My books are like my future grayeard. Quiet and silent.

A Werewolf Romance “The Alpha’s Curse and The Mark that Bounds Us” is out. Read Free Sample of Book 1 here!

on
Thursday, November 27, 2025
                                          


Chapter 1

The room stank of sweat and blood, the air thick enough to choke on. Papers were scattered across the floor, a chair lay overturned in the corner, and I could hear my own ragged breathing. My fists pounded against the wooden door, each blow sending a jolt of pain up my arms.

“Help!” I screamed, desperation cracking my voice. “Is anybody out there? Please!”

A voice answered from the other side, sharp and venomous. “You’re not going anywhere, Selene. Open the door, or I swear, I’ll—”

I didn’t wait for him to finish. My fist slammed against the door again, harder this time. The impact shot through my body, and I staggered back, gasping for air. My eyes darted to the small window in the far wall, my only hope.

I ran to it, fingers fumbling at the rusted latch. It wouldn’t budge. Years of neglect had sealed it shut, but I refused to stop. My hands burned as the metal dug into my skin, the sharp edge slicing into my palm. Blood smeared the frame, but finally, with one last desperate shove, the latch broke free.

“Selene!” his voice roared from behind the door, louder now, filled with venomous satisfaction. He knew I was trapped—or at least he thought so.

The wood began to splinter under his fists, sharp cracks echoing in the suffocating room.

My pulse thundered in my ears as I hauled myself through the narrow opening. The glass bit into my shoulders, tearing my skin. I hissed in pain, but there was no time to stop, no time to care. Blood smeared the sill as I pulled myself free, falling hard onto the frozen ground below.

The cold bit into me immediately, a brutal slap to my senses, but I didn’t slow down. I scrambled to my feet and ran, the icy air burning my lungs.

“Come back here!” his voice bellowed behind me, echoing off the walls of the alley.

I didn’t look back. I couldn’t. My legs pounded against the pavement, the dim lights of the city blurring into streaks of yellow and white as I ran faster. My heart felt like it would explode, the sound of my own pulse drowning out everything else.

The night was freezing, each breath a sharp, stinging reminder that I couldn’t stop. Not now. Not ever.

……..

Many years later, I sat at the rickety table in my tiny, suffocating apartment, my eyes fixed on the scar running across my hand. It stretched from my palm to my wrist—a thick, crooked line that refused to fade no matter how much time passed. A permanent reminder of the night I lost everything, the night I abandoned who I used to be.  

I rubbed it absently with my thumb, the rough texture of the skin grounding me in memories I didn’t want to revisit. My thoughts drifted far away, to places I hadn’t allowed myself to linger in years.  

“Everything okay?”  

Clara’s voice startled me, pulling me back into the present. I glanced up to see her leaning in the doorway, her hands firmly on her hips. The smell of burnt toast wafted in from her apartment, as it always did.  

“I’m okay,” I said, forcing a small smile to soften the lie.  

“You don’t look okay, though,” Clara shot back, crossing her arms. “When was the last time you slept?”  

I sighed, tucking a strand of hair behind my ear. “I’m fine, Clara. Just… sorting things out.”  

Her gaze slid past me, landing on the half-packed bag sitting on my bed. The contents barely filled it, yet it felt heavier than anything I’d ever carried.  

“I see,” she said, her voice quieter now. “You’re really going this time, aren’t you?”  

I nodded. “I need a new beginning.”  

Clara frowned, her brows knitting together in confusion. “A new beginning? Where to? Selene, you’ve been running since the day I met you.”  

Her words hit harder than I wanted to admit, and my jaw clenched. “It’s not running,” I said through gritted teeth. “It’s living.”  

I expected her to argue—she always did—but this time, she just stood there for a moment, studying me with an expression I couldn’t quite place. Then, she sighed and stepped back into the corridor.  

“Just… take care of yourself, okay?”  

I didn’t respond. I couldn’t. I simply got up and shut the door behind her.  

For a moment, I stood there, leaning against the door as though it could hold me up. My eyes closed, and I let out a slow, shaky breath.  

