登入Lana's Pov
I woke up slowly. For a few seconds, I actually thought I was back in my own bed. I expected to hear the birds outside my window and smell the coffee Jasper always made in the morning. I reached out my hand, expecting to feel the soft sheets of my home. Then, I felt the rough texture of the blanket. I smelled that old, heavy scent of the pack house. My eyes snapped open. I rubbed my eyes hard, hoping it was just a bad dream, but the white walls of the lab suite didn't go away. I wasn't home. I was in a cage. Damn you, Asher, I thought. I hate you so much. I cursed him in my head, calling him every name I could think of. He was a thief. He had stolen my peace just because he felt like he owned the world. I sat up and realized the side door was open. I heard voices. Happy voices. I got out of bed and walked to the doorway. My heart sank. There was a small table set up in the playroom. My three boys were sitting there, eating a big breakfast of eggs, bacon, and fruit. And sitting right there with them, looking way too comfortable, was Asher. I stood there and gulped. My throat felt dry, just how long does he plan to insert himself in places he is not even needed. Asher looked up. He didn't have his suit jacket on, and his sleeves were rolled up. He looked like a normal dad, which made my stomach turn into knots. But for a reason watching him like this made me feel some kind way, I want to blame it on my wolf. "Good morning, Lana," he said. His voice was calm, almost kind. The boys turned around. "Mummy! Look! The Alpha brought us real honey for the pancakes!" Jacob shouted, his face sticky with syrup. "Good morning, babies," I said. I tried to make my voice sound normal for them. Asher pulled out the empty chair next to him. "Sit down. You need to eat if you’re going to work all day." I looked at the chair, I didn't want to sit near him. I wanted to grab my kids and run until my legs gave out. But then I looked at my boys, they were smiling, they weren't scared. They were enjoying the food and the attention. If I made a scene, I would ruin their calm. I nodded slowly and sat down. The silence was thick. The only sounds were the boys clinking their forks against the plates. Asher kept watching me. I kept my eyes on my plate, moving a piece of egg around with my fork. "Is the food okay?" Asher asked. "It’s fine," I said. "We don't get bacon like this at home," Mathew said, looking at Asher. "Mom makes us eat a lot of green stuff because she’s a doctor and uncle Jasper supports mum because everyone doesn't want mum on their bad side." Mathew said laughing. Asher smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes. "Is that so? Well, while you’re here, you can eat whatever you want. I want you to feel like this is your home." "But it’s not our home," Lucas said. He was looking at Asher with a suspicious look. "We have a house with Uncle Jasper. When are we going back?" I saw Asher’s jaw tighten at the mention of Jasper’s name. He put his fork down and leaned in a little. "Well, Lucas," Asher started. "Sometimes, plans change. This place... it belongs to me. And since you are here with your mother, that makes you very special guests. In fact, you are more than guests, uncle Jasper is always welcome here, I'm not holding anyone from visiting." I felt a cold chill. I looked at Asher, trying to tell him to stop with my eyes. "What does that mean?" Jacob asked. Asher looked at the boys, and then he looked at me. He had a strange look on his face. It was like he wanted to scream the truth right there. "It means," Asher said, his voice getting a bit louder, "that we have a lot in common. More than you know. Did you know that I knew your mother when she was just a little girl? We grew up in this very house together." "Really?" Mathew asked. "Were you guys friends?" "We were very close," Asher said. He reached out and touched a glass of juice. "So close that if things had gone differently, I would have been the one—" "Asher," I said. My voice was sharp. He didn't stop. He was looking at Jacob, who looked exactly like him. "Uncle Jasper shouldn’t have been part of the story, eventually you will understand. I look at you three, and I see so much of myself. It’s almost like looking in a mirror. Don't you think it’s funny how much we look alike?" The boys stopped eating. They looked from Asher to me, then back to Asher. The air in the room felt like it was about to snap. "I think," Asher whispered, "it's time you boys knew who I really am. I’m not just an Alpha. I'm—" I stood up so fast my chair hit the floor with a loud bang. "We need to talk," I said. I wasn't asking. I was commanding. "Now. In the other room." Asher looked at me, he was thinking of fighting me for a moment. “Now.” I said my voice firm. Asher let out a laughter that didn't reach eyes. “I guess I will talk to you boys later, finish your meal and go play, your mother and I will be back.” Asher stood up and walked to the room. I looked at my boys. I walked over to them, giving each of them a peck on the cheek. “Be good alright.” They nod their head in unison.. Lana's POV. The silence that hung in the air after I spoke was unlike the usual quiet you find in empty hallways or deserted rooms. This silence felt heavy. Asher looked at me with the familiar expression he wore when piecing together what I had just shared, sorting through the fragments in his mind until they formed a coherent picture. I had learned to recognize that particular stillness in him. It wasn’t the kind of stillness that suggested doubt; rather, it was the stillness of someone who fully believed what they were hearing and found it deeply unsettling. Jacob stirred against Asher's shoulder, prompting him to adjust slightly to prevent the boy from slipping. His hand instinctively moved to support Jacob's weight. Even amidst all the chaos, that reflex was still there. He handled them with a care that felt instinctual, as if he had always been a protector of children rather than just someone managing them. "Can you describe the person?" he asked softly. "The person you s
