Two days. That was all it took for the world to spin back on its axis, returning me to the dirt where everyone believed I belonged. The grand halls of the Shadowclaw Pack House were draped in black silk and heavy velvet, mourning the passing of Alpha Cassius Hudson. The air smelled of expensive lilies and damp wool, a suffocating perfume that clung to the back of my throat.
I adjusted the heavy silver tray in my hands, keeping my head bowed. I wasn't here as a guest. I wasn't even here as a person. I was just a pair of hands holding champagne flutes, invisible until someone needed a drink.
"Champagne, Alpha?" I murmured, extending the tray towards a burly man from the Ironwood Pack. He didn't even look at me, just snatched a glass and continued his conversation.
My eyes darted across the room, landing on the pair that made my stomach churn. Zyon and Nadia. They stood near the massive stone fireplace, basking in the warmth and attention. Nadia looked radiant in a sleek black dress that cost more than my entire life's earnings. Her hand rested possessively on Zyon’s arm, her fingers tracing the muscle beneath his suit jacket.
Zyon looked... relieved. The debt was gone. The rogues were paid. He was free, and he hadn't even looked at me once since that night in the garden.
I moved closer, unable to stop myself. I needed to hear them. I needed to know if he felt even a shred of guilt.
"Poor thing," Nadia tittered, sipping her drink. "Look at her, Zyon. Back in rags. It suits her, don't you think?"
Zyon’s gaze flickered to me, cold and devoid of the warmth I used to crave. He leaned down, his voice a cruel whisper meant only for us. "Don't look at me like that, Carmen. You're damaged goods now. You let another Alpha own you. Did you really think I'd claim a pet as my mate?"
His words were like shards of glass in my heart. I gripped the tray so hard my knuckles turned white. "I did it for you," I whispered, my voice trembling. "You know I did."
"And now the debt is paid," he sneered, turning his back on me. "Go fetch more wine, Omega."
I stumbled back, blinking away the hot tears threatening to spill. I retreated to the shadows near the grand staircase, trying to make myself as small as possible.
"Attention," a voice boomed through the hall.
The room fell silent. An elderly man with spectacles and a briefcase stood on a raised dais at the front of the room. It was the pack lawyer, Mr. Sterling. beside him stood Alpha Holden. He looked tired, his storm-grey eyes scanning the crowd with an intensity that made the hair on my arms stand up. For a second, his gaze lingered on the corner where I stood, but his expression remained unreadable.
"We are gathered to read the last will and testament of Alpha Cassius Hudson," Mr. Sterling announced, his voice dry and crackling like parchment. "The Alpha was... eccentric in life, and his final wishes reflect that unique spirit."
A ripple of nervous laughter went through the crowd. Everyone knew Cassius was mad. They were all just waiting to see who would get the scraps of his empire.
"To my nephew, Holden," Sterling read, "I leave the title of Alpha and the burden of leadership. May your shoulders be strong enough to carry what I could not."
Holden nodded once, solemn and stoic. That was expected.
"However," Sterling continued, pausing for dramatic effect. "The Hudson fortune. The deed to the Northern Territories. The vast mining rights in the Silver Mountains. And the specific, ancient title of 'Pack Protector'..."
The room held its breath. This was the real prize. The wealth of the Hudsons was legendary, enough to make kings jealous.
"...I leave to the one who proved their worth not through blood, but through spirit," Sterling read. He looked up over his glasses, his eyes searching the room. "To the one who bore the collar with the heart of a Queen. I leave it all to Omega Carmen Castillo."
Silence. Absolute, deafening silence.
Then, chaos.
"What?!" Nadia screeched, her poise shattering. "That's impossible!"
"A mistake!" shouted Marcus Steele, the head elder of Shadowclaw. His face was purple with rage. "This is a mockery! You cannot give our land to a wolfless Omega from another pack!"
Growls erupted from every corner of the room. Wolves were shifting, their eyes flashing gold and red. The insult was too great. To leave a fortune to a servant? It was blasphemy.
"Void the will!" Marcus roared, stepping toward the dais. "She is a whore who sold herself for coin! She is unworthy!"
I shrank back against the wall, terrified. They were going to kill me. They were going to tear me apart right here in the hall.
*BOOM.*
A sound like thunder cracked through the room, shaking the chandeliers.
"**SILENCE!**"
The command slammed into us with the force of a physical blow. It was Alpha Holden. His aura exploded outward, a crushing wave of dominance that forced every wolf in the room to their knees. Even Marcus Steele buckled, gasping for air.
Holden stepped forward, placing a hand on the lawyer's shoulder. He looked out at the sea of bowing wolves, his eyes burning with a terrifying light.
"You call her unworthy?" Holden’s voice was low, dangerous. "You think my uncle was simply mad?"
He walked down the steps of the dais, the crowd parting for him like water. He stopped in front of me. I was trembling, clutching the silver tray to my chest like a shield.
"The 'pet' contract was not a game," Holden declared, his voice ringing out clearly. "It was the Rite of Endurance. An ancient test from the First Age. To wear the collar and keep your head high. To suffer humiliation to save another. That is not weakness."
He reached out and gently took the tray from my shaking hands, setting it on a nearby table.
