LOGINElena’s POV
Six Years Later… “Mommy, wake up! It’s past 8!” A chorus of chattering voices broke through the fog of my sleep, followed by a shower of soft kisses and tiny, energetic hands. “Let’s go for the tickle, it always works,” Caleb’s mischievous voice commanded. I cracked my eyes open, giggling as six small hands began a coordinated assault on my ribs. “Okay, okay! Mommy’s awake!” They cheered, tumbling over one another like a litter of pups; which, in a way, they were. My heart swelled as I looked at them: Colin, Caleb, and Cindy; my triplets, and my reason for breathing. They sat on my bed, grinning with a mix of human innocence and a predatory spark in their eyes that I prayed every day would stay hidden. “How are my little angels this morning?” I asked, pulling them into a massive hug. “We’re hungry!” they echoed in perfect unison. For a moment, I forgot the nightmare; the forest, the pack, the screams, the memory of fleeing the pack six years ago that still haunted me in my sleep. Six years, I had spent building a wall between Dr. Elena Willow and the rankless orphan who had been discarded like trash. “Mommy, there’s a mailman at the door,” Colin announced, his ears twitching. At six years old, his hearing was already sharper than a normal human’s. “Okay, angels, mommy needs to get the door. Can you please get off me?” I asked with a smile. I watched them scramble out of the room before I threw on a robe and headed downstairs. At the door stood Robin, our local mailman, but more than that, he was a neighbor who respected the quiet doctor who lived on the corner. He looked tired and worried. “Good morning , Dr. Willow. Letters for you,” he said, handing over two envelopes. “Thank you, Robin. Is everything okay? You look like you haven't slept.” He sighed, his shoulders sagging. “It’s my daughter, Tessa. She’s been burning up with a fever since yesterday. I was hoping… well, I know you’re busy, but could you check on her?” “No worries, Robin. Expect me soon,” I promised. His face brightened instantly. “Thank you, Dr. Willow.” As he left, the triplets swarmed me again, pulling at my robe. “Tessa is sick?” Cindy asked, her face falling into a pout. “That’s why she couldn't play with us yesterday. Can you help her, Mommy?” “Don’t worry, my love. I’ll go and check on her. She’ll be back on her feet soon,” I promised. Their little faces lit up with smiles, proud of their "smart doctor mommy." I watched him walk away, and a pang of bittersweet pride hit me. After fleeing the West-wash Pack, I had to erase every trace of my past. I moved to the human suburbs, I had to erase the "Elena" who was called worthless and become "Dr. Willow." I had inherited my father’s healing skills, and over the years, I had honed them until word of my talent spread across several states. Mr. Sinclair had taken me in, and lent me the funds to start anew, helping me secure a clinic where I could treat both humans and the occasional rogue wolves in secret. But a quiet fear always lingered. My children were nearing the age where their wolf traits would surface. My goal was simple: pay off my debt, then take my babies and travel the world. I wanted to give them the life I could only dream of as a child. Then, my breath caught. The first envelope bore an emblem that made my blood run cold. The West-wash Pack. My eyes darted outside the window, scanning the street for any sign of danger, any hint that I had been found. My hands trembled as I opened it. “Elena. It has been six years since your disappearance. I hereby summon you to the pack at once. I need to know you are alive.” — Alpha Zack. I scoffed at the paper, as a bitter laugh escaped my throat. He wanted to "know if I was alive"? After six years of silence? After the trial he surely wanted to put me through because of Tiana? Then, I opened the second letter, it was addressed to Dr. Willow. My pulse quickened. It was also the West-wash Pack, inviting the famed "Dr. W" to treat their failing Luna. ‘They knew of my reputation?’ That should have been impossible. I never showed my face to werewolves; I never left a scent. Fear and panic surged through me. What if this is a trap? A tug at my dress yanked me out of my spiraling thoughts. “Mommy? Are you okay? You’re speaking to yourself,” Caleb asked, wide-eyed. His words pulled me back to reality. I blinked, grounding myself. I looked at their faces; miniature versions of the man who had just summoned me. If Tiana was Luna now, and she discovered Zack had illegitimate children... she would kill them. “Yes, Mommy’s fine,” I whispered, bending down to hug them tightly. “Just going over some notes.” “I want to be a doctor just like you, Mommy,” Cindy giggled. Her words warmed my heart, but my resolve was already hardening. I wouldn't let Zack or Tiana anywhere near them. Whether Zack knew who Dr. Willow was or not didn't matter. I couldn't risk it. I must protect them, no matter what. Even if it costs me everything. The letters lay on the counter, calling me back to a past I had worked so hard to escape. My job, my children, my life, all of it depended on my next move. I picked up my phone and dialed Mr. Sinclair. “I need you to take care of my children for a few days,” I said firmly.Elena’s POVNathan’s words hung in the air, it was a light, almost teasing contrast to the suffocating dread that had been squeezing my lungs.I tried to summon a professional smile, but my heart was still hammering against my ribs. "I could say the same, Dr. Hayes."Before I could say anything else, Mrs. Evans gestured toward the open door of her office. "Now that we're all here, please, come inside."Caleb stood up slowly. I watched him closely, my medical instincts overriding my anxiety for a brief second. He kept his left hand shoved deep into his uniform pocket, and his shoulder was high and tense. I could see the subtle tremor in his forearm. The phantom pain was flaring up. To Caleb's traumatized nervous system, that hand didn't feel cured; it felt like a ten-pound block of solid stone, cold, heavy, and agonizingly stiff. It was a severe nerve involvement, his brain desperately clinging to the memory of the petrification. He wasn't hiding his hand to keep people from seeing
