Chapter 4

The morning mist still clung to the pines when Marcus, the Shadowfang Gamma, stood on the porch of our secluded cabin. He adjusted his tie, looking out of place in the wilderness, his expression unreadable.

"Are you sure about this, Alpha?" Marcus asked, his gaze flickering to me for a brief second before returning to Rafael.

Rafael stood in the doorway, his hand resting protectively on the back of my neck. He didn't need eyes to stare the Gamma down. "Tell Roman King that his cast-off Omega is dead," Rafael growled, his voice low and vibrating with a dark satisfaction. "Tell him the Feral Alpha lost control and tore her to shreds during the shift. Make him believe it."

I shivered, pulling my cardigan tighter around myself. It was a cruel lie, one that would paint Rafael as the monster the world already believed him to be. But it was the only way to ensure Roman never came looking for me again.

"As you wish," Marcus said with a curt nod. He turned and walked toward his SUV, the gravel crunching under his polished shoes.

I watched him drive away until the taillights disappeared into the dense forest. A strange heaviness settled in my stomach. By nightfall, Roman would think I was gone forever.

"Do not waste your pity on him, Claire," Rafael murmured, sensing my turmoil. His thumb brushed the nape of my neck, sending a warm shiver down my spine that chased away the cold. "He made his choice when he sent you here to die."

"I'm not pitying him," I whispered, leaning into his touch. "I'm just... saying goodbye to the ghost of who I used to be."

Hours later, the sky turned a bruised purple as twilight descended. We had retreated to the library, a hidden gem within the cabin that I had discovered only yesterday. It wasn't grand like the one at Blood Moon, but it was intimate, filled with the scent of old paper and cedar.

I sat on the rugged rug in front of the fireplace, Bella sleeping soundly at my feet. Rafael sat in the armchair behind me. The room was quiet, save for the crackling fire, but the silence between us was comfortable, a stark contrast to the tense, suffocating silence I had endured with Roman.

Suddenly, a sharp, phantom pain pierced my chest.

I gasped, my hand flying to my heart. It wasn't physical—it was deeper, a tearing sensation in the very fabric of my soul. It was a howl of pure, unadulterated agony that didn't belong to me.

*Roman.*

He had been told.

For a moment, I could feel his shock, the crushing weight of guilt that slammed into him like a tidal wave. The bond, already rejected and frayed, snapped taut with his sudden, overwhelming realization of loss. He wasn't relieved. He was devastated.

"Claire?" Rafael's voice cut through the haze. He was beside me in an instant, sliding off the chair to kneel on the rug. His hands found my shoulders, grounding me. "What is it?"

"He knows," I choked out, tears pricking my eyes—not for Roman, but for the sheer intensity of the emotion flooding through the broken link. "He thinks I'm dead. I can feel... I can feel his wolf mourning."

Rafael didn't growl. He didn't get angry. Instead, he pulled me into his chest, wrapping his strong arms around me. He became my shield, blocking out the psychic scream of the Alpha who had discarded me.

"Let him mourn," Rafael whispered into my hair, his voice rough with fierce protectiveness. "Let him rot in his guilt. You are here. You are alive. And you are mine."

Slowly, the sensation faded, leaving behind a hollow silence where the bond used to be. Roman was gone from my mind, walled off by his own grief and Rafael’s overwhelming presence.

I took a shaky breath, pulling back to look at Rafael. He had removed his dark glasses earlier. In the firelight, the scars running vertically across his eyes looked silver, like rivers of moonlight on dark water.

"I found something today," I said softly, wanting to chase away the shadow of Roman King. I reached for the book I had left on the floor. It was thick, bound in worn leather. "It's in Braille."

Rafael stiffened slightly. "I have not touched those books in years. Since the betrayal."

"Let me read with you," I offered, opening the book. I took his hand, guiding his rough, calloused fingertips to the raised dots on the page.

He hesitated, his jaw clenching. For a man so powerful, so feared by the entire werewolf community, he looked incredibly vulnerable in that moment.

"I am not the Alpha I was, Claire," he confessed, his voice barely audible. "A blind wolf cannot lead the hunt. I rely on sound, on smell... on you. How can I protect you when I cannot even see the danger coming?"

My heart ached for him. This was the root of his 'feral' reputation—not madness, but a deep, festering fear of inadequacy planted by the ones who had hurt him.

"You see more than anyone I have ever known," I said firmly.

I guided his hand across the page, tracing the story of an ancient pack. "Roman had eyes, and he was blind to everything that mattered. He didn't see me. He didn't see the lie Alessia was spinning."

I moved closer, until our knees were touching. I reached up, cupping his face in my hands. He went still, his breath hitching.

"You saw me in the dark, Rafael. You smelled my sadness when no one else looked twice."

I leaned in and pressed my lips softly against the scar tissue over his left eye, then his right. It was a gesture of total acceptance, of claiming the very thing he thought made him broken.

Rafael let out a shuddering breath, his hands coming up to grip my waist, pulling me flush against him.

"You are my eyes now, Claire," he rasped, his forehead resting against mine. "You are my light."

In the quiet of the cabin, with the firelight dancing over us, the last chains of my past shattered. I wasn't an Omega substitute anymore. I was the anchor for a king who had lost his way, and he was the shield I had always needed.

