LOGINSome wounds don't bleed where anyone can see them. Sera Voss walked into her mate's study one night carrying the most important secret of her life. She walked out carrying it still. Because before she could open her mouth — before she could find the words for the two pink lines sitting on her bathroom sink, for the tiny heartbeat growing quietly beneath her ribs — Kael Drayden, Alpha of the Ashveil Pack, looked at her across his desk with decided eyes and spoke the words that unmade everything. *I reject you, Sera Voss, as my destined mate.* She felt the bond snap like a spine breaking. She felt the hollow it left — cold and sudden and enormous — open up beneath her ribs where warmth used to live. And she pressed her hand flat against her stomach, and she said nothing. Because he didn't deserve to know. Because her daughter deserved better than growing up in the shadow of a man who chose someone else before she had even drawn her first breath. Because some decisions, once made, cannot be unmade — and Sera Voss was done waiting for people to choose her. She left that night with one bag, one secret, and nothing else. --- She built a life from scratch in a town where nobody knew her name. A diner. A small warm room above a bakery. A landlady named Donna who never asked questions and always made extra food. A routine that kept the grief from swallowing her whole in the quiet hours after midnight when the bond's absence felt loudest and the room felt smallest and she pressed both hands against her growing stomach and talked to her daughter like she was the only person left in the world. Because right then, she was.
View MoreThe pregnancy test was still clutched tightly in my hand when I stepped out of my room.
For almost twenty minutes, I had sat on the cold bathroom floor, staring at those two pink lines as if they might suddenly disappear if I looked hard enough.
They didn’t.
They remained there—clear, bold, undeniable.
Positive.
My trembling hand slowly moved to my stomach. Nothing felt different yet. No sign that a life was growing inside me. But the test said otherwise, and those two lines couldn’t lie.
I placed the stick carefully beside the sink and washed my hands, though my fingers still shook. Then I looked at myself in the mirror for a long moment.
“You can do this,” I whispered softly to my reflection. “Just tell him. Everything will be okay.”
The girl staring back at me didn’t look convinced.
Truthfully, neither was I.
The walk to Kael’s study usually took seven minutes.
I knew every corner of the pack house by heart—the long eastern hallway, the wall lined with hunting trophies, the dark wooden door at the very end with its heavy iron handle.
Tonight, those seven minutes felt endless.
The entire pack house was unusually quiet. Most wolves had already gone to their rooms, leaving behind that calm nighttime silence that usually made me feel safe and at home.
But tonight, the silence felt suffocating.
Like the world itself was waiting for something terrible to happen.
I stopped in front of Kael’s door and forced myself to breathe before knocking twice.
A few seconds passed.
Then the door opened.
Kael stood there, tall and intimidating as always. Broad shoulders, sharp jawline, dark eyes that carried authority without effort. Everything about him screamed Alpha.
Yet the way he looked at me made my chest tighten.
Not with love.
Not even with warmth.
Just distance.
“Sera.”
Only my name. Cold and emotionless.
“Hi.” My voice came out smaller than I intended. I cleared my throat quickly. “Can I come in? I need to talk to you. It’s important.”
Without a word, he stepped aside.
I walked into the room.
And immediately froze.
A woman stood near the fireplace, holding a glass of red wine gracefully in one hand.
Beautiful.
Painfully beautiful.
Long dark hair framed her elegant face, and the deep green dress she wore fit her perfectly. She looked calm, polished, untouchable.
I recognized her instantly.
Cressida Vane.
Daughter of the Northern Alpha.
The woman the elders constantly whispered about.
The perfect future Luna.
My heartbeat slowed painfully.
“I didn’t realize you had company,” I said quietly, somehow managing to keep my voice steady.
“It’s fine,” Kael replied.
He moved behind his desk, avoiding both my eyes and hers. His hands rested heavily against the wood as though he were preparing himself for something.
Then he exhaled.
“Actually… I’m glad you came tonight,” he said slowly. “I was planning to speak with you tomorrow, but this is better.”
A strange chill crept through my chest.
“Better for what?”
Kael finally looked at me.
And in that exact moment, I understood.
He hadn’t spoken the words yet, but I saw the decision written all over his face. His expression was hard, distant, final.
Like a man who had already convinced himself he was doing the right thing.
Fear curled inside me.
“Kael…” My voice cracked slightly. “What’s going on?”
He straightened his posture, every inch the Alpha.
Then he spoke in the same cold, commanding tone he used during official pack meetings.
“I, Kael Drayden, Alpha of the Ashveil Pack—”
My breath caught.
