Alpha's Dark Desires-Chapter 218: A New Era

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Chapter 218: A New Era

Damon – POV

Gods.

I was so fucking close.

She had thrown herself at me—willing, wanting, mine.

One yank of that damned towel and her body had been bare, perfect, aching for my hands, my mouth, my cock. I could still feel her skin under my palms, still taste her moan on my tongue like a brand.

And yet—

I’d walked away.

Not because I wanted to. Hell no. I’d have rather dragged her onto that bed and spent the rest of the day fucking her senseless until her legs refused to work and all she knew was my name, my touch, me.

But I couldn’t.

Not yet.

Because while my mate had been seconds away from surrendering, the rest of the goddamn world was circling like wolves at the scent of blood.

The Alphas had come. Every one of them. From every region, every bloodline, every faction.

Not because they respected me.

Not yet.

They came because I summoned them. Because I told them to bend the knee or bleed for it. And now they were sitting in the Council chamber — every ego-stuffed mutt of them — probably whispering behind their polished teeth, plotting, questioning whether I was bluffing.

I wasn’t.

I never bluff.

But I needed to be there. I needed to look every single one of them in the eye and decide — who lives, who dies, who pledges their loyalty and who needs to be put down like the rabid dogs they are.

Timing was everything. freeweɓnovel~cѳm

And fucking Elena right now? That would’ve undone me. Because one taste, and I’d never stop. One whimper, and I’d lose hours, days — fuck, centuries if I could.

So, I’d walked out.

I’d left her standing there, naked, breathless, wrecked from want, while every part of me screamed to turn around and bury myself inside her until she forgot her own name and only mine remained on her lips.

My fists clenched as I stalked down the hallway, every muscle tight, jaw grinding.

The tie she’d pulled on earlier was still hanging loose around my neck. My shirt was wrinkled, half-unbuttoned, and I looked like I’d just stepped out of bed — because I had. Out of her bed. Out of her heat.

Fuck.

Focus, Damon.

There would be time for pleasure later. For now? It was time to remind these Alphas why I was feared. Why they called me the Shadow Alpha. The Reaper King. The Darkborn.

Not because I asked nicely.

Because I didn’t need to.

The Council chamber doors opened as I approached, and the air inside shifted. Heavily. Like the room itself knew something had just entered — something ancient, something lethal.

Their eyes turned to me.

I counted at least two dozen. Some seated. Some standing in that stiff posture that tried to pass as confidence but reeked of caution. Maybe even fear.

Good.

Let them fear.

I stepped inside, silent, predatory. The doors shut behind me with a soft thud, sealing them in with me like meat in a cage.

I let the silence drag.

Let them feel it.

The pressure. The heat. The fact that the most dangerous thing in the room was now walking toward the head of the long obsidian table like he owned the very ground they stood on — because I did.

"You’re late," one of them dared to say. I didn’t even glance at him.

Instead, I walked slowly to the far end of the table and took the throne-like chair reserved for the High Alpha — the one no one had sat in since the old regime crumbled.

I sat.

The room reacted like a pulse. Sharp inhales. Twitching brows. The faintest flickers of unease.

"Am I?" I finally said, voice cool, measured. "Or are you simply too eager to die before lunch?"

The room stilled.

Good.

That shut them up.

I rested my elbows on the table, fingers steepled. Eyes scanning each of them.

Some I recognized — Alphas of old bloodlines, wrapped in titles and arrogance. Others were new. Cocky. Thinking power was something inherited or taken through strength alone.

Idiots.

Power wasn’t stolen. It wasn’t inherited.

It was earned. Built. Burned into the bone. It was carved by blood and war and sacrifice.

And I had done all of it.

"I didn’t summon you for pleasantries," I said. "I summoned you to make a choice. One you’re going to make today, in front of your peers, with no room for lies."

A murmur rippled down the table.

"I’m rebuilding the hierarchy. No more splintered packs. No more rogue councils. No more puppets dancing to old gods who’ve long since fallen."

I leaned forward, voice dropping like a blade.

"You’re either with me, or you’re dead."

One of the older Alphas scoffed. "Big words, Darkborn. But words are wind. What makes you think we’ll kneel so easily?"

I smiled.

Cold. Sharp. Lethal.

Then I stood.

No shift. No roar. No grand display of dominance.

I just was.

And the shadows around me pulsed, responding to the flicker of power I let leak — enough to darken the corners of the room, to make every Alpha in the chamber feel like the walls were watching.

"You mistake my patience for weakness," I said softly. "You think because I gave you a choice, you have power. Let me make this clear..."

I lifted a hand, and with a flick of my fingers — just that — one of the torches on the far wall exploded in black flame, unnatural and consuming.

"This isn’t a democracy. This is a declaration."

