LOGINThe 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 (which only made it worse), and tried to walk like a woman who had not just abandoned her car in the middle of the street after verbally assaulting a stranger.
The receptionist looked up, blinked twice, and plastered on a polite smile that said I’m paid to pretend this is fine.
“Good morning. Welcome to the—”
“I have a meeting,” I wheezed, sounding like a dying accordion. “With Beth. I’m Josephine.”
Her eyes flicked over me — the sweat, the hair, the pantsuit that had given up on life — and she nodded slowly, like she was trying to decide whether to call security or a paramedic.
“Of course. I’ll let her know you’ve arrived.”
She didn’t even ask for my name again. That’s how much of a disaster I looked like.
I sat down in the waiting area, trying to discreetly dab sweat off my forehead with my sleeve. It didn’t work. The sleeve was also sweaty. Everything was sweaty. I was a human soup.
“Josephine?”
I jumped.
Beth stood in the doorway, smiling brightly — and, thank God, without lipstick on her teeth — until she took in the state of me.
“Heeey,” she said.
Her face did not match her words. She looked more like she wanted to ask what the actual hell happened to you?
“I ran,” I explained, as if that made anything better.
“From where?” she asked, horrified. “The next town?”
I thought I saw her hiding a smile, but I couldn’t be sure. Spots were still dancing in my vision.
I opened my mouth to answer, but before I could, another voice cut in.
“Beth, is this our new candidate?”
I turned — and immediately forgot how to breathe.
The man walking toward us was wearing a white coat, but not the cheap kind. This was the tailored, expensive, I’m‑a‑doctor‑but‑also‑someone’s‑fantasy kind. McSteamy and McDreamy all wrapped in one. He had warm brown eyes, a jawline that could slice bread, and a smile that made my brain short‑circuit.
Weirdly, the face of the man whose car I’d ruined half an hour earlier popped into my head, and my first thought was that he was somehow even more handsome than the handsome doctor.
That’s it. I’m never running again. Apparently, it causes brain damage.
Dr. Adrian Hale.
The lead physician for all IVF procedures at the agency.
He finished introducing himself and was now awkwardly waiting with his hand extended.
I’d seen his picture on the website.
It did not do him justice.
Not even close.
Shit. Wake up, Jo. Breathe.
“Hi,” he said again, his hand still suspended in the air. “You must be Josephine.”
I stared at his hand.
Then at his face.
Then at his hand again.
Why was it so… clean?
Why were his nails perfect?
Why did he smell like eucalyptus and competence?
I finally shook his hand, and my palm made a disgusting squelch sound because of the sweat.
Kill me.
Just kill me now.
His smile didn’t falter, but his eyebrows did a tiny, polite jump.
“Long morning?” he asked gently.
“I hit a car,” I blurted.
Beth made a choking noise.
Dr. Hale blinked. “Oh. Are you hurt?”
“No. The car is. The man is. Emotionally. Possibly financially.”
Beth pinched the bridge of her nose.
Dr. Hale… laughed.
Actually laughed.
A warm, deep, unfairly attractive laugh that made my stomach flip.
“Well,” he said, “you’re here now. That’s what matters.”
No, sir. What matters is that I am one minor inconvenience away from crying on this very expensive‑looking floor.
“Let’s get you started,” he continued. “We’ll run your vitals, do a quick exam, and then I’ll walk you through the medical side of the surrogacy process.”
He gestured for me to follow him.
I did.
Like a duckling imprinting on the first warm thing it sees — though the face of a dangerous vulture still haunted my mind.
Beth walked behind us, whispering, “Please, please, please don’t say anything else.”
I whispered back, “I make no promises.”
This time, I definitely saw the corners of her mouth twitch.
We entered a small exam room. Dr. Hale motioned for me to sit on the table. I tried, but the paper stuck to the back of my thighs because of the sweat, and when I shifted, it made a loud ripping sound.
Fantastic.
I was now both sweaty and noisy.
Dr. Hale pretended not to notice.
Bless him.
“So,” he said, putting on gloves, “any recent illnesses? Surgeries? Chronic conditions?”
“Just chronic bad luck,” I muttered.
He smiled again — the kind of smile that made me want to confess crimes I hadn’t committed.
“Everything looks good so far,” he said after checking my vitals. “Your heart rate is a little elevated.”
“I ran,” I reminded him.
“From where?” he asked, amused. “The next town?”
Beth snorted. “That’s what I asked.”
“Great minds,” Dr. Hale said, winking.
Beth blushed.
The tiniest bit.
I glared at both of them.
Dr. Hale stepped closer, gently lifting my chin to check my pupils. His fingers were warm. His face was close. Too close. Close enough that I could see the tiny gold flecks in his eyes.
My brain melted.
“Your breathing is still fast,” he murmured. “Try to relax.”
Relax?
RELAX?
Sir, I am wearing a pantsuit no woman should be wearing in this decade, I hit a millionaire’s car, I abandoned my vehicle like a criminal, and you are standing three inches from my face smelling like a spa and good decisions.
Relax is not on the menu.
He stepped back, scribbling something on his clipboard.
“You’re doing great,” he said warmly.
I nearly burst into tears.
Beth clapped her hands. “Perfect! While the labs come back, we’ll move on to the psychological evaluation.”
Oh good.
A test to determine whether I’m mentally stable.
I was absolutely going to fail that.
Dr. Hale opened the door for me. “I’ll see you again in a bit, Josephine.”
He said my name like it was something soft.
Something worth saying.
I couldn’t help the goofy smile.
I walked out of the room on shaky legs, trying not to think about how flustered I was.
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
I hurried to get to work even though my world had basically shifted off its axis after meeting Derek — officially, that is. I think part of me was still in shock, and I dreaded the moment the full implications would hit.The diner smelled like burnt coffee, fried onions, and the kind of hopelessnes
The door clicked shut behind Beth and Corrine, and suddenly the room felt like it had shrunk to the size of a shoebox. A shoebox containing me… and a very large, very irritated man. To say I was reconsidering a lot of my life choices would be an understatement.Derek didn’t speak at first, which
“Wait, just… just hear me out. I can explain.”The words flew out of my mouth before my brain could stop them. The room froze. For a brief second everything was still, suspended in time. You could have heard a mosquito sneeze.Beth’s pen hovered mid‑air. Corrine’s smile sharpened like she’d bee
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