"My uncle looked for a wolf with an unbreakable spirit," Holden said, turning back to face the room, shielding me with his body. "He found her. Carmen Castillo is the rightful heir. And anyone who challenges her claim challenges me."
I looked at Zyon. He was on his knees, his mouth agape, staring at me with a mixture of horror and greed. Nadia looked like she had swallowed poison.
For the first time in my life, I didn't look down. I looked at Holden’s broad back, feeling the heat of his protection, and realized the collar was truly gone.
The room was still buzzing with tension when it hit me. A wave of sensation so intense it nearly knocked me off my feet. My vision sharpened until I could see dust motes dancing in the candlelight. My hearing amplified until I could distinguish every heartbeat in the crowded hall. But it was my sense of smell that nearly brought me to my knees.
The scents of the room exploded around me like a symphony of information I'd never been able to access before. I could smell fear, anger, greed—all the emotions radiating from the assembled wolves. But there was something else. Something that made my stomach turn.
Zyon's scent. I'd always been able to detect it faintly, the woodsy pine that should have been comforting. But now, layered beneath it, was something else. Something floral and cloying that didn't belong to him.
Nadia's jasmine perfume.
But it wasn't just perfume. My newly awakened senses could distinguish the subtle chemical signatures that meant intimacy. Sexual fluids. The unmistakable scent of two people who had been together—recently and repeatedly.
My hands began to shake. While I had been on my knees in that garden, wearing a collar, selling pieces of my soul to save his worthless life, he had been with her. Not just emotionally. Physically. The betrayal wasn't just in his heart—it was written in his very scent.
"Carmen?" Holden's voice seemed to come from very far away. "Are you alright?"
I looked at Zyon, who was still on his knees from Holden's Alpha command. His eyes met mine, and for a moment, I saw a flicker of something that might have been guilt. But then his gaze hardened.
"Get up," he muttered to himself, struggling against the lingering effects of Holden's dominance. "This is insane. She can't inherit anything. She's nobody."
Nadia was beside him, her face pale but her eyes calculating. She was already thinking, already planning how to get her hands on what should have been mine. What was mine.
The silver tray slipped from my numb fingers.
The crash echoed through the hall like a gunshot. Crystal champagne flutes shattered against the marble floor, sending shards skittering across the room. Every conversation stopped. Every eye turned to me.
But I wasn't the trembling Omega they expected to see.
Something was building inside me, a pressure that felt like it might crack my ribs. Heat flooded my veins, and for the first time in my life, I felt... powerful. Not the desperate strength that comes from having nothing left to lose, but real power. The kind that makes others step back.
I walked toward Zyon. Each step felt deliberate, purposeful. The crowd parted without thinking, their instincts recognizing something in me that even I didn't fully understand yet.
Zyon scrambled to his feet, his face flushing red. "Carmen, what are you—"
"I can smell her on you," I said quietly. My voice didn't shake. It didn't waver. It cut through the silence like a blade. "I can smell what you did while I was saving your pathetic life."
His face went white. Nadia took a step back, her hand flying to her throat.
"Carmen," Zyon said, his voice taking on that wheedling tone he used when he wanted something. "You don't understand. It's not what you think—"
"I understand perfectly." The words came from somewhere deep inside me, somewhere that had been sleeping until this moment. "I understand that while I wore a collar to pay your debts, you were with my sister. I understand that you broadcast my humiliation to our entire pack while her scent was still on your skin."
The hall was dead silent. Even the elders had stopped their grumbling.
I looked at Zyon—really looked at him. The weak jawline. The shifting eyes. The way he always needed someone else to clean up his messes. How had I ever thought this pathetic excuse for a wolf was worth saving?
"I, Carmen Castillo," I said, my voice ringing clear through the vast hall, "reject you, Zyon Baker, as my mate."
The effect was instantaneous.
Zyon's eyes went wide with shock, then agony. He screamed—a raw, animalistic sound that echoed off the vaulted ceiling. He collapsed to his knees, then to his side, clutching his chest as if someone had driven a knife between his ribs.
I felt it too—a sharp, tearing pain that started in my heart and radiated outward. But where his pain seemed to be destroying him, mine felt... cleansing. Like burning away infection to reveal healthy tissue underneath.
The bond that had tied me to him for years snapped like an overstretched rope. And in the space where it had been, something else rushed in. Power. Pure, undiluted power that made my skin tingle and my vision sharpen even further.
An aura exploded from me—not the weak, barely-there presence of an Omega, but something that rivaled the Alphas in the room. Several wolves actually stepped back, their eyes widening in shock.
Zyon was still writhing on the floor, gasping for breath. Nadia had dropped to her knees beside him, but her eyes were fixed on me with a mixture of fear and rage.
"Impossible," Marcus Steele whispered. "She's wolfless. She can't—"
"She's not wolfless," Holden said quietly. His voice carried easily through the stunned silence. "She's a Late Bloomer."
I turned to look at him, this Alpha who had witnessed my degradation and somehow seen my worth. His storm-grey eyes were fixed on me with an intensity that made my newly awakened power flutter in response.
"And unless I'm very much mistaken," he continued, a slow smile spreading across his face, "she's just getting started."