LOGINChapter 4
ANTONIO I did not know why I had done it. That was the part that infuriated me, even as I watched my mother rise from her chair slowly, not sparing me a single glance as she gathered herself. Christiana followed her, and I caught the brief hesitation at the door — the way she stopped, her eyes finding me, her lips parting like she was going to say something. Then she shook her head, pressed her lips into a thin line, and followed my mother out. The door shut behind them. I stood there in the silence of the room and asked myself why I had snapped over a comment my mother had made numerous times across four years and had never drawn that response from me before. The answer was practical. I had received a check-in message from the elder council this morning, and after Annalisa had essentially threatened me — I had been on edge, watching for signs that she had already gone behind my back. The message had contained nothing alarming, just the standard formality, but that had not been enough to fully loosen the tension I had been carrying since she had looked at me across my study and said what she said. I was wound up, and my mother's words had been the final push. That was all it was. I looked at Annalisa. She had not moved from her chair. Her head was bent over her notebook, her pen moving steadily across the page, and she had given no outward reaction to anything that had happened in the last several minutes. No gratitude. No acknowledgment. I had called her my mate in front of his mother and his fated mate, and she had simply continued writing. She had always had a talent for that. It had always irritated me. At this particular moment, it irritated me more than usual. "You didn't have to do that," she said, without looking up. "To defend me." "You wanted me to act like your mate for a month," I said, moving further into the room. "That is one of the things a mate does. And you've already wasted a week." She said nothing. "Besides," I continued, taking the chair across from her, "I have no interest in letting this play out with any interference. You are not going to sabotage that ceremony. I want it done cleanly and done well. There is nothing for my mother to monitor because you will not give her anything to find." I looked at her steadily. "If you do, I'll rip your throat out." She looked up at that — briefly — and something flashed across her eyes, something too fast for me to name. Then she lowered them back to the notebook and continued writing. The room was quiet except for the soft scratch of her pen. I found myself watching her without meaning to. The way she held the pen. The way her hair had been pinned back but had started to come loose at one side, a single dark strand falling against the back of her neck. The notebook was already half full of notes I could not read from this angle. She was competent at this. I knew that, technically. She had always handled things quietly, without drawing attention to herself. My father had always said her leadership instincts were sharp. I had not paid much attention at the time, because there had been no reason to. There was still no reason to. I brushed the thought away But the question of her pregnancy kept clawing at the back of my mind. She said she was pregnant; I called her a liar. I still believed she was lying, but I needed to be absolutely certain. A real pregnancy would ruin everything with Christiana. I couldn't afford a complication built on a lie. I knew I had not slept with her. The night at the Halverson estate was blurred in places, but I remembered arriving. I remembered seeing Christiana with Marcus Halverson and the fury that came with it. The next memory I had was waking in my own room with a headache that lasted most of the morning. I did not remember going to Annalisa's room. I did not remember any of what she claimed had happened. And I could not scent it on her. Whatever a pregnancy did to a female wolf's scent, I could detect nothing of it. Her heartbeat was slightly erratic, but it had always been slightly erratic around me. There was no second heartbeat. I had listened more than once without her knowing, and there was nothing there. She was lying Still, if I was going to be certain, I needed proximity. A proper scenting, close enough and long enough for her walls to come down and her scent to open fully. It was also part of our agreement. Two purposes, one action. "Come here," I said. She looked up, narrowing her eyes with suspicion clear in them. "Come here," I said again, my voice even. "What do you want?" she asked. "You said you needed my scent. For the pregnancy." I let the word sit between us exactly as she had left it — unqualified. "I am fulfilling my end of the agreement. Unless you were lying about that part as well." "I wasn't lying," she said, her hands tightening against the notebook. "Then come here." She wanted to argue. I could see it in the tension at the corners of her mouth, the way she was weighing whether to push back. Then something shifted in her expression, and she exhaled, and she stood. She came around the table and sat beside me, spine straight, a careful distance maintained that I had not asked her to keep. "Closer," I said. "Antonio—" "You gave me a list of requirements. I am satisfying one of them. If you want to argue, we can revisit the entire arrangement." Her jaw tightened. Then she shifted and laid her head against my chest. It was stiff. Everything about it was stiff — her shoulders, her neck, the careful way she had positioned herself so as little of her as possible was touching me. I raised my arm and wrapped it around her and began releasing my scent slowly, the way an Alpha did it deliberately, measured and controlled. There was no intimacy in it. This was a test. I kept my eyes forward and waited A minute passed. Then