I wasn’t meant to live like this—always looking over my shoulder, staying in one place just long enough to grow restless or afraid, and then packing up to leave again. But whether I wanted it or not, this was my life now.  

Running wasn’t survival. It was existence. Barely. And yet, it was the only existence I had. 

*

The trip out of the city was uneventful, the hum of the car engine and the occasional crackle of the radio my only companions.  

“…several residents reported missing near Blackwood Forest… authorities suspect wild animals…”  

I reached out and switched the radio off, my fingers trembling against the dial. The silence that followed was deafening, but I didn’t want to hear any more. I couldn’t.  

My eyes darted to the rearview mirror, scanning the empty road behind me as if the past might be chasing me, hidden in the shadows. I exhaled a shaky breath, trying to calm the tightness in my chest.  

“You’re okay,” I whispered to myself, gripping the steering wheel so hard my knuckles turned white. “Everything is behind you. He’s not there.”  

But the words felt hollow, like a lie I couldn’t even convince myself to believe.  

The road grew darker as towering trees closed in, their canopies weaving a suffocating dusk. The car sputtered, jolting me forward in my seat.  

“No. No, no, no,” I muttered, my eyes darting to the fuel gauge. Empty.  

The engine coughed one last time before giving out completely. I cursed under my breath, steering the powerless car to the side of the road.  

Dropping my head against the steering wheel, I let out a frustrated groan. “Perfect. Just perfect.”  

I fumbled in the glove box for the flashlight, its cold metal handle slippery in my sweaty hand. Stepping out of the car, the chill of the night air hit me like a slap. It seeped through my jacket, biting at my skin.  

The beam of the flashlight was dim, barely cutting through the darkness as I stood on the shoulder of the road. I glanced up at the imposing woods, the shadows within shifting like restless phantoms.  

“Lovely,” I muttered, forcing myself to step forward.  

The quiet was oppressive, the kind of silence that pressed against your ears and made you hyper-aware of every sound. My boots scraped against the gravel, the noise sharp and grating in the stillness.  

A sudden crack of a branch froze me in place. My heart leapt into my throat as I swung the flashlight toward the sound, but its weak beam revealed nothing but shifting shadows.  

“Hello?” I called out, my voice barely louder than a whisper.  

Nothing answered.  

I swallowed hard, the lump in my throat making it difficult to breathe. My legs moved faster now, driven by the primal need to get away from whatever might be lurking in the dark.  

Then I saw them—footprints. Massive, clawed impressions in the dirt that didn’t look like they belonged to any animal I’d ever seen. My pulse quickened, fear tightening its grip around my chest.  

Another sound—a low, guttural snarl—rumbled from behind me.  

I spun around, my heart pounding so hard it felt like it might burst. “Who’s there?” I shouted, my voice cracking.  

The flashlight flickered, then died, plunging me into complete darkness.  

“No, no, no,” I whimpered, shaking the useless thing in desperation.  

Heavy steps crunched through the underbrush, growing louder, closer. Panic overtook me, and I ran, my breath coming in short, ragged gasps.  

I didn’t see the snare until it was too late.  

The sharp snap of metal teeth clamping around my ankle sent searing pain shooting up my leg. I screamed, collapsing to the ground as tears blurred my vision.  

“Help me! Somebody, please!” I yelled, clawing at the trap with trembling hands. Blood coated my fingers as I struggled, but the metal wouldn’t budge.  

The forest seemed to hold its breath, the silence pressing down on me like a weight. Then it came—a roar so deep and primal it shook the very earth beneath me.  

I froze, my breath hitching.  

Two glowing yellow eyes emerged from the darkness, unblinking and fixed on me. The beast’s heavy, wheezing breaths filled the air, louder than my own frantic heartbeat.  

It stepped closer, its massive shadow swallowing me whole. Its fur was thick and dark, its claws gleaming in the faint moonlight.  

“Stay back!” I screamed, my voice trembling as I held up a hand, though I knew it was useless.  

The creature paused, tilting its head as if it understood me. For a moment, I dared to hope, dared to believe it might leave me alone.  

