Chapter 4

The rain had washed away my tears, leaving only numbness as dawn broke over the Pack House. My knees ached from kneeling all night, but the physical pain was nothing compared to the hollow ache in my chest. I rose slowly, my body stiff from the cold, and made my way back to the hospital.

Dr. Sage met me at the entrance, her eyes red-rimmed from her own night of vigil.

"I'm so sorry, Malia," she whispered, embracing me gently. "I tried to save her."

"I know," I replied, my voice hollow. "Thank you for trying."

She handed me a small wooden box. "Her ashes. The pack rules require... disposal within twenty-four hours."

I clutched the box to my chest, the last physical remains of my mother—the woman who had loved me unconditionally in a world that saw me as nothing but a shield.

"I'll take her home," I said. "To our cabin."

---

The eastern woods were quiet as I approached our small cabin, the morning sun filtering through the trees. I cradled the box of ashes against my heart, whispering the ancient words my mother had taught me—a blessing for safe passage to the Moon Goddess.

"I'll find a beautiful spot for you," I promised her. "Somewhere peaceful, away from all this."

As I rounded the corner to our clearing, I froze. Two pack warriors stood outside our cabin, their postures casual and indifferent. Between them lay a small mound of gray ash—my mother's remains—carelessly dumped on the damp earth.

"What are you doing?" My voice cracked as I rushed forward.

One warrior shrugged. "Alpha's orders. Ashes must be disposed of immediately."

"You're just going to leave her here?" I fell to my knees beside the scattered remains, my fingers trembling as I tried to gather them back into the box.

"It's just an Omega," the other warrior muttered. "Not like it matters."

Something snapped inside me. Twenty years of submission, of taking blows meant for others, of being invisible—it all crystallized into a single moment of clarity.

"It matters to me," I whispered, my wolf stirring within me.

I gathered what I could of my mother's ashes, tears blurring my vision. As I stood, I made a decision that would change everything.

---

"I'm leaving," I announced to Dr. Sage as I entered her quarters later that day.

She looked up from her microscope, startled. "Leaving? Where would you go?"

"Away from here. Away from them." I placed a small vial on her desk—a mixture of herbs and chemicals I'd created using my mother's recipes. "This will mask my scent completely."

Sage's eyes widened. "Malia, you can't just run. You're an Omega without a pack—you'll be classified as a Rogue."

"Better a Rogue than a shield," I replied, applying the mixture to my skin. It smelled of bitter almonds and earth, effectively neutralizing my natural scent. "Better free than forgotten."

"But the mate bond—"

"Is broken," I finished for her. "He made his choice when he left me kneeling in the rain while my mother died."

I shouldered a small bag containing only essentials—a change of clothes, my mother's journal, a water bottle. Everything else I would leave behind.

"Dominic will come after you," Sage warned.

"Let him try." I touched the scar on my wrist—the first injury I'd taken for Averie. "I've been hiding in plain sight for twenty years. I can do it again."

As I slipped out the back entrance of the pack hospital, I felt something inside me shift—the mate bond stretching painfully as I put distance between us. But with each step away from the Pack House, my resolve strengthened.

I was no longer Malia Warren, the Omega decoy.

I was simply Malia now. And I was done being invisible.

---

The forest blurred past as I ran, my wolf lending me strength I hadn't known I possessed. Hours passed, the sun climbing higher in the sky as I pushed deeper into the territory that belonged to no pack—the Rogue lands.

I was free.

But behind me, something was changing.

In the Dark Moon Pack House, Dominic Reed slammed his fist into the wall, his eyes blazing gold and silver as Gabriel entered his office.

"Alpha," Gabriel said cautiously, "there's something wrong with the pack bonds. I can't sense—"

"Not now," Dominic growled, his voice distorted by the partial shift that had overtaken him without conscious thought.

Gabriel stepped closer, his own wolf rising in response to the threat in the room. "Dominic, what's happening to you?"

Dominic's nostrils flared as he inhaled deeply, searching for a scent that was no longer there. "She's gone," he whispered, his voice breaking. "My mate is gone."

The realization hit him like a physical blow. He doubled over, a howl building in his throat—primal, desperate, and utterly mad.

"Find her," he snarled at Gabriel, his claws extending involuntarily. "Bring her back to me."

As Gabriel backed away from his Alpha's increasingly feral state, Dominic's eyes flashed between human consciousness and wolf instinct.

