LOGINAnnalisa Greenwood spent four years being invisible in her own marriage. She was the orphan girl her Alpha husband never wanted, the Luna he tolerated, the wife he looked through rather than at. When she fell pregnant with his child, he called her a liar. When she lay bleeding on the floor of his estate, he walked away. So she disappeared. Three years later, she has built something from the wreckage — a career, a home, a life. And a son with his father's eyes and a heart that has fought to beat since the day it was formed. But the world has a way of closing distances that were never meant to stay open. A medical crisis spreading across the major pack territories has only one solution, and Annalisa is the one who found it. The summit that could save hundreds of pregnancies requires one thing she has spent three years avoiding. A room with Antonio Greenwood in it. He has been searching for her since the night he came home and found her gone. He has been living in the ruin of what he did and what he failed to understand until it was too late. He does not yet know about the boy with amber eyes who builds puzzles and argues about wolf genetics and has a heart that needs his father's presence to fully heal. Some debts cannot be paid with an apology. Some doors, once closed, open onto something entirely different on the other side.
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ANNALISA My Alpha husband demanded I plan my own rejection ceremony. He had no idea I was pregnant.And he had no idea our baby's heart would stop beating in less than thirty days... I sat in Dr. Faison’s office. The silence was suffocating. I had been dreading this moment all morning. Ever since I woke up with sharp abdominal cramps, while my husband stood by the window, smiling at his phone, talking to his first love."The fetus is viable," Dr. Faison said, "but the heart rate is severely unstable and inconsistent with what is expected of the fetus. At the rate we are tracking, you have a window of approximately one month before the pregnancy becomes a miscarriage. You need a medical intervention before then.'' I had always wanted a child, it was a dream of mine, now that dream was here but I was being told It might not become a reality. "What kind of intervention?" I asked. He had leaned forward in his chair, his hands folded on the desk, and told me something I had not expected. Proximity to its father. Specifically — the Alpha's scent, especially the sire that was involved in the making. Not just that, I needed to have a lot of physical contact. Shared sleeping space. The baby's heart, he explained, was responding to an absence. A gap where that presence should have been. Without it, the pregnancy would not hold. The drive home was a blur. I gripped the steering wheel, trying to see the road through a film of hot tears. Antonio had not touched me in over a year. The one time he had barely a month ago— the one time in four years of marriage that he had come to my room, drunk on whiskey and carried grief in his heart that I had not fully understood at the time — he had not been there with me at all. Not really. He had said her name. Christiana. While he took me, over and over and I laid there and told myself that it was worth it. He had not remembered it the next morning. I had known that when I saw him eating breakfast and ignoring me, just like he did daily that whatever had happened the night before had been buried in him somewhere he did not intend to go looking. But I had not forgotten. And now, three weeks later, I discovered that I was pregnant. I parked in front of the Greenwood estate and sat in the car for a moment before I got out, staring at the huge mansion sprawled ahead. I grew up in this house. Not as a daughter of it but almost something similar to that, I was a child brought home by Antonio's father after my parents died, given a room and meals and told that I would be the mate to Antonio once I grew up. I had followed Antonio around as a teenager the way lonely children follow anyone who lets them, and he had tolerated it the way older boys tolerate things that they hated but were persistent. His father had decided we were perfect for each other. We were not. Antonio had known it longer than I had. But I had not understood it fully until the wedding night when he sat across from me in a room full of white flowers and pack elders and looked at me with the expression of a man who had swallowed something bitter and decided he was going to live with the taste of it forever. That was the moment my heart went cold, but I still loved him, and I believed my love could change him. But now, I wasn’t sure I could change anything anymore—maybe only a child could keep him here. How pathetic I was... I found him in his study. He was standing at the window when I pushed open the door, his back towards me. He turned when he heard me come in, and his face arranged itself into his usual expression he had reserved just for me; blank, distant, neutral. The look of a man clocking the presence of something he neither needed nor wanted to engage with. "I need to talk to you," I said breaking the silence instead, I had to do it now, rip it out and tell him before I would lose my cool. "So do I." He turned fully and moved to his desk, picking up his pen, setting it back down. A habit. "Christiana is back." I already knew. The whole pack had known since yesterday. She had driven through the front gates in a white car with the windows down and her hair loose, and the whispers had started before she even stepped out. His first love. His true fated mate. The woman he had been in love with since before I ever existed in his life in any meaningful