LOGINNichole pov
"Shit, shit, shit." I was already ten minutes behind and the parliament office was a fifteen minute walk, Tate's suit still in the garment bag over my arm and my shoes not properly fastened because I hadn't had time to sit down and do them right. I had overslept, which never happened, except that recently sleep was the only thing my body seemed genuinely interested in. I could drop off anywhere, I woke up more tired than when I'd closed my eyes. The nausea hit me at the top of the stairs, the same way it had every morning this week — it made the smell of breakfast unbearable and meant I'd eaten almost nothing in days. I pressed my hand against the wall, breathed through it, and kept moving. I was probably coming down with something. The stress, the cold corridors, the not eating, that was the logical explanation. The other explanation flickered through my mind for exactly one second before I shut it down. Pregnant. The symptoms were textbook early pregnancy — the exhaustion, the nausea, the food aversion. I knew that, I had read enough medical literature to know that. But I also knew that three years had passed without it happening once, and Tracy's voice had been living in my head long enough that I had simply stopped considering it a possibility. A hen that won't lay for three whole years. It wasn't that, it was never going to be that. I shook it off and ran. I made it to the parliament building with two minutes to spare, breathing hard, and that was when I ran directly into Councilman Reeve's personal attendant coming through the gate from the other side. The garment bag swung wide. I grabbed it and missed, and it hit the ground. The attendant looked down at it, then up at me, with an expression like I had done it on purpose just to inconvenience him. "Watch yourself," he said. "I'm sorry, I didn't see" "Of course you didn't." He stepped closer, dropping his voice in a way that was somehow worse than shouting. "You know what you are? You're an embarrassment. To this pack, to that title you're wearing like it belongs to you." His eyes moved over me slowly. "The daughter of a murderer, playing Luna. It's pathetic. Genuinely pathetic." Two other staff members had stopped nearby, watching, and neither of them moved to help. I bent down to pick up the garment bag, my knee still sore from yesterday, and the attendant put his foot on the corner of the bag before I could lift it. "I'm not finished," he said. "Here." A hand reached past me, lifted the attendant's foot by the ankle with calm authority, and set it aside as I looked up. Auburn hair, warm green eyes, an open expression that had no business being this relaxed in the middle of a parliament gate standoff. He picked up the garment bag and handed it to me, then turned to look at the attendant. The attendant finally left without another word. "Are you alright?" the stranger asked, turning back to me. "Yes. Thank you." I checked the garment bag, smoothed the front of it. "You didn't have to do that." "I know." He was already unwinding the scarf from his neck, and before I could protest he crouched and pressed it carefully against my knee where the fabric of my gown had torn at the old injury. "That needs proper attention." "I'll manage." "I'm sure you will." He stood, something almost like amusement in his expression, but gentle. "Take the scarf anyway." Someone called his name from across the courtyard, I didn't catch it clearly and he glanced over his shoulder. "I'll return it," I said. "If you tell me your name." He was already walking, waving it off. "Don't worry about it." A few minutes later I knocked on Tate's office door."Come in." He was behind his desk, jacket off, sleeves rolled to the elbow. He didn't look up when I entered. I crossed the room and set the garment bag on the side table. I was turning to leave when he said, very quietly, "Stop." I stopped. He rose from behind the desk slowly, crossed the room to where I was standing and his nostrils flared, once, and his eyes went dark. "Whose scent is that." "I fell," I said, keeping my voice low. "Someone helped me." "Someone." He stepped closer. "A man." "He helped me and left, it was nothing." "You smell like him." His voice had dropped low. He moved toward me and I stepped back and my back found the wall. "Did you think I wouldn't notice? Did you think I don't know exactly what you are?" "Tate, I didn't" "Don't." His other hand found my wrist and the word died in my throat. The mate bond did what it always did. My body had never learned to separate the bond from the man, the warmth from the harm, and that betrayal — my own biology working against every piece of sense I had was its own kind of humiliation on top of everything else. He knew it too, he had always known it. He turned me around, pushed me back until I hit the edge of his desk, and made me bend over it. I grabbed the desk with both hands and stared at the wall in front of me. Tate didn’t say anything. He pulled my dress up to my waist and tugged my underwear down just enough. Then he undid his pants, took himself out, and pushed into me in one hard movement. Something felt different, I couldn't have named it — not then, not with my hands gripping the desk and my mind focused entirely on getting through it but my body registered something unfamiliar, a heightened sensitivity that made every movement sharper than usual. No condom as usual there never was. Tracy had told him I was barren, a hen that wouldn't lay, and he had believed it completely, so the thought never crossed his mind. One less thing for him to consider as I pushed the thought away and held on. He held my hips tight and started moving—fast, deep, steady. Each