But then it growled—a low, rumbling sound that sent chills racing down my spine—and took another step forward.  

Tears streamed down my face as my hands worked frantically on the trap, my blood-slick fingers slipping against the cold metal.  

“Please,” I whispered, the word barely audible over the pounding of my heart.  

The beast didn’t move, its piercing eyes locked onto mine.  

For a fleeting second, I thought it might spare me. But then, with deliberate intent, it pushed closer, its breath hot and foul against my skin.  

I was out of time. 


Chapter 2

I stopped dead in my tracks, breath hitching as my eyes locked on those glowing yellow orbs cutting through the darkness. The shadowy creature stepped forward, and as it emerged from the inky blackness, my heart threatened to burst. Its body was massive, covered in thick, dark fur, and its claws gleamed like polished steel under the faint moonlight.

It growled, low and menacing, the sound vibrating in the pit of my stomach and sending a chill down my spine.

“No,” I whispered, barely recognizing my own trembling voice. The beast crept closer, its gaze never breaking from mine.

My hands fumbled for the trap clamped around my ankle, sharp metal teeth biting deep into my skin. The pain was blinding, a relentless throb that had my head spinning.

“Come on, come on!” I hissed at myself, my fingers scrambling desperately in the dirt. They brushed against something solid—a branch. It was rough and splintered, but it would have to do.

I seized it, my hands shaking as I held it up like some pitiful shield.

The beast let out another rumble, a sound that seemed to mock my efforts. Its lips curled back, revealing rows of sharp teeth, and I could see the faint sheen of saliva glistening in the moonlight.

“Stay back!” I shouted, my voice cracking, but it only kept coming, slow and deliberate, savoring my fear.

Then it lunged.

I screamed and swung the branch with every ounce of strength I had.

CRACK!

The wood connected with its side, and the beast stumbled back, letting out a deafening roar that echoed through the trees. My ears rang, but I didn’t stick around to see if it would recover.

Biting down on the inside of my cheek to keep from screaming, I yanked my leg free from the trap. Pain tore through me as the metal ripped at my skin, blood pouring down and soaking my jeans.

I didn’t stop. I couldn’t stop.

Dragging my injured leg behind me, I crawled, each movement sending fresh waves of agony shooting up my body. My breath came in ragged gasps, and tears blurred my vision, but I kept going.

The sound of the beast’s heavy footsteps sent my heart into overdrive. It was close. Too close.

Then I saw it—a river, its surface glinting faintly under the moonlight.

“There,” I gasped, my voice barely a whisper. I clawed at the ground, forcing my body to move faster even as every muscle screamed in protest.

The growls grew louder, the crunch of its steps closing in.

“Come on, move!” I begged myself, panic clawing at my chest.

When I reached the riverbank, I twisted around just as the beast pounced again. With a wild cry, I swung the branch, missing its snapping jaws by a hair.

Its claws raked the ground where I’d been moments before, and it snarled in frustration.

Without thinking, I turned and threw myself into the water.

The cold was like a slap to the face, stealing the breath from my lungs as the current dragged me under. I thrashed, fighting to keep my head above the surface, but the icy water was relentless.

The beast roared from the riverbank, pacing and swiping at the water, but it didn’t follow me in. Relief flooded me, but it was short-lived.

The current was stronger than I’d anticipated, pulling me under and tossing me like a rag doll. Water filled my lungs as I choked and gasped, struggling to resurface.

“Help!” I screamed, though I knew no one could hear me.

Rocks slammed into me, each one sending fresh bursts of pain through my battered body. My injured leg felt like it was on fire, and the cold was seeping into my bones, sapping what little strength I had left.

Finally, the current slowed, and I was spat out onto a muddy bank. I collapsed there, gasping for air, my body trembling violently from the cold and the pain.

I tried to sit up, but my strength was gone. The world spun around me, and darkness started creeping in at the edges of my vision.

I lay back against the mud, chest heaving, the forest spinning above me. My last thought before everything faded was simple and despairing.

I’m not safe yet.

“Is she alive?”  

The voice reached me like a whisper carried on the wind, muffled and distant, barely cutting through the roar of the river still pounding in my ears.  

