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The Alpha's Hidden Clause
The Alpha's Hidden Clause
Author: Riah

The Signing

Author: Riah
last update publish date: 2026-04-02 20:04:47

The contract smelled like old coffee and desperation.

My desperation, specifically. His coffee.

Alpha Kael Blackwood didn't look at me when I walked into his study. He was reading something on his phone. A stock report, maybe. Or a message from someone he actually cared about.

The room was all dark wood and colder than any building had a right to be in October. Rain streaked the floor-to-ceiling windows behind his desk. A fire crackled in the hearth ten feet away, but I couldn't feel it. Couldn't feel anything except the knot in my stomach and the empty growl I'd been ignoring since yesterday.

My hands shook as I stopped in front of his desk.

Not from fear.

From hunger.

I'd given my last protein bar to Lila that morning. Told her I'd eaten already. She was eight. She believed me. That was the worst part.

"Sit." Kael didn't look up.

I sat.

The leather chair swallowed me. I was too small for it. Too small for this room. Too small for the house I'd walked through to get here — all marble floors and crystal chandeliers and silence so thick it felt like drowning.

I was an omega from a dying pack.

He was the Ice Alpha.

This was not going to end well for me.

But Lila needed warm milk before bed. And I was out of options.

"Page three," Kael said, finally setting down his phone. He slid a thick binder across the desk. It landed in front of me with a heavy thud. "Sign there. Initial here, here, and here. You have ten minutes to read it."

Ten minutes.

For a document that looked longer than my arm.

I opened the binder. The pages were warm from his hands. I tried not to think about that.

Omega Surrogacy and Residency Agreement

Between Kael Blackwood, Alpha of the Northridge Pack (hereinafter "Alpha") and Elara Vance, Omega of the Fellshadow Pack (hereinafter "Surrogate")

My eyes glazed over by page two. Legal terms. Medical waivers. Nutritional requirements. A schedule of payments broken down by trimester.

$200,000 upon live birth.

Fifty thousand more if the child carried Alpha genetic markers.

I stopped breathing for a second.

That was more money than my entire pack had seen in three years. More than my father made in his lifetime before the fever took him. More than—

"Eight minutes," Kael said.

He wasn't looking at me. He was looking at the rain. His jaw was sharp enough to cut glass. His hair was dark, almost black, falling across his forehead in a way that looked accidental but probably wasn't. Everything about him was controlled. Calculated. Cold.

They called him the Ice Alpha for a reason.

At nineteen, he'd buried his entire family. Mother. Father. Two younger brothers. A pack rebellion gone wrong. He'd survived because he was in the city that night. Came home to bodies and blood and a title he never wanted.

He hadn't smiled since.

That's what the rumors said, anyway.

I didn't care about rumors. I cared about page three.

"Room and board included," I read aloud, mostly to steady my voice. "Medical care provided. Nutritional plan attached as Exhibit B."

"Yes."

"I can't leave the property without permission."

"No."

"If I break the contract before term completion, I owe back all compensation plus a penalty of—" I did the math in my head. My stomach dropped. "That's more than the original amount."

Kael turned his head. Gray eyes. Pale as winter sky. They landed on me like a physical weight.

"Then don't break the contract."

"I have a sister," I said. The words came out rougher than I meant. "She's eight. I can't just—"

"She'll stay in the guest house. Cook. Clean. She'll be fed and safe and educated." His voice didn't change. Flat. Empty. Like he was reading a grocery list. "You'll see her every evening from six to seven. No more. No less."

I opened my mouth to argue.

"Six minutes," he said.

I shut my mouth.

My eyes scanned the pages. Page seven. Page twelve. Page twenty-three. Nothing jumped out except the numbers. The rules. The cold, clinical language that turned my body into a transaction.

Surrogate agrees to reside in Alpha's residence for duration of term.

Surrogate agrees to submit to monthly medical examinations.

Surrogate agrees to refrain from romantic or physical contact with any individual not approved in writing by Alpha.

I stopped at that one.

"Approved in writing?"

Kael's jaw tightened. Just slightly. The only crack in his armor I'd seen so far.

"You're carrying my heir. You won't be... distracted."

Distracted.

Like I was a pet who might wander into traffic.

I should have been angry. I should have stood up and walked out and found another way. But Lila's face kept flashing behind my eyes. The way she'd smiled this morning when I gave her that protein bar. The way she'd said, "You're the best sister ever," like I'd given her a diamond instead of stale chocolate and oats.

I turned to page forty-seven.

And I stopped reading.

Because my ten minutes were up.

"Time," Kael said.

He slid a pen across the desk. Silver. Heavy. His initials engraved on the side.

I looked at the signature line. Elara Vance.

I looked at the rain.

I looked at the fire I couldn't feel.

And I signed.

The pen scratched against the paper. Too loud in the silence. My hand didn't shake anymore. That was the worst part. I'd gone numb somewhere between page three and the last initial.

Kael took the binder. Didn't read what I'd signed. Just closed it and set it in a drawer and locked it.

"Bedroom's upstairs," he said. "Second door on the left. Don't touch anything in my office."

He walked away.

Didn't ask my name. Didn't tell me his.

I already knew it anyway. Every wolf did.

Kael Blackwood. The Alpha who buried his entire pack at nineteen.

The one who hadn't smiled since.

And now, the father of my unborn child.

God help me.

---

I stood in the doorway of my new bedroom for a full minute before I walked inside.

