Olivia's POV.
I woke up to a loud bang on the door. I sat up with a start as I rubbed my eyes, trying to shake off the sleep in my eyes. My body was still aching, and the bruises still hurt me like a fresh wound. I had cried myself to sleep last night, exhausted from my failed escape attempt.
My heart was pounding as I heard Damien's voice on the other side. "Good morning, Olivia," he said, his tone dripping with sarcasm. "I hope you had a good night."
My eyes narrowed as I glared at the door. I knew he was just taunting me, enjoying my misery and pain.
"Get up," he ordered. "It's time to do what has to be done."
I threw off the covers and got out of the dark area, my eyes blazing with anger and hate. "You know exactly how my night was," I spat, my voice venomous and loud. "You think you can just use me and discard me like trash? You're heartless, Damien."
Damien's expression remained impassive, but I saw a flicker of something in his eyes. I didn't know what it was, but I knew it wasn't compassion.
"Enough," he said, his voice cold. "Johnson, Thomas, take her to the pack doctor."
The two men stepped forward, their faces expressionless as they grabbed my arms. The pain from the other day hurt me as I groaned. I struggled against them, but they were too strong for me.
"Please, Damien, don't do this," I begged, my voice cracking with emotion. "I'll do anything, just don't make me do this."
But Damien just turned away, his back to me as he walked out of the room. The men dragged me behind him, through the pack's headquarters, as we passed people who were curious about what was happening. My feet stumbled as I tried to keep up.
At the pack hospital, I was taken to a small room where the pack doctor waited. He was an old man with kind eyes and a gentle face.
"Hello, Olivia," he said, his voice soft. "I'm afraid I'm here to perform a procedure."
I glared at him, my eyes filled with tears. "You're just going to do what Damien says, aren't you?" I accused.
The doctor's expression was sympathetic. "I'm sorry, Olivia. But I have no choice."
As he began to prepare the equipment, I felt a surge of desperation. But then, he whispered to me, "Listen, child, I know what's going on here. I'll pretend to do the procedure, but you need to leave. Now."
My eyes widened in surprise. "Why are you helping me?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.
The doctor's eyes met mine, and he whispered back, "My daughter died under similar circumstances. I couldn't save her, but I can save you. Damien doesn't know I have a conscience, but I'm not going to let him take your life."
I nodded, understanding. As the doctor distracted the guards, I slipped out of the room and made a run for the back door.
I moved as quickly as possible, knowing this was my only chance left to run away from Damien and his wicked plot. My heart pounded in my chest.
I could hear the guards shouting behind me, but I didn't look back. I kept running until I was out of the hospital and into the forest.
It wasn't until I was several hundred yards away that the guards realized what had happened.
They alerted Damien as they couldn’t find Olivia in the hospital, who was furious.
"Find her," he growled, his face twisted with rage. "Bring her back to me." he ordered.
The guards took off after me, but I had a head start. I couldn't take any chances this time; I'd have to use this opportunity or I would be dead.
Meanwhile, Damien stormed into the hospital, his eyes blazing with fury. The pack doctor cowered before him, knowing he was in trouble.
"You disobeyed me," Damien spat, his voice ranging in anger. "You were supposed to perform the procedure, not help her escape."I said.”
The doctor tried to apologize, but Damien wasn't interested. He quickly ended the doctor's life, his body crumpling to the ground.
I was still on the run, but they were determined to catch me. Damien would show me no mercy, no quarter. I would pay for my disobedience this time, and he would make sure I never forgot the consequences of crossing him.
I ran as fast as I could until night began to fall, I suddenly lost my way. My eyes darted to every corner. I froze immediately when a wolf stopped in front of me, his eyes howling brightly at the dark sky.
My body stiffened, saliva choked my throat, unable to swallow down. I took a shaky step back. The wolf followed.I didn’t have a weapon. I didn’t have the strength to fight. Running was useless, it would catch me in seconds. I was going to die.
The wolf lunged at me, the movement shot past me, a sickening crunch echoed through my body. I gasped stumbling backward as a large figure crashed into the right, taking its disk with brutal force. The struggles were brief and deadly. Sharp claws tore through his flesh. Blood splattered against the ground. One second, the rogue lay lifeless on the ground. And then the man turned to me.
My breath caught him immediately. He was tall, broad shouldered , chest rising and falling steadily, his golden eyes flicked to me, sharp and assessing. He looked like he belonged in the wild like the forest itself bowed to his presence.
“Stay back,” his lips curled slightly. But I didn’t move, I didn’t even flinch at his words.
He stepped forward, wiping blood from his hand, his gaze never leaving mine. “You’re not from my pack.”
I swallowed emptiness down my throat, my finger gripping my cloth. I wasn’t sure if I should come clean but with the situation, telling him the truth might as well help the situation.
“I was banished,” I muttered my voice barely above a whisper.
His expression darkened slightly. “For what?”
My throat tightened. The shame, the anger, it all came rushing back.“They said I committed treason,” I whispered.
A moment of silence stretched between us before he chuckled, shaking his head. “You don’t look like someone who’d committed treason.” He studied me carefully, as if piecing together my story. “You ran away, didn’t you?”
I stiffened. “I didn’t have a choice.”
