LOGIN"Yes, sir," he replied, turning toward her.
Elara masked her surprise, forcing her face to remain a sheet of ice. Up close, the contrast was jarring. How had that small, fragile boy grown so fast? He was tall now, his frame bulky and filled out beneath the expensive fabric of his suit. Time had been generous to him, molding those soft, childhood features into something dangerously striking.
The memory of him at twelve flashed vividly in her mind. Twelve was the age of judgment, the year the secondary gender manifested, and determined your worth in the eyes of the Republic. Your fate was written in your pheromones. If you were an orphan raised by the Vance family, one of the hundred lucky or unlucky souls they took in each year, your only hope for survival was to emerge as something useful. To be a dominant Alpha was to be reborn; you became a Vance automatically, a weapon for the state.
In the entire history of their lineage, after her father, the President, Elara was the only one who had truly stunned the nation. She hadn't just become an Alpha; she had emerged as a dominant. It was a statistical anomaly. Most female Alphas were recessive, destined to eventually mate with a dominant male Alpha to balance their power. But Elara was a predator in her own right.
She could still hear her father’s voice echoing in the marble halls the day her results came back. He hadn't been proud; he had been practical.
"She will get surgery," he had stated to his council, as if she weren't standing right there. "She was clearly supposed to be a boy but was born in the wrong body. When she turns eighteen, she will get surgery to change her sex. She is supposed to be a man. No one will ever mate with a dominant Alpha female. It is a biological dead end."
The memory made her stomach churn. That was the real reason she had fled at eighteen. She was tired of the dictatorial rule, tired of being a shadow treated like a princess only to be told her very identity was an error to be corrected by a scalpel.
It was the night of her planned escape that she found him.
She had been creeping through the servants' quarters, her bags packed, when she heard the sound. A little boy, barely twelve, was tucked into a dark corner of the gardens, whimpering. His pheromones were leaking into the cool night air—sweet, floral, and terrifyingly recognizable. He was crying profusely, his small hands clamped over his mouth to stifle the agonizing whimpers that escaped him.
Elara had paused, stunned. She knew what that scent meant. The boy was an Omega.
It was a death sentence in this house. Her father loathed the "weakness" of Omegas. Betas were tolerated as staff, Alphas were groomed for power, but an Omega orphan would be discarded, sent to the slums, or worse.
The boy had looked up at her then, his eyes wide and drowning in tears, smelling the predatory strength of the girl standing over him.
"Please save me..." he had whispered, his voice cracking with a terror that mirrored her own. "Save me..."
She had been a girl about to lose her womanhood to her father’s ambition, and he was a boy about to lose his life to her father’s prejudice.
Now, that same boy stood before her right now taking orders from his father as if he were an alpha.
"This way, Alpha Vance," Silas said softly as he gestured toward the grand staircase, but as he stepped closer to lead the way, Elara caught the scent of him. It wasn't the sweet, cloying odor of an Omega child. It was something deeper, masked by heavy suppressants.
She followed him up the stairs, her eyes fixed on his broad back.
She walked into her room, her eyes taking in the entire space she had once rejected twelve years ago. The room was sprawling, a museum of a life she had tried to erase. The high ceilings were adorned with intricate gold molding, and the heavy velvet curtains were pulled back to reveal the sweeping views of the capital she used to dream of escaping.
Every space her eyes landed on felt like a ghost. There was her mahogany desk where she’d hidden her travel maps, and the bookshelf was still lined with tactical manuals and history books. The air was thick with her own scent, a suffocating blanket of nostalgia that made her heart quake terribly. She felt like an intruder in her own skin. Without a word, she crashed into the massive, silk-sheeted bed, the softness felt alien against her back, which had grown used to the lumpy, spring-punctured mattress she’d shared with Greene.
She closed her eyes, and like a dam breaking, the last ten years began to replay in a jagged, cruel loop.
"You're nothing but a weakling!" Her mother-in-law’s voice echoed in her skull, shrill and poisonous. "You're nothing but something Greene decided to help! Who do you think you are if not some orphan Greene is housing? Why did he even marry you?"
"I'm sorry, mother," she heard her own voice whisper in the memory. It sounded pathetic. She remembered how she would cower, bending her neck, suppressing the Alpha fire in her blood until it nearly choked her. Someone like her, who was born to lead nations, had spent a decade bowing to lowly beings who weren't fit to scrub her boots.
The memory shifted, turning colder.
"Let's throw her out of this house!" Her sister-in-law’s voice pierced through. "She's going to sleep in the streets until Greene comes back!"
Elara felt the phantom shove against her shoulders. She remembered the sensation of her knees hitting the wet pavement, the rain lashing down on a night of the full blood moon. It was her Alpha rut, a time when her body was a furnace of power and need and she had been forced to endure it in a dark alley, shivering in the mud, nearly killed by the cold while her "family" sat inside the house she paid for.
She gasped, her eyes snapping open as she tossed over on the bed, only to find Silas still standing there, his silhouette dark against the opulent wallpaper, watching her with an unreadable expression.
"Aren't you going to leave?" she snapped, her voice trembling with the leftovers of her nightmare.
"I am to keep watch over you," he replied, his voice steady, not budging an inch from where he stood near the door.
She sat up, her short hair messy, "Send in the maids. I don't want to see you. So leave."
"Alpha Vance..." Silas started, his blue eyes dropping for a fraction of a second.
"Just leave. Send the maids. I'm okay," she replied sharply.
She got down from the bed and headed toward the bathroom, her footsteps silent on the plush carpet. Pushing open the heavy marble doors, she found everything sparkling clean. It was haunting; nothing had changed. The bathroom was a sea of white Carrara marble and gold fixtures, centered by a sunken tub that looked more like a small pool.
She peeled off her worn, cheap clothes and sank into the already prepared bath. The water was perfectly heated, infused with oils that smelled of jasmine and cedar. She submerged herself up to her chin, the heat beginning to soak into her tired muscles, soothing her skin like a long-lost lover. She can't believe that divorce was a way of saying goodbye to suffering. How could she compare a life in a sprawling home like this to what she gave herself with Greene?
She suddenly rose, and stepped out of the bath, her gaze hitting Silas as she walked into her own room naked,
"I need you to find someone for me, his name is Greene."
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







