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Shattered By The Alpha
Shattered By The Alpha
Author: Godymercy

CHAPTER 1

Author: Godymercy
last update publish date: 2026-05-08 17:23:30

"You were an accident, Zara. The sooner you accept that, the easier your life gets."

My father said that to me on my twelfth birthday. He was standing in the kitchen, coffee in hand, not even looking at me. I had just walked in wearing the dress Dara helped me pick out the night before. I thought maybe — just maybe — he would notice.

He noticed I was in his way.

I stepped aside. He walked out. And I stood there in that yellow dress in the kitchen of the Beta's house and decided, right then, that I was done waiting to be seen by someone who had already made up his mind about me before I could even talk.

That was five years ago.

Now I am seventeen and I still live in this house, but I have learned to move through it like air — present, necessary for survival, completely unnoticed.

My name is Zara Cole. My father is the Beta of Ironveil Pack. My brother Bren is going to take that title when he graduates. I am the girl whose mother died bringing her into the world, and in a pack that feeds on rank and story, that is the only story anyone tells about me.

Except I have another one. They just haven't found it yet.

I am three steps behind Bren and his best friend Oliver — no, wait, I changed the names in my head. Three steps behind Bren and his best friend Theo, watching them walk through the front gates of Ironveil Academy without once checking that I am still back here.

Dara used to make them wait for me. Dara has been gone for a year.

The morning air bites through my hoodie. I have the sleeves pulled down past my wrists. That is habit now, not cold — I have two bruises from yesterday running up my left arm from where Nia's friend Jade slammed a locker door on me in the middle of the hallway. Nia does not like to do the physical work herself anymore. She has people for that.

I pass through the gate and keep my eyes forward. The trick to surviving Ironveil Academy is simple — be smaller than the space you occupy. Take up no room. Make no sound that draws attention. Be last in and first out of every classroom. Never eat in the cafeteria if you can help it. And never, under any circumstances, let them see you cry.

I have not cried at this school since seventh grade. That was the last time I made that mistake.

"There she is." The voice comes from my left, casual and sharp at the same time. I don't turn. I already know it is Nia. The click of her heels on the concrete is its own specific warning — not because she wears heels to a school built around a training compound, but because she does it on purpose, so you can always hear her coming. She wants you to hear her coming. She likes that it makes people nervous.

I am not nervous. I am calculating.

"You know, you really should think about doing something with that hair," Nia says, falling into step beside me like we are friends. She is not talking quietly. She never does. "Or those clothes. Or that face. Actually, maybe just start over entirely." Her two closest companions — Jade and a girl named Petra — laugh on cue.

I keep walking.

"She's not even going to respond," Jade says, sounding bored.

"She never does." Nia's voice drops into something that sounds almost like pity. "That's because she knows I'm right."

I turn the corner toward the main building and something in me counts, the way it always does: four steps to the door, pull left handle, second hallway, third classroom. I have memorized every route in this school by efficiency — not the fastest route, the safest one. The one least likely to have Nia or her crowd waiting.

What I feel right now is not fear. I want to be clear about that — it stopped being fear a long time ago. What it is now is something colder. A kind of deep, steady burn that I keep locked underneath everything I present to the world.

My wolf Raya calls it patience.

I call it not yet.

I got Raya two weeks before the end of fifth grade. Nobody knows. Not my father, not Bren, not the school, not the pack training instructors — nobody except Commander Holt, the Delta, who caught me shifting in the forest at four in the morning and looked at me for a long moment before saying, "I didn't see anything. Lock the east gate when you come back in."

He has been leaving the gate key for me ever since.

It is rare, getting your wolf young. It happens sometimes with ranked blood when the wolf senses the person needs her before the usual timeline. I think the Moon Goddess — I catch myself — I think biology and genetics gave me Raya early because she knew what was coming. Not magic. Just a body knowing what a person needs before the person does.

Raya is the reason I am still standing.

She is also the reason I have been very, very careful.

Because the moment my father finds out I have my wolf, this quiet agreement we have — him ignoring my existence, me surviving it — ends. He will want to use it. Or he will want to control it. Either way, whatever freedom I have carved out inside this invisible life disappears the second he knows what I am capable of.

So he does not know.

Nobody does.

Third period is Combat Theory, which is the classroom version of training — strategy, pack law, formation studies. I sit in the back row, second seat from the window, which gives me a clear view of both the door and the training grounds outside.

That is where I see him for the first time.

He walks across the training grounds below with Commander Holt beside him, and even from two floors up, through smeared glass, something about the way he moves makes the entire class stop and look. He is tall — very tall. Dark hair, short cut. He moves like a man who has never once second-guessed himself, like his feet know the ground belongs to them.

"Who is that?" Petra whispers two rows ahead of me.

"No idea." Jade leans toward the window.

"He's with Commander Holt." Someone else — I don't catch who.

I look back at my notes and write the date at the top of a clean page. I have learned that people who make the entire room look up are either very good or very dangerous. In a pack setting, usually both.

I don't need new problems.

Raya stirs quietly inside me.

Interesting, she says.

Don't, I tell her.

She goes quiet, but she doesn't settle. And that, more than anything, is what I remember — that Raya, who is calm about almost everything, did not settle.

The bell rings. I am first out the door.

I cut through the east corridor after school and take the long way around to the side training grounds. This is where I run the patrol route — two miles of forest trail that circles the eastern boundary of Ironveil Pack territory. The patrol warriors know my footsteps by now. Senior Patrol Officer Deni once told me I had better instincts on the eastern trail than half her team.

I don't tell anyone she said that.

I drop my bag at the base of the oak tree I use as a marker, stretch my arms above my head, and breathe. This is the one place in Ironveil where I am not performing anything. Where I am not calculating distance to the nearest exit or monitoring the sound of heels on concrete. I am just Zara, and Raya, and the trees.

I am three hundred meters into the run when I hear someone behind me.

I stop.

Turn.

He is standing at the entrance to the trail, arms crossed, watching me. Storm-grey eyes. The scar along his collarbone visible at the edge of his collar. Up close, the lines of his face are sharper than I expected — jaw, cheekbones, the set of his mouth. He doesn't look angry. He doesn't look friendly. He looks like a man doing math.

"Trail's not restricted," I say, because silence would mean I am intimidated and I am not giving that away.

"I know," he says. His voice is even. Controlled. "Commander Holt told me you run it every evening."

Something tightens in my chest. "He's very talkative lately."

The corner of his mouth moves. Just barely. "He said you were the best thing on the eastern trail. I wanted to see for myself."

I stare at him.

He stares back.

"You're the evaluator," I say. "From the Alpha King."

"Kade Voss." He doesn't extend a hand. Neither do I.

"I know who you are," I say, which is only half true — I know what he is. "And I don't perform for observers."

I turn back to the trail and start running.

He doesn't follow.

But when I loop back forty minutes later, he is still standing at the entrance. And he is smiling — small, private, like something just confirmed a theory he already had.

I walk straight past him without a word.

Raya does not go quiet this time.

Told you, she says. Interesting.

And somewhere behind me, I hear him say — quiet, almost to himself — "Faster than I thought."

I don't know yet whether that is good news or the beginning of the worst thing that has ever happened to me.

By morning, I will wish I had figured that out sooner 

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Kinikanwo Polycarp
that was 5 years ago? 12 years old?
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