Something flickered in his gaze. Understanding? Pity? I couldn’t tell.
“Then you need a new pack,” he said simply.
I frowned. “I don’t want to be a burden…”
“This is my pack.” His voice was firm, leaving no room for argument. “It’s my duty to ensure the safety of anyone standing on my land.”
His eyes locked onto mine. “And I’m not asking, dear stranger. I’m commanding you.” He said.” A breathless chuckle escaped me.
Olivia’s POV I stared at the bowl of watery soup in front of me, the same one Reuben had brought earlier with that smug look on his face, daring me to poison myself with spoilt food. It had not taken me long to decide that I would not be eating it. Even if I had been starving, I would not have touched something that looked so much like dirty water. I had spent the entire night turning over possibilities in my head, trying to think of how I could get out of this hell with Jeremy. I could not seem to come up with any viable plan given that I did not even know what this place looked like. The only place I knew was the room in which I had been locked up. The options that came to mind did not appear realistic, the only thing I could think of was taking an illness. .I glanced over at the bowl of watery soup and a smile formed on my lips. Reuben’s bowl of poison was going to be useful after all. I picked up the bowl and carefully walked to the far end of the room, lowering myself to the f
Olivia's POV I stayed there for several minutes, hoping that they would have some conversation in the next room that could alert me of their next plan. Then I heard Reuben’s voice, it was low but sounded furious.“He said he would think about it. Can you believe that? I offer him his wife and child in exchange for the throne, and he tells me he needs time to consider.”Alira's response was almost immediate, “I never thought Simeon would be so cruel but people always surprise you.”“I thought he loved them but he really is just one selfish bastard,” added Reuben. “What do we do now? Do we kill them?” Alira's voice sounded hostile. “Kill them? We should, they are only wasting our resources,” replied Reuben, “but we should wait a bit longer to listen to what Simeon has to say. It is possible that he may actually want them back.” “I doubt that. If he cares for them at all, he would have given up the throne in a heartbeat if he did,” came Alira's response. “But I cannot just end his
Simeon's POV That evening, under the cover of night, I went to the house. It was a house I knew well even though I had not been there in ages. The house stood at the edge of an old stone bridge just beyond our territory. It was small and had been deserted for years. I walked straight through the door.Inside, the room was quiet except for the crackle of a fire.Reuben sat near it. His legs were crossed. He looked at ease as though we were meeting on friendly terms.I was filled with an anger I could not describe. What was he doing here? What did he want? Demand that I take Prinsca back? I turned to leave as I had nothing I wanted to say to him. But then he spoke.“I assume,” he said smoothly, “that you would like to see your wife and child again?”I froze where I stood.Slowly, I turned back to face him.“Where are they?” I asked, my voice low and trembling with fury.Reuben offered no response.I crossed the space between us in three long strides. I grabbed him by the throat and
Simeon's POV “The lady that you took to treat her leg, where did you take her?” It had been fifteen minutes since Olivia had been led away by the maid who injured her with glassware.I strongly doubted she would do something foolish like running away from me, especially when she knew that her son's life depended on her compliance.I had no intention of killing Jeremy, but I had every intention of ensuring that she never laid eyes on him again. If she had really escaped, then it would be the last time she would ever see her son.Across the room, I caught sight of Damien. He looked far too relaxed. He was laughing with some blond woman whose name I didn’t care to know. When our eyes met, he looked away almost immediately.Rage burned through me but there was nothing I could do about it. Damien's presence always annoyed me. A thought struck me suddenly. Had Olivia found a way to pass a message to Damien? Was he already mobilizing against me? Could he be marching an army toward my pack
Olivia's POV There was a brief silence. Then the sound of footsteps moving lightly on the floor. I accidentally rested too hard on the wall and the stone shifted, causing an ingratiating sound. I held my breath, scared that I had been caught eavesdropping. “Did you hear that?”I held my breath, frozen in place. My heart was pounding so loudly in my chest that I feared it may be heard in the other room. Everything in me screamed at me to run. But I was locked up here, where would I run to? I remained frozen by the wall, trying desperately to stop my heart from pounding so loudly. When they continued on in silence I was convinced they had seen me through the small crack and were coming now to end my life. Then, I heard a door creak open but it sounded distant and if not for the still silence I would not have heard it at all. “Oh, how sweet,” a woman said, her tone dripping with sarcasm. “What have the lovebirds been conspiring this time?”I knew who that voice belonged to—it wa
Olivia's POV I had been pacing the room in slow, measured steps, trying to make sense of everything—my escape, Reuben, Jeremy, and the suffocating sense that I had only been rescued to be caged again. The walls were bare, the air was stale and too dry, so dry that it hurt my nostrils when I breath. The silence was maddening. We really had to be in the middle of nowhere because I heard no activity on the outside. I was certain though that Reuben had not left this place unguarded, this place had to be crawling with guards. That was when I heard it.At first, I thought it was just the wind filtering through the small window but I was wrong. I could make out the clear unmistakable voice of Reuben and someone else. I dropped to my knees and pressed my ear against the wall. I had not known there was another room behind this one. It was then I noticed it too—a jagged corner where the stone had chipped away. I pressed my ear against it, their voices becoming clearer. “I’m telling you,” R