For two days, Freya did not leave her room.
The walls pressed in tighter with each passing hour, and the air itself seemed to whisper cruel reminders: Breeder. Property. Loan repaid with your body. She stared at the ceiling until her eyes burned, then buried her face in the pillow until her breath came shallow and raw. But no matter how long she wept, no matter how much she tried to bury her mind, the truth clung to her like chains. She had begged. She had cried. She had pleaded. And Alpha Logan had walked away. By the third morning, the weight became unbearable. Sitting in silence was worse than death. She couldn’t remain locked in that room like a lamb waiting to be slaughtered. She had to try something—anything. Samantha noticed the shift in her. The young nurse had grown attached in those few days, watching Freya fade into the shadows of herself. She had brought food, brought comfort, but Freya could not eat or rest. Now, when Freya suddenly bolted upright, a spark of something fierce in her tear-stained eyes, Samantha knew trouble was brewing. “Freya, what are you—?” “I can’t stay here,” Freya cut in, her voice sharp with determination though her hands shook. “I need to speak to him. I need to beg him again. Maybe he will listen—maybe he will let me work for him instead. I’ll be a maid, I’ll clean floors, anything—just not this.” Samantha’s face turned pale. “No! Freya, you don’t understand. He doesn’t take kindly to questions, much less defiance. If you go to him, you might provoke his wrath.” “I don’t care,” Freya snapped, startling herself with the edge in her own voice. Then, softer, desperate, “I can’t just sit here and accept this. I’d rather die trying.” Before Samantha could stop her, Freya pushed past and fled the room. --- The corridors of Northridge Pack House were vast and confusing, but desperation lent her wings. She ran, her skirt tangling around her ankles, her hair falling from the pins the maids had carefully placed. Her heart thundered in her chest, her breath coming in short, fast gasps. The Guards turned their heads as she passed, some shouting after her, but she didn’t stop. She didn’t know where she was going, only that she needed to find him. At last, she saw him. Alpha Logan stood at the far end of the great hall, speaking with Xavier and two guards. His presence dominated the space effortlessly—tall, broad, carved from stone, his aura coiling like a storm barely restrained. Freya’s knees buckled, but she forced herself forward. The guards moved instantly to block her path. “Stay back, omega—” “No!” she cried, wrenching free. Before anyone could stop her, she ran straight to Logan and dropped to her knees before him, tears spilling down her cheeks. “Alpha, please!” she sobbed. “I beg you, don’t make me do this. I can’t be your breeder. I don’t want this life! Please—let me work for you instead. I’ll clean, I’ll serve, I’ll work for the rest of my life. I’ll repay every coin my father owes you. Just don’t make me…” Her voice cracked, breaking under the weight of the word. “…don’t make me bear children like this.” The hall went utterly silent. Logan stared down at her, his eyes narrowing. His jaw tightened, and his expression was unreadable, but his aura surged like a shadow threatening to crush her into the floor. The guards moved to restrain her, rough hands grabbing her arms, but she screamed and tore free, throwing herself back down at his feet. “Please!” she cried, her forehead pressed to the cold stone. “Please, Alpha, I’ll do anything—just not this!” Xavier’s calm voice cut through the silence. “Freya.” Her head jerked up, eyes red and wild. “It’s impossible,” the Beta said evenly. “Even if you worked for the rest of your life, every hour of every day, you would not be able to repay what your father owes. His debt was vast. And he collected even more when he sold you here. There is no escape from this fate.” The words struck like knives. Freya’s chest tightened until she could barely breathe. She looked at him, shaking her head violently. “No. No, that’s not true. I’ll find a way. There has to be a way—” But Xavier’s gaze remained firm. “There isn’t.” Something inside her broke. Her tears spilled faster, her voice rising in a raw cry. She turned toward Logan again, desperate. “Then kill me! If I can’t pay, if I can’t escape, then kill me, Alpha. Because I can’t live like this!” Gasps rippled through the hall. The guards stiffened, exchanging uneasy glances. No one had ever dared speak to him that way. Logan’s eyes burned like ice. He stepped forward, looming above her. “Enough.” But Freya couldn’t stop. Panic had overtaken reason. Her eyes darted to the side—an open archway leading to the outer courtyard. An exit. A chance. Without thinking, she scrambled to her feet and ran. The hope lasted only seconds. Two guards intercepted her at the threshold, seizing her arms in iron grips. She thrashed, kicked, clawed, screaming until her voice tore. But their strength was unyielding. They dragged her back before the Alpha, tossing her to the floor like a ragdoll. She landed hard, pain shooting up her side. Her palms scraped against the stone, but she hardly felt it as her sobs filled the silence. And then—his voice. Cold. Final. “Try that again,” Logan said, each word deliberate, “and I will behead you myself.” The world stopped. Freya froze, her tears drying on her cheeks. The air itself grew heavier, suffocating. His eyes pierced through her, sharp as a blade at her throat. Her stomach twisted violently, nausea rising. She pressed her hands to the floor, trembling uncontrollably. How could she mate with him? How could she let this man—this monster—touch her, claim her, break her? She was trapped. Samantha rushed in, her face pale as death. She dropped to her knees beside Freya, wrapping an arm around her shaking frame. “It’s all right,” she whispered, though her voice trembled. “It’s all right, I’ve got you.” But nothing was all right. Freya looked around through blurred vision. Guards lined the walls, every one of them standing stiff, alert. The pack house was a fortress, guarded at every corner. There was no escape. Her voice cracked as she forced the question out, trembling lips forming words she dreaded to hear. “If I refuse…” she whispered hoarsely. “If I refuse to be your breeder, Alpha… what will happen to me?” The hall froze again. Logan had already turned to leave, his back to her. But her question rooted him in place. Slowly, with a deliberate precision that