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Marked By Fate by Quinn Ryts - Book Cover Background
Marked By Fate by Quinn Ryts - Book Cover

Marked By Fate

Quinn Ryts
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Introduction
: Claire’s morning routine—running along the lakefront, coffee at Café Bellamy, preparing for work. Lena texts about the new CEO. Claire reflects on her structured life, hinting at past heartbreak. At Arden & Co., the bombshell: Hayden Carter is the new CEO. Claire’s shock sets the emotional stakes. (~1,000 words)Chapter 2: First company meeting with Hayden. Claire delivers a polished pitch, but his presence unnerves her. Flashback to their college romance (first meeting, a spark). She shuts down his attempt to talk, asserting control. Lena notices her tension. (~1,000 words)Chapter 3: Claire processes Hayden’s return at her desk. Emma gossips about the new CEO; Margot praises Claire’s pitch. Flashback to a happy moment with Hayden (a late-night study session). Claire vows to keep him at a distance. (~1,000 words)Chapter 4: Lunch at Café Bellamy. Jordan offers cryptic advice about facing the past. Lena pushes Claire to open up about Hayden; Claire deflects but reveals they dated. Back at work, Hayden assigns her to a high-profile project. (~1,000 words)Chapter 5: Claire and Hayden collaborate on the project. Their chemistry is palpable, but she’s cold. Flashback to their first kiss. Margot notices tension but stays professional. Claire feels her control slipping. (~1,000 words)Chapter 6: Lena hosts a wine night at her loft. Claire admits Hayden broke her heart. Lena is protective, warning her to stay cautious. Claire resolves to focus on work. (~1,000 words)Chapter 7: Hayden schedules a one-on-one with Claire. She keeps it strictly professional, but his sincerity unsettles her. Flashback to a fight before he left. She leaves the meeting shaken. (~1,000 words)Chapter 8: Claire runs into Dylan, Hayden’s friend, at the office. He hints at Hayden’s regret but doesn’t elaborate. Claire brushes it off. Jordan at Café Bellamy offers another nugget of wisdom. (~1,000 words)Chapter 9: Margot assigns Claire and Hayden to a business trip for a client pitch. Claire dreads the proximity. Flashback to a road trip they took together. She prepares, determined to stay detached. (~1,000 words)Chapter 10: At the office, Emma’s gossip about Hayden spreads. Claire overhears, fueling her frustration. She confronts Hayden about keeping things professional; he agrees but looks hurt. (~1,000 words)Chapter 11: Claire’s apartment, late at night. She finds an old photo of her and Hayden, triggering memories. Flashback to a moment of vulnerability he shared. She pushes the photo away, angry at herself. (~1,000 words)Chapter 12: The business trip looms. Claire meets with Margot, who senses her distraction but pushes her to shine. Claire packs, anxious about being alone with Hayden. (~1,000 words)Chapter 13: Travel day. Claire and Hayden fly to the client meeting. Awkward small talk reveals their shared history still lingers. Chicago’s rainy skyline fades as they leave. (~1,000 words)Chapter 14: At the hotel, a booking error forces them to share a suite. Claire is furious but stuck. They keep their distance, but the tension is electric. (~1,000 words)Chapter 15: Client meeting goes well, but Claire notices Hayden’s leadership style—confident yet attentive to her ideas. Flashback to him supporting her dreams in college. She softens slightly. (~1,000 words)Chapter 16: Dinner with the client. Hayden and Claire play their roles perfectly, but a shared glance reignites old feelings. She pulls back, reminding herself of the past. (~1,000 words)Chapter 17: Back at the hotel, Claire works late to avoid Hayden. He knocks, offering coffee as a peace gesture. They talk briefly, and she sees a glimpse of the old Hayden. (~1,000 words)Chapter 18: A storm hits, knocking out the hotel’s power. Claire and Hayden are stuck in the suite. They talk—really talk—for the first time in years. (~1,000 words)Chapter 19: Hayden asks, “Do you still feel it?” Claire freezes, unable to answer. Flashback to their breakup night—he left without explanation. She shuts down, hurt. (~1,000 words)Chapter 20: The next morning, Claire is distant. Hayden tries to apologize, but she cuts him off. They return to Chicago, the silence between them heavy. (~1,000 words)Chapter 21: Back at work, Claire throws herself into her project. Lena checks in, sensing her turmoil. Claire admits the trip stirred old feelings but insists she’s done with Hayden. (~1,000 words)Chapter 22: Hayden respects her space, but his presence is inescapable. He leaves a note praising her work, stirring her emotions. Flashback to a time he made her feel seen. (~1,000 words)Chapter 23: Claire visits Café Bellamy. Jordan senses her conflict and says, “Some things you can’t outrun.” She reflects on her fear of being hurt again. (~1,000 words)Chapter 24: A work event forces Claire and Hayden to interact publicly. Their chemistry is noticed, sparking Emma’s gossip. Claire feels exposed. (~1,000 words)Chapter 25: Claire confronts Hayden about the note. He admits he
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Chapter 1

The alarm screamed like it had a personal vendetta against me. A shrill, relentless wail that refused to quit. I groaned, my hand flopping around in the dark, smacking the nightstand until my fingers found the stupid clock and silenced it. Sweet, merciful quiet. Thank the Moon for small victories. My eyes stayed screwed shut, my body plastered to the lumpy mattress like I could melt into it and disappear forever.