thrust pushed me against the desk. The edge dug into my stomach as my legs shook from holding myself up. I could hear the sound of our bodies hitting together and his breathing getting heavier, but he stayed controlled. A knock came at the door. I froze as my whole body tightened around him. “Alpha,” Jonathan said from the other side. “The North Maple people are here. They’re waiting in the east room.” Tate didn’t stop, instead he kept going, harder now. “Alpha,” Jonathan said again. “They’ve been waiting a while.” My heart was pounding so hard it hurt. I pictured Jonathan opening the door, the visitors seeing us, the story getting out to every pack by tonight. “Please,” I whispered. Tears were already running down my face. “Please, I’m sorry. I was wrong. I’m sorry. Please” I’d said those words so many times they came out automatically. I hated how easy they were now. Tate paused — just for a second. I felt his eyes drop to me, felt the shift in the air like he was really seeing me for once. Something changed in the way he held me, but then it was gone. He started moving again, same as before. “Tell them five minutes,” he said to Jonathan, voice calm like nothing was happening. “Yes, Alpha.” Jonathan’s steps went away. He gripped my hips harder, drove in deep one last time, and held there. I felt him spill inside me, hot and wet, filling me completely. He stayed buried until he finished, breathing hard against my back. Then he stepped back. I heard him fix his pants, tuck in his shirt, shrug on his jacket like it was nothing. I slid down to the floor, feeling hollow. My dress was still up around my waist as I pulled it down and smoothed it flat with my hands over and over. Tate looked at me. “Everyone already knows you’re trash,” A pause, something shifting almost imperceptibly behind his eyes. “But you are my trash, you could walk in here naked and nobody would care. So don’t you dare go near other men.” He adjusted his sleeves. “Clean this up before you go.” He walked out as the door closed quietly behind him. I stayed on the floor a moment longer than necessary, smoothing my dress flat with both hands. Tate hadn't always been like this. I had watched Tate from the edges of middle school. I was an omega born into poverty, living only with my father. It was no surprise that I became a target for bullies. Once, when I was thirteen, three girls bullied me and cut my notebook. Tate saw them and said in a calm, firm voice, “Give it back to her.” They handed it over right away. He never knew my name and walked away before I could even thank him. I stood there holding the notebook to my chest, my heart beating too fast, thinking he didn't have to do that. From that moment on, I had a crush on him. Not just this time, but many times afterward, he lent a helping hand when I was bullied, even though he might not have known who the poor girl he was helping was, and even though it might all have been out of a sense of justice. Four years ago, I received my acceptance letter, but the money my father and I had wasn't enough to get me the permit. So I had to sneak to the edge of the pack in the middle of the night, preparing to slip away quietly under the cover of darkness. It was Tate, a member of the patrol team at the time, who discovered me but let me go. He never saw my face. He never knew it was me he let go. I used to find comfort in that—the idea that somewhere inside him there was still quiet mercy. But maybe I was only fooling myself. Everything changed when my father killed his father. From that day on, I knew there would be no chance for Tate to love me, and every minute of pain was mine to bear. ******** The pharmacy was three blocks from the parliament building, tucked between a dry cleaner and a convenience store, the kind of place nobody from the pack's upper circles would be caught dead in. I went in with my head down, found the aisle without asking for help, and stood in front of the shelf for longer than I needed to. I was being ridiculous, for three years nothing. It wasn't possible but I bought it anyway. The bathroom at the far end of the public hall was empty. I locked the door, followed the instructions I already had memorised and set the test on the edge of the sink. A few minutes later, I looked down. Positive.Sophia pov The heavy glass doors of the research wing clicked shut behind me, sealing out the sterile, white-tiled corridors of the institute. I walked down the dim basement passage, my heels striking the concrete floor with a sharp, rhythmic snap. The sound was comforting. It was a reminder that in a place filled with fractured minds and failing bodies, I was the one who controlled the rhythm.I checked my watch. It was past nine in the evening. The administrative staff had gone home hours ago, leaving the facility to the night shift and the shadows. This was when the institute felt most like a chessboard. Every room held a variable, every corridor was a lane of attack, and I had spent weeks mapping every inch of it.I turned the corner toward the maintenance utility room—a blind spot in the secondary security grid that I had personally vetted. I reached into my pocket, my fingers brushing against the heavy fabric of my jacket, and pulled out my keycard.Before I could swipe it agai