It was beautiful. Stupidly beautiful. A four-poster bed with white sheets that probably cost more than my entire wardrobe. A window seat overlooking the rain-soaked gardens. A bathroom with a clawfoot tub and towels so soft I wanted to cry.

I didn't deserve this room.

I didn't deserve any of this.

But Lila deserved warm milk. And a bed that wasn't on the floor of our collapsing cabin. And a future that didn't involve watching her big sister starve so she could eat.

So I'd take the beautiful room.

I'd take the cold Alpha.

I'd take the contract and the rules and the way his gray eyes made me feel like prey.

And in nine months, I'd take the money and walk away.

Simple.

Clean.

Impossible.

---

That night, I dreamed of wolves.

Not the peaceful kind. The hunting kind. A pack of them, gray and silent, circling something in the snow. I couldn't see what they were hunting. Could only hear the heartbeat. Fast. Terrified.

Mine.

I woke up gasping.

The room was dark. The rain had stopped. And someone was standing in my doorway.

A silhouette. Broad shoulders. Still as stone.

Kael.

He didn't speak. Didn't move. Just stood there, watching me in the dark, his face unreadable.

My heart pounded against my ribs.

"The hallway light," he said finally. His voice was lower than before. Rougher. "There's a switch by the door. Leave it on if you need it."

Then he was gone.

Footsteps fading down the hallway.

And I was alone in a stranger's house, pregnant with a stranger's child, clutching the sheets like they could save me.

I didn't turn on the light.

But I didn't fall back asleep either.

And somewhere in the darkness, I could have sworn I heard him stop outside my door. Just for a second. Just long enough to listen.

Just long enough to care.

---

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  • The Alpha's Hidden Clause   Chapter 8

    The door clicked shut behind Luna.She leaned against it, pressed her forehead to the cool wood, and tried to remember how to breathe.He knows.He knows about the children.He knows I'm alive.He knows everything.Her hands were shaking. Her chest was tight. The mask she'd worn for five years — the cold, untouchable mask of the Grey Queen — had cracked the moment he'd said her name.Luna.Not Lyna. Not the merchant. Not the stranger.Luna.The girl who had loved him. The girl he'd destroyed. The girl who had crawled out of the fire and built herself into something new.That girl is dead, she told herself. I killed her. I buried her. She's gone.But her heart didn't listen.It never listened."Mom?"She looked up.KJ stood in the middle of the room, arms crossed, jaw set. Behind him, Silas, Rhea, and Ronan were arranged like a tiny army — four pairs of eyes fixed on her with varying degrees of suspicion, curiosity, and barely contained fury."KJ," she said carefully. "I need you to—"

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  • The Alpha's Hidden Clause   Chapter 6

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  • The Alpha's Hidden Clause   Chapter 5

    Three days after the rejectionThe pack house was silent.Not the good kind of silent — the peaceful kind, the sleeping kind. This was the silence of a held breath. Of wolves walking on eggshells. Of a house waiting for its Alpha to shatter.Kael Blackwood hadn't left his father's study since they'd found the body.The room still smelled like Marcus. Leather and whiskey and the metallic undertone of old blood — the blood that had soaked into the floorboards before anyone could clean it out.Throat torn out. Eyes missing.Kael sat in his father's chair.Behind his father's desk.Staring at his father's blood.There was a knock at the door."Go away."The door opened anyway.Damon Cross — Kael's Beta, his best friend since childhood, the only wolf in the pack who wasn't afraid of him — stepped inside. He didn't say anything. Just walked to the whiskey decanter, poured two fingers into a glass, and set it in front of Kael.Kael didn't touch it."You need to eat," Damon said."I need my f

  • The Alpha's Hidden Clause   Chapter 4

    The door didn't just break.It splintered — oak planks snapping like twigs, iron hinges twisting, wood shrapnel spraying across the cabin like shrapnel from a bomb.Celeste moved before the first piece hit the ground.She grabbed me by the collar of my ruined dress and threw me behind the fireplace. My back slammed against the stone. Pain lanced through my spine. The quadruplets kicked in protest — four sharp, angry flutters.Stay down, I told them. Please. Just stay down.I couldn't protect them.I couldn't even protect myself.But I could hide.Celeste stood in the center of the cabin, a knife in each hand, her body a wall between me and the darkness beyond the broken door."Show yourselves," she snarled.They did.Three wolves stepped through the doorway.Not in fur — in flesh. Men. Large. Armed. Their eyes glowed gold in the firelight, and their scent hit me a second later.Nightshade Pack.Kael's wolves.The tallest of them — a brute with a scar splitting his lip and dead eyes th

  • The Alpha's Hidden Clause   Chapter 3

    The fire crackled between us like a living thing. Celeste hadn't moved since she'd spoken those words. The Alpha who killed her. She stood with her back to me, feeding logs into the flames one by one, even though the cabin was already too warm. She was avoiding my eyes. Good, I thought. Because if she looked at me right now, she'd see too much. Fear. Anger. Hunger for answers I'd waited eighteen years to hear. "My mother," I said slowly, "loved an Alpha. Not my father. Someone else. And that Alpha killed her." Celeste's shoulders tensed. "Yes." "Why?" "Because she rejected him first." The words hung in the air like smoke. I pressed my hand to my stomach — felt the quadruplets' heartbeats, steady now, stronger than they had any right to be — and tried to understand. "She rejected him?" I whispered. "But you said he killed her. That doesn't—" "He didn't kill her because she rejected him." Celeste finally turned. Her copper eyes were wet. "He killed her because she came back.

  • The Alpha's Hidden Clause   Chapter 2

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