LOGINIt was a small blessing that my seventeenth moon day fell on one of my days off. I don't think I could have survived Delta Hester's displeasure at me taking the entire day off otherwise. Small mercies found me in those days, and I never forgot to thank the Moon Goddess for the reprieve.
But that was the only small mercy that graced me on my seventeenth.
All day, I felt a gnawing in my stomach. A deep ache that made me feel sick, as though starving. But the thought of eating made me want to throw up. I drank water and did my best to stay confined to my quarters, but the heat was unbearable. Not outside. Outside, it was overcast, and the winds were high, threatening a storm.
Inside my body, though, fever burned hot and high.
When I was a young girl in the kitchens, one of the older girls worked on the day of her seventeenth moon, and she complained of mild fatigue and increased hunger. She said it was like getting her period, but a bit worse. Hotter and more insistent, but nothing she couldn't handle. But she was a Gamma.
As another wave of pain washed over me and I doubled over on my tattered cot, it felt like my insides were being clawed at by a beast. Perhaps this was the curse of being an omega.
Swallowing hard, I reached for my water on the rickety table by my bedside, drinking my fifth cup down in as many minutes. It was the only thing that helped.
Does it hurt more because I'm weak? Or is this what Doctor Andromeda's medicine was meant to fix?
A few slivers of glass still glittered at me by the door from between the cracks of my floorboards. Pieces I couldn't retrieve the night before that glared at me, damning and condemning me to this unending pain in my stomach.
I should have taken the medicine.
I whimpered internally, gripping the worn blanket beneath me. Seldom had the flimsy cloth been comforting, but I gripped it with shaking hands and more strength than I knew I had as I groaned through another painful arc of heat and pressure.
Every moment of my life played out behind my clenched eyes, sweat beading my furrowed brow. Most of the flashes were of the infirmary, the slow erasure of Doctor Andromeda's smiles as she treated me. Phillipe's fading image at my bedside. The glares and smacks of Delta Hester. The occasional snarl from the Alpha and Luna.
Evangeline was more prominent than I would have guessed. I hadn't realized how much of a fixture in my world she'd been until that moment when it felt like my insides were about to rupture.
Her piercing gaze was often above me. That was her favorite place. Above me. Taking pleasure in stepping on my hand when I dropped a plate. Or kicking my side when I scrubbed a spill from the carpet in her room. Cruel, beautiful Evangeline.
The wave passed, and the memories faded. My ragged breathing filled the small shack, and I rose to refill my water glass. This was going to be a long process. But I was determined to survive. Even as a lowly omega, finally having a wolf would mean I was no longer alone. It would mean I could find my mate one day. And escape life as a servant in Snow Pointe.
That fragile hope held me together through each cycle of pain. And when the moon rose high in the night sky after hours of agony, I opened my threadbare curtains and knelt in front of the window, letting the light bathe me in its cool glow.
"Moon Goddess... I know I am a weak omega. And I know you favor the strong and brave. But please... please give me the chance to be both of those things. Please help me be brave and face the pain. Help me be strong and accept my wolf."
It was a simple, honest prayer. It was a prayer that only someone who has been weak their entire life could pray. I shouldn’t have wasted my breath on it. Someone with more sense would have held their tongue and accepted their fate.
The Moon Goddess abandoned me at birth. I should have died in the wilderness as an infant, per Snow Pointe pack rule. But I didn’t. And she was all I had.
The pain intensified, as did the heat. My back ached as I caved in on myself, clawing at the floor. This was it. My first shift. I was changing.
"Is there a problem?" Doctor Andromeda asked, her eyes narrowing as she stood over me, hanging a fresh IV bag on the stand. She squeezed the bag a few times and thumped the line leading into my arm to get the thick fluid flowing.What the hell had she been feeding into my veins all this time? What had I unwittingly drunk down during all those visits to the infirmary? The questions compounded, and none had any answers in sight. Which only made the fear worse.Focus, Aurelia. Focus. Right. I shook my head and offered a warm smile at the imposter, spooning another mouthful of sludge into my face. "I'm just... thinking about how grateful I am. I know you said it's your job, but... without you, I'd have been dead years ago.""I know. You're weak. You've always been weak. And even with all my hard work and effort, you'll always be weak." The doctor sneered, shifting away to scribble on her clipboard once more.
