With the author's famous Babysitting The Amnesiac Lycan King series, Internet captivates readers with every word. Dive into chapter King Novel 1, where love anecdotes intertwine with plot twists and hidden demons. Will the next chapters of the Babysitting The Amnesiac Lycan King series be available today?
Key: Babysitting The Amnesiac Lycan King King Novel 1
“RUN!”
It starts the same way every damn time.
My father’s voice shouting behind us as the last rogue slit his throat, “Run, Taryn! Just run!” I'm running away with my brother, his hand’s squeezing mine, so hard I can barely feel my fingers. Behind us, the sounds—no, growls—are closing in.
My lungs burned. I wanted to stop. But I couldn’t.
The forest blurred around us, trees rushing past in streaks of dark and light, the sound of paws thudding against the earth growing louder, closer.
“Keep going!” My brother’s voice was frantic, but his grip was slipping. I turned, just in time to see the flash of fur and teeth before it lunged at me—No!
I wake up gasping, my heart hammering in my chest.
Shit, it’s that stupid dream again.
My jerked, my hands slamming onto the scattered papers all over Kallias’ desk. The dream fades into the gray-lit office, papers littered with “Riverstone Pack Quarterly Summaries” stamped in his neat handwriting.
All mine, technically.
My muscles ache from sleeping in that awkward position, and I let out a groan, half from pain, half because I was dumb enough to fall asleep here.
Three hours of sleep. Not bad, considering the nightmare marathon I’ve been running lately.
Of course, there’s no Kallias to do his own assignments. That would be too much work for the soon-to-be great Alpha of the Riverstone Pack, God forbid.
I rub my eyes, trying to shake it off. It’s been years, but the memory of that night never seems to go away. Every time I close my eyes, it’s like I’m back there, running through the forest with no way out.
Before I can even stretch, the office door bangs open, and Seraphina storms in. “Taryn, you ready? Tonight’s the big night!” Her voice is all excitement, but I’m not feeling it. Not even a little.
She throws a wrinkled dress at me like it’s something worth more than the dust it’ll gather.
I stare at it, frowning. “What . . .is this?”
“Oh, come on,” Seraphina rolls her eyes, “Kallias bought it for you. Thought you’d be excited, seeing as it’s for the Lunar Eclipse tonight.” Her words are as sweet as poison, and as soon as she’s done talking, she drops her gaze to her own haul—a pile of bags in her arms, all bulging with clothes. Fancy clothes. New clothes. Way more clothes than she’ll ever wear.
My stomach turns, but I grit my teeth. “Just the one dress for me, huh?”
She shrugs, “You’re not mad, are you? It’s all for tonight. This is your big chance.” She pouts, practically dripping with feigned innocence. “I mean, who know, maybe you’ll get a pack warrior as a mate or something? And don’t worry about Kallias being all distracted tonight; I'll take care of him.”
“Sure,” I mutter, tugging the dress up like it’s a dead rat. “I’ll try not to be too touched.”
Seraphina barely hears me, too busy admiring her reflection in Kallias’ full-length mirror, spinning in one of her own damn dresses. She’s got the bags, the attention, the affection—even the best friend. It’s twisted, watching her act all dainty while Kallias treats me like . . . well, like his secretary. A placeholder.
I’m his fucking girlfriend for Pete’s sake.
The door opens again, and there he is, Kallias himself, with that classic, cocky Alpha smile on his face. He was always the most gorgeous man of his age in the entire pack He scans the room, attention zeroing in on Seraphina as though I don’t even exist in the space. My heart clenches as he turns to me with a bored expression.
It's fine. It's fine.
“Taryn, you done with those documents?”
“Yeah,” I say, trying to sound bored. I mean, it’s not like I’m losing hours of sleep to his damn work, right?
“Good girl,” he says, giving me a pat. Crimson immediately crawls up my cheeks. He barely glances at me as he walks past, his attention zeroing in on Ser, who is now preening under his gaze. “Taryn sure did help. I’m sorry I wasn’t able to help yu even with that late-night studying we did.” Seraphina’s eyes turned gloomy with helpless ness as she looks up at Kallias. Kallis pulla s her in for a hug. “Don’t worry, you’re all the help that I would need.” He replies. My heart pounds hard as I clench the dress he bought.
