in the dark blue moss, tired after her journey, her head bowed under the weight of the curious headset. How should she signal her arrival to Ynara? And how was she to reach the house?
She had not been waiting long before Ynara appeared on the balcony of her home. She was a long way up, but Eva had no difficulty recognising her slender frame and mass of dark hair. She waved and took flight, her dark blue wings rapidly carrying her down to Eva’s level.
Her greeting was friendly, though her anxiety showed in her face. ‘I’m so grateful to you for coming,’ she said warmly. ‘I can’t leave the house, you see, not for days at a time. In case Llandry comes home. Here.’ She walked around the base of her tree, motioning Eva to follow. At the rear, a switch of grey metal was set into the trunk, camouflaged against the glissenwol’s smooth bark. Ynara pulled it sharply and a clanking sound began somewhere above. As Eva watched, impressed, a large box descended slowly from the skies. When it reached ground level it stopped, and doors opened smoothly in the front.
‘Aysun’s latest creation,’ Ynara explained, stepping inside. ‘They use them all the time in Irbel, but here we only have a few for hauling freight up to the heights. He fitted this when the beasts began surging through.’
‘Ingenious,’ Eva remarked, watching with interest as Ynara operated another lever. The box lurched slightly as it began to rise, and Eva was obliged to grab hold of a railing that ran around the inside. After that though the ride was remarkably smooth. It stopped adjacent to Ynara’s balcony and the doors opened again. Ynara ushered Eva into the house and immediately turned to the windows. She closed shutters and drew curtains from one room to another until the whole building was dark.
‘I thought you may wish to take those off once you got here,’ said Ynara, indicating the cumbersome spectacles Eva wore. ‘They’re functional, but not yet conveniently portable.’
‘Thank you,’ Eva said with real gratitude. She took them off with alacrity, pleased to find that the light levels were comfortable for her eyes. To Ynara, though, it must be pitch darkness.
‘Won’t this be an inconvenience to you?’
Ynara smiled briefly. ‘Not too much. I can still hear you.’
Eva nodded absent–mindedly, then caught herself. ‘Of course,’ she said, following her friend to the kitchen. Ynara had a light–globe in this room, a silvery ball of soft light which she had set to hover near the stove. Eva shut her eyes until Ynara had finished preparing food, then the light dimmed. Ynara sat opposite, pushing plates of food and drink at her.
Eva sat down, accepting Ynara’s offerings gratefully. As she ate, her attention was caught by shadowy movement in the corner of the room. A padded basket rested there and a small grey–furred creature was curled inside. It stretched out its long, thin body, its stubby tail twitching. Then it resumed its slumber.
‘That is Llandry’s pet,’ Ynara said. ‘Sigwide was left behind, somehow, when Llandry disappeared. That alone frightens me inordinately: those two have been inseparable since Llan was nine years old. She would never leave him behind deliberately. And he is depressed – he does nothing but sleep. I can’t decide whether he merely misses Llan, or whether he knows that she isn’t coming back…’
Eva’s heart twisted at the look of anguish on her friend’s face. She pushed away the food – she could eat later – and searched for a way to begin. On her way to Glinnery she had spent hours rehearsing what she would say to her friend. How could she break such news lightly? Normally comfortably eloquent, Eva found herself at a loss for words.
‘In my letter I assured you that Llandry was not injured,’ she began. ‘That is perfectly true. The last time I saw her she was in good health. But she has been… she has been changed.’
‘She’s
been
changed?’ Ynara echoed. ‘By what? Or who?’ She was gripping the table.
Eva sighed. ‘I’m just going to tell you everything that happened. From the beginning.’ She began, talking slowly and clearly through her experiences of the last few weeks. She spoke of the hunt for the reluctant criminal Edwae Geslin, whose sorcerer friend Tren had been obliged to aid in his capture. When she talked of their journey into the perilous Lower Realms, Ynara said nothing. But when Eva spoke the name “draykon”, Ynara blanched.
‘Draykon,’ she whispered. Eva had expected her to be surprised, but she did not seem to be. Instead she was aghast, electrified.