It took another hour for me to bend my legs and lift them from the bed without collapsing from exhaustion. Frustration bubbled in my chest, and I huffed, slamming my hands on the infirmary bed in frustration."This is taking too long," I muttered, head whipping toward the door to study for any sign of the doctor. "I won't have time to move around the ward at this rate."Look, you got your legs moving. That's a good start. It might be better for us to look around at night anyway. We won't be easily spotted by the doctor, and we already know she leaves the infirmary at night to return to her quarters. Right. You're right. Night would be better. I'll eat as much as I can and pull the IV out after she leaves. The tension in my shoulders eased, and I relaxed back against the pillows. All I needed was patience. Andromeda would come and feed me, take more blood, and hook up the IV bag before leaving me for the night. If I cou
The first week came and went. And with it, all of Doctor Andromeda's pretense of care.The sweet, goodly doctor act faded, and she returned to her cutting, clinical tone and manners. Thankfully, I only saw her once or twice a day. She'd darken the west ward doors with a rickety metal cart containing a sparse meal, three medicine bags for the IV, and a tray of empty blood tubes. And she'd leave with a half-eaten bowl of gruel and six tubes filled with my blood.The meals could barely be called such. Cold soup with chunks of unidentifiable meat and vegetables that were obviously from three dinners passed. But I didn't complain.When she hooked those medicine bags that shone and swirled like liquid mercury and fed them into my small, bruised arms, I didn't complain. When the medicine burned and made me feel like I was dying the most painful death imaginable, I didn't complain. And when she stood over my writhing body, glaring down at me as though each moment of agony was punishment for b
I'd done so well for so long to hold on to the hope that one day, everything would be different. I fought and struggled, kept my head down, and did the best I could each day. I showed up when no one wanted me. I carried loads that my weak body was not meant to hold. I endured abuse and neglect and hatred because I believed that... one day... someone was going to see me for myself and not as Fumbles.Tears welled in my eyes and dripped down into my hair as I stared at the ceiling of the infirmary. The doctor, for all the good she'd done to keep me alive all those years, had broken me more than Evangeline and her cohort of jackals ever could. And I saw on her face that she knew she had.For the first time in three years, her gaze softened, and she stroked the hair at my temples away from my face."Shhh, hey... I'm sorry. That wasn't fair to you, Auri. Look at me, okay? Please?" Her cool hand cupped my cheek and turned my face toward hers. Thin lines etched across
I woke alone.No, not alone. Arya whined within me, urging me to wake with every pained whimper. Her voice was weak and raspy in my head. She beckoned me, her thready tone a constant pleading in my mind.Aurelia? Please... please wake up.I'm here.Thank Goddess. I'm so glad, but... Something is wrong. I begged her to explain, but she went silent. Still. I hated that feeling. More than the needles and IV lines poking out of my arms. More than the pounding in my head and the ache of my ribs. More than the dizziness and the utter isolation I felt in that familiar hospital bed. I hated the absence of my wolf the most.I'd spent most of my life alone. But it was never as lonely as having her vanish from my thoughts."You're awake." Doctor Andromeda's voice sliced through the air, cold and clinical. "I was worried you wouldn't wake for a few more days. Your condition was deplorable."I flinched at her sharp tone, the familiar sludge of guilt turning my stomach sour.Why did she have to sa
Serena yanked me upright, sending the basket of compost clattering to the dirt. Her fingers dug into the sides of my neck hard enough to bruise, as she guided my form effortlessly. A flick of her wrist, a twist of her elbow, and my body shifted to her command with no resistance. She marched me around the dirt path, cooing and mewling as though I were a puppy she was burdened to train."No, no, no. Not like that. Like this. Head up!" Serena snickered and shoved me to the dirt.The impact knocked the air out of me, and I gasped into a coughing fit. Dirt and food waste stained my clothing as I shook with ragged breaths and scrambled to collect the mess."Now it's playing in the trash, how ungrateful. We were trying to help you straighten up, and you'd rather dig in the dirt with your bare hands? Are you feral?" Brayden hissed, the heel of his sneaker slamming down onto the back of my hand, grinding into my aching digits. The pain pulled a scream from me, brought te







