MasukChapter 4
Evelyn's POV Dr. Okafor found me in the ICU waiting room just after sunrise. I knew him. I'd worked codes with him, passed him charts, shared bad coffee with him at three in the morning. The look on his face was the one we were all trained to wear, professionally gentle, and seeing it aimed at me made my knees go loose. "Evelyn." He sat down next to me instead of standing over me. Small mercy. "It's an ischemic stroke. A significant one. We've started treatment, but there's swelling, and with her age and her heart condition..." The words washed over me. Some of them landed. Intubated. The next seventy two hours are critical. Long term care. Rehabilitation, if she stabilizes. If. "Can her wolf..." He was pack. He'd understand. "Is her wolf helping at all?" Dr. Okafor's jaw tightened. He shook his head slowly. "Her wolf is too old, Evelyn. Too weak. Whatever healing she had left, it's gone. It's going to be machines and medicine from here. All of it human. All of it slow." And all of it expensive. He didn't say that part. He didn't have to. I'd processed enough billing codes in six years to run the numbers in my head, and the numbers made me want to throw up. ICU. Ventilator. Weeks of it. Then months of rehab, if we were lucky enough to need rehab. "She has insurance," I said numbly. "And savings. She's been saving her whole life. She'll be okay. She has to be okay." "Talk to the financial office when they open," he said gently. Then his eyes dropped to the borrowed cardigan I was clutching around myself, to the gray in my face. "And get yourself seen, Evelyn. You're bleeding through." I looked down. He was right. I didn't care. The financial office opened at nine. I sat across from a woman with kind eyes and a folder full of terrible news. She walked me through it slowly, the way you walk someone through a battlefield. Insurance would cover a fraction. The deductible alone was more than I had in my account. The daily ICU rate made my vision swim. And that was before the ventilator, before the specialists, before the long term care facility she'd need if she survived the week. "Most families set up a payment plan," the woman said. "And if your mother has savings, we can..." "She does." I pulled out the worn envelope from Mom's kitchen drawer, the one with her account details in her careful handwriting. "She's been saving for thirty years. Cleaning houses. Taking in mending. It's not a fortune, but it's something." The woman typed. Frowned. Typed again. Then she turned the monitor toward me, and the floor dropped out of the world. "Ma'am. This account was emptied four months ago." The room tilted. "That's not possible." My voice came out thin. "Emptied how? By who?" She scrolled. "There's a transfer authorization on file. Signed. Notarized. It looks like the funds were moved into a business investment account." Her eyes flicked up at me, apologetic. "Whitmore Holdings." Whitmore. Marcus Whitmore. My dead heart found something new to break against. Four months ago. While I was ironing his shirts. While I was picking up double shifts to save for his anniversary watch. He'd sat in my mother's kitchen, drinking her tea, calling her Mom, and convinced her to sign her entire life over to his company. And my mother, who trusted her Alpha son-in-law the way omegas are raised to trust, had signed. "Can she get it back?" I heard myself ask. "It's her money. He took her money." The woman's face was full of a pity I couldn't stand. "If it was signed and notarized, that's a legal matter. You'd need a lawyer. And those cases..." She hesitated. "They take years, ma'am. Even when they win." Years. My mother had seventy two hours. I walked out of the financial office on legs I couldn't feel and stood in the hospital corridor, doing math that refused to add up. I had eight hundred dollars in my checking account. A car worth maybe three thousand. A husband's house I'd been thrown out of. A job I'd have to beg to keep after missing my shifts, in the same building where my mother was dying, where everyone would know within a week that I was the rejected omega with the empty womb. My phone buzzed. The hospital's first billing notice. They don't waste time. I stared at the number until it blurred. Then I did what I always do when I'm drowning. I made a list. Sell the car, take the bus. Pick up night shifts, if they'd have me. Payment plan. Second job. Third job. I ran the numbers three times. It didn't matter how I stacked them. Honest work paid in weeks and months. The machines keeping my mother alive charged by the hour. There was no version of the math where she lived and I stayed the good girl I'd always been. I leaned my head back against the corridor wall and closed my eyes, and a memory floated up from another life. Tasha. We'd done our rotations together, years ago, before she quit nursing for a different kind of work. The kind she never talked about in detail. The kind that paid in cash, every night, no questions asked. The last time I ran into her, she was wearing a coat that cost more than my car, and she'd laughed at the look on my face. If you ever get desperate, Evie, really desperate, call me. One phone call. That's all it takes. I'd laughed too, back then. I had a husband. A home. A future. Girls like me didn't need phone calls like that. I wasn't laughing now. I scrolled to her name with a thumb that didn't shake anymore. Somewhere behind the ICU doors, a machine was breathing for my mother, and every breath cost money I didn't have. I