LOGINTracy Xander’s POV
When I returned from the restroom, the meal was already coming to an end, the earlier warmth fading into the quiet sounds of departure as conversations softened and chairs scraped lightly against the floor, one after another, until the private room gradually emptied. I said my goodbyes without lingering, my smile polite and measured, and then I left. By the time I arrived back at the pack house, the night had already settled in fully, the halls dim and silent, the absence of presence far more noticeable than any noise could have been. Alpha Chandler had not returned. I did not wait. There was no reason to. I took a quick shower, letting the water run over me in silence, as though it could wash away the faint heaviness that clung to my chest, before changing into something light and slipping into bed without another thought. That night, I slept without dreams, without interruptions, without even the echo of memory. It was quiet in a way that felt almost unfamiliar. … The next morning, I went to the pack office as usual, my routine unchanged, my expression calm, as though nothing in my life had begun to unravel. After finishing last month’s report, I printed it out and made my way toward the financial office, my steps steady, measured, carrying none of the hesitation that might have once lingered. A light knock. “Come in.” Frank Miller skimmed through the report, nodding slightly as he turned each page, his approval evident in the small shifts of his expression. “Well done.” I gave a small nod in return, offering no unnecessary words before turning to leave. Only after the door closed behind me did he open his drawer and take out the resignation letter I had given him the day before. Even without seeing it, I could imagine the way his gaze would linger on it, the quiet disbelief, the reluctance he had tried to hide. A few moments later, he stood and headed toward the administrative department. … When the elevator doors opened, he ran into Quinton Taylor, Alpha Chandler’s assistant. “Morning,” Frank greeted, his tone light, though there was still a trace of distraction beneath it. Quinton gave a small nod. “Morning.” The doors slid shut behind them. “Which floor?” Quinton asked casually. “Tenth.” There was a brief pause before Quinton’s gaze shifted toward the documents in Frank’s hand. “Going to the administrative office for paperwork?” Frank shook his head, lifting the document slightly as though it were explanation enough. “No. I am submitting Tracy Xander’s resignation.” For a moment, everything stilled. “…Who did you say resigned?” Quinton asked, his voice tightening almost imperceptibly. “Tracy Xander,” Frank repeated, a faint frown forming. “Who else?” He did not understand the reaction. Frank exhaled slowly, as though the situation itself had already exhausted him. “I tried to convince her to stay, but she said it was due to her health. I could not push further. Health should always come first.” Quinton’s gaze dropped to the paper in Frank’s hand, and there it was, unmistakable and final. My signature. Clean. Firm. Without hesitation. A flicker of surprise crossed his face before it shifted into something colder, something edged with quiet disdain. Sick? There had been no visible sign of weakness, no indication that anything was wrong. To him, it could only mean one thing. Another attempt. Another way to draw Alpha Chandler’s attention. A method that had long since grown tiresome. The elevator came to a stop. Frank stepped out, leaving Quinton behind as the doors slid shut once more. … By the time Quinton returned to the seventeenth floor, the matter had already settled into his mind in a way that required no further thought. He placed a stack of files onto a secretary’s desk, just as another was preparing to deliver documents to Alpha Chandler’s office. “I will take those,” he said, stepping forward without hesitation. “I need to see Alpha Chandler anyway.” The secretary let out a small breath of relief as she handed them over. “Thank you, Mr. Taylor. I owe you coffee next time.” Quinton gave a brief nod before walking toward the office. A knock followed. “Come in.” Alpha Chandler’s voice carried its usual authority, low and controlled, the kind that never needed to be raised to be felt. Quinton stepped inside and delivered a brief summary of the day’s schedule, his tone professional, his posture precise. Then he hesitated. “There is one more matter.” Alpha Chandler looked up, impatience already surfacing in his expression. “What is it?” Quinton parted his lips slightly. “It is about Tracy…” The temperature in the room seemed to drop instantly. Alpha Chandler’s expression darkened, his gaze sharpening before Quinton could even finish. “From now on,” he said coldly, cutting him off without hesitation, “anything related to her is not to be reported to me. Whatever