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Falling For The Demon Wolf-Chapter 23: A Game Of Fire
### **Chapter Title: The Truth Between Us**
"To kill you."
I didn’t hesitate. Didn’t flinch. The words left my lips as easily as a breath, coated in venom, in certainty.
Zain didn’t move. He didn’t react the way I expected him to—with rage, with fury, with the violent wrath of an Alpha who had just been threatened in his own domain.
No, he just stood there.
Watching me.
And then, slowly, he smiled.
Not a mocking smile. Not cruel, nor taunting.
It was something *worse*.
It was the kind of smile that made my stomach twist, the kind that promised something far more dangerous than anger.
"Is that so?" His voice was smooth, almost lazy, as if I’d just told him the sky was blue. "And how, exactly, were you planning to do that?"
I yanked at the silver restraints. "Doesn’t matter."
He hummed. "It does, though."
His fingers ghosted over the wooden table beside him, where a small vial sat in plain sight. A vial I recognized instantly.
The herbs. The poison.
Weak enough that it wouldn’t kill him, strong enough to *weaken* him. Just enough for me to finish the job.
Zain lifted the vial, rolling it between his fingers. "A pathetic attempt, really. You think a few crushed leaves would bring me to my knees?"
I clenched my teeth, my heart hammering against my ribs.
I *had* been careful. I’d spent hours grinding those herbs, hiding the scent, making sure it blended seamlessly with the meal. There was no way he could’ve known—
Unless...
My stomach dropped.
"You knew." The realization burned its way through my chest, bitter and sharp. "You knew I would try something."
Zain chuckled. "Of course I knew. Did you really think I’d let you serve me without anticipating a little treachery?"
I wanted to scream. To curse. To lunge at him and tear that smug expression off his face.
But I couldn’t.
Because I was tied to his damn bed like a helpless fool.
I forced my breathing to steady, forced my expression to stay neutral. "Then why let me do it?"
His smile faded slightly. "Because I wanted to see how far you’d go."
Something in his tone sent a shiver down my spine.
Not fear. Not quite.
Something... else.
Something I didn’t understand.
I glared at him. "So what now? You kill me? Punish me?" I spat the words like a challenge. "Go ahead, Alpha. Show me what kind of monster you really are."
Zain just *watched* me.
For a long, agonizing moment, he said nothing.
Then, he leaned in.
Not enough to touch, but enough that I could *feel* him. The heat rolling off his skin, the slow, steady rise and fall of his chest.
His scent—cedar, smoke, something darker—wrapped around me like a noose.
He was too close.
*Too close.*
His voice was quiet when he finally spoke.
"If I were a monster," he murmured, "you wouldn’t be breathing right now."
I hated how my pulse reacted. How my body betrayed me, tightening, burning under his gaze.
I hated him.
And yet, deep in the part of my soul I refused to acknowledge, I knew the truth.
I was playing with fire.
And I wasn’t sure if I wanted to escape the flames.
"Then why am I still breathing?"
The question hung in the air between us, heavy, dangerous.
Zain didn’t answer right away. He just stood there, still close, still watching me like he was waiting for something. A reaction. A crack in my resolve.
I refused to give him one.
Instead, I lifted my chin, forcing myself to meet his gaze. His eyes were darker than before, the gold nearly swallowed by black. His wolf lurked just beneath the surface, restrained—but only barely.
I should have been afraid. Any sane person would have been.
But I wasn’t.
Not because I trusted him. No, I was certain Zain was capable of killing me without hesitation.
But because if he wanted me dead, I would already be nothing more than a stain on the floor.
And yet, here I was.
Still breathing.
Still alive.
Zain exhaled through his nose, tilting his head slightly as if considering his answer.
Then, finally, he spoke.
"Because I haven’t decided what to do with you yet." 𝐟𝕣𝕖𝐞𝐰𝕖𝚋𝐧𝗼𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝗰𝐨𝐦
His voice was calm. Deceptively so. But there was something underneath it. Something unspoken.
My fingers curled into fists against the restraints. "Then let me make it easy for you," I said, my voice sharp. "
A dark chuckle rumbled from his chest, low and threatening. He stepped closer, crowding my space until there was nothing but heat and tension between us.
"Let you go?" he repeated, like the idea itself was ridiculous. "And what would you do if I did, little hunter? Run straight into the woods? Try to fight your way out?"
I clenched my jaw, refusing to answer.
His gaze swept over me, slow and deliberate, like he could read every thought running through my head. "No," he murmured. "You wouldn’t run. You’d wait. You’d plot. You’d try again."
I swallowed, hating how easily he saw through me.
"That’s why you’re still breathing, Violet," Zain continued, voice edged with amusement. "Because you intrigue me."
I stiffened. "I am not your entertainment."
