LOGINTATE'S POV
Nicole had been unusually quiet for days. I noticed. I notice everything — Caesar made sure of that from the time I was old enough to stand. That morning she handed me the wrong tie. Her fingers moved too fast and her eyes didn't meet mine. Storm flagged her scent immediately, something underneath it was off, and I looked at her a second longer than I needed to. But the North Maple discussions were at a critical point and I had a pack to run. She was an omega without a wolf, what could she possibly do? I went to my meeting and told myself it was nothing. ******** The beta's report came through the mind link mid-morning on the fourth day, during a break between sessions. Unauthorized movement on the western border a small cluster of wolves who scattered the moment our elite squad arrived. Probably rogues testing the perimeter, it happened twice a year and rarely amounted to anything. I told Jonathan to monitor and returned to the conference room. I was forty minutes into the afternoon session when Tracy link hit me. “Nicole is missing.” Storm was on his feet before I had consciously processed the words. I excused myself from the table, walked into the corridor, and kept my voice low when I replied through the link. When did you last see her? This morning. Early when she brought my medication but she hasn't come back. I told Jonathan to quietly end the session and followed Storm's instinct toward the mansion at a pace that was not quite running but was not anything else either. The mansion was in controlled chaos when I arrived. Servants standing in doorways. I called her name and my own voice surprised me. There was nothing of command in it. Storm had been telling me for days that something was wrong, and I had chosen, deliberately, not to listen because listening would have required me to admit that I was watching her more carefully than I had any intention of admitting. That when she handed me the wrong tie that morning I had stood still for two seconds longer than necessary, not out of irritation but because something in the way she moved had changed, and I had noticed but had dismissed it immediately. I called her name as my own voice surprised me. I had not raised it for Nicole in a way that was not contempt or command in three years. This was neither. I called it again. The silence that came back was deafening. I asked every person I encountered, where she was. When did anyone last see her? What time. Where. Nobody had a clear answer. Nobody had been watching closely enough because nobody considered her worth watching. She was the omega, she was the locksmith's daughter. She was the pack's penance and the pack's shame and she had spent three years making herself so small that everyone had learned to look straight through her. Including me. I told myself the fury rising in my chest was at her. For the disruption, for the audacity. She tried to escape several times in the past two years, and each time my warriors caught her. Each time she was brought back, I would lock her in a dark basement for 24 hours. This was the best way my father taught me to make wolves obey; I don't know how many times I was put in solitary confinement as a child. At first, you'll howl, then you'll cry and beg for forgiveness, then you'll be terrified, as if the whole world has abandoned you. In the pitch-black confinement room, you lose track of time, you don't know what's happening outside. Fear engulfs you, and finally you surrender. That's how I learned absolute obedience, and I hoped Nicole would learn it too. I thought she had already learned it, but today I realized she's still as cunning as ever. I led the search myself. Storm was not calm about any of it, which I told myself was the bond. It was always the bond. It had nothing to do with the fact that I had memorised the sound of her footsteps in the east corridor, or that I knew exactly which window she stood at when she thought no one was watching. Those were security observations, nothing more. I split the elite squad across all four borders and covered the inner pack territory myself with the senior warriors. We searched through the afternoon and into the evening. Every building but we found nothing. By nightfall I was standing in the empty room she had occupied for three years. She was gone. She had planned it, she had stood in front of me this morning with the wrong tie in her hands and something hidden behind her eyes and I had looked directly at her and decided she was not worth the second thought. Storm lay down in the corner of my mind and pressed his face to the ground and made a sound I had never heard from him before. The next day, Jonathan came to me with the report, a patrol squad covering the northern forest perimeter had found something. Jonathan brought it to me personally, which told me before he opened his mouth that it was not good. A pool of blood at the treeline. The quantity of it left very little room for interpretation. Storm pressed his nose to the ground of my mind and went very still. "Is it hers," I asked. Jonathan didn't answer immediately, he didn't need to. The bond had already told me, Storm had already confirmed what no one needed to say aloud. "With that volume of blood loss," Jonathan said quietly, "even if she reached the border on her own, she would not." "Continue the search," I said. "Alpha" "In the forest, all sectors. Continue." I walked back to the mansion alone and did not speak to anyone for the rest of the evening. They came on the third day. I was already in a poor mood when I walked