Liv POV
Consciousness returned in waves, carrying the sharp, sterile sting of antiseptic layered over the soothing scent of dried lavender.
I knew that scent instantly. It was the private wing of the Hayes Pack clinic. My childhood home.
"She’s coming back to us," a soft voice murmured, thick with relief.
My lashes fluttered, heavy as lead, before I forced my eyes open. My mother, Elizabeth, hovered above me. Her face was pale, etched with new lines of exhaustion, but her gaze was fierce—a steel trap snapping shut.
"Mom," I croaked. My throat felt like it had been scrubbed with sandpaper. Panic spiked in my chest, sharp and sudden. "The baby?"
"Alive," she answered instantly, her grip tightening on my hand to ground me. "Weak, but fighting. He is alive."
Air rushed out of my lungs, a sob trapped in the exhale.
"But Liv," she continued, her voice shifting from maternal warmth to something colder, harder. "We cannot let Michael know."
I struggled to sit up, wincing as a dull ache radiated through my core. "He felt the bond snap, Mom. He knows I left."
"He knows you left," Elizabeth corrected, her eyes locking onto mine. "He does not know you survived the rejection."
She reached for a pitcher and poured a glass of water, the ice clinking softly in the silence.
"The stress... the physical trauma... it triggered a dormant aspect of your heritage, Liv. Your *Inner Wolf* forced a violent, partial shift to shield the fetus. It saved him, but the energy drain nearly killed you both."
She handed me the glass, her expression unyielding.
"We are going to tell him you died."
I froze, the glass halfway to my lips. "Died?"
"Think, Olivia. If he knows there is a child—an Alpha heir born of his blood—he will tear the world apart to claim it. He will drag you back to that cage and lock the door. Is that what you want?"
"No," I whispered. The phantom sting of Serena’s slap and the memory of Michael’s cold, indifferent stare burned behind my eyelids. "Never again."
"Then we kill Liv, the weak mate of the Thorn Alpha," my mother declared, her voice ringing with finality. "And we let the White Wolf rise."
*White Wolf.*
I looked down at my hands. The skin seemed to glow with a faint, pearlescent sheen, as if moonlight were trapped beneath the surface. I could feel a new power humming in my veins—pure, ancient, and terrifyingly regal. It wasn’t just a wolf. It was royalty.
"Jennings!" my mother called out, not looking away from me.
The heavy oak door creaked open. Jennings, our family’s steward for three decades, stepped inside. He was an older Beta, gray-haired and stoic, with eyes that had seen too much.
"The paperwork is prepared, Luna Dowager," Jennings said, his voice low and solemn. He held up a manila file. "Death certificate. Cause of death: uterine rupture and massive internal hemorrhage induced by stress-related rejection."
"And the child?" I asked, my voice trembling.
Jennings bowed his head slightly. "Listed as lost with the mother. I have already dispatched the courier to the Thorn Pack."
I closed my eyes, taking a steadying breath.
"Do it," I said.
*
Three days later, strength had returned enough for me to stand by the window, overlooking the manicured grounds of the estate.
My mother entered the room, the click of her heels sharp against the floorboards. "It is done. The courier delivered the news this morning."
"How did he take it?" I asked, hating the treacherous part of my heart that still cared.
"Jennings has eyes everywhere," she replied coolly. "Michael collapsed in the receiving hall. He has locked himself in his chambers and refuses to emerge. The pack is in chaos."
She paused, a grim satisfaction tightening her lips. "He is refusing to see Serena."
A dark, curling coil of satisfaction settled in my gut. *Good. Let him bleed. Let him drown in it.*
"But grief is not enough," my mother added. She walked to the antique desk and lifted the receiver of the secure line. "I have contacted the Werewolf Council. I have filed formal charges of gross negligence and abuse resulting in the death of a high-ranking female. His trade routes are frozen effective immediately. His offshore accounts are flagged."
My mother was a force of nature. Terrifying, ruthless, and exactly what I needed.
"What about the baby’s scent?" I asked, turning from the window. "If Michael ever gets close... if our paths cross..."
"We have the Ancient Art," she assured me.
From her pocket, she produced a delicate amulet made of twisted silver and raw moonstone. It seemed to pulse with a faint, rhythmic light.
"This will cloak the child’s Alpha aura completely. To the world, he will smell like nothing. Like a Beta, or perhaps even human."
