Evelyn
The hospital room was too bright, too sterile. I lay in bed, exhausted beyond words, staring at the ceiling tiles. Twelve hours of labor. Twelve hours of fighting to bring my daughter safely into this world, two months before she was ready.
The door opened, and I tensed, turning my head with effort.
Damon walked in, still wearing yesterday's clothes. His tie hung loose around his neck, his hair disheveled. And there, on his collar—a smudge of pink lipstick that might as well have been written in blood.
My stomach knotted at the sight. He hadn't even bothered to change. Or to shower. Or to hide the evidence.
He stopped at the foot of my bed, hands in his pockets, keeping his distance like I was contagious.
"I heard you gave birth this morning," he said, his voice flat. "Congratulations."
That single word hung in the air between us. Congratulations. As if I'd just aced an exam or won a small lottery. Not like I'd spent half a day fighting for our baby's life while he was somewhere else. With someone else.
"Where have you been?" I asked. My voice came out as a raspy whisper after hours of screaming through contractions. "I could have died if it weren't for Luis."
He blinked. "Luis?"
"The gardener," I clarified. "He's the one who brought me to the hospital. He's the one who stayed until they took me into delivery."
Damon shifted his weight from one foot to the other, almost looking uncomfortable for a split second. But he didn't answer my question. Didn't explain why he'd ignored my calls all night. Didn't even ask about his own daughter.
"I had a freaking premature birth," I said, each word sharper than the last, "all because I'm marked by a cheating mate..." My voice broke, tears spilling down my cheeks. "And all you can say is congratulations?"
Something flashed in his eyes—anger, maybe, or just annoyance at being inconvenienced by my emotions.
"I have no time to exchange words with you, Evelyn." He straightened his tie, a gesture so normal it felt wrong in the middle of all this. "I have no time to exchange words with you, Evelyn."
And just like that, he turned and walked away. As if I were nothing. As if our daughter were nothing.
I closed my eyes, letting the tears fall freely now. I'd known our marriage was in trouble. I'd felt his growing distance, seen the signs. But I never thought he'd abandon us when we needed him most. That wound would never fully heal, I knew. Some betrayals cut too deep.
A soft knock at the door interrupted my thoughts. A nurse stood there, a tiny bundle swaddled in her arms.
"Someone's been missing her mama," she said softly.
As she placed my daughter in my arms, something warm stirred inside my cold, broken heart. She was so small, so fragile, her skin almost see-through. But she was fighting. Her tiny chest rose and fell with determined breaths, her miniature fingers curled into defiant fists.
"Hello, little one," I whispered, tracing the curve of her cheek with my finger. For a moment, the ache in my heart subsided, replaced by something fiercer, more powerful. I would protect her. I would give her the love her father couldn't.
It was a sad thing, to be born into a home with a father like Damon. But she would have me. And somehow, that would have to be enough.
* * *
AvaI woke up reaching for someone who wasn't there. My fingers grasped empty air, trying to hold onto the woman with the rose smell and the laugh that made my chest feel warm. But she faded away like she always did, leaving me cold.Winter light sneaked through my window, making little rainbow spots on my wall. My room was too neat. Miss Hilda always said a proper young lady keeps her space tidy, but I thought she just didn't want me to have too many things. Things that reminded me of someone I wasn't supposed to remember.I sat up and rubbed my eyes. The dream was already going away, slipping like water through fingers. But I remembered her hands—soft but strong, with little marks on them like stars. In my dream, those hands were braiding my hair, and she was singing something I couldn't quite remember.It was strange how I missed someone I didn't know.I slid out of bed, my feet quiet on the cold floor. Alpha didn't like noise in the mornings. He didn't like a lot of things, especi
EvelynBlood stuck to my gloves, making my fingers tacky. This patient's blood seemed different somehow—darker, thicker than usual.I dropped the scalpel onto the metal tray the nurse held out. My back hurt. Six hours hunched over an operating table will do that to you."Sutures," I said, and Rachel handed them over without me having to explain which kind. After two years working together, she knew what I needed before I asked.The patient's chest moved up and down steadily. He'd make it—though it had been touch and go for a while. The tumor had wrapped around his pulmonary artery like it was hanging on for dear life. But I was more stubborn than any growth.I tied off the last stitch and stood up straight, rolling my shoulders. Something popped in my neck."Close him up and get him to recovery," I told the team. "I want updates every hour on his vitals."Rachel nodded. The other nurses and surgical assistants looked relieved. Another win for Dr. Graham. Another life saved.If only th
DamonFive years.I stood at my office window, watching rain streak down the glass. Five years since I'd signed those papers. Five years since I'd watched the guards drag Evelyn away.The mansion felt different without her. Quieter. The colors somehow duller, though nothing had actually changed. We still had the same furniture, the same artwork. I hadn't let the staff redecorate, though Susan had tried a few times.Susan. Another complication I didn't want to think about right now.A crash from down the hall pulled me from my thoughts. Then small, quick footsteps running toward my office."Daddy!"The door burst open and Ava tumbled in, her dark hair escaping from what had probably been a neat braid that morning. One of her socks had slipped down around her ankle, and there was a smudge of what looked like chocolate on her cheek.Five years old today. Hard to believe."Dad, it's my birthday!" She launched herself at me, latching onto my leg. "Everyone in the mansion gave me a present
