Chapter 2

I didn't sleep that night. How could I, when everything I'd believed about my life had crumbled in the span of a single conversation? By dawn, I'd made my decision—not the one Leo expected, but the one Silver and I both knew was necessary.

I had to confront him. I had to hear the words from his own lips.

The pack house felt like a mausoleum as I made my way to Leo's study the next morning. The early light filtering through the tall windows cast long shadows across the hardwood floors, and every step echoed with a finality that made my chest tight. Silver paced restlessly beneath my skin, her silver-white fur bristling with barely contained fury.

*Let me out,* she snarled. *Let me tear his throat out for what he's done to us.*

"Not yet," I whispered, my hand trembling as I reached for the heavy oak door. "We need the truth first."

Leo was already at his desk when I entered, as if he'd been expecting me. His amber eyes lifted from a stack of papers, and for just a moment, I saw a flicker of something that might have been guilt. But it vanished so quickly I wondered if I'd imagined it.

"Saige." He set down his pen with deliberate precision. "I trust you've made your decision."

"I have." I moved to stand directly in front of his desk, my spine straight, my chin lifted. If this was to be our final confrontation, I wouldn't give him the satisfaction of seeing me broken. "But first, I want to hear you say it."

His brow furrowed. "Say what?"

"The affair." The words tasted like ash in my mouth. "With Freyja. I want to hear you admit it."

Something shifted in his expression—a hardening, a closing off. The Leo I'd once loved disappeared entirely, replaced by a stranger who regarded me with cold calculation.

"Yes." The single word fell between us like a stone into still water. "I've been with Freyja for three years."

Three years. The number hit me like a physical blow, but I forced myself to remain standing. "While I was abroad. While I was studying to become your Luna."

"While you were playing at being something you were never meant to be." His voice carried that Alpha authority, but underneath it, I heard something else—defensiveness, perhaps even shame. "Freyja understands what it means to be part of this pack. She's given me a son, Saige. A true heir."

A son. The words echoed in my mind, each repetition driving the knife deeper. "How old?"

"Three." Leo's jaw tightened. "His name is Connor."

Three years old. Born shortly after I'd left for Europe. While I'd been writing him letters full of love and longing, while I'd been turning down every advance from European Alphas because my heart belonged to him, he'd been building a family with my half-sister.

"Was any of it real?" The question escaped before I could stop it, my carefully maintained composure cracking just slightly. "What we had—was any of it real?"

For a moment, just a moment, Leo's mask slipped. I saw something raw and pained flash across his features. But then it was gone, replaced by that cold indifference that cut deeper than any blade.

"It was a political alliance, Saige. It always was. Your father needed the security my pack could provide, and I needed the legitimacy of an old bloodline. But Freyja..." He paused, and when he continued, his voice carried a warmth that used to be reserved for me. "Freyja is my choice. My real family."

The words should have destroyed me. Should have sent me to my knees, sobbing and begging. Instead, they crystallized something cold and sharp in my chest. Silver's rage merged with my own, creating a clarity I'd never experienced before.

"I see." My voice came out steady, almost conversational. "And the evidence against my father?"

"Necessary." Leo's fingers drummed against his desk. "Freyja deserves her birthright. She deserves recognition."

"Fabricated evidence is what she deserves?"

"Careful, Saige." The Alpha command in his voice would have made me submit once. Now it just made Silver bare her teeth. "You're in no position to make accusations."

I smiled then, a cold expression that made Leo's eyes narrow. "You're right. I'm not."

Turning on my heel, I walked toward the door with measured steps. But as my hand touched the handle, I paused.

"Enjoy your real family, Leo," I said without looking back. "I hope they're worth what you've destroyed to get them."

I left him there in his study, surrounded by his papers and his lies, and walked calmly to my old room. Only when the door closed behind me did I allow myself to pull out my phone with shaking fingers.

Gideon answered on the first ring, as if he'd been waiting for my call.

"Saige?" His voice was warm with concern, a stark contrast to the coldness I'd just left behind. "How did it go?"

"It's worse than we thought," I said, sinking onto my childhood bed. "He's been having an affair with Freyja for three years. They have a child together. And the evidence against Father—it's all fabricated to force me to transfer my inheritance to her."

Silence stretched across the ocean between us before Gideon spoke again, his voice tight with barely controlled anger. "That bastard."

"I need you to start the transfers," I continued, my mind already shifting into the strategic mode that had served me well in European pack negotiations. "Everything we discussed. The Swiss accounts, the London properties, the alliance agreements with the Northern European packs. Move it all."

"Already started," Gideon said grimly. "The moment you texted me yesterday, I began reaching out to our contacts. Marcus Blackwood in Edinburgh is ready to receive the first transfer. Aria in Stockholm has prepared secure accounts. By tomorrow night, every liquid asset will be beyond Leo's reach."

A fierce satisfaction bloomed in my chest. While Leo had been playing house with his mistress, I'd been building real alliances, real relationships with pack leaders across Europe. Connections he didn't even know existed.

"What about the evidence against Father?"

"I'm working on that too," Gideon's voice carried a note of grim satisfaction. "Turns out, fabricating financial records leaves digital footprints. I have contacts in cyber security who owe me favors. Give me forty-eight hours, and I'll have proof of who really created those documents."

I closed my eyes, feeling something that might have been hope stirring in my chest. "Thank you."

"Always, little sister." The warmth in Gideon's voice was everything Leo's had lacked. "Are you safe there?"

"For now. But Gideon—" I hesitated, then plunged ahead. "I think Freyja's coming here. Today. I can smell her scent getting stronger in the pack house."

