The clearing had been chosen carefully.
Wide enough to be seen. Narrow enough to be contained.
Pack land, but neutral in the way only contested borders ever were. The ground was packed dirt and old grass, trampled flat by decades of meetings that pretended to be about trade and territory instead of dominance and fear. Scars ran through the earth where fires had burned and claws had dug in years before. A ring of trees marked the edges like silent witnesses, trunks dark and unmoving, leaves whispering only when the wind shifted. The air tasted sharp, electric, wrong, like a storm waiting for permission to break.
I stood alone in the center.
Just as the leak had promised.
No guards visible. No obvious backup. Just me, boots planted shoulder width apart, shoulders squared, breath steady despite the way my heart hammered against my ribs. I rolled my shoulders once, loosening them, feeling the familiar weight of my body, the balance of it. My wolf was close beneath my skin, not straining, not panicking. Waiting. Listening. Coiled tight like a drawn bow.
Engines cut in the distance.
Too many.
The sound carried across the clearing, low and deliberate, meant to be heard. Dust rose first, drifting between the trees, then headlights appeared, slicing through shadow. Vehicles rolled in loud and unapologetic, tires grinding over dirt, engines revving just enough to show power. They formed a loose arc along the edge of the clearing, not crowding but claiming, a formation that spoke of control rather than chaos.
Doors opened.
Boots hit dirt.
Silvermen’s warriors spread outward in practiced arcs, spacing themselves with precision, each step measured, each angle deliberate. They claimed space inch by inch, eyes scanning, shoulders squared, hands loose but ready. These were not frightened wolves. These were trained ones.
Then he stepped forward.
Alpha Silvermen.
He moved with unhurried confidence, hands loose at his sides, posture relaxed in a way that dared anyone to mistake it for weakness. He wore calm like armor, polished and deliberate. No rush. No wasted motion. His gaze found me immediately, sharp and assessing, stripping layers away as if he expected to find something smaller underneath.
He smiled.
Not warm. Not cruel.
Satisfied.
“Savannah,” he said, voice carrying easily across the clearing without effort. “You have made quite a mess.”
Submit.
I felt it clearly. The weight of it. The demand.
And I did not bend.
I met his gaze and held it, my wolf rising just enough to answer, to push back, to show teeth without baring them. The pressure met resistance and stalled, colliding with something that would not move.
A flicker crossed his eyes.
Surprise.
“You think standing straight makes you my equal,” Silvermen said softly. “It does not. I outrank you.”
“No,” I said. “You abuse rank. There is a difference.”
The clearing had gone very still.

Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Omega and The Arrogant Alpha (by Kylie)
Very great read. Could have done with out the last few chapters....
Love the story. How can I read the remaining?...