Mag-log inI wore my mother’s old pantsuit for the meeting at the clinic.
Not because it fit.
Not because it was stylish. And definitely not because it made me look like a woman who had her life together.I wore it because it was the only thing in my entire wardrobe that wasn’t jeans, a hoodie, or a diner uniform that permanently smelled like fried onions.
The pantsuit was a little baggy on me — okay, a lot baggy — but the fabric was sturdy. The kind of sturdy they don’t make anymore. You could probably survive a natural disaster in this thing. Tornado? Fine. Earthquake? Sure. Job interview that might determine whether your mother lives or dies? Absolutely.
I tugged at the sleeves as I walked to my car, trying to convince myself I looked “professional” and put together. The mirror on the visor didn’t help. My hair was doing that thing where it refused to cooperate, and the pantsuit’s shoulder pads made me look like I was about to challenge someone to a duel.
But I didn’t have time to fix any of it.
I had a meeting with Beth in exactly one hour, and according to my phone, the drive to the clinic was one hour and ten minutes.Well. Challenge accepted.
I sent a silent prayer to the traffic gods and gently turned the key in my mom’s old sedan. The engine coughed to life like it was waking up from a coma, but it moved, and that was all I needed. I pulled out into morning rush hour traffic, gripping the wheel like it was the last stable thing in my life.
“Okay,” I muttered to myself. “You’re wearing a pantsuit. You look responsible. You look mature. You look like someone who definitely has her shit together and is perfectly capable of growing a baby for nine months.”
I rehearsed what I’d say to Beth. Something calm. Something professional. Something that didn’t scream I’m desperate, please let me rent out my uterus so I can pay my mother’s medical bills.
I prayed that all my tests would come back healthy.
The crawl of traffic didn’t help my nerves as I watched the minutes pass but not the miles. Despite knowing better, I was not about to be late, so I started weaving in and out of lanes.And then the universe, in its infinite wisdom, decided to spice up my morning — or potentially teach me a lesson.
Because of course it did.
I took a sharp turn, eyeing the side street that I knew would let me cut in front of the traffic and get to the clinic with maybe one minute to spare. I was so proud of myself for thinking I’d make it that I must not have paid enough attention, because I slammed straight into a shiny red sports car.
A shiny red sports car that absolutely did not belong in morning rush hour traffic.
A shiny red sports car that probably cost more than everything I have ever owned, combined. A shiny red sports car that screamed I have money, I have issues, and I want everyone to know both.My sedan barely flinched.
Old sedan: 1 Shiny midlife‑crisis sports car: 0But still, it didn’t look good for me.
We both pulled over to the side, allowing traffic to keep crawling at a snail’s pace with only a dozen or so horns blaring and people cursing at us. Like they were going to move any faster regardless.
The fact that cars were barely moving — and the roar of the sports car’s engine — were the only reasons I didn’t try to make a break for it.
“Well, that’s good,” I muttered, staring at the dent I’d left in the red car’s bumper. “Because I don’t have time for repairs. Or insurance claims. Or… insurance.”
Right. Insurance.
Technically, I didn’t have that anymore. But in my defence, I only used the car for emergencies and to go to the hospital.And getting to this meeting?
Absolutely an emergency.But I was wearing a suit, so I was manifesting that at least I looked like someone who had insurance.
I was still processing the situation when a deep voice exploded behind me. I guess the driver took his sweet time getting out of the car.
“What the fuck, lady?”
Lady?
Oh no.
No, no, no.I turned slowly, eyebrow already raised, blood rushing to my ears.
“Lady?” I repeated, offended on a spiritual level. “I’m pretty sure this midlife‑crisis penis extension of yours — which has no business being on the road during morning rush hour, might I add — is a clear indication that you are older than I am.”
His jaw dropped in disbelief.
Good.
Let it.He was tall.
Of course he was tall. Didn’t even look that old, which made me even angrier in an irrational way. Tall in the way that made me feel like I’d accidentally wandered into a different species’ territory. Broad shoulders, expensive suit, hair that looked like it had been styled by angels or a very well‑paid barber.And angry.
Very angry.He stepped closer, and I had to tilt my head back to keep eye contact. His eyes were sharp — the kind that could cut glass or make a grown man apologise for breathing too loudly.
Oh God. He’s not going to hit me, is he?