Eva cast her a quizzical look. ‘Have you heard something of it already?’ The common belief was that the mythical draykons, beasts with scaled hide and vast wings, were nothing more than legend. But Ynara did not look doubtful. As a member of Glinnery’s ruling Council, perhaps she had received reports from Glour.
‘I’ve seen one,’ Ynara said with studied calm. ‘Or in fact, I have heard one. So I believe. Finish your tale, if you please, and I will tell you mine.’
Eva blinked. ‘I… yes. Very well.’ She went on, describing the two uncanny sorcerer–summoners she and Tren had encountered. Eva had been brought up to believe that those blessed with magical ability were skilled either as summoners, those with a connection to beast kind, or sorcerers, whose talents included skilled manipulation of light and air. She had never heard of anybody possessing strong talents in both areas; not until now. She and Tren had discovered two apparent dual practitioners – the same two who had stolen and killed for the mysterious istore stone. Ynara listened raptly as Eva related how Ana and Griel – both from the Darklands realm of Ullarn, or so Eva suspected – had sought to wake a draykon.
‘For the stone that Llandry called
istore
is not a gem at all, clearly not. She actually discovered the grave of a long–dead draykon. Those stones are draykon bones. You’ll have heard the legends.’
Ynara nodded. Many of the stories about draykons were not commonly known anymore; they had disappeared from the realms far too long ago. They were the stuff of long–buried books and obscure theses. Ynara, however, was a sorcerer herself and a highly educated woman. She would know that the draykon was said to be the most powerful creature in the realms, that they were vast, unstoppable beasts. She would also have heard that they were extinct, if they had ever truly existed. Eva herself had been sceptical on that score until recently, but Ynara was speedily convinced. Had she truly heard the draykon?
‘I am aware of the end to your tale, though without the details,’ said Ynara. ‘I can guess that the bones must have been reassembled and the draykon successfully restored to life, though I cannot imagine how. What I do not grasp is how Llandry is involved.’
Eva winced inwardly. Now came the most difficult part of this conversation.
‘It’s hard to know how to explain this to you when I barely understand it myself,’ Eva began. ‘But I think you may have seen Llandry more recently than I have.’ She recounted the finale to her tale. She and Tren had been in the night–shrouded Lower Realm, but when Eva had been in physical contact with the waking draykon, she’d seen straight through the fabric of the worlds: into the Middle realms where most of humankind lived, and further, all the way into the sun–drenched Uppers. She’d realised that the separations between those realms were far flimsier than was readily supposed. She’d seen Llandry Sanfaer kneeling in the moss of the Upper Realm, sunlight glinting off her deep black hair.
Moments later, Llandry had been pulled bodily through the layers into the Lower Realms. The experience had obviously been painful for her: watching Ynara’s quiet daughter screaming in pain had been deeply distressing.
Then she had changed. Her small, winged human body had stretched, expanded and ultimately transformed; when the process was complete, a second, smaller draykon had joined the first. Eva had only been able to watch as they flew into the skies and then, abruptly, vanished.
Silence fell as Eva finished her story. Ynara appeared to be unable to speak at all. At last she managed, ‘How is that possible?’
‘I don’t know,’ Eva said honestly.
‘Was she – was she changed by those two…?’
‘No. It was certainly no part of their plan. If Ana had been able to effect such a transformation, she would have turned herself into a draykon. Her plan was actually to dominate it, to make it her companion. She, and her husband Griel, were obviously as astonished as we were. Personally I do not believe it was effected from outside at all. It had more to do with Llandry herself.’
‘You think she did that to
herself
?’
‘Not exactly. Not consciously anyway. I think it was inherent within her and brought forward because of her proximity to the other draykon. Otherwise why was she alone metamorphosed? Why not me? Why not Ana?’
Ynara nodded, more out of habit than real understanding as her face revealed a profound confusion. ‘Her proximity? But she was in the Uppers, wasn’t she? That is a completely different world.’