Lana's POV.The corridor felt like it was swallowing me whole.I hurried down the hall, maybe a bit too quickly for a castle that wasn’t exactly my home, my bag swinging at my side while my mind raced ahead of my feet. I needed that first dose—the compound I had prepared for him before this whole nightmare spiraled out of control. Before someone started dismantling everything I had worked so hard for, piece by careful piece.The lab was close. I had walked that path so many times over the past few weeks that I could have navigated it blindfolded, counting the turns, the flagstones, and the torch brackets lining the lower passage. My feet knew the way, even as my thoughts scattered across a dozen unsettling possibilities.But when I rounded the last corner and halted in front of the lab door, a chill settled over me.It was locked.I stood there for a moment, genuinely unable to believe my eyes. I reached out to test the handle again, this time more slowly, as if I could somehow convin
Lana's POVI counted to thirty, trying to wrap my head around what was happening. His breathing had steadied, the erratic rhythm calming into something almost human. For a fleeting moment, I dared to hope that I had done it again, that the golden liquid in that syringe had reached him just like it had with the others, pulling him back from the brink. Then, without warning, he jerked.It was a sudden, violent convulsion that arched his back off the mattress, sending one of the attendants stumbling back with a startled cry. I was on my feet before I even realized I had moved, my hands gripping his shoulders, desperate to keep him from tumbling to the floor. His skin, which had just started to shed its awful ash-grey colour, was darkening again right beneath my fingers, the colour draining from him as if something inside had yanked the plug."No," I murmured, more to myself than anyone else in the room. "No, no—"I had seen this suppressant work wonders on three different wolves, watched
Lana's POVI followed Maya into the corridor, my legs already moving faster than my thoughts could keep up with, and it was several strides before I realized my hands were empty. No bag, no vials, no instruments. Nothing but the panic climbing up my throat and the sound of my own footsteps against the stone floor.I stopped so abruptly that Maya nearly collided with me."Go ahead," I told her, already turning back the way I'd come. "Tell whoever's with him that I'm coming. I need my bag. I can't treat him with nothing in my hands."She hesitated only a second before nodding and breaking into a run toward the east wing, her omega instincts apparently overriding whatever fear had put that look on her face in the first place. I admired that about her, even in that fractured moment the ability to keep moving when everything in you wants to stand still and fall apart. I sprinted back to the lab.The room looked just as I had left it only minutes ago, the dark screen of my phone resting whe
Lana's POVThere were two voices, one in my ear and the other at the doorway. I was so distracted. I waited for Jasper to talk but he was not saying anything. Another person, a lady, picked the call and I heard his voice from the background."Who is there?" He asked."It's an unknown number," the girl replied.He told the girl to hang up the call.The line went dead before I could breathe a single word into it.I stood there for a half second with a disconnected phone pressed against my ear and the particular hollowness of a plan that had just collapsed before it had fully taken shape. The girl's voice had been unhurried, domestic almost, the voice of someone completely at ease in a space she considered her own. I filed that away without examining it, because the doorway was still occupied and that required my attention first.I crossed the room and looked at the guard.“I'll expose you.”He said and was already turning away, already moving back toward his post with the unhurried conf
Lana's POV. A whole lot was just going through my mind at the same time. If that medicine worked more than the others I had been producing, then I had to do more of it. That much was already settled, already hardening into resolve before the thought had even finished forming. But beneath that certainty, a dozen other questions were pushing upward simultaneously, jostling for position, each one carrying enough weight to derail the next. Why had this particular formulation produced results that none of its predecessors had managed?Asher walked back through that door looking like a man who had just witnessed a small miracle: why did this medicine matter to him the way it clearly did? Not just as an Alpha relieved that his pack members had survived. Something more particular than that. Something that had been living in him before tonight and had simply found its confirmation here. I was reaching for my notepad, already crafting the first line of a new protocol in my mind, when Asher
Lana's POV. The medicine was already in my hands by the time the second nurse came back with it. I had seen this coming. Deep down, a part of me that had been quietly calculating since the first confirmed case two weeks ago — had prepared the suppressant compound three days before I ever thought
Lana’s POV 8 years later It was one of those rare, peaceful mornings where everything seemed to be in perfect harmony in my life. Jasper and I were lying in bed, tangled up in each other’s arms, enjoying the quiet before the day really began. His warm breath tickled the back of my neck as he kis
Lana’s POV I was struggling to hold back my tears when Amelia’s laughter harsh laughter echoed in the room, sharp and mocking, as if my heartbreak was nothing more than a joke to her. “Oh, Lana, are you really that pathetic?” she sneered. “You’ve always been jealous of me, haven’t you? That’s why
Lana’s POV Pregnant? I was Pregnant? I couldn’t believe it.“Where’s that stupid little bitch?” My stepmother suddenly screamed from across the hall, jolting me back to reality.I looked up in panic as my step mother’s fist began to furiously pound on my bedroom door, almost pulling the hinges off