They’re close friends. They’re close friends. They’re close friends.
“Are you ready?” he mutters, more to Ser than me, though, but I’m sure they’re just close like that.
I nod as Kallias steps closer towards me, his hand brushing my hair back from my face. “You’ll be fine,” he says softly, almost like he cares. But there’s always this distance between us, a wall I can’t quite figure out how to break down. Yet he can easily do that with Ser.
Maybe I don’t even want to.
“Get dressed,” he adds, glancing at the time. “The ceremony starts in an hour. Don’t keep everyone waiting.”
I try not to watch the way he lingers, how his hand brushes her arm just a little too long. My stomach twists, the suspicion I’ve tried so hard to ignore bubbling up again. I can feel it, that gnawing jealousy clawing at me, but I swallow it down.
Now isn’t the time.
But . . .
“Seraphina, could you give us a moment?”
“What? Why? She asks, brows popping up in annoyance. “I just have something to talk to with my boyfriend.” I emphasize the last word, although I’m not even sure why I did. Seraphina would never do that, right?
“Taryn, what the fuck are you doing?” Kallias grits his teeth to look at me. “She wants to help you right now and you’re shoving her out of the room?”
“I just have something to ask, Kallias. You and Ser . . . is there something I should know?”
Kallias’ face darkens, “You’re being ridiculous. There’s nothing going on. She’s just a friend—a long-time one, before you even came, if you ask me. Maybe if you were the east bit like her, it would have been less tiring trying to keep you around..”
I stare at him, feeling that familiar sting of rejection. Just a friend. It shouldn’t hurt, but it does. I nod, keeping my voice steady. “Oh, okay. I—I’m sorry for asking.”
His jaw tightens, and for a moment, I think he might say something else, but he turns on his heel. “Finish up here,” he barks, “and stop overthinking.”
Kallias storms out of the office, slamming the door behind him, leaving me standing there, frozen. I try not to think about the sting of his words, but they stick, lingering in the air like a bad smell. Too jealous, he’d said. Too sensitive.
My hands automatically move to the stack of documents on his desk. I start arranging them, forcing myself to focus.
Do the work. Get it done. That’s all that matters. That’s all I’m good for anyway.
***
The night falls thick and cold, the kind that settles in your bones. The whole pack is gathered outside, preparing for the Lunar Eclipse. I can see them all gathered around the clearing, dressed in every damn shade of elegance, every fabric soft and gleaming under the moonlight.
My fingers twist the fabric of the dress, the one Kallias “gifted” me. Shabby, even compared to the basics Seraphina tosses on when she’s bored. But hey, it’s better than nothing, I tell myself.
And who am I trying to impress, anyway?
“Kallias bought it for you. Embrace it.”
It wasn’t like Seraphina’s gown—hers sparkled under the moonlight, dripping with luxury and the fact that Kallias bought these for the two of us and the differences are simply . . . A sigh leaves my lips as I tugged at the hem of my dress. It’s okay, Taryn. It’s not like a dress would change lots of things between us.
“Why is she even here?”
“I guess she’s still hoping to be blessed with a wolf, huh?”
“Well, for someone like her who’s been trying to for the last decade, I think it’s just pitiful at this point.”
I don’t have time to bite back; the ceremony’s starting.
One by one, the wolves around us start to shift, bodies twisting, muscles tightening as fur bursts through skin, like they’ve done it a thousand times.
I should have shifted years ago, and yet for some reason I never did, until I became an adult. Every year I participate in these ceremonies hoping I finally get my wolf out.
The Gamma was kind enough to register me in here as an Omega when I first arrived without so much as a family—I was an orphan with no background.
“Argh!” The kids roared as they fall to the ground in pain.
I stand there, my heart pounding in my throat. Maybe I shouldn’t have attended this year. It’s always going to be the same thing. I’d stand here as they all shift into their wolves and I—
Time slows, and then, like a switch flipped, I feel the change surge through me.
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