I took the amulet, the metal cool and heavy against my palm.
"I need to go away, Mom. I can’t stay here. If his grief turns to madness, he will come to the Hayes lands looking for answers."
"I know," she said softly. "We have a property. An island off the jagged coast, isolated and forgotten. It is protected by old blood magic. The salt and the tides wash away all scents. You will be safe there."
"An island," I mused. "Isolation."
"Sanctuary," she corrected.
I spent the next week preparing. I felt my body changing rapidly. The White Wolf was knitting me back together, healing the damage faster than any normal shifter could. My senses were sharpening to a razor's edge; I could hear a leaf detach from a branch three rooms away.
One afternoon, I sat in the garden, legs crossed, meditating. I turned my focus inward, reaching for the spark of life within me.
*Hello, little one,* I projected.
And for the first time, I felt a response.
It wasn’t a voice. It was a sensation—a pulse of pure, molten gold. It was strong. Incredibly strong.
*Alpha,* my wolf whispered reverently. *He is a born Alpha.*
"Finn," I said aloud to the wind. "His name is Finn." It meant 'fair.' Justice.
Jennings approached across the lawn, his shadow falling over me. "The boat is ready, My Lady."
I stood up, smoothing my dress. I looked back at the main house, at the life I was leaving behind—the girl who had tried so hard to be enough for a man who didn't see her.
"How is the Thorn Pack?" I asked.
"Starving," Jennings said simply. "Serena is stealing from the storerooms. The Omegas are fleeing in the night. And Michael... Michael is wandering."
"Wandering?"
"He spends his nights running the borderlands, howling for a mate who doesn't answer. They say he is a ghost haunting his own territory."
I felt a twinge of pity, a reflex of my old self, but I crushed it instantly. He had made me a ghost first.
"Let’s go," I said.
I slid into the back of the waiting car. As we drove away, heading toward the coast and the island that would be my fortress, I caught my reflection in the darkened window.
The girl with the soft, pleading eyes was gone. The woman staring back had eyes like polished steel.
"The game isn't over, Michael," I whispered to the glass.
"It is just the beginning."
Liv POV:
Four years.
Four years of salt spray, biting wind, and silence.
The island was a fortress of nature. Cliffs of grey stone plunged into a churning sea, while behind me, the forest stood dense and ancient. It was a place for survival, not luxury.
And I loved it.
I stood on the edge of the precipice, watching the waves shatter against the rocks below. The wind whipped my hair across my face, but I didn't feel the cold. My White Wolf blood kept me warm, a furnace burning against the chill.
"Mama! Look!"
I turned. A small boy was running towards me, triumphantly holding a crab by one leg.
Finn.
He was four years old, but he looked six. He was tall, sturdy, with messy blond hair like his father and my dark eyes.
"Careful, Finn," I said, letting a smile soften my face. "He looks pinchy."
Finn laughed. The sound was pure joy, bright and untainted.
But as he laughed, the air around him rippled. A low growl vibrated in his small chest, a sound too deep for a child. His eyes flashed gold—pure, bright Alpha gold.
The crab in his hand suddenly went limp, paralyzed by the aura of a predator far larger than a child.
"Sorry, Mr. Crab," Finn whispered, dropping it gently back onto the sand.
I walked over and smoothed his hair. The amulet around his neck hummed, working hard to suppress his scent. Even with the magic, his power leaked out. He was going to be stronger than Michael. Stronger than anyone.
"Did you practice your letters?" I asked.
"Yes. And I practiced hunting!" He pointed to a pile of sticks he had arranged into a crude but effective snare.
"Good job."
I wasn't raising a prince. I was raising a warrior.
Later, I went into the cabin. It was simple—wood and stone. I had learned to cook, to fix the roof, to fish. The Hayes princess was dead.
I sat at the table and opened the laptop. It was my only connection to the outside world, routed through six different secure servers.
An email from my mother was waiting.
*Subject: Update*
*The Thorn Pack has lost its status. They are no longer a Top 10 pack. The Council is considering dissolving them.*
*Serena was exiled two years ago. Michael threw her out when her fake scent faded and she couldn't produce an heir. She is running with Rogues now.*
*Michael is... unwell. He rejects all challenges. He refuses to take a new mate.*
I closed the laptop with a sharp snap.
"Mama?"
