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Chapter 1 - PROLOGUE

The Advanced Botany Lab

Damien Blackwood lived by the unbending laws of nature: strong devours weak, predator claims prey, the Alpha commands the Pack. These were not mere guidelines but the bedrock physics of his existence. As Alpha Prime, his senses were gospel. He heard a heartbeat skip two rooms away. He sniffed out half-truths before they reached a speaker's lips. He recognized fear's chemical signature, lust's, betrayal's.

But he did not know her.

He lingered in the sultry gloom of the greenhouse, where dripping leaves and warm air clung to skin like a second layer. Rows of ferns and orchids hissed with hidden moisture. In the center, Elara Vance—slender, pale, absurdly vulnerable in an oversized lab coat—moved among potted seedlings. For five days she had been a blank on his sensory map: no musk of blood, no shimmer of adrenaline, only the razor tang of solvents and the faint squeak of cheap hand soap. A ghost in high definition. It enraged and intrigued him in equal measure.

He watched her fingers tremble over a stainless-steel scalpel. "Steady," he murmured, slipping up behind her. She stiffened, and he felt the erratic heat pulsing from her body—too hot for a mere human, too inconsistent for a shifter.

"I'm fine," she whispered, though her knuckles turned white around the handle.

Then it happened. A sudden jerk. The blade slashed across her palm.

The world froze. Blood blossomed, a vivid scarlet flower against her skin.

Instinct propelled him forward. He closed the distance in two strides, caught her wrist before she could pull away, guiding it toward his face. "Let me see," he ordered.

He braced for copper tang, the metallic sting of human blood. Instead a scent exploded against his senses: sweet and electric, like ozone after a storm, like ancient wildflowers shivering through snow. It was a power so pure, so old, that his wolf, Ares, bowed submissively in his mind.

Damien stared at the wound. The edges of the cut quivered, then inched together like living tissue, stitching closed in seconds until only flawless, pearlescent skin remained.

Her brown eyes were wide with panic. She yanked her hand out of his grip, flattening it behind her back. "It's just a scratch," she lied. Her voice trembled. "I have… good platelets."

He studied her anew. The chemical odor was artifice; the trembling hands a cage. This fragile creature was no ordinary prey. She was something else—something dangerous, something divine.

He stepped into her space, dumping her against a battered potting table. The humid air pressed around them as he bent, his lips ghosting her ear. He drank in that impossible scent of storm-wrought honey and ancient power. "You are a terrible liar, Elara," he whispered, voice low and dark with a new, primal obsession. "And I will uncover exactly what you're hiding."

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