Chapter 2

Cold. So cold.

I wasn't dead. Not yet.

My eyelids felt like lead as I forced them open, snowflakes landing on my lashes. The world was a blur of white and gray, my body half-buried in a snowdrift. I tried to move, but my limbs refused to cooperate, weighed down by whatever drug Bailey had injected me with.

"Edward," I whispered, his name a broken sound in my throat.

The rejection pain hit me anew—a hollow, gaping wound where our bond had once been. I curled inward, a whimper escaping my lips as I coughed up blood. The taste of copper mixed with the icy air, reminding me I was still alive. Still suffering.

Something moved in the corner of my vision. A shadow against the white landscape.

"Fresh meat," a raspy voice growled.

I forced my head up, panic cutting through the fog of sedatives. Yellow eyes gleamed in the dim light—feral Rogues, drawn by the scent of blood and weakness. Three of them circled me, their matted fur and gaunt faces evidence of their desperation.

"Please," I begged, trying to crawl backward despite my useless limbs.

"Pretty little thing," another Rogue snarled, revealing yellowed teeth. "Alpha's leftovers?"

They knew. They could smell Edward on me, sense the rejection in my blood.

"Kill her quick," the third one muttered. "Or the cold will do it for us."

Instinct surged through me—the will to survive. My body temperature plummeted further as adrenaline coursed through my veins.

"Get away from me," I gasped, my voice stronger than I expected.

Something shifted inside me—a spark of heat in my chest where the bond had been severed. My bones began to ache, then crack.

"What's happening?" I cried out as pain unlike anything I'd ever experienced tore through me.

My skin rippled, fur pushing through in patches. My fingers elongated, nails becoming claws. The half-shift was agony—my body trying to transform but lacking the strength to complete the process.

"Impossible," one Rogue hissed. "She's shifting now?"

"She's too weak," another replied, circling closer. "Dying."

A massive black shape burst through the trees, moving with predatory grace. Before I could process what was happening, the Rogue nearest to me was torn in half, blood spraying across the pristine snow.

The remaining Rogues scattered, but not quickly enough. The black beast pursued them with terrifying efficiency, each powerful movement ending another threat.

I couldn't focus on what was happening. My body continued its painful partial transformation, caught between human and wolf forms. I heard footsteps approaching—heavy, deliberate.

"Mine," a deep voice growled.

Warm hands touched my face, and electricity shot through my skin. My eyes fluttered open to see the most beautiful and terrifying face I'd ever seen—sharp features, silver eyes that glowed in the darkness, and an expression of fierce possession.

"You're safe now," he said, his voice gentler than his appearance suggested.

He wrapped something warm around me—a fur cloak that smelled of pine and winter storms. The scent triggered something primal inside me.

"Mate," I whispered, the word escaping before I could stop it.

His eyes flashed brighter. "Yes," he confirmed, lifting me into his arms with surprising tenderness. "I am Roy Perry."

The Lycan King. The rumors of his brutality didn't match the careful way he held me now, as if I might break.

"Rest," he commanded, his voice vibrating with authority. "You're coming home with me."

Home. The word echoed in my mind as consciousness slipped away again. The last thing I remembered was being cradled against a broad chest, the steady beat of a powerful heart beneath my ear.

---

I awoke to warmth and unfamiliar surroundings. Silk sheets caressed my skin, so different from the rough blankets I'd grown accustomed to in the Silver Mist Pack. Candles illuminated a vast chamber, their light reflecting off polished stone walls.

"Where..." My voice cracked, my throat raw.

"You're in the Obsidian Palace," a deep voice answered from nearby. "My home. Your home now."

I turned my head to find Roy Perry watching me from a chair beside the bed. In human form, he was even more imposing—tall and powerfully built, with an aura of absolute authority that made the air around him seem heavier.

"Your Majesty," I whispered, trying to sit up.

He moved with supernatural speed, gently pressing me back against the pillows. "No titles between us," he said, his fingers lingering on my wrist. "You're my mate."

The word sent a shiver down my spine—not entirely unpleasant, despite everything I'd endured.

"But I'm..." I swallowed hard. "I'm nothing. An Omega. Rejected."

Something dangerous flashed in his eyes. "Whoever told you that will pay," he promised, his voice deadly quiet.

Before I could respond, the door burst open. A man with stern features entered, followed by servants carrying medical supplies.

"The Healer is here," he announced with a bow. "I'm Marcus Stone, Beta to the King."

Roy nodded once, then turned back to me. "No one will touch you but me," he declared, his Alpha aura flaring protectively.