Tate pov Tracy didn't answer. She just picked up her tea cup and looked away toward the window, completely checking out of the conversation.I stood up and left her alone in the quiet room.I stood in the corridor after leaving Tracy’s room, the weight of the investigator's photos pressing heavily against my chest. The protocol Marlon had set up was clear: because Marlon had selected and hired the private investigator, the initial findings were supposed to route through him first to ensure an independent track. The investigator had broken protocol by pinging my personal device directly with those images, likely out of sheer urgency.If Marlon saw those photos, he would go straight to Nicole. And if Nicole found out that my own beta—the man I stubbornly defended in front of her—was sleeping with Sophia and leaking our security, the fragile trust we were building would vanish completely.I turned on my heel and walked rapidly down the residential hallway toward Marlon’s temporary offi
Tate pov "I know you cannot believe your eyes, Alpha," the investigator replied, his tone entirely professional and devoid of pity. "But the camera does not lie. If you call him out on this right now, he is going to lie to you. He will hear the change in your voice. He will know something is wrong, and he will get skeptical. He will warn her, and they will cover their tracks. If you want to know the depth of this betrayal, you need to keep your mouth shut. Keep him close, act normal, and watch him like a hawk."He paused, letting his words sink into my chest. "Frankly, it is quite surprising. I could find out the truth within days of arriving here, but you couldn't see what was happening right under your nose."I hung up on him. I did not want to hear another word.My hand shook so violently that I could barely force the device back into my pocket. The betrayal hit me like a physical blow to my chest, knocking the wind right out of me.Jonathan. My beta. My brother.The investigator’
Tate's POV"Exactly," I said. "Keep the recording lines open on her room phone and monitor her cell data. The moment she reaches out to the northern territories, I want the audio file sent straight to my computer.""I already set up the patch on her quarters," Jonathan said. "We are recording everything she transmits. But what about the research wing? Is there anything else you need for Dr. Carter's safety?""Make sure our men keep a close eye on the hallway," I said. "If anyone approaches her door, I want to know about it.""They will stay in the shadow of the stairwell," Jonathan replied. "They won't stand right in front of the door like a regular guard detail. If the institute staff asks what they are doing, they will say they are waiting for a late-night delivery of legal files for the trial.""Good," I said, finally letting out a breath as the plan settled into place. "That keeps us under the radar. Keep me updated on any movement. I will be in my room.""Will do, Alpha," Jonatha
Tate's POV I stood in the corridor outside my room and listened to the phone but my expression did not change. She told me the exact words Sophia used. She said them without any crying, and without any extra drama. "Are the twins in the nursery now?" I asked. "Yes," Nicole said. "I will have two people outside the door within the hour," I said. "They stay there." She paused. "What are you going to do about Sophia?" "Handle it," I said. I meant it completely. My wolf, Storm, agreed with me. Sophia had looked at my children. She had gone to Nicole's office, played a fake game of being nice, and then threatened my kids on her way out. She had used the words terrible and confused to scare Nicole. "Tate," Nicole said. "I will not touch her," I said, already walking down the hallway. "But this ends today." "Tate" she said again and her voice sounded heavy. "I know," I said. She hung up and I immediately dialed Jonathan before I even reached the stairs. He answered on the f
Nicole pov I scoffed loudly, the sound sharp in the quiet office."Accept what?" I asked, leaning back in my chair. "A fake speech you practiced in front of your mirror? You do not mean a single word of it, Sophia."Sophia’s face flushed pink. She slammed her hand down on the edge of my desk, making the paper files rattle. "I am swallowing my pride to stand here and talk to you. Most people would have the decency to say thank you. You were a servant in our house, and now you think you can look down on me?""I am looking at you exactly as you are," I said, my voice completely calm compared to her rising anger. "You only apologize when you want something, or when you are afraid of losing your spot next to Tate. Which one is it today?""Tate knows I am here," she lied, her chin tilting up as she tried to use his name like a shield. "He knows I am trying to make peace. If you keep acting like this, I will tell him how impossible you are. He won't tolerate a worker insulting his inner cir
Nicole's POVRosy tells me about the dream at breakfast, between bites of toast."He was in the garden," she says. "It was raining but he wasn't wet, he was just sitting there.""Was he sad?" Maple asks without looking up from his book."A bit." She considers it. "Less than before."I look at my te
Nicole's POV I am halfway down the east corridor when I hear him behind me. "Lea." I stop as my breath hitches, then I turn around.Tate is coming from the direction of Tracy's wing. He stops a few feet away and looks at me."I need an hour of your time," he says. "This afternoon, you and Marlon,
Nicole's POV Morning comes the way it always does, without asking permission. I've been awake since four, I watched the light change on the ceiling for an hour before I got up and made coffee and sat at my desk and looked at the protocol notes without reading them. The twins woke at six-thirty,
Nicole's POVI got home and stood in the hallway for a full minute before I moved.Amber was on the sofa with Maple, the two of them deep in a book that Maple was explaining to her in great detail despite the fact that she was clearly the one reading. Rosy was at the table with her crayons, head be