made every heartbeat drag like eternity, he turned. His steps echoed across the stone floor as he advanced. Each one was measured, predatory, the sound of inevitability closing in. His eyes never wavered from her face, colder than steel, darker than night. He stopped just before her trembling form. His shadow swallowed her whole. Then, in a voice that vibrated with danger, he said— “Either you do what you’re here for…” He leaned closer, his words a death sentence whispered against her fear. “…or you’ll find out what happens to those who defy me.”Alpha Logan’s footsteps echoed down the corridor as he left the room. Anger was solidly etched on his face, his back rigid as though carved from stone. Theodore remained behind in the sitting room, his chest heavy with a weight he could not shake. The image of Samantha being dragged away and thrown into the cell replayed over and over in his mind.She was his fiancée. His mate. And yet, in the span of moments, she had been reduced to nothing but a criminal in Logan’s eyes. Theodore clenched his fists until his nails dug into his palms. He knew Samantha had been wrong—lying to the Alpha was an offense no one could overlook—but did it have to come to this?When Logan entered the sitting room, the tension became unbearable. The other wolves, Theodore and Xavier straightened, their heads bowed in instinctive respect. Theodore, however, could hardly lift his gaze. He swallowed hard before taking a tentative step toward the Alpha.“Alpha Logan,” he said quietly, his voice tight with emotion
The door slammed shut with a heavy thud, sealing Samantha inside the room with Theodore. The echo of it rattled her bones. Her whole body shook as she stumbled backward until her back brushed against the cold wall. Theodore’s grip on her arms was firm—too firm—his nails nearly digging into her skin. She dared not raise her head. Hot tears spilled over her lashes, blinding her vision. She was terrified, trembling not just from his anger but from the weight of the secret she had carried for too long.Theodore’s breath was ragged, his chest rising and falling as though he had sprinted across the whole territory. “Samantha,” he hissed, his voice tight with fury. “Tell me the truth. Is what Freya said true? Did you know she went into the human world?”Her lips parted, but no sound came. She couldn’t force the words out. Her throat felt stuffed with stones, choking her.“Answer me!” Theodore’s voice cracked like a whip, and before she could brace herself, he shook her hard, his hands trembl
The car moved in a tensed silence, its tires humming against the asphalt as the night swallowed them. Freya sat rigid in the back seat, pressed into the leather, the silver cuffs on her wrists biting into her skin. Every pulse of pain reminded her that she was trapped, and her wolf was in shackles, silenced.Logan sat beside her, close enough that she could feel the heat radiating from his body. His presence was suffocating, his aura heavy with restrained rage. He hadn’t spoken since forcing her into the car. He didn’t need to. The anger burning in his eyes, the way his jaw clenched and unclenched, spoke volumes.Freya swallowed hard, her throat dry from excessive crying. Her voice came out hoarse.“How… how did you find me?”No answer.She turned her head, searching his face. His gaze remained fixed forward, hard as stone, unyielding. The veins in his hands stood out where they gripped his knees, every line of his body coiled with fury.“Alpha Logan,” she tried again, desperation cre
“Let me go!” Freya’s voice cracked as she struggled, twisting her wrist in Logan’s iron grip. Her nails scraped at his hand, but his hold was unyielding, carved from the strength of years as an Alpha.Her pulse hammered in her throat. Panic spread like wildfire under her skin. She had known this day would come—that someone from Northridge would find her—but she had prayed for more time, for Daniel’s sake. For her sake.“Did you really think,” Logan’s voice was low, lethal, “that you could just walk out of Northridge and I wouldn’t come for you?” His eyes glowed with restrained fury. “You are mine, Freya. Bought. Paid for. My breeder. You can’t escape what you are.”The word sliced her. Breeder. Her stomach turned, and for a moment the fear gave way to fury. She lifted her chin, though her voice shook.“I am not anyone’s breeder. Not yours. Not anyone’s!” She shoved at his chest, but his body didn’t budge. “I’ve tasted freedom, Alpha Logan. I’ve lived like a human. And I loved it. I wo
Freya kept herself busy the following days. On the surface, she was just another employee going about her duties, but underneath, every nerve in her body remained alert. She hadn’t forgotten the men she’d glimpsed on the day of the fire—their shadows burned into her memory.. And though she couldn’t yet prove it, her instinct screamed they had something to do with the flames that nearly cost Daniel his life.So she worked and she watched. Filing documents, sorting schedules, answering emails—all while scanning the corners of the building, memorizing faces, listening to stray conversations.One afternoon, as she was typing away on her computer, she heard heavy footsteps in the hall. She glanced up. Daniel was walking past her desk, flanked by two men in dark suits. She couldn’t see their faces clearly from her angle, but their presence was commanding. The men spoke in low tones, words slipping through the air.“…shares… expansion… investment returns…”Business. Always business.Freya wa
Freya held Nicole’s trembling hands, her thumbs gently brushing away the tears that streaked down the older woman’s cheeks. Nicole had always carried herself with grace and authority, but now, sitting on the cold hospital bench with swollen eyes and shaking shoulders, she looked small—fragile in a way Freya had never seen before.“It’s alright,” Freya whispered, her own throat tight with emotions. “He’s stronger than this. Mr Daniel will pull through.”Nicole sniffled, pressing her lips together as though words themselves were too heavy to carry. For a long moment, they sat in silence, the sterile smell of disinfectant in the corridor wrapping around them like a suffocating blanket. Finally, when Nicole’s breathing became steady, Freya leaned closer.“Let’s go check on him,” she said softly.Nicole’s eyes widened in panic. She shook her head rapidly, almost like a child refusing bitter medicine. “I—I can’t. Not right now. I can’t face him. What if… what if he asks questions I can’t a