The servants trembled visibly under the weight of his power. As he leaned closer to adjust the blankets around me, I caught a glimpse of something in his eyes I hadn't expected—vulnerability, carefully hidden beneath centuries of control.

"What happens now?" I asked, afraid of the answer.

His fingers brushed my cheek with unexpected gentleness. "Now," he said softly, "we heal what was broken."

Chapter 3

I jolted awake, gasping for air that wouldn't come. The silk sheets beneath me were nothing like the rough cotton I was used to. The room was massive—stone walls adorned with tapestries I couldn't focus on, candles casting dancing shadows across unfamiliar furnishings.

Where was I? The Deadlands? Had the Rogues dragged me somewhere?

The door swung open, and a tall figure entered. Even in the dim light, I could see his powerful frame, the authority radiating from him in waves that made the air itself feel heavier.

"Easy," he said, his deep voice sending vibrations through the room. "You're safe now."

Roy Perry. The Lycan King. My supposed mate.

His presence filled the room like a physical force, pressing against my skin. My body reacted instantly—heart racing, breath coming in short bursts. The sensation was too similar to when Edward had used his Alpha Tone, when he'd rejected me.

"No!" I scrambled backward until my spine hit the intricate headboard. "Don't come near me!"

Roy froze, his silver eyes widening slightly. "I won't hurt you."

"You can't promise that," I whispered, wrapping my arms around myself as if I could hold the pieces of my shattered heart together. "No one can."

Something shifted in his expression—understanding, perhaps. He took a deliberate step back, then did something I never imagined the notorious Lycan King would do.

He knelt.

The mighty ruler of the Northern territories lowered himself to one knee, his head bowed slightly. "I am not him," he said quietly. "And I will never force anything upon you."

I watched in disbelief as his overwhelming aura receded, pulled inward until he seemed almost... human. The pressure in the room eased, allowing me to draw a full breath for the first time since he'd entered.

"You're safe here," he repeated, his voice soft but still carrying that underlying command. "No one will ever hurt you again."

I didn't speak. Couldn't speak. The silence stretched between us, filled only with the sound of my ragged breathing.

---

"The Rejection Sickness has taken deep root," a female voice said, pulling me from my half-conscious state. "Combined with severe frostbite and malnutrition, her body is struggling to heal."

I forced my eyes open to see a woman with kind eyes and silver-streaked hair examining my hands. Her touch was gentle, clinical.

"I'm Elena Thorne," she said, noticing I was awake. "The Head Healer here at the palace."

"Will she recover?" Roy's voice came from across the room, where he stood watching us.

"Her body, yes. The frostbite is responding to treatment." Elena's expression grew serious. "But the Rejection Sickness is another matter. It's attacking her from within."

"What does that mean?" I managed to ask, my voice barely audible.

"It means," Elena said gently, "that the severing of your bond has created a wound in your spirit that isn't healing. Your heart rate is erratic, your immune system compromised."

"Can it be treated?" Roy's voice was tight with concern.

Elena hesitated, then nodded. "Skin-to-skin contact with her Fated Mate will stabilize her heart rate and allow her body to heal properly."

I shook my head immediately. "No. I can't."

"You don't have to do anything you're not ready for," Roy said quickly. He moved to the side of the bed, sitting carefully so as not to crowd me. "But I'm here if you need me."

He extended his hand, palm up—an offering, not a demand.

"Please," he said simply.

Trembling, I reached out a single finger and touched his palm.

The effect was immediate and overwhelming. A warm current rushed through me, soothing the jagged edges of pain in my chest. It wasn't the agony of rejection or the icy bite of the Deadlands—it was warmth, safety, healing.

I didn't pull away.

---

Days passed in a haze of healing and tentative trust. Roy never pushed beyond that first touch, though he remained constantly nearby, sleeping in a chair rather than forcing me to share the bed.

Then came the night when the fever returned tenfold.

"The shift is coming," Elena announced urgently as Roy carried me to the palace's sanctuary garden. "It began in the Deadlands and was interrupted. Her body is trying to complete it now."

The moon hung full and bright overhead, bathing the secluded garden in silver light. Roy laid me gently on a bed of soft grass.

"Let it happen," he urged. "Don't fight it."

The pain was excruciating—bones cracking, skin stretching. I screamed as fur erupted across my body, my form contorting beyond recognition.

And then... peace.

I stood on four legs, my senses sharper than I'd ever imagined possible. The world was alive with scents and sounds I'd never experienced.

"Beautiful," Roy breathed, his eyes reflecting the moonlight.

I caught my reflection in a nearby pond and froze in shock. My coat wasn't the mottled brown of an Omega or the gray of a common wolf.

