ログインHe crossed the room in four strides and stopped just short of touching her, close enough that she could feel the heat radiating off his chest. His eyes were dark, searching her face with something that looked almost like panic underneath the control. "I know what this is," he said quietly. "Then tell me." His jaw tightened. "If I touch you right now—" "Abel." "—I won't stop.” She walked away from her father's legacy, from power and fear and the Lycan name, for one thing — love. And for three years, Ronan gave her exactly that. Or so she believed. Betrayed, broken and left with nothing but her pride, Vanessa walks out. But fate has a cruel sense of humor — she walks straight into the path of Abel's car, and wakes up remembering only her name. Now she's a maid in a stranger's pack. The stranger who hit her. The stranger who knows exactly who she is and wants nothing to do with it. The stranger who can't stop watching her.
もっと見るVanessa's POV
“You are making the worst mistake of your life, ” those had been my father's exact words. I'd stood in the doorway of his study, my eyes fixated on him, my face devoid of every emotion known to man. "I am not asking you to stay forever," he had said, leaning back in his chair, fingers laced together on the desk the way he always did when he was choosing his words. "I am asking you to think. You are a Lycan's daughter, Vanessa. Do you understand what that means? What you carry? You cannot just set it down on the side of the road because it is heavy." I had understood perfectly. That was precisely the problem. I had grown up watching men flinch when my father walked into a room. I had grown up at dinners where visiting Alphas laughed too loudly at his jokes and agreed too quickly with his opinions, their eyes never fully at ease, always measuring the distance between themselves and the door. I had grown up being introduced as Jordan's daughter and watching whatever warmth had been in a person's face rearrange itself into something more careful. More guarded. I had never been just Vanessa to anyone in that world. I had always been a warning dressed in skin. I had not wanted that life. I had not wanted to be feared. I had wanted something ordinary and warm and mine. And no title, no matter how heavy, was worth more to me than that. So I had looked my father in the eye and said nothing, because there had been nothing left to say. I had turned toward the door. "You don't know what you're walking away from." His voice had followed me. "You don't know what's waiting for you out there. And when it breaks you, and it will break you, you will come back here on your knees." My hand had been on the door frame, my other hand hovering around the door frame. With a deep breath, I whirled around just so that I'd look into his old eyes once more. "Watch me," I had said, and walked out. That had been three years ago. Now, I stood in front of the mirror in our bedroom and smiled at the woman looking back at me. Of course it took a lot of humiliation by werewolves who thought they were superior and were convinced that I was an omega were wolf. It turned out that Omegas were considered weak and often despised. That changed the moment I crawled my way up to the Luna level The black fur coat sat across my shoulders,the collar brushing my jaw, the hem grazing the tops of my thighs. The dress beneath it was deep burgundy, fitted in a way that Ronan always noticed, always commented on in that low, unhurried voice of his that made even a simple compliment feel like something private. My hair was pinned up with a few loose strands falling against the side of my neck, and the earrings catching the light were the ones he had brought back from the summit in Ashford two winters ago. Small gold crescents. He had said they looked like the moon, and that the moon reminded him of me. I had told him that was unbearably sentimental, he'd grinned and put them in my hand anyway. I missed that grin. I had been missing it for months now, the particular way it started slow, like it was deciding whether the moment deserved it before committing fully, the way it always reached his eyes before it reached his mouth. I missed the weight of him on the other side of the bed and the smell of pine and cool earth that clung to his skin after a long run. I missed the way he argued strategy with me at the kitchen table, sleeves pushed up, leaning forward like I had said something that genuinely surprised him, even when I had been saying the same thing for three years. He listened. That had been the first thing I had noticed about him. Not his face, not his title. The fact that he actually listened. The Lycan name had not followed me into the Wild Bloomers pack. I had come quietly, given a different surname, moved like a woman with no extraordinary history. And Ronan had still chosen me. I exhaled slowly, the smile staying. My father had promised I would come back on my knees. Instead I had