Finn was standing by the door, clutching his blanket. "Why are you sad?"
"I'm not sad, baby. I'm thinking."
"About the Bad Man?"
I froze. The air left my lungs. I had never told him about Michael. I only told him that his father was gone.
"Why do you say that?"
"I dream about him," Finn said matter-of-factly. "A big grey wolf. He is sad. He cries at the moon."
My heart skipped a beat. The blood connection. It was stronger than distance. Stronger than death.
"It's just a dream, Finn."
That night, I couldn't sleep. My *Inner Wolf* was restless. She kept pacing the cage of my mind, sniffing the air.
*Danger,* she whispered. *Change.*
I got up and walked down to the beach. The moon was full, casting a silver path across the water.
I let go.
*Shift.*
Bones cracked and reshaped. It didn't hurt anymore; it felt like release. Fur sprouted, white as snow.
I stood on four paws, a massive White Wolf. I was twice the size of a normal female wolf.
I ran. I tore through the sand, letting the speed burn out my anxiety.
Then, I stopped.
Something was washing up on the shore.
I trotted over, sniffing. It was a piece of driftwood. But it wasn't natural. It was carved.
I shifted back to human form, shivering slightly in the night air. I picked up the wood.
It was a totem. A wolf carving.
Burnt into the wood was a symbol. A thorn wrapped around a rose.
The crest of the Thorn Pack.
My blood ran cold. This hadn't drifted here by accident. The currents didn't flow this way from the mainland.
Someone had dropped it. Or lost it nearby.
I looked out at the dark ocean.
"He's coming," I whispered.
I ran back to the cabin. I checked the locks. I checked the magical wards.
I went into Finn's room. He was sleeping, his thumb in his mouth.
"I won't let him take you," I vowed.
The next morning, Jennings arrived on the supply boat. He looked grim.
"Jennings," I said, holding up the totem. "Look."
He took it, his face paling. "This is fresh work."
"Is he here?"
"We haven't seen any unauthorized boats," Jennings said. "But... there have been reports of a Rogue swimming the channel. A madman."
"Swimming?" I asked, incredulous. "That's twenty miles of shark-infested water."
"Desperation makes wolves do impossible things," Jennings said quietly.
He hesitated.
"There is something else, My Lady. We hired a new hand for the island maintenance. A drifter. He had good references, kept to himself. But..."
"But what?"
"He refuses to look anyone in the eye."
"Bring him to me," I said.
My protective instincts were screaming.
An hour later, Jennings returned. Walking behind him was a man.
He was thin, gaunt even. His clothes were ragged, hanging off a skeletal frame. He had a thick, unkempt beard and long, matted hair that covered his face. He walked with a limp.
He smelled like salt, sweat, and... old grief.
"What is your name?" I asked, standing on the porch, my arms crossed tightly over my chest.
The man didn't look up. He stared at his boots.
"Martin," he rasped. His voice was rough, like he hadn't used it in years.
"Look at me, Martin."
He slowly lifted his head.
His eyes were shadowed, bloodshot. But deep within the grime and the pain...
They were blue.
A jolt of electricity shot down my spine. My *Inner Wolf* sat up and let out a confused whine.
*Mate?* she asked. *Enemy?*
I narrowed my eyes. He looked nothing like the arrogant Alpha King I had left. He looked like a broken beggar.
"Can you cook?" I asked, my voice steady despite the trembling in my hands.
"Yes," he whispered.
"You stay in the outbuilding. You do not come near the main house unless summoned. You do not speak to my son. Is that clear?"
"Yes, Luna," he said.
The way he said *Luna*. It wasn't a title. It was a prayer.
I watched him limp away towards the shed.
I gripped the railing until the wood splintered beneath my fingers.
I knew those eyes.
Liv POV
I stood by the kitchen window, watching the man who called himself "Martin."
He was chopping wood in the yard. Despite his gaunt, hollowed frame, the axe rose and fell with a rhythmic, lethal precision. He didn't move like a servant. He moved like a warrior whose muscles remembered the cadence of war, even if his mind remained fractured.
My inner wolf was a chaotic mess of contradictions. One moment she wanted to tear out his throat for daring to be near us; the next, she wanted to close the distance and rub against him. It was confusing, maddening, and utterly exhausting.
"Why did you hire him?" I asked Jennings, who was meticulously organizing the pantry behind me.