Me and my big mouth.“Do you always talk like that,” he asked, voice low, “or is today special?”
And just like that, I was back to being angry.
Who does he think he is? You know what? Screw it.“Oh, today is very special,” I shot back, practically gearing up for a fight. “I’m late, I’m stressed, and I’m trying to get to a meeting that might literally save my mother’s life. So forgive me if I’m not in the mood to apologise to your overpriced toy.”
His nostrils flared.
Mine did too, but only because I was trying not to cry from the stress and the sudden adrenaline crash.
He seemed to soften — just a fraction — at the mention of my mom.He looked at the dent again, then at my car, then at me scowling.
“You hit my car.”
“And your car hit my car,” I countered. “It’s called equality.”
He blinked.
I don’t think he was used to people talking back to him. Or being as rational as I pretended to be while spewing totally irrational words. Or maybe he wasn’t used to people talking to him at all without bowing or offering him a sacrifice. I must admit I had a weird urge to bow or curtsy.“Do you even have insurance?” he asked.
I opened my mouth.
Closed it. Opened it again.Busted.
I’d rather go back to fighting.“Define insurance.”
He dragged a hand down his face like he was reconsidering every decision that had led him to this moment.
You and me both, buddy.
Before he could say anything else, my phone buzzed.
Beth.
Shit.
I panicked, shoved past him, and practically sprinted toward the street I’d been eyeing earlier.
“Hey!” he called after me. “We’re not done here!”
I didn’t look back.
I didn’t have time. I had twenty minutes to get to the clinic. Twenty minutes to not ruin my entire future.I abandoned the car and ran the rest of the way, panting, sweating, and praying the pantsuit didn’t split down the back. My mother’s old suit was sturdy, but even fabric has limits.
The city blurred around me — honking cars, people shouting, the smell of exhaust and burnt coffee. My lungs burned. My legs felt like wet noodles. The shoulder pads bounced with every step like they were mocking me.
I reached the clinic doors, breathless, hair sticking to my forehead, heart pounding.
I had no idea if the man I’d just verbally assaulted — and whose car I’d bashed — would call the police on me. I refused to think about my car being towed away and the hefty fine I’d have to pay to get it back.
All I could think about was that this was my only chance to get enough money to make sure Mom got another shot at life — and maybe have some change left to deal with today’s repercussions.
I grabbed the door handle, took one last shaky breath, and stepped inside — straight into the blast of cold air‑conditioning.
I woke up far earlier than any sane person should, blinking up at the unfamiliar ceiling and needing a full ten seconds to remember where I was, why I was here, and how on earth my life had spiralled into a situation where I was sleeping in a billionaire’s mansion with a bell cord by the door like I’d accidentally wandered into a period drama. The room was quiet—too quiet—the kind of silence that made you aware of your own heartbeat, and for a moment I lay there wondering if I should get up, stay put, or simply pretend I was invisible until someone told me what the morning protocol was supposed to be.Before I could decide, a knock sounded on the door—firm, controlled, unmistakably Derek. I just knew it was him.I opened it to find the man standing there, looking like he’d been carved from stone and polished by insomnia. His shirt was crisp, his hair slightly mussed in a way that suggested he’d run his hands through it too many times, and his expression was the kind that made you inst
DerekHe couldn’t sleep.He hadn’t expected to, not with Josephine under his roof for the first time and his wolf pacing like a caged animal beneath his skin. The creature was restless, prowling, pushing, snarling at shadows that weren’t there. Derek suspected the beast inside him was upset simply because he’d brought another woman here.He stood in his office, staring out at the dark stretch of forest behind the manor. The moonlight cut through the trees in silver shards, but even the night couldn’t calm him.His wolf was too loud.Too alert.Too focused.On her.He hated it almost as much as his wolf hated Josephine.He didn’t understand it, and he sure as hell didn’t trust his wolf not to do anything stupid. The beast inside him refused to comprehend human subtleties like contracts or surrogacy arrangements. Wolves didn’t do nuance. Wolves did instinct — and right now that instinct screamed that Derek was replacing his fated mate.Maybe once the insemination took place, his wolf wo
