LOGINElliot POV By the time my teammates came back into the locker room, I had my expression under control.
That was the only part of me I controlled. My skin felt wrong in a way that had nothing to do with exhaustion, like a hand pressed flat against a crack in a dam with the pressure building steadily on the other side. I kept my head down, peeled off my gear with numb fingers, and answered no one.
I made myself look like a man too furious about a loss to talk. That part, at least, was true.
The guys muttered sympathy, and someone cursed Sebastian's entire bloodline, but tonight the noise barely reached me. My mind stayed trapped inside that final exchange, the phantom heat of his mouth still lingering against the shell of my ear.
A deal is a deal. Tonight, you belong to me.
Why hadn't it felt like a joke?
Night had settled hard over the city by the time I finally left the arena. My apartment was close, a bleak sanctuary against the dark. I let myself in, shoved the door shut, and turned the deadbolt with a heavy, metallic click.
I went straight to the bathroom and stared at myself in the mirror. With my dark hair and freckles, I had the kind of face people underestimated until I gave them a reason not to, and I had worked for years to make my body tell a different story. Right now, the reflection looking back at me looked like a stranger on the verge of ruin.
Cold, ugly fear moved through me.
The warning signs had been building for weeks: worse sleep, heightened sensitivity, and scents becoming harder to ignore. My suppressants still worked, but only barely; like a hand pressed flat against a crack that was getting wider, the water was beginning to seep through.
I reached for the cabinet above the sink, pulled out the small case hidden behind prescription painkillers, and flipped it open. Inside were two things that ruled my life more than hockey ever had: suppressants and a secret.
The truth was simple enough to say and deadly enough to destroy me: I was not a Beta, but a hidden Omega. I had started suppressants young enough to pass every medical test the league required, six years of perfect discipline, and six years of it working fine.
Until Sebastian Wolfe started looking at me like he could smell blood beneath my skin.
I popped a pill from the blister pack and swallowed it dry, then, because my chest still felt tight, I took another. I braced my palms against the porcelain edge of the sink and waited for my breathing to slow.
It wasn't the first time someone had looked too long. Three weeks ago in Vancouver, a league medical officer had been waiting outside the locker room, which wasn't unusual on its own. What was unusual was the way he watched me walk past, something slower than routine, his eyes filing things away. I had clocked it, tightened my grip on my gear bag, and kept moving. I doubled my dose the next morning and told myself it was nothing.
Standing here now, with the ghost of cedar still caught somewhere in the back of my throat, I understood it had been nothing. It had been the beginning.
Then my phone lit up on the counter with an unknown number. I stared at the glowing screen, every instinct turning ice-cold, and swiped it open.
You should lock your door tonight.
The bathroom floor seemed to shift under my bare feet, and a second message arrived before I could even process the breath in my lungs.
Pretty things get stolen.
All the air left me. My first stupid thought was Sebastian- who else talked like that? It was cruelty wrapped in something almost intimate. But Sebastian didn't have my number, and if Sebastian wanted to rattle me, he did it to my face, always.
This felt different. Colder.
I walked out of the bathroom and checked the door, even though I had already secured it, then checked the windows and the security chain. My hands refused to steady, vibrating with a low, chaotic energy. I called my private doctor only to get voicemail, and I almost called my coach, but my thumb hovered over the screen and stopped.
What would I even say? I think someone knows I'm a biological fraud.
I sat on the edge of my bed, staring into the shadows. The suppressants had finally dulled the sharpest edge of what had been happening to my body all night, but something unresolved remained beneath my skin, restless and dangerous.
I hated how easily my thoughts circled back to him.
I lay down in the dark and ran the numbers the way I always did when panic threatened to become something I couldn't manage alone. What did Sebastian actually know? Not suspect, know. He knew my suppressants were failing, he knew something biological had happened between us in that locker room, and he knew I wasn't a Beta.
What he didn't know, what he couldn't know, were the specifics, the six years of forged data, the lethal dosage I took just to stay on the ice, and the medical records I had scrubbed and rebuilt from scratch at nineteen with the help of a doctor who owed my former coach a favor and had never asked a single question.
Sebastian knew the shape of the secret, not the secret itself, and that was a difference that still mattered. I held onto that thought with both hands until a thin, uneasy sleep finally, mercifully took me.
Sometime after midnight, I woke up with a violent jerk.
For one terrifying second, I didn't know why, and then I smelled it, Alpha. It wasn't physically present in the room, just caught in the ragged edges of a nightmare, but my body reacted before my brain could intervene, my heart pounding so violently it bordered on physical pain.
No one was in the apartment, and the locks were intact.
I threw off the covers, went to the window, and shoved the heavy curtain aside.
A black SUV sat directly across the street with dark windows, its engine idling as a faint cloud of exhaust rose into the freezing air. I stared at it, telling myself it was a coincidence and telling myself to breathe.
Then the passenger window rolled down.
Sebastian Wolfe leaned one massive arm out into the night and looked straight up at my apartment, straight at me, certain, like a man who had been waiting long enough and had no intention of waiting anymore. He lifted two fingers in a slow, lazy salute and smiled.
My blood ran cold. I had never given him my address, and I had never given anyone in the league my address.
And then, a different notification popped up on my screen, a message sent from a completely different number, colder, with no games in it, one final text that had arrived while I slept.
The league already has a file on you, pretty boy. You have seventy-two hours before it lands on the commissioner's desk.