come into my own. I had put everything I inherited from Jordan, the instinct for strategy, the ability to read a room, the bone-deep understanding of how power moved and where it was likely to fracture, into building something with my husband. Wild Bloomers had been a mid-tier pack when I arrived. Now, it was respected. I'd built everything with Ronan by my side,And tonight, I was going to watch him walk back through that door and see the welcome I had organized for him. The hall decorated, the pack assembled, the best meal the kitchen had produced all season. He had been gone for months, sent to mediate a brutal territorial dispute between two packs in the north. He had left with a bag and a forehead kiss and a promise to be back before I forgot what he looked like. I had not forgotten. I turned away from the mirror, picked up the small clutch from the dresser, and walked toward the door. The hall would be full by now. The pack always gathered early when their Alpha was returning. There was something almost ceremonial about it, the way everyone straightened up, dressed better, laughed a little louder, like his presence alone raised the temperature of the room. The hall was warm and loud when I entered, lanterns burning gold, every table full, the low pulse of conversation rising to meet the high wooden ceiling. Heads turned when I came through the main doors. A few of the elders nodded. Some of the younger pack members shifted straighter without seeming to realize they had done it. I had not asked for that kind of authority. It had gathered around me. I moved through the room with a glass of deep red wine cradled in one hand, greeting people by name, pausing to squeeze an elder's shoulder, and laughing at a joke I had already heard twice. I had just settled into my seat at the head table when the great doors at the far end of the hall swung open. The room shifted, conversations dropping half a register as the chairs scrapped, people turning. Ronan walked in. He was exactly as I remembered. The travel had put a tiredness around his eyes but not in them. His coat was dark, dusted from the road, and he had not shaved in what looked like several days. He looked like he had been working hard and didn't mind. His eyes found mine across the hall immediately. The smile that broke across his face was the one I had been missing for four months. Wide and warm and specifically for me. I rose from my chair slowly, the wine glass still in my hand, my own smile answering his across the distance between us. Around us the pack was getting to their feet, the noise building, hands coming together in welcome. He raised a hand to acknowledge the room and began walking forward, and I watched him, beaming. He stopped a few paces from the high table and turned to face the room fully. The hall quieted by degrees, the way it always did when he was about to speak. He drew a breath and his voice carried easily to every corner. “Let's rise and welcome..." He paused, his gaze sweeping the hall. A smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. "My new heir." The applause erupted immediately. I blinked. Heir? The word circled uselessly in my head. Wild Bloomers had no shortage of talented warriors. No shortage of promising young wolves either. Ronan had spent months in the north negotiating alliances. Perhaps he had taken a protégé. Found some distant relative. Chosen a successor for training. Beside me, Elder Marcus was already nodding approvingly. "A wise decision," someone murmured from further down the table. The room seemed delighted by news I had not been invited to hear beforehand. My legs stayed upright, the smile still on my face because my face had not yet received the message that something was wrong. My fingers tightened slightly around the stem of the wine glass. Around me the room was rising, hands coming together again, louder this time, chairs scraping back with enthusiasm. Ronan turned his head and looked directly at me. His smile had not changed. A woman moved through the doors behind him. She was young and undeniably pretty. Her hands were folded across the unmistakable fullness of a belly far along in its growth, and she moved with through the crowd carefully. The applause swelled. I had not moved, the smile still spreading across my face as my heart slammed hard against my chest. My body has not yet understood the message or what the woman was doing in my hall. Ronan turned to face me fully now, one hand extended toward the woman at his side, his voice rising clean and clear over the noise of the room. "The mother of my pup." The glass did not fall,I made sure of that. My fingers held it with a steadiness that had nothing to do with calm and everything to do with the fact that I was Jordan's daughter, and Jordan's daughter did not shatter in public. But something inside me did. The room kept clapping. People around me were smiling, leaning toward each other, murmuring. Someone