The moment Derek disappeared down the hallway, the silence of the mansion settled around me like a heavy velvet curtain. Not oppressive — just… big. Too big. The kind of silence that made you hyper‑aware of your own breathing. And mine was laboured. But since all the medical tests I’d done for this surrogacy gig came back declaring me in excellent condition, I wasn’t worried about my momentary inability to breathe normally.Instead, I stood in the doorway of my new room, staring at the bed like it might swallow me whole.This was my life now. Temporarily. Allegedly.But I had the strange, creeping feeling I’d be here for at least nine months more.I dropped my shoulder bag on the floor and sat on the edge of the mattress. It dipped under my weight like a cloud giving way. I bounced once. Then again. Then a third time because I was an adult and absolutely allowed to test the bounce‑factor of a billionaire’s bed. Needless to say, I have never experienced opulence like this.I laughed at
The drive out of the city felt like slipping into another world — one with cleaner air, wider skies, and roads that didn’t feel like they were actively plotting my demise. The further we went, the more the landscape shifted from concrete and noise to rolling fields and clusters of trees that looked like they belonged in a postcard. It truly was magical and it will absolutely make my commute into the city suck less.Then we passed through a village and I’m sure my eyes doubled in size.This was not just any village, but a quaint little country village with a surprisingly posh feel — the kind of place where the bakery sold croissants that cost more than my electricity bill, and the flower shop had bouquets arranged like they were auditioning for Vogue. Even the dogs being walked looked expensive.“Where… are we?” I asked, pressing my forehead lightly to the window.“Blackwood Hollow,” Declan said. “Derek’s territory.”“Territory,” I repeated, because that word carried weight. “Like… may
DerekDerek Blackwell didn’t like hospitals.He never had.Knowing his surrogate had a mother so ill she practically lived in one did something unpleasant to his insides — a twisting, tightening sensation he refused to name. And though he would never admit it aloud, it chipped away at the anger he’d been holding onto since the accident.Flashbacks of Freya — his mate, his Luna — living her short life either in a hospital bed or in the bedroom at home that resembled one, clawed at the back of his mind. Machines. Monitors. The quiet beeping that still haunted his sleep. The way she’d smiled through pain she never deserved.Not many knew the whole story.Most of the pack certainly didn’t.Freya had been ill all her life. When they discovered they were mates, she had offered Derek an easy out — a chance to reject the bond and live a long, uncomplicated life. But he had refused. He could never reject the gift of a mate, even if fate had been cruel in the giving.The witch — Freya’s grandaunt
The flat looked even smaller than usual when I walked in, as if the walls themselves were shrinking in anticipation of my departure or trying to offer some last‑minute comfort for my ordeal. It felt like the place already knew I was abandoning it for some fancy house hidden away in the woods, somewhere far quieter and far stranger than anything I’d ever known. The familiar clutter, the soft hum of the fridge, the faint scent of my lavender candle — all of it suddenly felt like a life I was stepping out of rather than living in.The air felt heavier too, thick with the weight of everything I hadn’t processed yet, and my nerves were still buzzing from the attack earlier. My hands shook when I tried to lock the door behind me, and for a moment I just stood there, forehead pressed to the wood, wondering if I should have gone to the Police like a sensible adult. The thought alone made my stomach twist. Sensible adults didn’t freeze, didn’t panic, didn’t run. Sensible adults didn’t feel l
JosephineBy the time my shift ended, my feet were killing me, my back ached, and I smelled like grease and desperation. The kind of smell that clung to your soul, not just your clothes. The kind of smell that made people on the bus subtly lean away from you and pretend it was because they needed m
Josephine I didn’t expect the results of the millions of tests they ran on me to come back so quickly. They poked, prodded, scanned, questioned, and siphoned off what felt like half the blood in my body — and I barely flinched. I’d been terrified of the psychological evaluation, convinced they’d d
Derek Derek Blackwell already regretted leaving pack land. The city pressed in on him the moment he crossed the boundary — noise, fumes, too many humans packed into too little space. Cars crawled along the road like wounded animals, horns blaring, engines whining. Morning rush hour. His persona
The blast of cold air‑conditioning hit me like a slap from God Himself. My lungs burned, my legs trembled, and I was sweating in places I didn’t know could sweat. The pantsuit was clinging to me like a damp funeral shroud.Act normal, Jo. Act. Normal.I straightened my spine, smoothed my hair (whi