Edited Chapter 3
Sebastain POVThe wellness room was super peaceful. I was still really nervous. I stood with my back flat against the wall, holding Elliot securely against me from behind as his back rested against my chest. My left arm was wrapped around his waist, my large hand flat on his warm belly, while my eyes scanned the rows of exercise mats. I watched Elliot move gently on the blue exercise ball. He looked amazing. The pregnancy made him look strong and gentle at the same time, and everyone in the room was staring at him. I felt a burn in my chest whenever someone else looked at him, but I kept my eyes on the doors.The big wooden door opened a minute ago. A man in a hospital uniform was pushing a cart inside.At first, it looked like he was there to clean.The cart wheels squeaked on the floor.Then I looked at his feet.He was wearing shoes, but the way he walked was totally off. A guy pushing a cart should lean forward and dig his heels into the floor. This guy was gliding. His weight was
Elliot POV It took fifteen minutes of chaos for Black Shield to break into the side ambulance bay. Sebastian held his thick wool coat tightly over my head until the hospital walls finally blocked out the crowd and flashing cameras outside.The main lobby was a mess. Patients and hospital staff panicked as armed guards entered. Director Brown, a woman in a grey suit, stopped us near the elevators. Her face was red with anger."Mr. Wolfe, you can't just bring guards into a public hospital!" she shouted. Her voice shook as she blocked our path. "This is a place to heal, not a base. You're disrupting our patients."Sebastian stopped moving toward the elevators for a second. He stepped forward, towering over Director Brown. His golden eyes were cold."My mate is having a phase of his third trimester, Director." His voice was low and hard. "His blood pressure is spiking because your strike forced us out of our clinic. I'm not here to negotiate.""That doesn't give you the right to break ou
Elliot POVThe heavy sliding doors of the entrance closed behind us, cutting off some of the noise from the street. As Sebastian's team moved past the security lines inside the bright building, my mind drifted back to the journey that brought us here.Just twenty minutes ago, the rain came down hard. It covered the windows of the SUV we were in. The tires made a humming sound on the road. I put my cheek against the window.The city was a blur as we drove by. We left the part of town where all the big banks are and got into the main streets. I looked at the sidewalks.A big yellow bus drove through a puddle and splashed water everywhere. A woman with an umbrella got mad at the bus driver. A man in an apron was sweeping the sidewalk in front of his bakery. Some college kids were sharing a cigarette under a roof.I smiled because it all seemed normal.My life has been really weird for a few months. I have been in cars and waiting rooms that feel like hospitals. I missed smelling the side
Elliot POVThe heavy silver trophy felt cold against my palm. I put it down on the metal desk with a clank. Dr. Cole didn't look at the award. He kept his eyes on his tablet screen, his face pale under the fluorescent lights of the tunnel office."What do you mean by a strike?" I asked, my hand on my stomach."It is a shutdown, Elliot," Dr. Cole said. He tapped the screen, showing a map of the city's medical districts. "The union stopped all healthcare staff at midnight. Private birthing pavilions, luxury wellness centers, and high-security clinics are all closed. The nurses and specialists walked out."Sebastian moved closer, his arm tight around my shoulder. His open black shirt rustled against my suit jacket. "My people own the St. Jude facility. The security guards report to me.""The guards can hold the doors, Sebastian, but there are no teams inside," Dr. Cole said, looking up with a serious expression. "No obstetricians, no surgical tech staff, nothing. The facility is empty."
Elliot POVThe clock was ticking away. We had forty-two seconds left. The air in the arena was really hot. It smelled bad. I was sweating a lot. It was dripping down my neck and into my grey shirt. I put my hand on my stomach. I could feel my heart beating fast under my suit jacket."Listen up!" I yelled. I slammed my marker on the board.The other players were standing around me. They were all out of breath. Their helmets had ice on them. The noise in the stadium was really loud. It was Game Seven. The score was tied."They think we will just hit the puck and run after it," I said. I drew an arrow on the board. "We are not going to do that. We are going to trap them in the middle. Miller, you need to go and stand between the circles. When their player crosses the line, you need to stop t
Sebastian POVThe big double doors of the arena storage bays slammed shut, cutting off the shouts of the crew. I pulled the bag over my shoulder, and it was really heavy. The wet pads were digging into my collarbone. My knees hurt from being on the ice for twenty-eight minutes. My lungs still felt the sting of the air. We won Game Four. It did not feel good. We played two games in a row. It was tough.I did not go to the team bus that was waiting near the exit."The car is waiting at the south gate," Aris said, coming out from behind a pillar. He fixed the thing in his ear. "The guys on the street made sure it is safe to drive. The road to the highway is clear.""Did Elliot take his medicine?" I asked.I walked past the people from the media,
Elliot POV The electronic lock on the front door hummed, a heavy steel bolt sliding into the frame. The sound was a distant snap. Nothing mattered but the thick, pulsing anchor inside my body. Sebastian’s knot swelled deep within my pelvis, a hot wooden block plugging my core. The pressure was i
Sebastian POV The private jet hadn’t even taxied to a complete stop at the private terminal before I kicked the cabin door open. The cold rain hit my face, cutting through the thick layer of sweat on my forehead. I skipped the metal steps entirely, dropping four feet straight onto the wet tarmac
Elliot POV The line from Chicago did not stay silent. Sebastian’s voice shifted from a dark, rich rumble to a sharp, feral roar that rattled the small speaker of my phone. "Elliot! What was that sound? Elliot!" I didn’t answer. I rolled off the bed, feet hitting the cold hardwood floor with a
Elliot POV The black receiver rattled as Sebastian slammed it back onto the cradle. The sound was loud in the dark office, a sharp snap that cut through the thick smell of iced cedarwood. "He is offering a truce," Sebastian said. He did not look at me. He kept his hazel eyes fixed on the window,