‘I don’t think that it is. Our three “worlds” are much closer to each other than we ever realised. They’re virtually sharing the same space. I think she felt the draykon waking from the Uppers, and she was drawn to it. And she herself may have inadvertently aided the process by her presence.’ Eva shrugged. ‘Without speaking to Llandry herself, though, I can’t be sure about any of this.’
‘Several days ago Aysun and I heard a terrific cry from somewhere overhead,’ Ynara said slowly. ‘It was like nothing I’d heard before. We ran outside, but there was nothing to be seen. Except for Dev, lying injured outside my house.’
‘Dev?’
‘I mentioned him to you before, though not by name. He is an old friend of mine. Llandry went with him to Nimdre, though without his knowledge. He says they were attacked, and he was wounded trying to defend Llandry. Since he arrived – or I should say, appeared – he has been raving about beasts the size of houses and being carried here by one of them. I thought he was delirious. But I cannot disbelieve you.’ Ynara sighed, her head drooping with tiredness. ‘So Llan found Devary and brought him here. Then – what? She vanished again.’
‘I don’t believe anybody knows where Llandry is now. I’m sorry. I wish I had more information to give you on that point.’
Ynara gripped her hand. ‘Don’t apologise. You can’t know how much I appreciate your coming here to tell me these things. Though I don’t deny they are hard to hear. How can I even begin to believe that my daughter is not – not human?’
‘Oh, she is,’ said Eva. ‘She’s both.’
Devary Kant was abed in Ynara’s house. His wounds were evidently severe, though he suffered no delirium. He glanced only briefly at Eva, then fixed his dull gaze on Ynara as she relayed the news to him.
‘That was Llandry?’ His words emerged weakly, and when he tried to sit up he gasped and fell back.
‘Don’t try to move, Dev,’ said Ynara wearily. ‘Apparently it was, yes. She saved your life, I think.’
Devary said nothing. His gaze had returned to Eva’s face, and he frowned slightly.
‘Eva Glostrum,’ she said. ‘From Glour.’ It was probably too dark for him to see her clearly, but he continued to try.
She, on the other hand, could see him quite well. Her sharp night eyes filled in strongly defined, Nimdren features, a long, thin nose and Darklands–pale skin. Under normal circumstances his hair must be a fairly light shade of brown, though at present it was splayed out on his pillow, dark with the sweat of fever.
Ynara leaned forward. ‘Dev, it seems you were the last person to see the draykon. Llandry, if it was her. Do you remember where she went?’
‘There were two beasts. Two draykons, then. I thought they vanished, but I may have been hallucinating.’
‘Probably you were not,’ Eva put in. ‘I have seen them do the same thing. I think they can cross between worlds without needing to open gates.’
‘Then my Llandry – if it was my Llandry – could be anywhere. Anywhere in the worlds.’ Ynara fell silent, but Eva could hear her unsettled breathing as she struggled to master her emotion.
Devary bestirred himself enough to grip Ynara’s hand. ‘When I’m well,’ he said with difficulty, ‘I will find her. I promise it.’
Ynara gave him a stare of disdain. ‘My husband will bring her home.’
‘Aysun has gone after her?’ Eva was surprised at that. She had heard something before of the deep suspicion he held for the Upper Realm.
Ynara nodded. ‘Nearly two weeks ago. He said he won’t come home until he can bring Llan with him.’
This was poor news. She had counted on Ynara’s having her husband’s support as she waited for her daughter to come home. Instead, her friend had been alone all this time, and in a state of anxiety about both members of her family.
‘I’m sorry, Ynara,’ she said with real regret. ‘I wish I could stay until Llan returns to you, but I can’t.’
Ynara tried a smile. ‘I know. I understand. Thank you for coming to me now.’
Eva nodded, unsure of what else to say.
‘I’ll be here,’ said Devary.
‘You’re the one who lost her!’ The words burst from Ynara as if she couldn’t hold them back anymore. She swept a hand over her face, dashing away the dampness that glittered on her cheeks.