It was pure white—gleaming like snow under the moon's glow.

"The White Wolf," Elena whispered from the garden entrance. "A royal sign."

Roy shifted then, his massive black Lycan form emerging where the man had stood. He approached slowly, his silver eyes never leaving mine.

"Run with me," he said, his voice deeper in this form.

Together we raced through the moonlit garden, our contrasting coats creating a striking image—black as midnight, white as snow. For the first time since Edward's betrayal, I felt something other than pain.

I felt free.

Chapter 4

The morning sun filtered through the high windows of the training arena, casting long shadows across the polished stone floor. I stood in the center, my legs still unsteady from yesterday's shift. My body felt foreign—weaker than I'd expected after transforming into my White Wolf form.

"Again," commanded Garrett, Roy's Gamma and newly assigned trainer. His voice was firm but not unkind. "Your reflexes need work."

I nodded, taking a defensive stance as he approached with a training staff. My muscles screamed in protest as I tried to block his advance.

Too slow. Too weak.

The staff connected with my ribs, not hard enough to break anything but enough to send me stumbling backward.

"Focus," Garrett said, extending a hand to help me up.

Before I could reach for it, a shadow fell between us.

"That's enough for today," Roy's voice cut through the arena, his displeasure evident in every syllable.

I straightened my spine, irritation flaring unexpectedly. "No, it's not enough."

Roy turned to me, surprise flickering across his features. "Louisa—"

"I need to be strong," I said, my voice stronger than I'd heard it in weeks. "Not coddled."

Something shifted in his silver eyes—respect, perhaps. Or desire.

Garrett cleared his throat awkwardly. "Your Majesty, perhaps I should—"

"Leave us," Roy commanded, never taking his eyes off me.

When we were alone, he approached slowly, like one might approach a wounded animal. "You don't want my protection?"

"I want to be worthy of it," I replied, lifting my chin. "I want to stand beside you, not behind you."

A smile—rare and genuine—curved his lips. "Then I'll train you myself."

---

The nightmares always began the same way.

Snow falling on my skin, cold seeping into my bones. Edward's voice echoing in my mind: "I reject you." Bailey's triumphant smile as darkness closed in.

"Please," I begged in my sleep, thrashing against the sheets. "Don't leave me there."

Strong arms wrapped around me, pulling me against a solid chest. A deep vibration hummed through me—not quite a sound, but a feeling that resonated in my very bones.

"Safe," a voice murmured against my hair. "You're safe."

The vibration intensified, a rhythmic pulsing that soothed the jagged edges of my panic. My wolf responded instinctively, curling closer to the source of comfort.

When I opened my eyes, dawn was breaking. Roy's arms were wrapped around me, his massive frame curled protectively against my back. The vibration had been his chest—a deep, sub-vocal Lycan purr.

"You were dreaming," he said softly, his breath warm against my neck.

I should have pulled away. Should have been frightened by his proximity after weeks of careful distance. Instead, I felt... safe.

"How did you know?" I asked, my voice husky with sleep.

"The bond," he replied simply. "I felt your fear."

I turned in his arms, studying his face in the soft morning light. For the first time since the rejection, I didn't flinch at his nearness.

"Thank you," I whispered.

His eyes darkened as I lingered in his embrace. "Anytime, my Queen."

---

"Your Majesty," Marcus's voice broke through our morning training session. The Beta stood at the edge of the arena, his expression carefully neutral. "News from the border."

Roy tensed beside me, his hand finding mine instinctively. "Speak."

"The Silver Mist Pack has sent their RSVP for the Winter Solstice Ball," Marcus reported, his eyes flicking briefly to me. "They will be arriving in three days to pledge fealty."

The name hit me like a physical blow. Silver Mist. Edward. Bailey.

"Cancel it," Roy growled, his aura flaring with sudden violence. "I won't have them here."

"No." The word escaped before I could stop it.

Both men turned to me, surprise evident on their faces.

"They need to see me," I said, feeling my White Wolf stir within me. "They need to know what they did—and what they failed to destroy."

Roy studied me intently. "Are you certain?"

I stepped forward, drawing myself to my full height. The weeks of training had strengthened me physically, but it was the inner change that mattered most.

"I am no longer Louisa the Omega," I declared, feeling my wolf's power flow through me. "I am your mate. The Lycan King's mate."

Roy's eyes flashed with pride and something darker, more primal. "Then they will see exactly what they lost."

As Marcus bowed and retreated, Roy pulled me close, his lips brushing my ear. "Three days," he whispered. "Then we show them who you really are."

For the first time since my rejection, I looked forward to the future—and the reckoning it would bring.

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