I didn’t need to open them to know it was still dark outside—no one in their right mind was up at this hour unless they were insane, suicidal, or, like me, stuck with omega duties in the Alpha’s house.Five in the morning. Every damn day. No exceptions.No wolf. No status. No future. Just me, Selene, scraping the bottom of the Silver Claw pack’s hierarchy, smiling through the dirt they kicked in my face.I lay there for a minute, staring at the ceiling I couldn’t even see in the pitch-black. The air was cold, stale, carrying that faint smell of old wood and something heavier—like dreams that gave up and died years ago.

The heater wheezed in the corner, fighting a losing battle. It hadn’t worked properly since I was a kid. My room wasn’t much better than the heater: a glorified closet with four bare walls, a rickety dresser that leaned like it was drunk, and a cracked mirror I avoided like the plague. Why bother looking? I already knew what I’d see—nothing worth noticing.

If you’re wondering who I am, fine, here’s the rundown. I’m Selene. Three days from turning eighteen. Five feet of unremarkable, with sleek black hair that never behaves, hazel eyes that don’t do that sparkly thing people write poems about, and a face that only registers when someone’s looking for a target. My wolf? Never showed up. Not a whisper, not a claw, not a hint of fur. In a pack like Silver Claw, that makes me less than nothing.

A walking punchline. The kind of girl who gets shoved into lockers, has her lunch tray “accidentally” dumped on her, or gets tripped in the halls just because someone’s bored. They whisper about me like I’m deaf.Spoiler: I hear every word.My mom’s gone. Died when I was too young to hold onto more than fragments of her—soft hands, the faint floral scent of her perfume when she hugged me, the way she hummed lullabies when she thought I was asleep. She was warmth, the kind that sinks into your bones.

I miss her in a way that’s hard to explain, like a piece of me got lost with her.Dad tried to fill the void for a while. He really did. But then he met Lilian, a human, which is rare in our world of claws and hierarchies. I braced myself for her to treat me like everyone else did—like I was a stain on the pack’s reputation. But she didn’t. She loved me, not out of pity, but like I was hers. She brought light back into our house, made it feel like more than just a shell of memories. Then Rhea came along—my little sister, eight years old now, all giggles and toothy grins, like the world hasn’t had a chance to break her yet.

She’s everything I’m not—bright, hopeful, untouched by the pack’s cruelty. She looks at me like I’m her hero, like I’m worth something.I’d burn this whole damn world to ashes before I let anyone hurt her.I dragged myself out of bed, every muscle in my back screaming from that rock-hard cot. Dressing in the dark was second nature—same worn jeans, same faded shirt, same tight braid to keep my hair from being a liability.

I’d learned the hard way how to dress for survival, not attention. Move quiet, stay small, don’t give anyone an excuse.I crept through the hallway, avoiding the creaky floorboards. Lilian didn’t deserve to be dragged into my early-morning misery, and Rhea needed her sleep. She had a field trip today, some big adventure she’d been buzzing about for weeks. I promised I’d try to get home in time to hear every detail, assuming no one decided to use me as a punching bag first.Outside, the cold hit like a slap, sharp and mean.

The sun wasn’t even thinking about rising—just that eerie blue haze before dawn, the kind that makes everything feel like a ghost story. My breath puffed out in clouds, and the path to the Alpha’s house stretched ahead like a sentence I couldn’t escape. Up the hill, past the guards who didn’t bother looking at me, through the servants’ entrance like the nobody I was.

The Alpha’s quarters were a different world—stone walls, gleaming glass, floors that smelled like money and power. It was the kind of place that screamed you don’t belong here. But I still had to scrub every inch of it like my life depended on it. Because, let’s be real, it kind of did. Kitchen counters, dining room tables, polishing the staircase banister until it shone, cleaning bathrooms for people who wouldn’t even spit in my direction unless it was to make a point. That was my morning routine, day in, day out.Miss a spot? Forget it. They’d make sure I paid for it.

Sometimes with words—sharp, cutting ones that stuck like splinters. Most times, it was worse. A shove. A slap. A fist when they were feeling extra generous. They liked keeping me bruised and quiet. It made them feel big.By the time I was done, my shirt clung to me with sweat, my hands were raw and red, and the sun was finally crawling over the treetops, like it was as reluctant to face the day as I was. But my morning wasn’t over. Oh no. I still had to drag myself to Silver Claw High, where the real fun waited.School was a battlefield disguised as a classroom.

Half the day was normal stuff—math, history, whatever. The other half was pack training, where everyone else got to shift into their wolves, run drills, and practice moves I’d never be able to do. I sat in the corner, scribbling notes, watching them leap and snarl and shine while I stayed invisible. Or tried to. The teachers didn’t care about me, and the other students? They made sure I knew my place. Fake smiles, sharp claws, and endless reminders that I was less than the dirt on their shoes.

“Selene!” a voice called as I stepped into the courtyard, my boots crunching on the gravel.I froze. Damian. Of course it was him. The pack’s golden boy, all charm and cruelty wrapped in a pretty package. His voice was a warning, a promise of trouble I didn’t have the energy to dodge today.

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