‘I’m sorry,’ Devary said, watching helplessly as Ynara fought to regain her composure. ‘I’m sorry.’
Eva stayed as long as she could with Ynara, but she knew it wasn’t enough. It took all of her will to leave her friend alone again after a mere day’s stay, but she knew she had no choice. She began the walk back to the border with grave reluctance.
Yna’s strong,
she told herself.
Strong enough for this.
As long as Llandry comes back.
Latest Chapters
#31 Chapter 31
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#30 Chapter 30
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#29 Chapter 29
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#28 Chapter 28
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#27 Chapter 27
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#26 Chapter 26
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#25 Chapter 25
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#24 Chapter 24
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#23 Chapter 23
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11#22 Chapter 22
Last Updated: 04/17/2025 13:11
Comments
You Might Like 😍
The War God Alpha's Arranged Bride
Yet Alexander made his decision clear to the world: “Evelyn is the only woman I will ever marry.”
Falling for my boyfriend's Navy brother
"What is wrong with me?
Why does being near him make my skin feel too tight, like I’m wearing a sweater two sizes too small?
It’s just newness, I tell myself firmly.
He’s my boyfirend’s brother.
This is Tyler’s family.
I’m not going to let one cold stare undo that.
**
As a ballet dancer, My life looks perfect—scholarship, starring role, sweet boyfriend Tyler. Until Tyler shows his true colors and his older brother, Asher, comes home.
Asher is a Navy veteran with battle scars and zero patience. He calls me "princess" like it's an insult. I can't stand him.
When My ankle injury forces her to recover at the family lake house, I‘m stuck with both brothers. What starts as mutual hatred slowly turns into something forbidden.
I'm falling for my boyfriend's brother.
**
I hate girls like her.
Entitled.
Delicate.
And still—
Still.
The image of her standing in the doorway, clutching her cardigan tighter around her narrow shoulders, trying to smile through the awkwardness, won’t leave me.
Neither does the memory of Tyler. Leaving her here without a second thought.
I shouldn’t care.
I don’t care.
It’s not my problem if Tyler’s an idiot.
It’s not my business if some spoiled little princess has to walk home in the dark.
I’m not here to rescue anyone.
Especially not her.
Especially not someone like her.
She’s not my problem.
And I’ll make damn sure she never becomes one.
But when my eyes fell on her lips, I wanted her to be mine.
Crowned by Fate
“She’d just be a Breeder, you would be the Luna. Once she’s pregnant, I wouldn’t touch her again.” my mate Leon’s jaw tightened.
I laughed, a bitter, broken sound.
“You’re unbelievable. I’d rather accept your rejection than live like that.”
As a girl without a wolf, I left my mate and my pack behind.
Among humans, I survived by becoming a master of the temporary: drifting job to job… until I became the best bartender in a dusty Texas town.
That’s where Alpha Adrian found me.
No one could resist the charming Adrian, and I joined his mysterious pack hidden deep in the desert.
The Alpha King Tournament, held once every four years, had begun. Over fifty packs from across North America were competing.
The werewolf world was on the verge of a revolution. That’s when I saw Leon again...
Torn between two Alphas, I had no idea that what awaited us wasn’t just a competition—but a series of brutal, unforgiving trials.
Author Note:New book out now! The River Knows Her Name
Mystery, secrets, suspense—your next page-turner is here.
Goddess Of The Underworld.
When the veil between the Divine, the Living, and the Dead begins to crack, Envy is thrust beneath with a job she can’t drop: keep the worlds from bleeding together, shepherd the lost, and make ordinary into armor, breakfasts, bedtime, battle plans. Peace lasts exactly one lullaby. This is the story of a border pup who became a goddess by choosing her family; of four imperfect alphas learning how to stay; of cake, iron, and daylight negotiations. Steamy, fierce, and full of heart, Goddess of the Underworld is a reverse harem, found-family paranormal romance where love writes the rules and keeps three realms from falling apart.
Accardi
“I thought you said you were done chasing me?” Gen mocked.
“I am done chasing you.”