“Barely. Look at her leg—it’s a mess.”  

I forced my eyes open, the effort draining what little strength I had left. The world above me was a blur, dark shapes moving against a canvas of endless night.  

“We can’t leave her here,” another voice said, softer than the first but tinged with hesitation.  

“She’s trouble,” the first voice shot back, sharp and annoyed. “We don’t need more problems.”  

Trouble? They were talking about me. My head lolled to the side, and I caught a glimpse of boots stepping closer.  

“She’s hurt,” the softer voice insisted, pleading now. “If we leave her, she’ll die.”  

I tried to speak, to tell them I wasn’t trouble, to ask for help, but nothing came out. My throat felt raw, my body too weak to obey even the simplest commands.  

“She might’ve seen it,” the first voice muttered, low and cautious.  

Seen it? My sluggish thoughts tried to piece together what they meant. The beast—they were talking about the beast.  

“Even more reason to take her,” the softer voice argued. “If she saw it, we can’t risk her talking.”  

There was a long pause, the air thick with tension.  

“Fine,” the first voice finally relented, though there was no kindness in it. “But if she causes any trouble—”  

“She won’t,” the softer one interrupted, firm but gentle.  

A shadow loomed over me, and I felt strong arms slide under my battered body. Warmth enveloped me as I was lifted from the cold, wet ground, cradled against a solid chest.  

Through the haze, I heard the soft voice again, this time closer, laced with quiet concern.  

“Hang on, stranger. You’re safe now… for a little while.”  

The words followed me into the darkness as I let it take me, too weak to resist.

*



#newseriesalert ‼️🚨 Dannesya brings you a thrilling tale of human girl x Lucifer. Read free sample of Book 1 below!

on
Wednesday, November 26, 2025



PROLOGUE: DEATH #3

Chapter 1

Ruby woke up drowning.

Not in water—not in anything that wanted to cradle or refresh. She woke up drowning in screaming.

The River Styx wasn't a river. It was a living paste of compressed agony, thick as tar and twice as hungry. Every soul that had ever drowned since the Beginning of Time had been rendered down into this viscous nightmare, and now it clung to Ruby like it recognized her.

Thousands of cold hands grabbed her ankles. Her wrists. Her throat.

She kicked. Something bit her calf—teeth or memory, she couldn't tell. Something else hissed her name in seven distinct, overlapping voices, each one slightly off-pitch.

Her head broke the surface for one precious second.

Long enough to hear a voice—exhausted, familiar, and deeply annoyed—shout from the bone-white shore:

"OH FOR THE LOVE OF—NOT AGAIN!"

Then she went under.

Ruby clawed upward with everything she had. Her fingers finally scraped against the riverbank, and she hauled herself onto a shore made of ground bones, smooth and warm like polished ivory.

She collapsed on her knees, coughing up thick black sludge. It sizzled when it hit the ground, smelling of sulfur and rusted iron.

The sky above her was the color of a fresh bruise—purple, black, streaked with lightning that never actually struck anything. Faces moved inside the clouds, opening toothless mouths in silent, eternal screams.

A clipboard slapped down beside her.

Hard.

Demanding.

Gary stood over her, looking like he'd aged a hundred years in the last ten minutes. He wore his usual short-sleeved button-up, clip-on tie, and an expression of existential exhaustion perfected over six centuries of Hell's customer service.

His burnt-orange skin cracked when he frowned.

He frowned constantly.

He didn't offer her a hand. He never did. He was Hell's Support Staff, not a bloody angel.

"Ruby," Gary said, his voice flat as a corpse. "This is the third time this month."

Ruby spat more sludge onto the bone shore. Her large, bright eyes—like ruby candies framed by thick lashes—stared up at Gary without a trace of remorse.

"Hi, Gary," she said sweetly. "Coffee?"

"This is Hell, Ruby. No amount of coffee can handle this."

Gary sighed—a breath that weighed as much as the fall of a civilization. He flipped through his clipboard, each page rustling like dying leaves.