Chapter 5

Two years. That’s how long it took for the seasons to change, not just outside the window of our secluded cabin, but inside me. The terrified Omega who had been dragged into Shadowfang territory was gone. In her place stood a woman who knew the rhythm of the forest and the heart of the man who ruled it.

Rafael sat across from me at the heavy oak table, his fingers tracing the raised topographic lines of a map I had specially commissioned for him. His blindness was no longer a weakness; it was a different kind of sight. Under his command, and with my quiet support, Shadowfang hadn’t just survived—it had thrived. We were ghosts, moving in the silence, reclaiming ancient borders that Blood Moon had stolen decades ago.

"Roman is losing his grip," Rafael said, his voice a low rumble that vibrated through the wood of the table. He didn't need eyes to see the shifting territories; he felt the power dynamics changing in the air. "Three more outposts surrendered to our patrols last night without a fight. His warriors are starving, Claire. Their loyalty is fraying."

I poured him a cup of tea, the scent of chamomile and honey drifting between us. "He’s desperate," I replied, my voice steady. Once, the thought of Roman King would have sent me spiraling into a panic attack. Now, he was just a distant storm, thunder without the lightning. "And a desperate Alpha makes mistakes."

"He is pressing for an heir," Rafael noted, his head tilting slightly as he listened to the approaching footsteps outside. "Marcus is here."

Moments later, the heavy door swung open. Marcus, our Gamma, stepped in, shaking the rain from his coat. But it wasn't the weather that made him shiver; it was the energy of the news he carried. His eyes were wide, gleaming with a mixture of shock and grim satisfaction.

"It’s done," Marcus breathed, dropping a thick folder onto the table. "The Blood Moon Pack is in chaos."

I moved closer to Rafael, my hand resting on his shoulder. "What happened?"

"Implosion," Marcus said, pulling out a chair. "Our spies in the main house reported everything. Roman finally snapped."

I listened, entranced and horrified, as Marcus painted the picture of my former tormentor's unraveling.

For months, Roman had been hounding Alessia for a pup. He needed to secure his lineage, to prove to his doubting pack that his 'fated mate' was strong. But Alessia, the woman who had orchestrated my misery, had been stalling. She claimed stress, she claimed illness, but the scents didn't lie. Roman, suspicious of the lack of heat cycles and the strange, chemical smell that always clung to her during the full moon, had torn apart their shared suite while she was out.

"He found her journals hidden in the floorboards," Marcus recounted, his voice dropping to a whisper. "Detailed logs of the suppressants she was taking to fake her cycles. Receipts for synthetic scent glammers. And... letters."

"Letters?" I asked.

"Love letters," Marcus sneered. "From a rogue male she’d been meeting near the southern border. She wasn't just barren to him, Claire. She was unfaithful."

I felt a cold chill, followed by a burning wave of vindication. Alessia had destroyed my life, killed my unborn pup, and sold me to a 'monster' all to keep her crown. And she had thrown it away for a rogue fling.

"When she returned to the pack house," Marcus continued, "Roman didn't take her to the private chambers. He dragged her to the training grounds. In front of everyone—the Deltas, the Omegas, the visiting dignitaries. He read the journals aloud."

I could almost see it. The arrogant Roman King, his pride shattered, his voice cracking as he realized the magnitude of his error. He had rejected a true mate bond—me—and murdered his own flesh and blood for a liar who viewed him as a bank account.

"He went mad," Marcus said, shaking his head. "He shifted—fully shifted—and for a moment, the pack thought he would kill her. But he didn't. He did something worse."

Rafael’s hand covered mine, his grip tightening. "He stripped her rank."

"Brutally," Marcus confirmed. "He used the Alpha command to force her into submission, then he tore the Luna mark from her neck with his teeth. He declared her an Omega. He ordered her hair cut off—a mark of shame in their pack—and banished her to the servants' quarters. She’s scrubbing floors now, Claire. The woman who treated you like garbage is sleeping on a cot in the basement, forbidden to speak to anyone of rank."

Silence filled the cabin, heavy and profound.

I should have felt pity. I knew what it was like to be an Omega in that house, to be invisible and abused. But as I remembered the cold sterile lights of the clinic, the doctor’s mask, and Alessia’s smug smile as I was dragged away, I found no pity in my heart. Only a fierce, dark sense of balance.

"The pack is falling apart," Marcus added, leaning back. "The warriors are confused. They see an Alpha who destroyed his true mate for a fraud. His aura is weakening. The bond... the rejection... it’s finally catching up to him. He screams at night, Claire. They say he calls out for the pup."

My hand went instinctively to my stomach, now flat and empty, but no longer aching with the raw grief of yesterday. I had healed. I had found a love that didn't ask me to be a substitute.

"Let him scream," Rafael said softly, echoing my thoughts. He stood up and pulled me into his arms, his chest a solid wall of warmth against the chill of the story. "He is reaping the harvest he planted."

I buried my face in Rafael’s neck, inhaling the scent of rain and pine, grounding myself in the present. Roman King was destroying himself from the inside out, consumed by the rot of his own choices.

"It's not over," I whispered, pulling back to look at Rafael's scarred, beautiful face. "He's wounded, and wounded beasts are dangerous."

"Let him come," Rafael growled, a dark promise curling on his lips. "We are ready."

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