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"Is there anything you regret at the moment?" The therapist asked.
Elara’s eyes closed, the salt of her tears stinging the raw skin of her cheeks. Her heart bobbed up and down in her chest. She couldn't even say no. How could she? The memories were everywhere, clinging to the corners of her vision like a lewdity, greasy and unwanted. She ran a hand over the back of her neck, feeling the prickly, unfamiliar sensation of her hair, newly clipped short at a salon. A physical shedding of a skin that no longer fits.
She still couldn't believe it. Ten years. She had wasted the entirety of her twenties on a man who didn't care if she existed or not.
The irony was a bitter pill she’d been forced to swallow daily. Elara was the one with the money hidden in dormant accounts; she was the one with the command in her blood. Her father, President Alexander Vance, ruled the entire nation with an iron fist, yet she had lived for a decade as if he were a commoner in some nameless, dusty outskirts city.
Twelve years ago, she had run. At eighteen, she thought Greene was her sanctuary. She thought his smile was a promise, not a lure. To be his wife, she had suppressed every instinct. She had served him, his ungrateful mother, and his leeching siblings at their table every single day. She, a dominant Alpha of the most powerful lineage in the country, had masked her pheromones, stifled her power, and played the role of a submissive Omega until her soul felt paper-thin. All for the sake of a man who ultimately looked at her with nothing but bored disdain.
The final message he gave her before tossing the divorce papers onto the stained kitchen table played on a loop in her head: "I have finally found the woman suitable for my status."
"What do you mean, love?" she had asked, her voice steady even as her world cracked.
She remembered looking down at her hands as she picked up the documents. They were smeared with dirt from the garden, calloused and rough, hands that had scrubbed floors and sold drinks in neon-lit clubs just to pay for Greene’s tuition. She had built him. She had carved a man out of a boy with her own blood and sweat, while her father watched from the White House, letting her drown in her own choices just to prove a point.
"What do you mean, divorce?" Her heart had trembled then. It was trembling now.
"I found the right person for me," Greene had said, straightening his expensive tie, the one she’d bought him. "She’s an Alpha. I knew her from college and she’s ready to turn my whole life around. She’s the daughter of President Vance."
Elara had scoffed, a jagged, hysterical sound. The President had only one child. Him. Her. Greene was being played, or he was a fool, or perhaps some social climber had successfully draped themselves in her stolen shadow. Greene didn't even know her real last name. To him, she was just a rag, a pity project he was finally finishing.
"You're so pitiful," he’d added, sliding a check for alimony across the table like he was feeding a stray dog. "That's why I want you to take care of yourself. Move out by tomorrow."
"How annoying," she finally said, her face turning dark. "Someone I could feed his entire family at a whim telling me to move out of his rickety house." She broke into a jagged laugh that didn't reach her eyes. "My father was right about one thing: everyone is supposed to be treated according to their status. Why did I ever think everyone was equal to me? I must’ve watched too many movies to think that was even true."
"Well..." the therapist began, shifting uncomfortably as the air in the small room suddenly felt heavy, charged with a static he couldn't explain.
"No 'well,' Mr. Therapist. Thank you for your entertainment these past ten years. Even when I thought I was losing my senses, you helped me gather them. I should’ve known when to walk away instead of sucking it all up like a fool." She sprang to her feet, her posture shifting. Gone was the slumped, weary woman; in her place stood someone whose very shadow seemed to lengthen against the office walls. "It’s time to go home, where I belong."
"Ms. Elara Greene," the therapist stammered, reaching for his notepad.
"It’s Ms. Elara Vance now. The daughter of Alpha Alexander Vance, the most powerful man in all of America. I’m his heiress, the one who will have America passed down into her grip."
She didn't wait for a goodbye. She walked out of the office, the bell above the door chiming a funeral dirge for her old life. Outside, the humid air of the outskirts felt suffocating, but not for long.
She reached into her bag and pulled out a small, metallic device no larger than a coin, a distress beacon she hadn't touched since the night she climbed out of the White House window twelve years ago. With a decisive click, she activated it.
She stood on the cracked sidewalk, her cheap, worn-out shoes a stark contrast to the fire burning in her golden-flecked eyes. She looked at her phone one last time. A text from Greene’s mother sat on the screen: Don't forget to scrub the porch before you leave, you useless girl. My son's new Alpha girlfriend shouldn't see such a mess.
Elara’s lip curled. She deleted the thread and tossed the phone into a nearby trash can.
Within minutes, the distant hum of rotors began to vibrate in the pavement. People stopped in their tracks, looking up as three sleek, black V-22 Ospreys tore through the clouds, their flight path direct and unapologetic. They weren't headed for the city center; they were descending right into this nameless, dusty neighborhood.
The helicopters hovered, the downdraft kicking up a storm of grit and debris that forced the onlookers to shield their eyes. Soldiers in tactical gear, bearing the unmistakable crest of the Presidential Guard, rappelled down with precision.
The lead commander, a man Elara remembered as a young lieutenant, hit the ground and snapped into a rigid salute.
"Alpha Vance," he shouted over the roar of the engines. "The President has been tracking your signal. He says your vacation has lasted long enough."
He stood right in front of her, "Elara..." He called with a distant familiarity that she was no longer aware of.
She looked into his eyes, she remembered him as a child, but she couldn't place his face though he was strikingly handsome especially in his suit, his physique was quite striking. His blue eyes were drowning... She didn't have the time to admire him as she walked past and set onto the helicopter. The roaring blades overhead drowned out the quiet chaos of her thoughts, the wind whipping her short-cropped hair into a frenzy.
