Chapter 4

The pain in my side had become a constant companion, a dull ache that flared into agony whenever I shifted position too quickly. Three months had passed since Giovanna's latest scheme had unfolded.

"Critical condition," Elena had announced to the pack, her eyes carefully avoiding mine as she stood beside Giovanna's bed. "Renal failure. She needs a transplant immediately."

I'd been summoned to the pack house's medical bay, where Elena had drawn my blood with trembling hands.

"You're the only match," she whispered later, her voice breaking. "I'm sorry, Mariah. She has something on me—my family..."

Now I lay strapped to an operating table, the cold metal seeping through the thin hospital gown they'd forced me into. The surgical lights blinded me as figures in masks hovered above.

"Alpha has authorized the procedure," someone said. "Patient is secured."

"No anesthesia?" Another voice questioned.

"Alpha's orders. We need her conscious enough to feel... for compliance later."

I struggled against the restraints as a needle plunged into my arm. Not anesthesia—something else. Something that kept me awake but paralyzed as they cut into my side.

"Taking the left kidney," Elena's voice drifted above me. "Blood pressure dropping..."

The pain was beyond anything I'd experienced—worse than rejection, worse than childbirth in that cold prison cell. I screamed silently as they harvested a piece of me to save the woman who had destroyed my life.

---

I woke to searing pain in the servants' quarters, curled on a narrow cot. My side felt hollow, a jagged scar marking where they'd taken my kidney. The wound was crudely stitched, already infected at the edges.

"Water," I croaked, my voice still raw from the wolfsbane.

A young Omega girl appeared, her eyes wide with fear. "Don't move. You'll tear the stitches."

"How long?" I managed.

"Three days since the surgery." She helped me sip from a cup. "They said you were donating to save Luna Giovanna."

I coughed, the movement sending fresh waves of agony through my body. "Save her? Or save her position?"

The girl's eyes widened further. She glanced nervously at the door before whispering, "There are rumors. Some say she's not really sick at all."

Of course she wasn't. This had never been about saving Giovanna's life—it was about ensuring I could never escape, never fight back. A wolf with one kidney was weaker, more vulnerable.

---

Weeks passed as I slowly recovered. The scar healed into a twisted ridge of flesh that pulled whenever I moved. I'd lost weight, my clothes hanging loose on my diminished frame.

One evening, while cleaning the west wing, I discovered a forgotten ballroom. Dust sheets covered furniture and paintings, but in the corner stood an old grand piano, its mahogany case dulled with neglect.

Something stirred within me—not my wolf, who remained silent, but something deeper. I approached the piano hesitantly, lifting the fallboard to reveal yellowed keys.

My fingers hovered over them, remembering. Before everything—before Colton, before rejection—there had been music. My mother had played, and I had learned at her side.

I pressed a key. The note rang out, surprisingly clear despite the piano's age. Then another. And another.

A melody formed—sad, haunting, filled with all the words I could no longer speak. The music poured from my fingers, carrying my pain, my rage, my grief. For the first time since my rejection, I felt something other than emptiness.

The melody drifted through the pack house, a ghostly presence that seemed to touch everyone who heard it. I didn't notice the footsteps until it was too late.

"What is this?" Colton's voice cut through the music.

I turned to find him standing in the doorway, his face a mask of confusion and something else—something that looked almost like longing.

"Alpha," I whispered, rising from the bench.

He stepped closer, his eyes fixed on the piano. "That song..."

"It was my mother's," I said softly.

He reached out as if to touch the keys, then stopped. Behind him, Giovanna appeared, her face twisted with fury.

"She's using witchcraft," she hissed, grabbing Colton's arm. "Can't you feel it? She's trying to curse us—to curse our son!"

Colton's expression changed, the momentary softness vanishing. "Witchcraft?"

"Through the music," Giovanna insisted, her eyes wild. "She's trying to steal him away from us!"

Before I could protest, Colton lunged forward. But instead of striking me, he slammed the piano lid down with all his strength—directly onto my fingers as they rested on the keys.

The crack of bones was audible. Pain exploded through my hands as they were crushed between the heavy lid and the keyboard.

"Now you can't cast your spells," he snarled, lifting the lid to reveal my mangled fingers—twisted, broken, forever ruined.

I stared at my destroyed hands, unable to scream through the shock. My fingers—the only part of me that could still create beauty—were shattered beyond repair.

As darkness closed in around me, I heard Giovanna's satisfied laugh echoing through the ballroom. But beneath it was something else—a faint sound that might have been Colton's wolf, howling in protest at what his human half had done.