"Listen to me carefully," he said. "I've processed millions of souls over millennia. They die. They come here. That's the First Death. They never come back."

He shook his clipboard at her, pointing to the entries with a trembling finger.

"Three times. You died, and Hell spat you back up. Do you understand what that means? That's a miracle. A cosmic chance of grace. It's an opportunity for redemption, to earn Heaven. A chance to start over."

Gary's voice dropped to a hollow whisper.

"I've never seen it. Nobody has. Being ejected from Hell is divine intervention. And the ones who get that mercy?" He shook his head slowly. "They run to the nearest church. They hug monks. They dedicate their lives to charity. They do anything to stay away from here."

He pointed at Ruby, his withered finger trembling with barely contained frustration.

"But you? You return to the rooftop. You return to the rope. You return to the livestream. You actively try to get back here. You are phenomenally good at suicide, Ruby."

Ruby merely tilted her head, her sweet, guileless smile contrasting sharply with the hellscape around them. Her full, red lips looked too vibrant for this place.

"Well," she said in that cute voice that was horribly misplaced, "I missed Daddy."

Gary closed his eyes. He massaged his temples so hard that small flecks of ash dusted off his cracked skin.

"I'm going to ignore that," he muttered. "Cause of death?"

"Jumped off a building," Ruby replied, wringing Styx water from her hair. "I livestreamed it. Very tasteful lighting. Good angle. The followers said they loved the 'falling-from-perfection' aesthetic."

Gary's pen hovered over his clipboard.

"Last words?"

Ruby grinned, manic and proud. Her candy-like eyes shone with pure mischief.

"'See you soon, Daddy!'"

Gary's pen snapped in half.

He took a slow, deep breath—the kind someone takes before resigning themselves to fate. His spectacles fogged.

This was his breaking point.

"He's going to incinerate you," Gary muttered.

"Hot."

Gary pulled out Ruby's punch card. It said FREQUENT DIER – BUY 9, GET 1 FREE in cheerful red font. He punched it with a hole shaped like a tiny flame.

"One more and you get a free lava latte," Gary said mechanically.

Ruby perked up. "Do I get marshmallows this time?"

"No."

"Cinnamon?"

"No."

"Then why would I—"

"Ruby." Gary pinched the bridge of his nose. "Please. For once in your short, chaotic existence, do NOT make this harder."

She sat cross-legged on the bones, wringing out her hair—dark at the tips and starting to streak white from the stress Hell kept gifting her.

"Well?" she asked brightly. "Can I see him?"

Gary flipped a page on his clipboard. He looked like he'd aged ten years in three seconds.

"He's in a meeting with the Sins," he said carefully. "They're discussing your... TikTok account."

Ruby lit up like a firecracker. "It finally blew up?!"

"It didn't blow up," Gary corrected. "It melted the servers. Twice. Mammon had a panic attack. Pride is still screaming about copyright infringement. Sloth fell asleep in the middle of the outrage. And Lucifer is—"

CRACK.

The ground split beneath them.

A deep, earth-shaking roar echoed through all Nine Circles at once, rattling the bones beneath their feet.


Chapter 2

Ruby's hair stood on end.

She simply smiled.

Gary squeaked like a dying mouse.

Then—

LUCIFER'S VOICE rolled through the air like thunder wearing expensive cologne. The sound was destruction draped in velvet, beauty wrapped around annihilation.

"BRING. HER. TO. THE. THRONE. ROOM."

The River Styx bubbled violently. Sulfur geysers exploded behind them. The sky flickered. A dozen tortured faces in the clouds turned toward Ruby as if they were watching a disaster movie in real time.

Ruby hopped to her feet, dusting herself off.

Amidst the chaos, she looked like an ordinary human girl—cute, witty, and brave. A rare gem in the mortal realm, let alone Hell. She had wide, beautiful candy eyes, a porcelain doll face, and a courage that bordered on pure insanity.

"Well," she said, beaming, "at least he still wants to see me."

Gary stared at her, hollow and afraid.

"No," he whispered, clutching his clipboard like a life preserver. "He wants to kill you."

Ruby shrugged, her attitude one of total acceptance.