His lips quirked. "No. You’re a threat. A foolish one, but a threat nonetheless."
My pulse pounded in my throat, my pride warring with common sense. I wanted to spit something sharp back at him, to wipe that smug expression off his face, but the truth was—he wasn’t wrong.
I will try again.
I’m going to keep fighting.
I wasn’t going to be some captive human at his mercy, waiting for whatever fate he decided for me.
His hand lifted, fingers grazing my jaw, tilting my face up ever so slightly. It wasn’t gentle. It was testing. A predator’s touch, waiting for the prey to flinch.
I refused to.
His thumb brushed my pulse, lingering for a second too long. "Your heart is racing."
"Because you’re suffocating me," I snapped.
Another dark chuckle. "No, Violet. You’re just feeling something you don’t want to admit."
My stomach twisted, a flare of rage rising through me. "If you’re expecting me to fall at your feet like some obedient little pet, you’re going to be very disappointed."
Zain smiled, but it wasn’t kind. It was sharp. Knowing.
"Good," he said. "I’d hate for this to be easy."
Then, just like that, he turned away, releasing me from his suffocating presence.
I swallowed hard, forcing myself to steady my breathing.
What am I doing?
Ad much as I hated him, my body says somethings totally different whenever he’s near.
And I didn’t know how to deal with that.
I watched as Zain strolled back to his seat like he hadn’t just pinned me under his gaze and peeled away my defenses with nothing but words. The casual way he moved, the confidence in his every step, made my blood boil. He liked this. He liked that I fought him.
The room was silent except for the crackling of the fire. I could feel the weight of his attention on me, even without looking. He wanted to see what I would do next, how I would react to his words, but I refused to give him that satisfaction.
Instead, I moved to clear the tray of untouched food, keeping my hands steady despite the heat of my rage. My fingers wrapped around the cup of wine, the deep red liquid swirling as I lifted it from the table.
Zain’s voice broke the silence. "Sit."
I froze.
My grip on the cup tightened, my nails pressing into my palm. "I’m not hungry."
"I didn’t ask if you were."
The command in his voice was unmistakable. My heart thumped hard, but I forced myself to stay still.
"You do understand what happens to disobedient pets, don’t you?"
I turned slowly to face him, my eyes locking onto his with a defiance I wasn’t sure was wise. "I told you, I’m not your pet."
Something flickered in his expression—something dark and unreadable. Then, to my surprise, he leaned back in his chair, stretching out like he had all the time in the world.
"Fine," he said lazily. "Since you’re not hungry, you can entertain me instead."
I tensed. "...What?"
He smirked. "Dance."
A stunned silence filled the space between us.
I let out a sharp laugh. "You’re joking."
His expression didn’t change. "Do I look like I’m joking?"
Anger curled through me, hot and sharp. "If you think I’m going to—"
He tilted his head, his voice dropping into something almost lazy. "I think you understand your position, Violet. And I think you’ll do as you’re told."
I wanted to slap that smirk right off his face.
But I also knew I had no real choice.
Grinding my teeth, I set the tray down with more force than necessary. My fists clenched at my sides, but I stepped toward the center of the room, where the firelight cast flickering shadows against the stone.
I could feel his eyes on me, watching, waiting.
Fine.
If he wanted a dance, I’d give him one.
But it wouldn’t be the one he expected.
I moved slowly at first, my body swaying with the crackle of the fire, my steps careful and deliberate. I let my hips shift just enough to draw his gaze lower, let my fingers trail over my arms like a lover’s touch. I could *feel* his attention darken, the weight of it pressing against me like a storm waiting to break.
Then I let the movement build, let the rhythm take over, let my body move with something that wasn’t submission, but challenge.
I wasn’t doing this for him.
I was doing this to show him I wasn’t afraid.
Zain’s smirk was gone.
His jaw was tight, his eyes burning like molten gold as he watched me. I could see the tension in his shoulders, the way his fingers curled around the arms of his chair.
I had him.
I had him.
Heat flared in his gaze, something raw and dangerous, and for a second, I thought he might snap—
Then, suddenly, he moved.
In the blink of an eye, he was in front of me, his hand clamping around my wrist, stopping me mid-motion.
My breath caught.
His grip was firm, his body *too* close, and the air between us turned thick.
"Enough," he growled, voice rougher than before.
I lifted my chin. "Why? Am I too much for you, Alpha?"
His fingers flexed, his eyes locked onto mine with something unreadable, something wild.
For a second, I thought he might pull me closer.
For a second, I thought I might let him.
But then, just as quickly as he had grabbed me, he let go, stepping back with a breath that sounded almost like a curse.
I swallowed hard, my pulse pounding.
I didn’t know who had won this round.
But I knew the game was far from over.