Before she could formulate a witty remark, Matteo threw her down. She landed hard on her back atop his dining room table. She tried to sit up when she noticed what he was doing. His hands were working on his belt. It came free of his pants with a violent yank. She collapsed back on her elbows, her mouth gaping open at the display. His face was a mask of sheer determination, his eyes were a dark gold swimming with heat and desire. His hands wrapped around her thighs and pulled her to the edge of the table. He glided his fingers up her thighs and hooked several around the inside of her panties. His knuckles brushed her dripping sex.
“You’re soaking wet, Genevieve. Tell me, was it me that made you this way or him?” his voice told her to be careful with her answer. His knuckles slid down through her folds and she threw her head back as she moaned. “Weakness?”
“You…” she breathed.
Genevieve loses a bet she can’t afford to pay. In a compromise, she agrees to convince any man her opponent chooses to go home with her that night. What she doesn’t realize when her sister’s friend points out the brooding man sitting alone at the bar, is that man won’t be okay with just one night with her. No, Matteo Accardi, Don of one of the largest gangs in New York City doesn’t do one night stands. Not with her anyway.
Alpha Nicholas's Little Mate
What? No—wait… oh Moon Goddess, no.
Please tell me you're joking, Lex.
But she's not. I can feel her excitement bubbling under my skin, while all I feel is dread.
We turn the corner, and the scent hits me like a punch to the chest—cinnamon and something impossibly warm. My eyes scan the room until they land on him. Tall. Commanding. Beautiful.
And then, just as quickly… he sees me.
His expression twists.
"Fuck no."
He turns—and runs.
My mate sees me and runs.
Bonnie has spent her entire life being broken down and abused by the people closest to her including her very own twin sister. Alongside her best friend Lilly who also lives a life of hell, they plan to run away while attending the biggest ball of the year while it's being hosted by another pack, only things don't quite go to plan leaving both girls feeling lost and unsure about their futures.
Alpha Nicholas is 28, mateless, and has no plans to change that. It's his turn to host the annual Blue Moon Ball this year and the last thing he expects is to find his mate. What he expects even less is for his mate to be 10 years younger than him and how his body reacts to her. While he tries to refuse to acknowledge that he has met his mate his world is turned upside down after guards catch two she-wolves running through his lands.
Once they are brought to him he finds himself once again facing his mate and discovers that she's hiding secrets that will make him want to kill more than one person.
Can he overcome his feelings towards having a mate and one that is so much younger than him? Will his mate want him after already feeling the sting of his unofficial rejection? Can they both work on letting go of the past and moving forward together or will fate have different plans and keep them apart?
Fangs, Fate & Other Bad Decisions
After finding out her boyfriend cheated, the last thing she expected was to stumble across a wounded man in an alley. And definitely not one with fangs. But thanks to a mix of cocktails, shame, and her questionable life choices, she takes him home. Turns out, he’s not just any vampire—he’s a king. And according to him, she’s his fated mate.
Now, she’s stuck with an overprotective, brooding bloodsucker who keeps rescuing her, a growing list of enemies who want her dead, and an undeniable attraction that’s making it very hard to remember why falling for a vampire is a terrible idea.
Because if she’s not careful, she won’t just lose her heart—she’ll lose her humanity.
The CEO's Contractual Wife
Off Limits, Brother's Best Friend
“You are going to take every inch of me.” He whispered as he thrusted up.
“Fuck, you feel so fucking good. Is this what you wanted, my dick inside you?” He asked, knowing I have benticing him since the beginning.
“Y..yes,” I breathed.
Brianna Fletcher had been running from dangerous men all her life but when she got an opportunity to stay with his elder brother after graduation, there she met the most dangerous of them all. Her brother's best friend, a mafia Don. He radiated danger but she couldn't stay away.
He knows his best friend's little sister is off limits and yet, he couldn't stop thinking of her.
Will they be able to break all rules and find closure in each other's arms?
My Marked Luna
"Yes,"
He exhales, raises his hand, and brings it down to slap my naked as again... harder than before. I gasp at the impact. It hurts, but it is so hot, and sexy.