pressed call. She picked up on the second ring, music thumping somewhere behind her voice. "Well, well. Evelyn Carter." I could hear the smile in it. "To what do I owe the miracle?" "Tasha." My voice was steady. Cold and clear as the thing that had settled inside me on my mother's kitchen floor. "I need a job. A real one. Cash. I don't care what it is." A pause. The music thumped. When she spoke again, her voice had dropped low, amused and dangerous all at once. "Then you called the right girl, babe. The Crimson Den always needs pretty girls who know how to keep their mouths shut."Chapter 5Evelyn’s POV "Absolutely not," I said.Tasha held the dress higher, as if distance were my only objection. It was a pool of deep red silk, cut dangerously low in the front and even lower in the back, featuring a thigh-high slit that would end somewhere north of decency."Absolutely yes," Tasha countered, her voice unyielding. "Den rules, Evie. If you walk that floor, you look like you belong on it. This isn't Memorial Hospital. Nobody pays to see sensible shoes."We were in her cramped apartment, three hours before my first shift, and she had been systematically reconstructing me for two of them. My hair, freed from its neat nurse’s bun for the first time in years, fell in loose, dark waves past my shoulders. The face staring back at me from her vanity mirror belonged to a complete stranger. Smoky eyeshadow. A blood-red mouth. High, sharp cheekbones I hadn't realized I possessed.I hated it.I hated every single second of it. Not because it looked bad—but because it looked
Chapter 4Evelyn's POVDr. Okafor found me in the ICU waiting room just after sunrise.I knew him. I'd worked codes with him, passed him charts, shared bad coffee with him at three in the morning. The look on his face was the one we were all trained to wear, professionally gentle, and seeing it aimed at me made my knees go loose."Evelyn." He sat down next to me instead of standing over me. Small mercy. "It's an ischemic stroke. A significant one. We've started treatment, but there's swelling, and with her age and her heart condition..."The words washed over me. Some of them landed. Intubated. The next seventy two hours are critical. Long term care. Rehabilitation, if she stabilizes.If."Can her wolf..." He was pack. He'd understand. "Is her wolf helping at all?"Dr. Okafor's jaw tightened. He shook his head slowly."Her wolf is too old, Evelyn. Too weak. Whatever healing she had left, it's gone. It's going to be machines and medicine from here. All of it human. All of it slow."And
Chapter 3Evelyn's POVMom wrapped me in the old quilt from the back of the couch. The one with the faded sunflowers that she'd stitched the winter Dad died."Drink," she said, pressing a mug of moonflower tea into my hands. "Small sips."My hands were shaking so badly the tea rippled. She closed her fingers over mine to steady them, and that small act of kindness broke me all over again."I lost the baby, Mama." I hadn't said it out loud yet. Saying it made it real. "I lost my pup."Her face crumpled. She didn't say it will be okay. She didn't say everything happens for a reason. She just pulled my head against her chest and held me while I shook, her old heart beating slow and steady under my ear."He rejected me," I whispered into her robe. "He said the words, Mama. In front of her. He rejected me and my body just... let go."Mom's arms tightened. I felt something wet land in my hair. She was crying too, silently, the way she'd cried at Dad's burial. Grief without sound. Omega grie
Chapter 2 Evelyn's POV Three months pregnant? This was too much to be just a one time coincidence. They'd been planning this. From the way she spoke about their plans, it all started to make sense now. I should have noticed. The way they spoke so casually while I made breakfast every morning. While I ironed his shirts and packed his lunches and told him I loved him before he left for work. I should have scented it. That was the part that shamed me most. A wolf is supposed to know. A mate is supposed to know. But Marcus had been careful, showering before he came home, drowning himself in cologne, and I had been too trusting to question why his scent never sat right on his skin anymore. Or maybe my wolf had known all along, and I just refused to listen to her. "The house is in my name," Marcus said, his voice businesslike now, like we were discussing a real estate transaction and not the destruction of my entire world. "I'll give you a week to pack your things and get out." He s
Chapter 1Evelyn’s POV The champagne bottle slipped from my fingers and shattered across the marble floor the moment I saw my husband’s bare back moving in sync with my sister’s naked body. For three seconds, I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. The red rose petals I’d scattered on our bed that morning were crushed beneath them. They were tangled on the special occasion silk sheets that I changed this morning to celebrate this memorable day, There were small moaning sounds coming from her, the words were almost a whisper, but I could still hear it, every bit of it. “Yes Marcus, oh baby, tell me I’m the best.” She had asked between shaky breaths of pleasure. “You know that you’re the absolute best thing that happened to me..” Marcus replied immediately amidst Moans. Though my eyes was seeing the two, my mind couldn’t comprehend what was happening, to say I was hurt would be an understatement. “Marcus?” I found myself calling him in disbelief. My voice was ba