she chooses to do has nothing to do with me.” The words fell heavily. Decisive. Final. Quinton swallowed the rest of his sentence. “…Understood.” So it was true. Alpha Chandler had completely lost patience. Otherwise, he would not have reacted so strongly at the mere mention of her name. Quinton gathered the signed documents and left without another word. … At noon, I went to the pack cafeteria. The moment I stepped inside, a few colleagues glanced in my direction, surprise flickering briefly across their faces before they quickly looked away, as though unsure what to make of my presence. After collecting my meal, I found a seat and sat down quietly, my movements unhurried. A colleague leaned closer, lowering her voice just enough to keep the conversation private. “Ms. Xander… are you not going home to cook for your husband today?” She knew I was married. She simply did not know to whom. I stirred my food lightly, my expression calm, untouched. “No.” In the past, every single day at noon, I would leave the office and return home to prepare a meal for Alpha Chandler, no matter how busy the day had been, no matter how little time I had to spare. Even when he did not return, I would pack the food carefully and bring it to his office, waiting quietly just to watch him take a few bites. At the time, that had been enough. For years, I never missed a single day. Until I learned the truth. Most of those meals had never been touched. And in the end, they had all been thrown away. “Did you two argue?” she asked, unable to hide her curiosity. “No.” I picked up a piece of chicken and took a small bite, my tone casual, almost indifferent. “He is seeing someone else.” She froze. For a moment, she said nothing, then quickly lowered her head, pretending to focus on her food as though she had heard nothing at all. Because my reaction did not match the situation. Anyone else would have lost control, would have confronted him, demanded answers, refused to let it pass quietly. But I did not. To them, it looked as though it did not matter. … Around three in the afternoon, my phone vibrated softly against the desk, pulling my attention away from the documents in front of me. Another message. Sam Zach. It was the third invitation from the medical research division. But this time, the message carried a clear condition. If I declined again, the opportunity would not be offered to me in the future. I stared at the screen for a moment, my fingers resting lightly against the edge of the desk as the weight of the decision settled quietly within me. This time, there would be no second chance.TRACY Crystal chandeliers dripped from the vaulted ceiling of the Grand Hotel ballroom.A string quartet played a frantic, sweeping waltz in the corner, but the music barely pierced the dense, oppressive wall of Alpha auras clashing in the room. Hundreds of the region’s most powerful shifters wore custom tuxedos and glittering gowns. The smell of roasted duck, expensive perfume, and pure, predatory tension filled my lungs.Every single eye tracked us.Walking beside Sean, the crowd literally parted. His dominance wasn't a suggestion; it was a physical force. Men lowered their gazes. Women stepped back. Walking through this room with Chandler used to mean keeping my head down, making myself invisible so I wouldn't embarrass his fragile ego. Tonight, wrapped in emerald silk and anchored by the most feared man in the territory, I stared directly back at them."Elder Thorne is glaring at you from the ice sculpture," I noted, grabbing a glass of sparkling water from a passing silver tray.
TRACYTHE NEXT WEEKSilk squeezed my ribs like a vice.Sarah yanked the corset strings again, bracing her knee against my lower back. Sharp pain flared across my spine. The heavy, humid July heat bleeding through the apartment windows didn't help. Surviving the Silver Moon Gala tonight meant projecting absolute, untouchable power, but right now, breathing felt like an Olympic sport."Hold still." Sarah tied a vicious knot at the base of my spine. "You want to look like the lead developer of a billion-dollar AI or a charity case?"Gasping, I gripped the edge of the mahogany vanity. "I want to keep oxygen flowing to my brain. Loosen it.""Not a chance." Sarah stepped back, clapping dust from her hands. She wore a bright yellow cocktail dress, her hair pinned up in elaborate curls. "Alpha Sean’s entire pack is going to be there. The regional elders. Chandler. You need armor tonight, Tracy. This dress is your armor."A heavy knock rattled the bedroom door.Marcus, Sean’s lead security gua