A silence fell so thick you could taste it.

"Swear fealty," I said. "Or I’ll rip your pack marks from your chests myself and use them to light the pyres of your fallen."

They started shifting in their seats.

I’d rattled the hive. Good.

One by one, they’d fold.

And those who didn’t?

Well.

I’d bring their heads back to Elena as trophies.

Maybe then she’d understand that when I claimed the world, I wasn’t just doing it for power.

I was doing it for her.

For us.

The world would burn in my name — and she would rise beside me as queen.

Once I claimed her.

Fully.

Completely.

But first?

I had to finish carving the path in blood.

And then?

Then I’d return to my little mate.

And take what’s mine.

********

Of course, there had to be one.

There was always one.

An Alpha too stupid, too prideful, too fucking blind to recognize death when it stood right in front of him, cloaked in shadow, with blood on its tongue.

He stood up at the far end of the table — massive, broad-shouldered, with the kind of height that made lesser wolves cower. His wolf mark glowed faintly on his neck, already pulsing with aggression.

Cassian of the Iron Fang Pack.

Cocky bastard. Known for his ruthlessness. Revered by some of the southern clans for his "old ways." He was probably used to others bowing without question, pissing themselves at the sight of his teeth.

Too bad he just stepped into a ring where I was the only predator.

"This is a council, not a dictatorship," Cassian said, voice echoing off the high, stone walls. "We don’t kneel to shadows and whispers. If you want fealty, you earn it. The old way. Trial by combat."

A few others murmured — unsure if they supported him or just didn’t want to be the next to die.

I rose slowly.

No rush.

No expression.

Just a quiet stillness before the storm.

"You want to challenge me?" I asked, voice eerily calm.

Cassian’s eyes flared gold. "If you’re as powerful as you say, you won’t deny the challenge."

A pause.

Then I smiled.

It wasn’t kind.

It wasn’t reassuring.

It was the kind of smile that preceded carnage.

"I accept."

He bared his teeth, proud, puffed-up, already thinking this was won.

The fool.

The chamber shifted into a clearing space — the floor between the long obsidian table and the back wall was cleared. Magic etched faint rings across the marble, ancient symbols reawakening with a low hum, sealing the challenge. No outside interference. No tricks.

Just two Alphas.

One winner.

One corpse.

Cassian shifted first.

Fast. Brutal. His wolf form was massive — fur like iron, claws like daggers. He was power. He was muscle. He was every nightmare a pack would respect.

And it still wasn’t enough.

I didn’t shift.

I didn’t need to.

The room darkened. Shadows spiraled from my feet like smoke made flesh. The ancient markings on the floor dimmed, flickered, as something older, darker pulsed beneath my skin.

I stepped into the circle.

Cassian growled low in his throat, pacing, waiting for me to become something like him.

But I was never like him.

I was more.

Then I moved.

One blink.

That’s all the Alphas saw before Cassian was slammed into the wall with enough force to crack stone. He howled, twisting, snapping at nothing — because I was already behind him, shadows peeling from my hands like talons.

I grabbed his hind leg and dragged him across the floor with ease, leaving deep claw marks and a smear of blood.

No finesse.

No ceremony.

Just raw domination.

Cassian lunged — jaws wide — and I stepped into his attack, one hand grabbing his throat mid-air, the other plunging into his ribs with shadow-forged claws that weren’t quite wolf, weren’t quite man.

Something else.

Something ancient.

He yelped — yelped — as I twisted, ripping free a chunk of his power center, his energy screaming as it flared uselessly.

"Still think you lead by combat?" I snarled.

His legs buckled.

I slammed him into the stone so hard the wall spider-webbed around his body, holding him up like a mounted kill.

Then I reached forward and shoved two fingers into his chest — right where his pack mark burned — and ripped it out.

Magic shrieked.

Cassian howled.

The chamber went dead silent as I held the smoldering mark in my palm. It flickered like a dying flame. His wolf collapsed, shifting back to human, naked and twitching, broken on the floor.

I crushed the mark between my fingers and let the ashes fall to the marble.

"You had power," I said to the room. "But you forgot one thing."

I looked at each of them, slow, deliberate, gaze like a blade slicing their spines open.

"I’m not a fucking Alpha."

The shadows coiled tighter around me, responding to my rising control. "I’m what comes after Alphas fall. I’m what crawls out of the bones of gods and makes kings kneel."

A few of them couldn’t meet my gaze anymore. One was trembling.

Good.

I wanted them terrified.

I stepped over Cassian’s twitching body like he was trash. Walked back to the table. Sat again.

Silence reigned.

Then one by one — slow at first, then in succession — the Alphas knelt.

Some bowed heads.

Others dropped to a knee.

All of them submitted.

The old order was dead.

And I had buried it.

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