"Do you remember me?" He asked as soon as they sat in the helicopter, "It's me Elara..."
For a second, time stopped. Elara’s mind went completely blank. She wasn't thinking, control gone, just impact mixed with heat and shock. His lips were hot, burning against hers like he was trying to anchor himself, like she was the only thing keeping him from completely losing it. "Please Elara...save me..." He murmured into her mouth, his hands suddenly beginning to leave their position on her waist, trailing over her back, sparks and ignition flying everywhere across her skin, dragging upward over the silk of her dress, leaving a trail of static electricity in their wake.And for that dangerous second, she melted into her want, her lips suddenly moving against her will, grinding against his, flaring their senses. Her heart was beating out of proportion. Her fingers tangling in the damp hair at the nape of his neck to tilt his head back. She let her lips slide from his mouth, tracing the hard line of his jaw until she found the pulse point in his neck. It was hammering, a frantic
Before she could react, his arms slid around her waist, pulling her closer. Her breath caught but she didn’t move.“Or… am I dreaming?” he whispered.Elara didn’t give herself time to think about it.Thinking was dangerous and thinking meant remembering.And remembering right now would be a mistake.“The passcode,” she repeated, more firmly this time.He hummed faintly, his head dropping briefly against her shoulder.“I missed you…” He mumbled, the words barely coherent.Her expression hardened slightly. He's completely out of it.“Silas,” she pressed again. There's no point speaking to him in this state, she should hurriedly take him to her room. As she turned away heading towards her own private space, she heard; “1812,” he said faintly forcing himself to breathe as if regaining consciousness for a brief moment. “That’s… the code…”His grip loosened slightly as his head tilted, voice fading.“1812…”The numbers lingered in the air like something fragile. 1812 "It was that day...
“Him,” Calvin said, his gaze fixed. “Why did he suddenly collapse?”The question landed heavier than it should have.Elara felt it not in her ears, but deeper, like something dropping straight into her stomach.She swallowed, forcing herself to meet Calvin’s eyes. Careful. Too careful. One wrong thought and he would hear it. The mind link between them wasn’t something she could outrun.So she didn’t think, she reacted. “Why do you care?” she replied coolly. “You people overwork him in this place.”Calvin let out a short, humorless snort. He stepped forward but Elara moved just as quickly, blocking his path without hesitation.“I’m not a fool, Elara,” he said, voice low. “Silas doesn’t just fall. Not like that.”His eyes flicked past her, landing on Silas, who was still barely holding himself upright, his breathing uneven, his body trembling despite his efforts to stay composed.“An Alpha who can’t withstand your pheromones?” Calvin continued. “That doesn’t make sense. Isn’t he suppos
“Please! I can fix this—”“And make sure,” she added, her gaze finally flicking back to him, “he remembers exactly where he stands.”Greene dropped fully this time to his knees. Right there in front of everyone. “Elara, please! I didn’t know! I swear I didn’t know—”She stared at him unmoved.“You’re right,” she said quietly.“You didn’t know.”Her lips curved slightly not into a smile but for something colder. “And that ignorance cost you everything.” She turned to the guards, and then lowered her stance to meet Greene's ears, "I spent ten years scrubbing your floors, Greene. Tonight and forever, you'll scrub mine.""Please...Elle, for the sake of the beautiful..."A slap left her hand directly on his face, and his face shifted, "Beautiful what?" She asked narrowing her gaze at her. "Remind me, what was ever beautiful about you?” "Take him away." The guards grabbed him and dragged him back as he shouted, begged, struggled, no one stepped in and no one spoke. Because the verdict h
The scent hit her like a memory she had no permission to forget. It was sweet, soft, and dangerously familiar. Just like twelve years ago. Elara’s breath caught as it wrapped around her senses, slipping past her control, settling deep in her chest like something ancient recognizing its own.Silas.Her gaze snapped fully to him, he was on the floor.Not just fallen, broken.His broad frame trembled violently, one hand gripping the chair leg so hard the wood creaked in protest. Sweat clung to his skin, his jaw locked tight as if he was fighting something feral clawing its way out of him.And the scent, his scent was spilling. It was everywhere, uncontrolled, exposed, and vulnerable. A silence rippled through the room, heavy and suffocating. Everyone felt it, even those who didn't understand it. Elara moved instinctively, one step then another and the crowd parted without being told even further after the sudden crowd. Because something in her expression had changed, it wasn't about G
"What did you just say?" Silas’s voice dropped like a guillotine. He stepped from behind Elara, his presence expanding until he seemed to eclipse the very light in the room. The sheer intensity of his gaze was a physical blow, yet Greene, blinded by his own delusion, didn't flinch."Who are you having the audacity to talk to like that?" Silas asked, his voice vibrating with a fury that made the nearest guests take a collective step back."And who are you to speak to me like that?" Greene challenged, his chest puffed out. He sneered, looking Silas up and down with a dismissive grunt. "Are you the one who smuggled her into this place?" He scoffed, gesturing vaguely at Elara’s gown. "Were you also invited? You don't look like an Alpha to me, more like a Beta feeding on suppressants."Silas took another step forward, his shadow looming over Greene. "What did you just say?""I'm with the President's daughter!" Greene boasted, throwing an arm around Beatrice’s waist. "You don't want to be t