near the back let out a celebratory howl and others joined it, the sound lifting to the rafters, filling every corner of the hall I had decorated for him. I felt a sharp sting in my eyes, Ronan's eyes still looking at me. That was when I understood that this was not a mistake, this was not a misunderstanding I could smooth over in a Private room later tonight. There was no version of this where he had not known exactly what he was doing when he walked through those doors with her beside him and me standing at the head of his table in the dress he liked. He had chosen this room, this moment and this audience. He had chosen to do it in front of everyone. My face did not change. My spine did not bend. I lowered myself back into my chair with the same ease I had risen from it, set the wine glass down without a sound, and looked back at my husband across the length of the hall. I smiled at him, and I hated myself for how long it took to stop.Cards on the tableVanessa's POV The door opened before he'd finished the second knock.I stood there already composed, one hand resting on the frame, my expression arranged into something mild and faintly curious, though underneath it every instinct I owned had gone sharp and still."My family," I said. "What about it?""Can I come in?""You're already halfway in the doorway, Ronan. I don't think my permission's ever mattered much to you before."Something flickered across his face, there and gone, and he stepped past me into the room anyway, hands tucked into his pockets, unhurried, glancing around like he was cataloging something."I've been thinking," he said, "about how little I actually know about where you came from.""After three years of marriage, that's what's occupying your mind this morning.""Humor me."I crossed my arms, leaning back against the closed door. "You know everything there is to know. Parents killed in a rogue attack when I was young. No pack affiliation wor
Chapter SeventeenWhat He Chooses to BelieveRonan's POV "I'm telling you, Elder Wren, I'm fine." I shifted the phone to my other ear, rubbing at the ache still lingering along my ribs. "The healers cleared me days ago.""You were nearly killed, Ronan." The old man's voice crackled faintly through the line, heavy with age but sharp underneath it, the way it had always been since I was a boy sitting at his knee learning what leadership was supposed to sound like. "The council doesn't take an attack on an Alpha lightly, whatever face you're putting on it for the cameras.""The pack is stable.""Is it?" He asked, pausing slightly so that the words would sink in. "And the Beta. Marcus. There are people asking questions about his sudden removal, questions I don't have satisfying answers for.""He orchestrated the attack." The lie came smooth, practiced now, the fourth time I'd said it aloud and each time a little easier to believe myself. "Paid the rogues to ambush me. Spite, mostly, ove
Ink and Shadows..Vanessa's POV The days folded into each other, one bleeding into the next until I stopped counting them properly, and through every single one of them I sat in that hospital chair with Mandy hovering somewhere close enough to remind me she existed.I watched him sleep more than I watched anything else, the rise and fall of his chest under the thin hospital blanket, watched the machine beside the bed chart his heartbeat in small green peaks, and somewhere in all that watching I stopped being able to tell whether I was hoping he'd wake up faster or hoping the stillness would just stretch on a little longer, sparing me the version of him that talked.My wolf didn't like the waiting. She paced through all of it, restless, torn between two loyalties that refused to reconcile, and I'd stopped arguing with her days ago. I simply let her pace.The door creaked open on the fourth morning.The doctor stepped through, an older man with tired eyes and the careful, measured way
Vanessa's POV Watch the door The words came out bland on my tongue, and for one unguarded second I wished I could take them back and say something sharper instead.I straightened my spine.Ronan said nothing, his eyes fixed somewhere on the ceiling, that same small grin still tugging at his mouth like he hadn't heard me at all."I'd like to take my leave," I said again, my brow furrowing slightly this time, some old irritation creeping into the words despite my best effort to keep them flat.He still didn't answer.I didn't wait for one. I turned on my heel to walk out, and nearly collided with the doctor stepping through the curtain at that exact moment, his clipboard pressed to his chest."My Luna." He steadied himself, then me, with a light hand at my elbow. "I need you to stay.""Excuse me.""You'll need to remain in the room.""Why exactly would I need to do that?""Pack law," he said, matter of fact, like he was reciting something he'd said a hundred times before to a hundred
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