"Then be ready," he said grimly. "And Saige? Remember what we practiced in Stockholm. Sometimes the best defense is letting your enemies think they've already won."

As if summoned by our conversation, I heard voices in the hallway outside my room. Leo's deep tones, and another voice—higher, sweeter, with a triumphant lilt that made my skin crawl.

Freyja had arrived.

And from the sound of it, she'd brought her son.

Chapter 3

The knock on my door came at dawn, sharp and authoritative. I'd barely slept, my mind churning with plans and contingencies while Silver paced restlessly beneath my skin. Through the thin walls of my childhood bedroom, I could hear the sounds of the pack house stirring to life—footsteps in the corridors, muffled conversations, the distant clatter of breakfast preparations.

"Saige." Leo's voice carried through the heavy oak door, formal and cold. "We need to go."

I opened the door to find him standing in the hallway, flanked by two pack enforcers I didn't recognize. Their stance was casual, but their eyes held the alert watchfulness of guards rather than escorts. My stomach clenched with unease.

"Go where?" I kept my voice steady, though Silver's hackles were rising.

"Routine health assessments," Leo said, his amber eyes not quite meeting mine. "Pack protocol requires all potential Lunas to undergo comprehensive medical evaluations. It's been four years since your last examination."

The lie rolled off his tongue so smoothly I almost admired the skill of it. Almost. "I wasn't aware this was required."

"Many things have changed in your absence." His tone carried that Alpha authority that brooked no argument. "The car is waiting."

I had no choice but to follow, flanked by the silent enforcers like a prisoner being led to trial. The sleek black sedan that had brought me home yesterday now felt like a hearse as we drove through the morning mist toward the pack's medical facility on the outskirts of our territory.

Dr. Helena Cross met us at the entrance, her severe features arranged in professional neutrality. She'd been the pack's head physician for as long as I could remember, but something in her manner seemed different—more guarded, less warm than the woman who'd treated my childhood scrapes and illnesses.

"Miss Barnes," she said with a curt nod. "Please follow me."

The examination room was sterile and cold, all gleaming metal surfaces and harsh fluorescent lighting. As Dr. Cross began her preparations, laying out instruments with clinical precision, Leo positioned himself by the window where he could watch everything.

"Is it necessary for the Alpha to be present?" I asked, my voice tight with barely controlled anger.

"Pack protocol," Dr. Cross replied without looking up. "All Luna candidates require Alpha oversight during fertility assessments."

Fertility assessments. The words hit me like ice water. This wasn't about my general health—this was about my ability to bear Leo's children. Children he already had with Freyja.

*They're documenting everything,* Silver snarled in my mind. *Every humiliation, every violation. They want evidence.*

The next hour passed in a blur of invasive procedures and clinical detachment. Blood draws, internal examinations, hormone level tests—all conducted with Leo's amber eyes watching from across the room. Dr. Cross asked questions about my menstrual cycle, my sexual history, my genetic background, all while scribbling notes on a clipboard that she kept angled away from my view.

"Interesting," she murmured at one point, studying a test result. "Alpha King, you should see this."

Leo moved closer, his expression unreadable as he examined whatever she'd found. They exchanged a look I couldn't interpret, but the satisfaction in his eyes made my skin crawl.

"What is it?" I demanded.

"Nothing to concern yourself with," Dr. Cross said dismissively. "We'll have the full results in a few days."

But I caught the edge of triumph in her voice, the way Leo's shoulders relaxed as if some crucial piece had fallen into place. Whatever they'd found—or whatever they'd fabricated—it was exactly what they'd been hoping for.

The ride back to the pack house passed in tense silence. But as we pulled into the circular drive, I noticed additional vehicles parked near the entrance. Official-looking black SUVs with tinted windows that screamed authority.

Pack enforcers.

"Saige," Leo said as we climbed the front steps. "There's been a development in your father's case."

My blood turned to ice. "What kind of development?"

"New evidence has come to light. Financial irregularities dating back several years." His voice carried that false regret again, the performance of a man who was simply doing his duty. "Until the investigation is complete, you'll need to remain in the pack house. For your own protection, of course."

The enforcers were waiting in the foyer—four of them, all strangers with the hard eyes of hired muscle rather than pack members. Marcus Kane stood off to one side, his expression troubled as he avoided my gaze.

"Marcus," I said, hoping to find some ally in my father's old friend. "Surely this isn't necessary—"

"I'm sorry, Saige," he said quietly. "Orders are orders."

One of the enforcers stepped forward, his voice professionally neutral. "Miss Barnes, you'll be confined to your quarters pending the outcome of the financial investigation. All communications will be monitored, and you'll have supervised access to common areas for meals."

House arrest. They were placing me under house arrest in my own childhood home.

Leo watched it all with those cold amber eyes, his expression a mask of Alpha authority doing what was necessary for the pack's welfare. But I caught the slight tightening around his eyes, the way his jaw clenched when the enforcer mentioned monitored communications.

Some part of him still felt guilt over what he was doing to me.

Good. He should.

"I understand," I said with as much dignity as I could muster. "May I at least retrieve some personal items from my room?"

The lead enforcer nodded curtly. "You have ten minutes. Supervised."

As I climbed the stairs to my childhood bedroom, flanked by guards like a common criminal, my mind was already racing. They thought they'd trapped me, cut off my communications, isolated me from any potential allies.

They had no idea what I'd learned during four years abroad.

Or what I'd hidden in my room before I ever left for Europe.

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