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The Alpha's Hidden Heir
The Alpha's Hidden Heir
Author: May Che

Chapter 1: The Gold Door

Author: May Che
last update publish date: 2026-07-02 01:26:16

The first thing Finn Foster understands is that his body no longer feels entirely his own.

He wakes on a cold marble floor, his cheek pressed against polished black stone, his breath coming too quickly to control. For several confused seconds, he cannot place the room around him. Heat moves beneath his skin in slow, frightening waves, too deep to be fever and too deliberate to be ordinary weakness. His shirt clings damply to his back. His hands shake when he pushes himself upright, and the elegant room tilts as if the walls are quietly sliding out of place.

A chandelier burns above him, scattering gold light across dark wood panels and expensive furniture that looks untouched by ordinary human life. Heavy curtains hide the windows. A leather sofa sits near the fireplace, smooth and empty, while a gold-handled door gleams across the room with a wolf’s head carved into the metal. Everything is beautiful, and that beauty makes the fear worse, because Finn knows rich people like to hide ugly things behind polished surfaces.

He stares at the gold door until memory returns in jagged pieces: The side entrance of the Harborline Club, the woman at the desk accepting the sealed envelope without meeting his eyes, the message promising forty dollars in cash if he delivers the envelope to a private lounge before midnight. Then the corridor, the sharp scent of expensive cologne, a hand clamping over his mouth, and the sudden sting of a needle biting into the inside of his arm before he can turn.

Finn looks down and sees the tiny red mark near his elbow.

Fear tightens through his stomach so violently that he nearly bends over. When he touches the mark, the small pressure sends a shiver through him that has nothing to do with simple pain. The sensation is worse because it wakes something hidden and unwanted inside his body, something he fights every day with pills, discipline, and silence.

“No,” he whispers, his voice rough from panic and thirst.

Finn is twenty-four years old, and hiding what he is has become the main rule of his life. Male Omegas are rare in Riverton, and powerful families describe them with soft, dangerous words. Precious. Blessed. Valuable. Finn knows what those words mean when Alphas use them. Precious things are guarded because someone wants to own them. Valuable things receive a price before they receive protection. Rare things disappear from poor neighborhoods and return in private registries with new names.

That is why Finn takes suppressants even when they make him sick. That is why he avoids Alpha districts, keeps his scent muted, and never lets a clinic enter his real second gender into any official file. He survives by being forgettable, quiet, and careful.

The heat rising inside him now is too powerful to come from one missed dose.

Someone forced this into him.

Finn drags himself toward the nearest table and grips its edge until his knuckles ache. His legs tremble as he stands, but stubborn anger pushes through the weakness. He is not delicate, and he hates the way the drug tries to make him feel helpless. He knows hunger, exhaustion, unpaid bills, and fear. He knows how to stand straight when his body wants to fold.

This is different, though, and the difference terrifies him.

The heat not only weakens him. It makes the air feel intimate against his skin. The collar of his shirt scratches his throat with unbearable softness. The fabric at his waist brushes him with such sensitivity that his face burns with humiliation. Beneath the scents of leather, smoke, and old whiskey, he smells Alphas beyond the door, and their presence presses into the room like a threat seeping under the wood.

Voices come from the hallway.

“He should be ready by now.”

Finn freezes, his fingers tightening around the table edge. The voice is male, low, and disturbingly bored, as if the man outside were discussing a bottle of wine instead of a person trapped behind a locked door. Another man answers with a quiet laugh that makes Finn’s blood turn cold.

“Do not rush it. The drug needs time. A male Omega in full heat is worth more if he can still look pretty when the buyer arrives.”

The word buyer seems to empty the room of air.

Finn moves before panic can paralyze him. He tears open drawers, searches under cushions, and checks every polished surface for something sharp or heavy enough to use as a weapon. Whoever prepares the room knows what to remove. The lamp is fixed into the wall, the phone is gone, the bottles behind the bar sit locked away, and the fireplace tools are bolted into place like decoration in a hotel lobby.

Only a crystal tumbler on a small silver tray seems to have been overlooked.

Finn snatches it up and strikes it against the marble edge of the bar. The first blow rings through the room. The second cracks the glass. The third shatters it into bright, vicious pieces, one of which slices across his palm. Pain flashes through his hand, clean and sharp enough to steady him for a moment. He welcomes it because pain belongs to him, and the heat does not.

He grips the largest shard and turns back toward the door.

Outside, one of the men laughs again, slower this time, as though Finn’s fear is exactly what he has been waiting to hear.

“The buyer will like that fight in him,” the man says.

Finn presses the glass shard tighter into his palm, lets the sting sharpen his thoughts, and lifts his chin toward the gold door.

If they open it, he will make them bleed before they take him.

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