DamonEvelyn didn't flinch. Didn't cry out. Just stood there, hands folded in front of her, accepting the judgment with a composure I hadn't expected.Before the elder could call for the ceremonial acceptance of judgment, the doors burst open. Three of my best warriors rushed in, their expressions grim, clothing torn and bloody."Alpha!" the first one called, dropping to one knee before me. "Rogues have breached the eastern border. Five of our head warriors are dead, and they've burned down the plantation fields."The room erupted in chaos, pack members shouting questions, demanding answers. I raised my hand for silence."How did they get past our defenses?" I asked, cold fury replacing the conflicted emotions of moments before.The warrior shook his head. "We don't know, Alpha. But we captured one of them. Under questioning, he revealed that—" He hesitated, glancing nervously at Evelyn."Speak," I commanded."He said the Luna gave them the location of the secret route into Moon Pack
Damon"I want a divorce."The words hit me like a punch. Evelyn stood there, her eyes hard in a way I'd never seen before. The woman who always forgave me, who always came back, was gone.I stepped toward her, trying to hide my surprise. "You want a divorce?" I tried to sound mocking. "No. You're just trying to get my attention. It's not working."She didn't react the way I expected. No tears. No begging. She just shifted the baby carrier to her other hand, her knuckles white from gripping it too hard."I can't be with a cheater who didn't care about my pain when he slept with my sister." Her voice broke on the last word.She started hitting my chest with weak punches. I let her. Her fists barely hurt, but each one landed somewhere deeper."Why are you so upset when you cheated first?" I caught her wrist. It felt small in my hand, birdlike. I remembered holding it the first time we met, how perfectly it had fit.Something stuck in my throat. I swallowed hard."Wasn't I enough for you?
EvelynOutside Damon's office building, the late morning sun turned the glass façade into a wall of fire. I stood on the sidewalk, Ava's carrier heavy in one hand, the bag with his documents and food in the other, wondering if I'd made a mistake coming here.This is ridiculous. I'm his mate and the mother of his child. I shouldn't be afraid to walk into his office.But my heart hammered against my ribs anyway, a trapped bird beating against its cage.The security guard at the front desk recognized me, his eyes brightening. "Luna Evelyn! It's been weeks." His gaze dropped to the carrier, and his smile widened. "And this must be the little one.""Yes, this is Ava," I said, grateful for the warmth in his voice after weeks of Damon's cold silence."The Alpha will be pleased to see you both," he said, buzzing me through.Will he, though? I wondered, stepping into the elevator. I caught my reflection in the mirrored wall—dark circles under my eyes, hair pulled back in a hasty ponytail, wear
Evelyn"It was the gardener who took me to the hospital." The words felt strange coming out of my mouth. I stared at the thin hospital blanket covering my legs, picking at a loose thread. "Luis. The guy who mows our lawn."Susan sat in the chair beside my bed, her hair pulled back in a messy ponytail. She'd come straight from work, still wearing her scrubs with the little cartoon frogs on them."When I couldn't reach Damon..." I trailed off, not sure how to explain the fear of that moment. The panic. The pain.Susan reached over and squeezed my hand. "Hey, it's okay." Her voice was steady, the same voice she'd used when we'd hide under blankets during thunderstorms as kids, sharing a flashlight and making up stories to drown out the thunder. "You don't have to talk about it if you don't want to."But I did want to. I needed to. The words had been building up inside me since yesterday, threatening to choke me if I didn't let them out."He hung up on me, Sus." My voice was quiet. "I tol
EvelynThe hospital room was too bright, too sterile. I lay in bed, exhausted beyond words, staring at the ceiling tiles. Twelve hours of labor. Twelve hours of fighting to bring my daughter safely into this world, two months before she was ready.The door opened, and I tensed, turning my head with effort.Damon walked in, still wearing yesterday's clothes. His tie hung loose around his neck, his hair disheveled. And there, on his collar—a smudge of pink lipstick that might as well have been written in blood.My stomach knotted at the sight. He hadn't even bothered to change. Or to shower. Or to hide the evidence.He stopped at the foot of my bed, hands in his pockets, keeping his distance like I was contagious."I heard you gave birth this morning," he said, his voice flat. "Congratulations."That single word hung in the air between us. Congratulations. As if I'd just aced an exam or won a small lottery. Not like I'd spent half a day fighting for our baby's life while he was somewher
EvelynThe blue glow of the TV washed over me in the darkness. I sank deeper into the couch, one hand rubbing my swollen belly. On screen, a reporter stood at Moon pack's borders, detailing the latest security measures. Pack warriors moved in the background, but the one face I was searching for wasn't there.Where was Damon?I checked my phone: 12:04 AM. My back ached from sitting too long, and the baby had been unusually active tonight, kicking and rolling as if she could sense my unease. Seven months pregnant, and I was still waiting up for my mate like some lovesick teenager."He said he'd be back by ten," I whispered to my belly. "Daddy had to settle a dispute at the borders, that's all."The baby kicked in response, a sharp jab just beneath my ribs. Almost like she was calling me on my bullshit.The words sounded hollow, even to me. The knot in my chest had been growing for weeks now—that unmistakable twinge that came with the mate bond. Something wasn't right.I shifted position