two. Her shallow, panicked breathing began to slow down. Her body naturally surrendered to the comfort of an Alpha's scent. Her shoulders dropped in tiny, microscopic movements. The rigid distance between us vanished as she subconsciously snuggled closer.Then, her true scent began to bleed through. It was faint at first—the familiar scent of cedar and rain I had cataloged years ago. I breathed it in, searching for the secondary, sweeter note that always tags a pregnant female. As I listened to her slow breathing, her head settled deeper against my chest. She shifted again, her nose burying into the crook of my neck. She looked remarkably small. Like a fragile, fluffy animal seeking warmth. A strange, sudden fondness flared in my chest."Adorable" I thought almost reaching out to ruffle her hair. Her scent was just beginning to open fully when the door handle clicked. She was off me before I had fully registered the sound, straightening, that careful distance reinstated instantly, as though the last several minutes had not occurred. Beta Reyes stood in the doorway, his expression already apologetic. "I'm sorry. Alpha, miss Christiana was in the east garden. She's hurt. She refused to let me come get you — she said you were occupied and she didn't want to be a bother." I was already on my feet. I looked back at Annalisa. She had turned back to her notebook, pen in hand, writing like I was not in the room. Something about it made my blood run hot, though I could not have explained why. "I spent time with you today," I said. "The proximity. The scent. And the thing with my mother. It is enough for today. I will find you tomorrow." "All right," she said, and did not look up. I followed Reyes into the hallway. He fell into step beside me, and after a beat, he reached into his jacket and held out a folded document without a word — the result of the blood test I had quietly arranged two days ago, pulled from the medical records she had signed over when she became Luna of this pack. I took it. Unfolded it. Read it as we walked. Negative. My fingers crushed the edges of the paper. I stopped walking for a split second before forcing myself to move forward. For a brief, insane moment in that room, I had actually wondered what I would do if she were telling the truth. I had wondered how I would protect a child. Now, I felt like a fool. There was no baby. There never was The numbers were unambiguous — hormone levels flat, no indicators of any kind. She was not carrying anything. She had lied to my face. Looked me in the eye and constructed an entire medical scenario to buy herself thirty days, and I had let her do it because I had not been able to confirm it fast enough. The report crumpled in my hand as my grip tightened. I folded it once, then again, forcing it back into shape before sliding it into my jacket. She was going to pay for this.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 72ANNALISA"I don't know," I said. "I can't prove anything right now beyond what my own clinical instinct is telling me, and clinical instinct is not evidence." I kept my voice very low. "But if she had access to that bottle before today, even briefly, and added something to the remaining doses rather than to a single isolated administration, then any test on that medication, controlled or not, would produce exactly what she wants it to produce. The compound would be present in the documented medication because she put it there. Not because the medication caused it naturally. Because she made sure it would."Dominic was quiet for a long moment."That's a serious accusation to be unable to prove," he said."I know," I said."How would she have gotten access," he said. "Who handles the medication between dispensing and use."I thought about Reyes's earlier concern, the household staff, the supply chain he had been quietly watching since the
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 small table positioned at the front of the room where everyone could see what was happening without anyone being able to claim afterward that the process had been obscured.Dr. Maren's sealed bottle was placed on the table.Councilor Petra herself broke the seal, which I noted as a careful procedural choice, removing any possibility that the medication's chain of custody could later be questioned. She counted out the dose with the precision of someone who had clearly done this kind of verification before, confirmed it against the prescribing documentation, and held it up for the room to see before placing it in a small dish."Alpha Greenwood," she said. "Confirm this is your stand
Chapter 37CHRISTIANAMy cheek had stopped stinging by the time I reached Miriam's sitting room.The physical part of it, anyway. The rest of it, the part that was not about the slap itself but everything else, following it, surrounding it the way Annalisa had not moved back even an inch when I ste
Chapter 34ANNALISAShe was dressed well, which she always was, and her expression was friendly, although i could see that she was attempting to keep it permenant on her face and wasn't quite succeeding."I hope I'm not interrupting," she said. Nobody answered that immediately."I just wanted to co
Chapter 32ANNALISA"Regardless of the goodwill gestures. Regardless of the blood donation and the signed papers and the four hours in the meeting room asking sensible questions. A man who, years ago, was begged to care about his own child and chose not to, because he had himself wrappe
Chapter 35 ANTONIOThe morning report arrived at eight.Reyes came in with it the way he always did, with the look of someone who seemed to be carrying something that he did not know how to say to me. I had known him long enough to read the difference between a routine report and one that required







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