LOGINPOPPY’S POV
I should have kept my mouth shut. That was the thought running on a loop in my head as I stood in the doorway of my father's study.
But I couldn’t just sit back and do nothing.
I stepped inside without asking and sucked in a deep breath.
"Dad." My voice came out smaller than I wanted it to. "Please, reconsider your decision.”
He didn't look up.
"The arrangement with the Rockwell family has already been confirmed," he said, turning a page. "Jude called this morning and we gave our word."
My body trembled. "You gave your word about my life without asking me-"
"You forfeited the right to be asked." Now he looked up and his eyes were cold in a way that was somehow worse than the anger from earlier. "What's on that video, Poppy, is enough to disgrace this entire family. Do you understand what people are saying?”
He snarled, slamming his fist against the table. “The Beta's daughter, sneaking into a stranger's hotel room the same night her mate rejected her." He shook his head slowly. "You're lucky the Rockwell’s are still willing."
"Lucky," I repeated.
He huffed. "Jude has agreed to overlook it. He was gracious about the situation."
I could almost see my father framing it as a selling point. ‘Our daughter is already humbled, so she'll be grateful and she won't cause trouble.”
I felt sick to my stomach. “You used it to bargain me off."
He shrugged but my grief was slowly turning into anger again.
"You sold me." My voice cracked on the last word, which I hated. "You took the worst night of my life and you used it to make a deal?"
My father set his pen down. "You'll be moved to the east room tonight," he said, like I hadn't spoken at all. "Until the formal meeting with the Rockwell’s next week, we think it's better if you're… kept close."
No. No. No!
"You won't be attending pack gatherings. You won't be leaving the property unaccompanied and we'll need to make certain you're-" He paused, choosing his words carefully, “presentable to their family.”
I stared at him in disbelief. "You're going to lock me up," I said slowly.
He picked up his pen again."You're dismissed, Poppy."
I stood there for a moment but he didn’t look up. The only acknowledgement was a dismissive wave of his hand.
I sucked in another deep breath, then turned around and walked out.
My mother was in the hallway, which told me she was listening. She didn't even pretend otherwise.
She just looked at me with those dark eyes and said, "It's for your own good. You've always been too much trouble on your own."
I walked past her without answering and in my room, I sat on the edge of the bed and pressed my palms flat on my knees and made myself breathe.
They were going to lock me in the east room and then next week some stranger old enough to be my father was going to come and look me over, and they were going to hand me to him like something wrapped in paper with an apology note attached.
I looked at my window and I thought very carefully.
“I can’t do this.” I decided and I got up, pulled my bag from under the bed, and started packing.
I didn't take much. Just a change of clothes, my phone, and the small amount of cash I kept tucked in my journal.
I locked my door from inside, slow enough so the click wouldn’t echo. Then I sighed and walked toward the window, easing it open.
My room was on the second floor, but the oak tree my father had always threatened to cut down grew close enough to the wall that it wasn't a terrible drop to the first branch.
I climbed it often so it wasn’t much of a hassle. The only trick was doing it during the day with a backpack.
“Alright, Poppy.” I muttered to myself. “You can do this.”
I swung my bag over one shoulder and climbed out. The air was cold and the sound of music echoing from the living room was a relief.
I dropped from the last branch, landed in a crouch in the damp grass, and stayed still for a moment, listening.
There was nothing.
So I stood up and raced like my life depended on it. I shrugged on the baseball cap I took and kept my face fixed on the floor.
I couldn’t afford anyone seeing me. I just had to make it to the pack’s border and find a way into the neighboring village.
I was twenty metres from the border when I heard footsteps behind me.
I didn't stop walking even as my heartbeat was climbing in a way I was trying very hard to ignore.
The footsteps got closer and I held my bag tighter, preprared to launch into a sprint when something hit my head from behind.
I yelped, tripping over my foot as the ground rushed up to meet my face. Suddenly, a strong arm wrapped around my waist and there was a sharp smell of something chemical pressed against my face.
I grabbed at the arm above me and tried to scream and it came out muffled and small until I finally went under.
********
I woke up feeling cold, it was seeping up through whatever I was lying on, and settling into my joints. My cheek was pressed against a hard surface, and for a strange, half-conscious moment I thought I was on the floor of my own room.
Then I heard the whispering of unfamilar voices and I opened my eyes.
The room was lit by a single bulb hanging from a low ceiling. I noticed the concrete walls, and lack of windows, even the metal door at the far end.
The floor was bare and I was not alone. There were other girls, maybe six of them, scattered around the room in various states.
Some were slumped against the wall, others curled on their sides, and there was one with her knees pulled to her chest, staring at nothing.
What the hell? I remembered being attacked while running away from home but…
I sat up quickly, instantly regretting it as I grabbed my head, a pained grunt leaving my throat.
"Don't stand too fast," said a voice near my left and I turned to see a girl my age with dark circles under her eyes and dried cut above her eyebrow. "They drugged us. It takes a while to clear."
"Where are we?" I asked.
She looked at me for a moment. "An auction house," she said slowly. "You know what that means."
I did.
Every pack had whispered about it. The underground trade and girls who disappeared from border towns with no news of them after.
The realization that I was now one of those girls hit me like I truck and I sank further into the floor.
I’d been kidnapped, and now I was going to get sold like a cattle… the same thing I was running from still caught up to me.
I really did have the shittiest luck.