way. The woman who had been the bane in my marriage not working out, because my husband could not leave the past behind and focus on building something with me. But I didn’t have the luxury of caring about Christiana right now. Not when my child was running out of time. "Antonio," I said. I stepped fully into the room and pulled the door shut behind me. "I'm pregnant——" “Prepare the Moon Rite, Annalisa”, he said at the exact same time, his voice cutting cleanly through mine. “I’m going to claim my fated mate.”Chapter 76CHRISTIANA"I'm not threatening you," Dominic said. "I'm telling you what I will not tolerate."The corridor was very quiet now, every onlooker absolutely still, watching two Alphas measure each other with their voices instead of their hands, which was somehow more frightening than if they had simply fought.Antonio's arm was still around me."I want you both to leave the territory," he said. "Now. Today. You will return only when summoned for coalition business that requires your presence, and not before." He looked at Annalisa for the first time since he had told her to stay out of it, and his expression was hard in a way that did not look entirely like him, though I was the only person in that corridor who might have known to wonder why. "And you will not attend my mating ceremony. Either of you.""Antonio," Annalisa said, "the test failed to disprove anything. It confirmed something is in your system that you cannot fully explain, and instead of asking why, you are stan
Chapter 75CHRISTIANAThe chamber doors opened and I walked out into the corridor with my chin level and my steps even.I did not smile.That was the discipline of it. I wanted to smile. Some part of me wanted to throw my head back the moment we were clear of the council's eyes and let out everything I had been holding since Annalisa stood up and said yes to a question that should have ended with no. But smiling would have been careless, and careless was the one thing I could not afford today, not with this many eyes still on me in a corridor full of advisors and staff and council aides moving between rooms.I let myself feel it instead. Quietly. Underneath.It had worked exactly the way I built it to work.Three days before the hearing, I had gone to Antonio's private medication shelf with steady hands and added just enough of the compound to the remaining doses to make sure that any test, controlled or not, supervised or not, would find exactly what it needed to find. Clean source.
Chapter 74ANNALISA She was looking at the table, at her own hands, with the composed stillness I had noted before the test, and I understood now, watching her in this specific moment, that the stillness was not confidence. It was control. The particular effort of someone holding a very carefully built structure together and watching it begin to do exactly what they had designed it to do, and not allowing themselves a single visible flicker of relief in case the room was watching for it.I filed that observation away with the rest.Councilor Brask let the murmur in the room settle before she spoke again, and when she did, her voice carried the particular gravity of someone about to ask the question that the entire morning had been building toward."Dr. Voss," she said. "The council has now heard testimony establishing a legitimate medical explanation for the compound you identified, corroborated by an independent laboratory test conducted under this council's own direct observation.
Chapter 73ANNALISACouncilor Brask read the result before she said anything aloud, and I watched her face for the half second it took her to process it, the small shift of her eyebrows that told me what the document said before she gave the room the words."The independent laboratory confirms the presence of the compound previously identified by Dr. Voss," she said. "Same profile. Comparable concentration to the original samples." She looked up. "This sample was drawn following a controlled administration of only the documented prescribed medication, under direct observation of this council, with no other substance introduced."The room reacted before she finished the sentence.Aldren was on his feet immediately, the particular swiftness of a man who had been waiting for exactly this outcome and had his response already assembled before the chair had finished speaking."This settles the matter," he said. "The council has just witnessed, under its own controlled conditions, that Alpha
Chapter 65ANNALISAI sat with the phone in my hand and the silence of the room around me and I let myself feel what the call had done.I had expected to feel anger.Anger was familiar and useful and I had gotten good at working with it over the past four years, knowing its shape and its weight and
Chapter 64ANNALISAThe formal notice arrived at six fifty-two in the morning.I know the exact time because I had been awake since five and had been watching my phone with the particular attention of someone who knows something is coming and cannot stop the watching even when they know it will not
Chapter 62ANNALISAThe morning had been quiet.That was the thing I kept returning to afterward, the fact that it had started quietly, with Eli eating breakfast and the sun coming through the kitchen window and Dominic making coffee with the focused attention he gave everything, and nothing about
Chapter 71ANNALISAThe council called a recess to prepare the test.Two members of the chamber's independent medical staff arrived within ten minutes, a man and a woman in plain clinical attire who had clearly been on standby for exactly this possibility, and they set up at a smal






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