Elena’s POVI swallowed hard, closing my eyes. I didn't mean... I wasn't... No. I wasn't replacing Zack, no one ever could. No one in this shiny, busy city would ever have survived together.I exhaled slowly, letting my hand drop from the collar. "You're still my home, Zack."The stone remained warm against my skin, beating steadily, as if someone beyond the northern horizon had heard me.By the time I left the hospital, the afternoon sun had begun its slow descent toward the grey horizon of the ocean. The city buzzed with the frantic energy of rush-hour traffic, the horns and engines were a dull, distant hum behind the quiet protection of my car windows.My mind was already running through the evening's checklist. I still needed to stop by the market for groceries. Colin had asked for another bottle of heavy-duty engine degreaser yesterday; I still had no idea how one teenager managed to go through so much of the stuff on that old Ford. Cindy had mentioned needing more hot glue and
Elena's POVThe medical library was my favorite room in the hospital. It wasn't because of the books, but it was the silence.Not the heavy, suffocating silence of the mountain after a hunt, nor the lonely silence that settled over the house after the triplets had gone to school. This silence was different; It hummed with purpose. Every shelf held decades of people trying to understand why the human body betrayed itself.It felt... hopeful.I slid another journal back into its place on the shelf, as my finger lingering over the faded gold lettering on its spine."Neuroplasticity in Acquired Motor Disorders."“Interesting.” I muttered to myself.I sighed, balancing two more textbooks against my hip before reaching for another."Looking for anything specific, Dr. Willow?"I glanced over my shoulder at Mrs. Harris, the elderly librarian."Rare neurodegenerative conditions," I answered with a smile. "Something that doesn't immediately blame everything on genetics."She chuckled. "If you
Elena’s POVThe drive out of the valley was different from the one we had taken nine years ago.Back then, the back seat of the old station wagon had been filled with cardboard boxes of stolen medical supplies, three crying toddlers, and a silence so thick it felt like dry sand in our throats. Zack had spent the last hours of the night convincing me to go.He didn’t do it with the roaring authority of an Alpha, or even the stubborn pride of the man I had spent my youth fighting. He had done it in a whisper, his forehead was resting against mine.“They need to see what a normal life looks like, Elena,” he had murmured. “They’ve spent their childhood hiding from my shadow, and their youth fighting monsters. Give them a year where the only thing they have to worry about is a biology test. Please.”“I’ll come back,” I had promised him, my fingers digging into his torn shirt until my knuckles turned white. “Every month, Zack. I’m not leaving you up here all alone.”“I’ll be waiting,” he h
Elena‘s POV“And who decided that?” I asked, my voice rising, thick with a sob I couldn't hold back anymore. I grabbed his shirt tighter, twisting the coarse fabric in my hands. “Who decided you don't get to be forgiven, Zack? Is it the mountain, or is it just your own stupid pride? You think carrying all this guilt on your own makes you strong? It doesn't. It just makes you a coward.”Zack flinched, his head tilted back slightly as if I had physically struck him. His lips parted, but no sound came out.“You spent nine years letting me believe you were a monster because it was easier for you to carry the blame than to face us,” I whispered, my chest heaving as I looked up into his icy blue eyes. “If you throw away our feelings now, if you tell me to go find some other man just so you can feel clean up here in your self-inflicted prison... then you are throwing away everything we bled for.”Zack’s eyes closed. His chest rose in a long, shuddering breath, and when he opened them again
Elena’s POVThe silence that followed the pack’s departure was heavier than the noise of their transition.Marcus had gathered the kneeling wolves, his old eyes lingering on Zack one last time before he turned them back toward the lower valley. Julian had taken the triplets down the SUV. They were tired, and rightly so. I could see them from the distance; Colin was sitting on the bumper with his head in his hands, Cindy was leaning against his shoulder, and Caleb was standing perfectly still, watching the pale yellow rising sun. He was staring at his fingers, still trying to understand the boundary where his flesh ended and the mountain began."Elena."The voice didn't come from behind me. It came from the stone itself, vibrating up through the soles of my boots before it reached my ears.I turned back to the altar.Zack’s eyes were open. He looked smaller now, stripped of the terrifying, golden-red light of the ritual. His human shoulders were slightly slumped, and his shirt was tor
Elena’s POVEven though my children were grown and almost my height, I instinctively shielded them from my uncle, pulling them together behind me. My hand pressed back against Colin’s chest, feeling the heat radiating from him, while my other arm kept Cindy and Caleb pinned close."Uncle Kael, ple
Elena’s POVSoon enough, we arrived at Rashford territory; my childhood cage."Mom?" Cindy’s voice came from the back of the car seat. She had her knees pulled to her chest, her nose-canceling headphones resting around her neck. "The air... it feels thick. Like I’m breathing water.""It’s the swamp
Zack’s POVWith every pulse of the corporate rig, the mountain beneath our feet groaned like a waking beast pulling itself out of a deep grave. The sheer force of it made the soles of my boots thrum.And then, they fell from the sky.The first Synthetic wolf landed ten feet away with a bone-jarring
Elena’s POVI could only stand there and watch as my partner marked another, and there was nothing I could do.***The hall fell unnaturally silent. Even the elders straightened as the Alpha stepped forward.“Now,” the Alpha’s voice rang out, vibrating with authority that jolted me back to reality.