into that room and the mood did not improve as Elder Crane led it. "The search parties are pulling warriors from border rotations all for an omega.” "I am aware of what she ranked," I said. "Then you understand the optics." Crane folded his hands on the table. "Resources committed at this scale signal to the pack that the matter carries weight it should not carry and it raises questions about your " "Careful," I said quietly. He was careful, he waited and then continued. "About the pack's priorities, there is also the matter of closure. For the pack, for your ability to move forward on the Luna question, which cannot remain open indefinitely." I listened to all of it. When the last voice finished I said, "Three more days." Crane's expression shifted, just slightly. "Alpha, the evidence" "Two days more," I said again, and looked at him until he closed his file. They filed out, Sophia was waiting in the corridor, which meant she had known the meeting was happening and had positioned herself accordingly. She waited until the council members were out of earshot and then she turned to me with an expression I had seen before. "They're right," she said. "You know they're right. End the search, Tate. She's gone. And when you're ready when you've had whatever time you need I'm here. I've always been here, make me your Luna. We both know it was always going to be me." I looked at her for a moment. "You are not my mate," I said. "You were never going to be Luna." Something flickered across her face like surprise, then something harder underneath it. "That's not what you said when you were in my bed, what is this? Guilt?" She tilted her head. "You allowed the entire pack to treat her the way they did. You allowed it for years, don’t stand there performing grief over a bitch who" "Don't." The word came out very quiet. "Do not use that word for her, not in front of me. Not ever." Sophia blinked. "She was Luna of this pack," I said. "Whatever else she was or wasn't, she held that title. You will not refer to her that way." "Tate." She shifted, moving toward. "I only meant" "I know what you meant." I held her gaze. "But don’t you ever talk to your Alpha the way you like, Also I want to be clear about something, Sophia. Everything you have, your position here, your access to this pack, the respect you receive in these halls I gave you that. Every piece of it and I can take it back with a single word. Do not mistake proximity for permanence." She held my gaze, something calculating moving behind her eyes, and then she straightened. "I've already arranged for the servants to start clearing Nicole's things from the mansion. It needed to be done sooner or later." I was already moving before she finished the sentence. I heard the noise before I reached the corridor as I stopped in the doorway. The room was a mess, books pulled from the glass case and thrown on the floor, the small chair knocked on its side, clothes dragged from the wardrobe and piled in the centre of the room. One of the maids was standing directly on top of that pile, her full weight on Nicole's folded things, reaching for the high shelf, while the step stool was right beside her. She was standing on Nicole's clothes because she wanted to. "Stop." My voice came out low as all three froze. "Put it back, every item. Exactly where it was. If you don't remember where it was, you stand in that corridor until you do." "Alpha," the nearest one said carefully, "Luna Tracy gave the order, and Miss Sophia confirmed." "I am the Alpha of this pack," I said. "Not Luna Tracy, not Sophia. Put it back." They moved. I watched them go and stood in the corridor for a moment, breathing. I finally stepped into the room, It looked as I remembered it — simple, barely personalized. "Alpha." One of the maids appeared behind me, hesitant. "While we were, when we were clearing I found something. Under the sink in the bathroom. I thought you should see it before I" She held it out as I took it from her and turned it over. Two lines. I stood completely frozen in the middle of the room and looked at the test in my hand for a long time without speaking, without moving, without being able to do either. Positive. "Leave," I said as the maid left. The door closed. I was alone in Nicole's room with a positive pregnancy test in my hand. "She's pregnant,"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 POVAmber brings them back at three. I hear them before the door opens—Maple’s voice echoing in the corridor and Rosy’s quieter response. Then the key turns, and they’re through the door in a rush of dropped bags and cold air. I crouch down and they hit me at once; Maple’s arms wrap aroun
Nicole's POVI wake up with a clear head. The heat is gone, and my mind is sharp. I lie still for a moment, taking in the room and the warmth beside me, before sitting up.Tate is already awake, lying on his back. When he looks at me, he doesn't look like he's trying to control me; he just looks wa
Tate's POVI wake before dawn and she is there.I wake before dawn and she is there, her head resting on my chest.Her breathing is slow and even—the deep rhythm of real sleep. For one moment, this is everything. She is here. She is warm. She is real in a way she hasn’t been for years, except for t
Nicole pov He nods slowly. He doesn’t try to fix it for me. He just stands there, holding the weight of both versions of himself without flinching. The man I left wouldn’t have known how to do that."The rejection papers," I say."Nicole""I’m not asking you to sign them tonight. I just need you t