GREY'S POVThe camera light went off and I set down the script I hadn't used. I didn't need it. Talking to a camera wasn't difficult when you'd spent fifteen years making people believe exactly what you wanted them to believe. Penelope was already on her tablet. "I'll push it through the pack network first, then the wider city channels.”I nodded, steepling my fingers together. "Good. And the story?""Newlywed wife, overwhelmed after the wedding night incident, stepped out without telling anyone." She looked up. "I'll make sure it's the only version people hear."I leaned forward, my brows scrunched together. "Handle any outlet that tries to run something different.""Already have three on standby," she said. I nodded. "Go."She left but Cade remained where he was. I walked to my desk and picked up the next file but Cade stayed still. I sighed and waved at him dismissively. “Out with it.”"The council contacted me an hour ago," he said instantly. "They want an emergency meeting."
POPPY’S POVThe taxi smelled like pine air freshener and the driver had been talking since I got in. I didn't mind. Silence would have made me think too hard."... and then my sister-in-law shows up to the wedding in white. White!” He huffed, shaking his head vigorously. “Can you imagine? My wife hasn't forgiven her to this day and that was six years ago!”"Wow," I said, which was the fifth time I had said it."Six years! Women remember everything, I tell you." He glanced at me in the rearview mirror. My cap was pulled low and the sunglasses were big enough to cover half my face. If he thought it was strange, he hadn't mentioned it. "So what about you? You said you're heading to the border?"I bobbed my head. "Yes."He nodded then grinned. "Running away with someone?”I blinked."I'm not judging," he said quickly. "My cousin did the same thing. Family didn't approve of the girl, so one night…" He snapped his fingers. "Gone. They have three kids now. Beautiful family.""Something li
GREY'S POVI had booked the clinic out for the day and then made every staff member swear confidentiality.The waiting area was eerily quiet except for the hum of the AC and Annalise sitting across from me with her hands folded in her lap, pretending to look calm.I scrolled through my emails with nonchalance."Did you have to do it like this?" she said finally.I shot her a glance. "Like what?""Book out the entire clinic.” She hissed, then shook her head. “It's humiliating."I returned my gaze to my phone. “Maybe you've forgotten but we're both married to different people, Annalise. I can't afford a scandal.” She went quiet. Just as the doctor came, I stood and shook his hand."Thank you for accommodating this," I said. "I know it was short notice.""Not at all." He glanced briefly at Annalise, then back to me. "Is she the one?” I bobbed my head. “How soon can I get the result?”“Before the end of today,” he said, then turned to gesture for his nurses. “Take her to the exam room.”
POPPY’S POVGrey wasn't home but the moment I told Cade everything, he immediately pulled out his phone then called out for Penelope and Lana."Lock down the east wing," he said into his phone, already walking. "I want you to pull the CCTV from the last three hours and get someone on the perimeter check now."Penelope arrived two minutes later, slightly out of breath, and wrapped both arms around me before she even fully entered the room."I've got you," she said. "You're okay."I held onto her, still holding the card even though my hands hadn't fully stopped shaking.Lana came in behind her and took one long look at me. “I heard what happened. Are you okay?”I shook my head and sucked in a sharp breath. She patted my shoulder just as Cade returned, his brows furrowed together."Tell me exactly what happened," he said. "Walk me through it."I nodded and I told him about coming upstairs, kicking off my shoes, lying down and finding the envelope. I told him I had thought it was from Pe
POPPY’S POVGrey's body went stiff the moment Edric said the words ‘unfinished business’. Whatever it meant, it was something serious. I looked at Edric then back at Grey.What just happened? "Continue what you were doing," Grey said, and his voice was perfectly normal.He wasn't looking at me. He was half-turned toward Edric, already moving. "We'll talk later."And then he just left.I stood in the middle of the training ground holding my staff and watched the two of them walk away.And I had absolutely no idea what to do with the feeling sitting in my chest. I stood there for another ten seconds. Then I put the staff down and followed them.I made it approximately forty feet before Penelope jumped right in front of me, nearly scaring me half to death. “Dammit, Penny!” I gasped, pressing a hand to my chest. “You nearly gave me a heart attack.”She ignored me, gathering my hands together and squeezing. "You missed breakfast again. Poppy, you cannot keep skipping meals, your body n
GREY'S POVThe council meeting was giving me a headache before it even properly started.Twelve people talking at once will do that."... completely unacceptable that Blackhawk operatives were able to infiltrate a secured event!”"... the perimeter protocols clearly failed and someone needs to answer for it!""... at a wedding of all places!”I sat at the head of the table and let them go for exactly three minutes. That was my limit. After three minutes, I pressed two fingers to my temple and said, loudly enough to cut through the noise. "One at a time." I gave them a hard look. “Please.” They fell silent and I sighed. The truth was I was just as angry as they were. More, probably, because it was my wedding and my security that had failed. Three Blackhawk operatives loose in a hotel full of pack leaders and their families was not a small thing. The fact that we contained it before anyone important got hurt was the only reason I was sitting in this room instead of burning somethi
POPPY’S POVAnother gunshot echoed and I couldn't move. That was the thing nobody told you about real fear. And it was not the kind that came in dreams or nightmares that dissolved the moment you opened your eyes. It was the real kind that emptied your head and turned you into something that ju
GREY'S POVI read the report twice but it didn't change the words and slowly, a knot started to form in my throat. DNA confirmation. Paternity probability: 99.97%. The clinic's letterhead was real and the signature at the bottom belonged to a doctor I'd heard of. None of that meant anything,
POPPY’S POVThe first thing I noticed when I woke up was the light. It came in sideways through the curtains, too bright for how my head felt, and for exactly three beautiful seconds I didn't remember anything. Then I rolled over, and the other side of the bed was empty. The pillow still held the f
POPPY’S POVThe universe had a sick sense of humour.I always knew that but tonight, it decided to really prove its point.My name is Poppy Voss, and I was rejected by my mate in front of half the pack.Not in a way that would let me pretend it hadn't happened when I woke up tomorrow morning with p







