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The Billionaire Investor Stolen Bride Novel Cover

The Billionaire Investor Stolen Bride

During her engagement celebration, Lila Hart is horrified to learn her fiancé is unfaithful and has traded her to the Silvermoon Pack's Alpha to clear his debts. Forced into the custody of Damien Blackwood, a cold and formidable billionaire werewolf, Lila is determined to flee. However, she soon discovers that Damien hides a dark secret. This hidden truth reveals a profound, inescapable connection that binds them together forever.
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Chapter 13

The dawn was heavy with mist. The river lay like a silver ribbon, smooth on the surface, but wild beneath. The humans were back-closer this time, their shapes moving deliberately along the far bank.

The pack had gathered on our side, restless and alert. Muscles tensed. Eyes narrowed. Every wolf waiting for the signal to attack. But Damien didn't move. Neither did I.

"This is it," the young scout whispered, fear and awe mingling in his voice. "They're going to cross."

"They might," I said quietly, "but crossing doesn't have to mean conflict."

A low growl erupted from the younger wolves. "We should strike first! Show them we're not afraid!"

I turned to them, meeting each pair of eyes in the front line. "That's exactly what they want," I said, voice sharp. "Fear makes fools of us. Strength isn't teeth and claws. Strength is presence. Holding the line without giving them power over your choices."

Damien's hand brushed mine, almost imperceptibly. "Lead them," he said. "They'll test you first. Then, you decide the consequences."

I took a step forward, letting the weight of the moment settle. I raised my voice. "You have entered pack territory," I called to the humans across the river. "No harm will come to you if you leave now. But every step forward is your choice-and you will bear it."

One human tilted their head, then smiled faintly, stepping closer. Another followed.

The pack stiffened. The growls became a chorus of anticipation.

I held my ground. "We enforce boundaries by our presence, not by blind rage," I continued. "Do you wish to see if we will break, or do you respect what cannot be taken?"

A long silence hung over the river. Then the first human stopped, eyes narrowing, measuring. The second hesitated. The third tilted their shoulders, as if weighing whether to risk it.

I glanced back at the pack. They were bristling, teeth bared in instinct, but waiting. Watching me.

It was mine to control.

"Step one closer," I said, calm but commanding, "and you will face consequences you cannot undo. Step back, and leave with no harm done."

The human on the right took a slow, deliberate step forward-testing.

The scout beside me flinched. A young wolf snarled low, claws scraping stone.

I raised a hand. "Stop. Do you see? We hold. We do not break. Fear cannot force us to act rashly."

The human hesitated, then lowered their hand. The other two mirrored the movement, stepping back slowly.

A ripple of tension left the pack. Relief mixed with disbelief, confusion, and grudging respect.

I exhaled, letting the moment sink in. Damien's hand squeezed mine lightly. "First line held," he murmured. "Not by force, but by judgment."

The humans finally retreated into the trees, disappearing into shadow. The river returned to its quiet murmur, but the lesson lingered.

The pack had tested me, the humans had tested me, and now... I knew the cost of patience.

Under Alpha Law, leadership wasn't about winning fights. It was about deciding which battles were truly yours to fight.

And tonight, the river had answered The humans vanished into the trees, but no one moved.

The river kept flowing, loud in the silence that followed, as if mocking how close everything had come to breaking. Wolves stood frozen, muscles still tight, breaths shallow.

Waiting for permission to exhale.

Damien lowered his hand first.

Only then did the pack ease-slowly, reluctantly-claws retracting, growls dying in throats that still burned with adrenaline.

"They retreated," a young wolf muttered, disbelief heavy in his voice.

"Yes," an elder replied sharply. "This time."

I turned toward the pack. Faces stared back at me now, no longer curious-intent.

"You wanted proof," I said, my voice carrying without strain. "That restraint isn't fear. You saw it."

A ripple of uneasy agreement moved through them.

"But understand this," I continued. "They didn't leave because they were afraid of us. They left because they couldn't control us."

That landed harder.

One of the elders stepped forward, expression conflicted. "If they return in greater numbers..."

"Then we adapt," I said. "Just as we did tonight."

Damien's gaze stayed on me, unreadable-but steady.

The freed scout approached hesitantly. "They crossed because of me," he said quietly. "They wanted to show they could."

"No," I corrected gently. "They wanted to show we would react."

He nodded, swallowing hard.

As the pack dispersed, conversations sparked in low voices-some impressed, some angry, some thoughtful. No one ignored me anymore.

Later, when only the guards remained, Damien spoke. "You held them."

"I almost lost them," I admitted.

"You didn't," he said. "You trusted them to wait."

I looked at the river again, calmer now. "And if next time they don't?"

"Then next time," Damien replied, "the response will be different. And they'll know exactly why."

Night settled slowly.

Torches burned brighter along the river line. Wolves stood taller. Patrols moved with purpose instead of agitation.

The crossing had not happened.

But something else had.

Authority had shifted.

And in the quiet that followed, I understood the truth beneath Alpha Law:

You didn't earn loyalty by being protected.

You earned it by standing still when everyone else wanted to lunge.

The river would be tested again.

But next time, the pack would look to me 

The night didn't settle the way it should have.

Even after patrols resumed and the river returned to its steady murmur, sleep refused to come. Wolves lingered in corridors. Guards rotated too often. The pack wasn't celebrating.

They were thinking.

I felt it the next morning.

Whispers followed me-not loud enough to confront, not quiet enough to ignore. Some carried admiration. Others carried resentment sharpened by fear.

"She spoke to them like equals," someone murmured.

"She didn't strike when she had the chance."

"She made us wait."

Waiting, to wolves, was dangerous.

An elder stopped me near the council hall, blocking my path just long enough to be intentional. "You embarrassed them," he said quietly.

"The humans?" I asked.

"No," he replied. "Our own."

I met his gaze. "Then they needed reminding that strength isn't volume."

He studied me for a long moment, then stepped aside. Not agreement. Not defiance.

Assessment.

Later, Damien summoned a closed council. Only five attended. I was one of them now-no longer a presence by protection, but by necessity.

"They will talk," one elder said. "Some already are."

"Let them," Damien replied. "Talking is safer than acting."

"For now," another countered.

Eyes turned to me.

"They didn't cross because they didn't want consequences," I said. "That tells us something."

"That they fear you?" the elder asked.

"That they're patient," I corrected. "And patience means planning."

Silence followed.

Damien leaned forward. "Then we plan faster."

That afternoon, patrol routes shifted again-not heavier, but smarter. Wolves were placed where visibility mattered most. The riverbank became a place of calm vigilance rather than aggression.

But peace never lasts long in a fractured pack.

By evening, a younger wolf challenged a patrol order openly. Not violently-publicly. It was small, but deliberate.

"I won't wait again," he said. "Next time they step closer, I act."

The challenge hung in the air.

All eyes turned to me.

I stepped forward slowly. "Then next time, you won't be standing at the river."

His ears flattened. "You'd remove me?"

"I'd protect the line," I said. "Even if that means removing those who endanger it."

A heartbeat passed.

Then he bowed-tight, angry, but compliant.

When night fell, I stood alone by the water again. The moon reflected perfectly this time, smooth and deceptive.

Damien joined me. "You're learning," he said.

"What?"

"That leadership isn't choosing between right and wrong," he replied. "It's choosing between wrong options... and living with the least damaging one."

I watched the river flow, endless and unbothered.

The crossing hadn't happened.

But something else had crossed tonight.

A boundary inside the pack.

And once crossed, it could never be uncrossed.

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