"Will you do it again?"
"No,"
"No, what?"
"No, Sir,"
"Best girl," he brings his lips to kiss my behind while he caresses it softly.
"Now, I'm going to fck you," He sits me on his lap in a straddling position. We lock gazes. His long fingers find their way to my entrance and insert them.
"You're soaking for me, baby," he is pleased. He moves his fingers in and out, making me moan in pleasure.
"Hmm," But suddenly, they are gone. I cry as he leaves my body aching for him. He switches our position within a second, so I'm under him. My breath is shallow, and my senses are incoherent as I anticipate his hardness in me. The feeling is fantastic.
"Please," I beg. I want him. I need it so badly.
"So, how would you like to come, baby?" he whispers.
Oh, goddess!
Apphia's life is harsh, from being mistreated by her pack members to her mate rejecting her brutally. She is on her own. Battered on a harsh night, she meets her second chance mate, the powerful, dangerous Lycan Alpha, and boy, is she in for the ride of her life. However, everything gets complicated as she discovers she is no ordinary wolf. Tormented by the threat to her life, Apphia has no choice but to face her fears. Will Apphia be able to defeat the iniquity after her life and finally be happy with her mate? Follow for more.
Warning: Mature Content
After One Night with the Alpha
I thought I was waiting for love. Instead, I got fucked by a beast.
My world was supposed to bloom at the Moonshade Bay Full Moon Festival—champagne buzzing in my veins, a hotel room booked for Jason and me to finally cross that line after two years. I’d slipped into lacy lingerie, left the door unlocked, and lay on the bed, heart pounding with nervous excitement.
But the man who climbed into my bed wasn’t Jason.
In the pitch-black room, drowned in a heady, spicy scent that made my head spin, I felt hands—urgent, scorching—searing my skin. His thick, pulsing cock pressed against my dripping cunt, and before I could gasp, he thrust hard, tearing through my innocence with ruthless force. Pain burned, my walls clenching as I clawed at his iron shoulders, stifling sobs. Wet, slick sounds echoed with every brutal stroke, his body unrelenting until he shuddered, spilling hot and deep inside me.
"That was amazing, Jason," I managed to say.
"Who the fuck is Jason?"
My blood turned to ice. Light slashed across his face—Brad Rayne, Alpha of Moonshade Pack, a werewolf, not my boyfriend. Horror choked me as I realized what I’d done.
I ran away for my life!
But weeks later, I woke up pregnant with his heir!
They say my heterochromatic eyes mark me as a rare true mate. But I’m no wolf. I’m just Elle, a nobody from the human district, now trapped in Brad's world.
Brad’s cold gaze pins me: “You carry my blood. You’re mine.”
There is no other choice for me but to chose this cage. My body also betrays me, craving the beast who ruined me.
WARNING: Mature Readers Only
The Delta's Daughter
Born on the same night as the Kings son, Prince Kellen; Lamia Langley, daughter to the Royal Delta of The New Moon pack (royal pack) bares the mark of a royal and is a seemingly ordinary wolf, until she shifts at the age of 14 and by 15 becomes one of the strongest wolfs in the kingdom.
All Lamia ever wanted was to serve her prince, become a warrior, find her mate at 18 and live happily ever after.
Growing up together and sharing a rare and special goddess given bond, everyone is sure Lamia and Prince Kellen will be fated mates. Being given the opportunity to go to the Alpha academy, Kellen and Lamia fall in love and they hope they are fated like everyone thinks.
But the fates have already mapped out her future.
What happens when a wolf from the Kings past has his eye on Lamia?
Follow this epic tale of Love, tragedy and betrayal as Lamia starts to discover her family heritage. Will her family’s forgotten heritage and secrets become more than she can handle?
Will her Prince become her mate or will she be fated to another?
Will Lamia rise to become the wolf the goddess’ fated her to be?
For a mature audience
About Author
Charlotte E. English
Download AnyStories App to discover more Fantasy Stories.