“No,” I whispered desperately. “Don’t say it.”
“—reject you, Sera Voss, as my destined mate.”
Everything around me shattered.
The pain wasn’t emotional at first.
It was physical.
Like something invisible slammed violently into my chest, knocking the air from my lungs. My knees gave out beneath me, and I grabbed the edge of his desk before I could collapse completely.
Then I felt it.
The mate bond.
That warm connection that had lived inside me since the moment we found each other.
Gone.
Snapped apart so suddenly it felt unbearable.
An empty ache spread through my chest, cold and hollow, as if something had been ripped out of me without mercy. My body struggled to process the loss.
I could barely breathe.
Instinctively, my hand moved to my stomach.
My secret.
Our child.
Still there.
Still his.
Kael never noticed.
He stared somewhere beyond me, his jaw tight with forced control, pretending cruelty was simply responsibility.
Near the fireplace, Cressida remained silent.
She watched me carefully, her expression unreadable. There was no satisfaction in her eyes, but no pity either.
Only quiet understanding.
As though she had expected this moment long before I walked through the door.
Using every bit of strength left inside me, I forced myself back onto my feet.
My legs trembled violently.
I pressed one hand against my thigh to hide the shaking and slowly lifted my eyes to Kael.
Finally, he looked at me.
I put a hand against my stomach and sat there a moment in the quiet, feeling her shift again, slower this time, like she was settling in for the night the way I was."Hi," I said, quiet, the way I did most evenings when it was just the two of us and no one to hear how strange it sounded. "Long day."She didn't answer, obviously. But something about saying it out loud made the room feel less empty.I thought, not for the first time, about what I'd say to her someday when she was old enough to ask about her father. I hadn't landed on an answer yet. Some nights I told myself I'd tell her the truth, plain and unflinching — that he'd rejected me before I ever got the chance to tell him she existed, that he'd done it in front of someone else, that he'd chosen ceremony and witnesses over five seconds of listening. Other nights I told myself I'd soften it, give her something she could carry without it curdling into the same bitterness I carried.I hadn't told anyone here the whole truth. Donn
The bell over the diner door didn't ring so much as clatter, a tired metal sound that Donna kept saying she'd fix and never did. I'd learned the exact weight to push it so it wouldn't clatter twice.Eight months. Eight months since the tree line, since Ada's hand digging into my arm, since I'd made the decision that same night before I let anyone talk me out of it. Eight months since I'd let myself think about any of it long enough to feel it."Table four's getting impatient," Donna called from behind the counter, not unkindly. She said everything without much heat in it, like she'd used up her urgency decades ago and had none left to spare."I'm going." I braced one hand against the small of my back and pushed up from the booth where I'd been catching five minutes off my feet. Nine months pregnant didn't leave much room for catching breath sitting down either, but it beat standing.The bell clattered again. I didn't look up right away — I never did anymore, that reflex long since tra
Eight months.More than eight months of waking up every morning in a tiny apartment above a bakery and convincing myself that life hurt a little less than it did the day before.Most days, it actually did.Millhaven slowly became familiar to me in the quietest ways.The bakery downstairs opened before sunrise, filling the building with the warm scent of fresh bread every morning. The diner opened at six sharp. The library on Main Street locked its doors every evening at exactly five, and Mrs. Okafor, the librarian, always carried a sunflower bookmark inside whichever romance novel she was currently reading.The pigeons near the town square were fearless little thieves.And the gas station at the north end of town sold surprisingly good coffee from a machine that looked older than I was.Small things.Ordinary things.Human things.Nothing like the life I left behind.No pack politics. No Alpha titles. No mate bonds hanging painfully inside my chest.Just simple routines.I clung to th
I stopped in the middle of the dark forest path, completely still.A strange ache pulsed through my chest.He felt it.Even after the rejection… even after the bond had been broken, some instinct deep inside me knew Kael could still feel me leaving. The connection between mates didn’t disappear instantly. It lingered. Reached. Held on long after it was supposed to end.Somewhere back in that study, he was awake.And he knew I was walking away.I closed my eyes briefly, forcing down the pain threatening to rise again.Then I kept moving.The southern border marker stood at the edge of the woods, old and weathered beneath the moonlight.The Ashveil symbol carved into the stone had faded over the years, softened by rain and time. Two overlapping circles—the mark of the pack I had called home my entire life.I had crossed this border hundreds of times before.But never like this.Tonight, there would be no coming back.Beyond the marker, the trees opened onto an empty road stretching endl
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