SEANThe damp chill of the mountain air finally began to numb my bare shoulders, but the woman resting her head against my chest was perfectly warm. Wrapped tightly in my oversized flannel shirt, Tracy looked peaceful, her breathing even for the first time in days. My shirt engulfed her small frame, the hem reaching her knees.I stroked her hair, my fingers tangling in the dark strands. The raw, physical bond we had just forged felt deeper than any legal mark. She had trusted me with her body while she was at her weakest, and I had proven I could control the monster inside me to keep her safe.A sharp, high-pitched electronic shriek shattered the quiet night.Tracy jolted upright instantly. Her smartphone, sitting face-up on a flat rock near our discarded clothes, flashed a violent, piercing red. The digital alarm echoed loudly over the steady rumble of the waterfall."What is that?" I asked, sitting up and reaching for my combat pants."The mainframe," Tracy whispered, her face turni
AUTHOR'S POVThe scream shattered the tension in the room.Tracy slammed her laptop shut. The loud crack echoed over the blaring alarms outside. She stood up, her fists clenched at her sides. Her breathing was ragged, her chest heaving, and the dark circles under her eyes looked stark against her pale skin."Shut the fuck up! Both of you!" Tracy pointed a shaking finger directly at Sam. "I am not your partner, Sam! I am your employee! You ambushed me with the press today. You touched me without asking, and you used my face to inflate your stock prices!"Sam blinked, his arrogant posture faltering. "Tracy, I was just trying to build the brand—""You built a target!" she yelled, her voice cracking. Pivoting on her heel, she turned her furious gaze on me.I braced myself."And you!" Tracy stepped forward, jabbing her index finger hard into my chest. "You storm in here with armed guards like a warlord! You command me to drop my life's work! You don't ask what I need. You just issue orders
SEANThe sweat pricked the back of my neck despite the blasting air conditioning in my packhouse office. The July heat outside baked the asphalt into a shimmering mirage, matching the absolute, violent fury boiling in my gut. Keeping Tracy safe from Chandler’s hitmen was my only goal today. But looking at the eighty-inch flat screen mounted on my wall, the real threat wore a custom Italian suit.Sam Zach."Turn the volume up," I commanded.David, my Beta, grabbed the remote and hit the button. The news anchor’s voice filled the room, loud and entirely too cheerful.*"Dubbed the 'Tech Savant,' this unknown developer's algorithm correctly predicted a massive server failure and diagnosed a critical patient three minutes faster than the hospital's top medical team. The leaked footage already has ten million views."*The screen cut to a shaky cell phone video. Tracy stood in the center of the hospital testing floor, her eyes glued to a tablet, rattling off medical jargon while alarms blare
AUTHOR'S POVHeavy June rain hammered against the corrugated iron roof of the underground bar, drowning out the low thumping bass.Yvonne crossed her arms over her expensive trench coat, shivering as the damp, stifling humidity clung to her skin. The subterranean tavern smelled of wet dog, stale beer, and raw ozone from the thunderstorm raging across the city. Sitting across the sticky wooden booth, a man with a jagged scar down his neck lazily counted the stacks of crisp hundred-dollar bills. Securing her position as Luna meant cutting out Chandler’s obsession at the root, and this human mercenary was the only blade sharp enough to do it."Fifty thousand," Silas said. He tapped the thick envelope against the table. "This covers the entry fee. But hitting a pack hospital? That’s suicide. Alpha Sean has his elite guards blanketing the entire VIP wing.""You aren't going in through the front door with a gun," Yvonne snapped.She reached into her designer purse and slid a forged plastic
TRACYThe waiting room of the Zenith Medical Institute smelled of ozone and expensive eucalyptus, entirely devoid of the harsh bleach scent common to traditional hospital wards. Sunlight spilled across the polished wooden flooring, warming the heavy leather chair where I sat. I stared down at the p
Thick cigar smoke clouded the air inside Chase Xander’s heavily secured private office. The mahogany clock on the wall read three in the morning. Thats when Silas pushed through the heavy oak doors, shattering the tense silence. His tactical gear was coated in dried mud, and a thick layer of sweat
SEANThe metallic stench of fresh blood and the sickening, sweet odor of scorched flesh hung heavily in the damp air of the underground holding cells, clinging to my clothes and burning the back of my throat with every breath. I stood completely motionless over the mutilated corpse of the rogue wh
TRACY The gray afternoon light filtering through the blinds felt heavy, pressing down on the cramped living room. I sat at my dining table, staring at the lines of diagnostic algorithm code on my laptop screen. The cursor blinked rhythmically. It mocked my inability to focus. That's when it hap