"We needed the help," Jennings said, his face carefully neutral. "And... he has a sorrow about him. You know the Hayes pack has always offered sanctuary to the broken."
"He smells dangerous," I muttered, my eyes narrowing.
"He smells like regret," Jennings corrected softly.
I walked out onto the porch. Finn was playing in the yard, pushing a toy truck through the dirt.
Martin stopped chopping. He froze, the axe hovering mid-air, his gaze locking onto my son.
The look on his face... it was raw, devastating hunger. Not the hunger of a predator stalking prey, but the hunger of a starving man gazing upon a feast he knows he cannot touch. His hand trembled on the haft of the axe.
"Back to work, Martin," I called out sharply.
He flinched violently and immediately swung the axe down. *Thwack.*
That evening, Martin brought dinner to the main house. It was a simple stew.
I took a single bite. The flavor exploded across my tongue—rosemary, thyme, and a distinct, velvety hint of red wine.
The spoon clattered from my numb fingers.
It tasted exactly like the stew we used to eat at the university, back when Michael was just a Beta and I was helping him study. It was a time capsule. It was his mother's recipe.
I stared at the closed kitchen door, my heart hammering against my ribs. *Who are you playing at, Michael?*
The fragile peace shattered the following afternoon.
I was in the study with Jennings, reviewing security protocols. Finn was in the kitchen, trying to retrieve a cookie jar from the high shelf.
I heard a sickening crash. Then, a scream.
"Finn!"
I bolted from the room, adrenaline flooding my veins.
I skidded into the kitchen. The ceramic jar lay shattered on the floor. Finn was sitting amidst the shards, crying, clutching his knee. There was a small ribbon of blood.
But I wasn't the first one there.
Martin was on his knees. He had scooped Finn up into his arms, ignoring the glass biting into his own skin.
"Shh, shh," Martin was whispering, rocking him with desperate tenderness. "It's okay, little warrior. It's just a scratch. Pain makes us strong."
In his panic, he was leaking pheromones.
Usually, a strange Alpha's scent would terrify a child. It is aggressive, dominating—a threat to be feared.
But Martin’s scent—though masked by dirt and sweat—wrapped around Finn like a warm, protective blanket.
And Finn... Finn stopped crying.
He sniffed Martin’s neck, instinct taking over. His little hands grabbed Martin’s ragged shirt. He let out a small, contented sigh and buried his face in the man's chest.
*Family,* Finn’s young wolf projected. *Safe.*
The sight hit me like a physical blow. The undeniable biological connection. The blood calling to blood.
Rage, hot and blinding, flooded my vision.
"Get away from him!" I screamed.
I didn't walk. I lunged.
I ripped Finn out of Martin’s arms, clutching my son tight against my chest, shielding him from the man who had abandoned us.
"Get back!" I snarled. My eyes flashed white.
Martin fell back, scrambling on the floor. He looked terrified, but not for himself. He was looking at Finn with absolute devastation.
"I... I just wanted to help," he stammered.
"Don't you touch him," I hissed, my voice dripping with venom. "Don't you ever touch him."
Jennings appeared in the doorway. He looked from Martin to me, then to Finn. The realization settled in his eyes. He knew. He had to know.
"Take Finn to his room, Jennings," I ordered, my voice trembling with suppressed violence.
"Mama?" Finn asked, looking confused. "The sad man is nice."
"Go, Finn."
Jennings took Finn gently and led him away.
The room fell silent. The only sound was my heavy breathing and the relentless ticking of the clock.
I turned to Martin. He was still on the floor, his head bowed in submission.
"Stand up," I commanded.
He stood slowly. He wouldn't meet my eyes.
I walked up to him. I could smell it now. Beneath the grime, beneath the disguise. The forest. The rain. The scent that used to be my home.
"Did you think I wouldn't know?" I whispered, my voice breaking. "Did you think a mother wouldn't recognize the monster who tried to destroy her?"
He flinched as if struck.
"Look at me!" I shouted.
He lifted his head. Those familiar blue eyes were filled with tears.
"Drop the mask, Michael."
He closed his eyes. He took a deep, shuddering breath.
His posture changed. The servile slouch vanished. His shoulders squared. He seemed to grow three inches instantly. The air in the room grew heavy with Alpha power—suppressed, broken, but undeniably there.
He opened his eyes.
"Hello, Liv," Michael said.