"She can't leave me," he growled, his voice no longer his own. "I won't allow it."

The mate bond that had been denied now screamed for completion, driving him toward the edge of sanity—and beyond.

Chapter 5

The forest blurred past as I ran, my lungs burning with each desperate breath. Three days I'd been running, pushing deeper into Rogue territory, sleeping in brief snatches against tree trunks or beneath thick underbrush. The scent-masking mixture had worked—no pack warriors had tracked me yet.

But something was wrong.

A primal howl cut through the night air, raising goosebumps across my skin. It wasn't the usual territorial call of a wolf—it was something else. Something feral.

"Malia."

I froze at the sound of my name, whispered through the darkness. Slowly, I turned.

Dominic stood at the edge of the clearing, his silhouette barely visible against the moonlight. But his eyes—one golden, one silver—glowed with an unnatural intensity that made my wolf whimper.

"How did you find me?" I asked, my voice steadier than I felt.

He took a step closer, and I saw what I hadn't noticed before. His movements were wrong—too fluid, too predatory. His Alpha aura rolled off him in waves, but underneath it was something else. Something wild.

"I will always find you," he said, his voice distorted as if two voices spoke at once. "You are mine."

I backed away, my heart hammering against my ribs. "You made your choice, Dominic. You chose Averie."

Another step closer. "A mistake."

"A mistake that cost my mother her life," I spat, anger flaring hot in my chest.

His face contorted, features shifting between human and wolf. "She is gone. But you—you will never leave me again."

Before I could react, he lunged forward. His hand closed around my throat, not squeezing but holding me in place. With his other hand, he ripped the small vial of scent-masking mixture from my pocket.

"This," he growled, crushing it beneath his boot. "This is how you thought to escape me?"

I struggled against his grip, but it was like fighting stone. His wolf was too close to the surface—maybe it had already taken over completely.

"Let me go," I demanded.

Instead, he dragged me through the forest, back toward pack territory. I fought with everything I had, but my strength was no match for his. By the time we reached the Dark Moon Pack House, dawn was breaking over the horizon.

"Take her to my chambers," he ordered the guards who flanked the entrance. "No one enters without my permission."

---

I awoke to the sting of a needle piercing my arm. Disoriented, I blinked up at Dominic's face hovering above me.

"What are you doing?" I tried to pull away, but my wrists were bound to the bedposts with silk scarves.

"Fixing our problem," he replied calmly, pushing the plunger down.

Fire spread through my veins from the injection site. I gasped, arching off the bed as pain radiated outward.

"Wolfsbane," I choked out, recognizing the burn. "Dominic, stop—"

"Not just wolfsbane," he said, his eyes gleaming with a terrible light. "Something new. Something that will help you forget."

The pain intensified, spreading to my chest where my wolf lay curled protectively within me. I felt her stir in panic as the substance reached her.

"Don't fight it," Dominic murmured, stroking my hair back from my forehead. "Let her sleep. Let everything that hurts fade away."

I tried to reach for my wolf, to hold onto her, but she was slipping away like water through my fingers. Her presence dimmed, growing fainter with each heartbeat.

"No," I whispered, tears streaming down my face. "No, please—"

But it was too late. My wolf went silent, curling into a tight ball deep within me. Not dead—sleeping. Dormant.

Dominic leaned down, his lips brushing against my ear. "Now you can be what I need you to be."

The room spun around me as the drug took full effect. My thoughts blurred at the edges, memories shifting like sand beneath my feet. But somewhere in the center of the storm, a spark remained—my consciousness, my will.

I forced my eyes to flutter closed, my breathing to slow. When I opened them again, I let confusion fill my gaze.

"Who..." I whispered hoarsely.

Dominic smiled, satisfaction gleaming in his eyes. "You're home, Luna. You're where you belong."

I stared at him blankly, playing the role he expected. "Luna?"

"Yes," he said, his voice softening with false tenderness. "My Luna. My mate."

I let my gaze drop submissively, while inside, behind the mask of confusion and compliance, my mind remained crystal clear. My wolf slept, but I was still awake.

Still fighting.

Still planning.

"I don't remember," I whispered, the words both lie and truth.

"Then let me remind you," he said, his fingers tracing patterns on my skin. "Let me show you what we can be together."

As he spoke, I nodded slowly, the perfect picture of submission. But in the darkness behind my eyes, I was already calculating, waiting for the moment when his guard would drop.

When I would strike back.

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