This was the most unsettling aspect for Gary.

He had seen millions of souls. They all fought. They all struggled. They all begged, cried, or cursed.

Ruby?

She just smiled.

She seemed fused with Hell. She appeared to welcome every torment without resistance, without self-defense.

This brought Gary back to the old legends, the whispers only uttered in the darkest corners of the Infernal Archives:

Hellborn.

Hellborn.

Neither Demon nor mere Human. One whose soul, whether due to the brutality of life or a cosmic flaw, found its true home in Hell. One who accepted fire as a blanket and suffering as a lullaby.

Legend had it that only a soul so fundamentally accepting of Hell's darkness—one who instinctively refused to fight the torment—would be spat back up, only so Hell could enjoy their repeated, eternal struggle to return.

Ruby was this anomaly.

She was the first modern Hellborn—a bitter joke played on Heaven itself.

"Even better," Ruby replied cheerfully.

And grinning like a cute gremlin, she followed the glowing cracks toward Pandemonium.

Hell groaned.

The Morningstar waited.

And Ruby skipped.


INTERLUDE: CIRCLE 7 – VIOLENCE WING, THE BLOOD RIVER TORTURE DEPARTMENT, MIDSHIFT

The blood river gurgled like a clogged drain, thick and bubbling with the consistency of hot tar. Souls writhed beneath the surface, arms flailing desperately, trying to grab anything solid.

No one was actively drowning them.

Because the demons assigned to the task were standing around gossiping.

Kragith leaned on his trident—all eight feet of horned muscle and bad decisions. "I'm telling you, what if she's his type?"

Vexa hissed, her forked tongue catching a clot of dried blood in the air. Her scales didn't sit right on her face—like someone had applied reptile-print makeup with a sandblaster.

"Lucifer doesn't have a type," she said. "He hasn't slept with anything since the Fall."

Kragith shrugged, his massive shoulders rippling. "Maybe that's why she's interesting. She's broken. He loves broken things."

Thalgrim shifted uncomfortably. He was still new—only three hundred years dead—so much of his human face remained. His eyes still held the kind of moral discomfort that didn't last long in Hell.

"You're telling me," Thalgrim said slowly, "we're delaying torture because we're discussing Lucifer's potential sex life?"

Kragith jabbed him gently with the trident. "You're young. You don't understand. Nothing ever happens in Hell. Torture is boring. The screaming? The begging? The writhing? It's the same playlist every single day. But this—" He pointed upward, toward Lucifer's tower. "—this is drama."

Vexa nodded enthusiastically. "The big man's pacing. His aura's glitching. Belial looks like he's shedding a whole decade off his lifespan every ten minutes. Something's up."

Thalgrim frowned. "And we think the reason is... a dead girl making viral videos?"

Kragith grinned, revealing teeth like crushed pearls. "This is Hell, kid. Reputational damage is worse than any sin. Think of the metrics."

Before Thalgrim could answer, the supervisor arrived—Agares, who looked like a crocodile skull wearing a cheap work shirt. His tail flicked like a boss who already regretted coming over.

Agares surveyed the river, then the three demons, then the river again. His eye sockets narrowed.

"Why," he said quietly, dangerously, "are there forty-seven souls still conscious in the river?"

Vexa straightened. "We were just—"

"I don't care." Agares pointed a bony claw at the souls thrashing around like desperate spaghetti. "Drown them. Now. Or I reassign all three of you to Circle Three."

Kragith paled. "Circle Three... the maggot shoveling?"

Agares clicked his teeth—a sound like dry bone breaking. "Try me."

The demons scrambled—literally scrambled—back to work. The river erupted with screaming again as they shoved souls under one by one, complaining the whole time.

Agares watched them go, tail twitching irritably.

He waited until they were out of earshot.

Then muttered to himself, his voice dry as ancient parchment:

"...I bet he hooks up with her though. She's pretty hot."

He scratched his crocodile-snouted chin thoughtfully.

"Fifty souls says by Arc Three."

He made a mental note to start a betting pool.

Hell was boring.

This was better than cable.


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