Chapter 5

The rain pounded against my skin like tiny daggers as I dragged the rogue wolf's corpse across the muddy ground. My broken fingers screamed in protest with each movement, but I couldn't stop. The storm had knocked out the power to the servants' quarters—my only chance.

"Almost there," I whispered to myself, my voice still raw from the wolfsbane.

Three weeks had passed since Colton had crushed my hands. Three weeks of watching Giovanna's smug smile as she paraded my son around the pack house. Three weeks of knowing that sooner or later, they would finish what they started.

I'd found the rogue wolf's body near the property edge that morning while collecting firewood. Dead less than a day, killed by silver bullets—probably a pack enforcer's work. His face was bloated, unrecognizable. Perfect.

The servants' quarters loomed ahead, dark and silent in the storm. Most of the Omegas were at the main house, serving dinner to the pack's elite. I kicked open the door with my good leg and dragged the corpse inside.

"Forgive me," I murmured, placing my father's silver locket around the dead wolf's neck. The metal gleamed in the darkness—my last connection to my past.

I pulled the lighter from my pocket—stolen from the kitchen staff. My swollen fingers fumbled with it, but finally the flame caught. I touched it to the curtains first, watching as the fire spread hungrily across the fabric.

"Goodbye, Mariah Ferguson," I whispered as I limped toward the back door.

Behind me, flames engulfed the building, consuming the evidence of my existence.

---

The forest blurred around me as I stumbled through the undergrowth. Rain soaked through my thin clothes, and blood dripped from my infected wound where they'd taken my kidney. Each step sent shards of pain through my body.

"Keep moving," I urged myself. "The border is close."

I'd studied the maps in Colton's office during my cleaning duties. The Lycan territory lay just beyond the northern ridge—three days' journey for a healthy wolf. For me, it might take weeks.

My legs finally gave out as I reached a small clearing. Snow began to fall, replacing the rain with silent white flakes that covered my trembling body.

"Just a little further," I whispered, but my vision was fading.

The last thing I saw before darkness claimed me was a massive wolf with silver streaks in its fur, approaching from the tree line.

---

"Leave her," a gruff voice commanded. "She's Silver Moon scum."

"Stand down," another voice replied—deeper, authoritative. "I'll carry her myself."

Strong arms lifted me from the snow. Through half-lidded eyes, I glimpsed a face that seemed carved from stone—sharp jawline, intense blue eyes, silver-streaked dark hair pulled back from a broad forehead.

"Zander," someone protested. "You can't bring a Silver Moon wolf into Lycan territory."

"I can and I will," he replied, his voice resonating with power that made even his guards lower their heads. "There's something about her."

---

Pain. That was my first memory of the Lycan palace. Then warmth. Then more pain as surgeons worked on my mangled hands.

"Will she live?" A deep voice asked.

"Barely," someone replied. "The blood loss, the infection... it's remarkable she survived this long."

I forced my eyes open to see a man watching me—the same one who had carried me from the snow. Zander Lawson, the Lycan King.

"Why?" I managed to whisper.

His expression softened slightly. "Because no one deserves what was done to you."

---

Five years passed like a dream. The Lycan specialists rebuilt my hands—they would never play piano again, but they could hold books, write, even embrace someone I trusted.

"Your mind is your greatest weapon now," Zander told me as I graduated from my psychology program. "Use it wisely."

We stood on the balcony of his palace, watching the sunset paint the mountains gold. His hand found mine—gentle, respectful.

"I never wanted to replace what you lost," he said quietly. "But I hope I've helped you find something new."

I leaned against him, feeling my wolf stir within me—stronger now, her coat gleaming like moonlight where once it had been dull.

"Thank you," I whispered, "for choosing me when I thought no one would."

---

The invitation arrived on embossed card stock, bearing the Silver Moon Pack's crest.

"Official Inspection," it read. "The Lycan Council requests your presence to assess the welfare of the Silver Moon Pack."

Zander placed it on his desk, his eyes meeting mine. "Are you ready?"

I took a deep breath, feeling my wolf rise within me—no longer broken, no longer silent.

"Jase is there," I said softly. "My son."

Zander's expression darkened momentarily before he nodded. "Then we go together. Not as enemies, but as royalty."

He took my hand—my scarred, rebuilt hand—and pressed it to his lips.

"Your past ends today," he promised. "And your future begins."

I smiled, feeling the strength of our chosen bond flow between us. The Silver Moon Pack would never see me coming—until it was too late.

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