The message burned in my pocket the entire ride home.
I didn’t show it to Jules. I didn’t tell the other girls. I just slipped it into my coat like it hadn’t made my heart race or set my pulse pounding with that horrible, electric dread.
Someone was watching us.
Someone knew what I was doing—and they didn’t like it.
“You should’ve let me handle it,” Jaxon said from behind the wheel, gripping the steering wheel tighter than necessary.
“I can’t sit back and pretend this isn’t happening,” I said, arms crossed. “Ava didn’t just disappear. Someone took her, or scared her off. Either way, she didn’t vanish into thin air.”
“I know,” he muttered. “But now you’re involved. More than you already were.”
“I was already involved. These girls are in danger. I’m not going to just stay quiet.”
He pulled into the driveway and killed the engine. “You’re brave, Elara. But being brave doesn’t mean being reckless.”
I opened the door and stepped out. “And what about you? You want me to go back to hiding? Pretending everything’s fine?”
“No,” he said, following me up the steps. “I want you safe. And I want these girls safe. Which means we need to start talking louder.”
I turned, surprised. “Louder?”
He nodded. “If someone wants you scared, the last thing you should do is go quiet.”
I didn’t expect the board meeting.
Jules called the next morning, voice full of warning.
“The city’s Omega Oversight Committee wants to talk to you. Today. A formal hearing.”
“Why?”
“They’re saying your presence at the center is stirring up trouble. That you’re a liability. That someone should’ve vetted your background better.”
My heart sank. “Cyrus.”
“Probably,” Jules said. “He has friends on the board. But I’m not pulling you. Not unless you want out.”
I didn’t hesitate. “I’m showing up.”
“Then wear something strong,” she said. “And bring backup.”
The Oversight Committee met in a wide conference room lined with windows too high to see out of.
Eight Alphas. One Beta. Two bored-looking assistants. And me—Omega, clearly out of place in my thrifted blazer and knotted stomach.
Jaxon came too, dressed sharp and silent beside me like some kind of royal bodyguard. He hadn’t said much on the drive over, but now that we were here, he radiated tension like a loaded spring.
A man with graying temples cleared his throat. “Ms. Sloane. Thank you for coming.”
“It’s Elara,” I said. “And thank you for summoning me like a rebellious teen.”
He blinked. One of the assistants stifled a laugh.
Another board member—a woman with a no-nonsense stare—leaned forward. “You’ve been working at Haven House?”
“Yes.”
“Without registering as a certified Omega mentor?”
“I didn’t know I had to register to care,” I said calmly.
“Let’s not play games,” said another man. “You have a history with Cyrus Black. That makes your presence controversial.”
I smiled tightly. “You mean threatening.”
Jaxon shifted beside me.
Someone else cut in. “We’ve received complaints that your involvement has incited unrest. There’s concern your personal history is influencing the youth under your care.”
“I hope so,” I said. “I hope they see that even if you’re trapped in a gilded cage, you can still break the lock.”
A murmur went through the room.
“You’re provoking,” the first man snapped.
“I’m existing,” I snapped back.
That’s when Jaxon stood.
And the room froze.
“If I may,” he said, voice deep and steady.
The board chair narrowed his eyes. “And you are?”
“Jaxon Black. Registered Alpha. Business owner. Protective guardian of Elara Sloane.” He looked around. “And the brother of the man you’re all too afraid to name.”
A hush fell.
Jaxon stepped forward. “Let me be clear. Elara has done more for those girls in two weeks than most of you have in your entire careers. She’s shown up. She’s listened. She’s given them something none of you ever bothered to provide—respect.”
“Mr. Vaughn—”
“No, you wanted this meeting,” Jaxon said sharply. “So now you’re going to listen. My brother may have money, but Elara has integrity. You can’t buy that. And I won’t let you use her past as a weapon to silence her.”
The woman on the end folded her hands. “And are you saying you intend to protect her from official oversight?”
“I’m saying I’ll protect her from abuse disguised as oversight,” Jaxon said. “If you want to regulate mentors, fine. But don’t pretend this is about rules. This is about control.”
He turned to me then, his voice softening. “You don’t owe them silence. Not anymore.”
Something inside me steadied.
I stood straighter. “I’m not stepping down. And if that costs me something, so be it.”
The committee went quiet.
The chair finally cleared his throat. “We’ll deliberate and get back to you.”
Jaxon opened the door for me.
And we walked out together.
Outside, I finally let out a long breath. “I don’t know whether to thank you or scream.”
He smiled slightly. “Please scream later. I like the drama.”
I bumped his arm. “You didn’t have to defend me like that.”
“Yes, I did,” he said. “Because I’ve watched you shrink for too long.”
We were quiet for a moment. Then he added, “I’m not Cyrus. And I never want you to treat me like you’re bracing for a hit.”
“I’m not,” I whispered. “Not with you.”
He met my gaze. “Good.”
And then he stepped closer.
And for a second, I thought—
But then my phone buzzed.
Another text.
Blocked number.
One down. Two more to go.
You should’ve stayed out of it, Elara. We warned you.
I froze.
Jaxon saw the screen.
“Is that—?”
“Same number,” I said, breath catching. “They know I went to the committee. They’re watching.”
He grabbed my hand. “We need to go. Now.”
When we got back to the house, the front door was ajar.
I stopped cold. “Did you leave it open?”
“No,” Jaxon said.
He stepped in first, tense and alert. I followed slowly.
Nothing was obviously missing. Nothing broken.
But when I got to the kitchen, I saw it.
A photo.
An old one.
Me. At my wedding.
And it was torn in half.
Cyrus’s face gone.
Mine circled in red.
Steam clung to the glass walls of the bathroom, curling in soft waves as the shower hissed around me. The heat seeped into my skin, easing the ache in my shoulders. For a few minutes, I let myself breathe in silence. Just water, just warmth, just me.But it didn’t last.The moment I heard the door open behind me, my pulse leapt. Jaxon. His presence filled the space before he even touched me. He had a way of claiming air, of making it impossible to ignore him.“Elara,” his voice rumbled low, rough like he’d been holding it back.I didn’t turn around, but my body reacted instantly—goosebumps rose across my arms despite the heat.“Do you have to sneak in here?” I muttered, trying for casual.He chuckled, deep and warm, but when his hands slid around my waist, pressing my back to his chest, casual dissolved instantly.“You know I can’t stay away,” he whispered against my neck.I leaned into him before I could think better of it. The scent of him, the solid weight of his chest against me—i
I thought I had finally gotten used to Cyrus’s voice lingering like smoke in the back of my head. Even when he wasn’t speaking, even when my phone wasn’t buzzing with his late-night messages, I could feel him there. My mate bond had dulled but it hadn’t disappeared, and that was my curse.But nothing could have prepared me for the venom in his words tonight.“Come back to me or you will never see your Jaxon again.”I froze where I stood in the hallway. The phone was still warm in my hand, my knuckles white around it. For a long moment, all I could hear was the rushing in my ears and my own heartbeat, so fast it made me dizzy.Cyrus didn’t even sound like the boy I used to know. He didn’t sound like the Alpha heir who had once looked at me with something close to tenderness. No—his voice was sharp, almost gleeful in its cruelty, as though the thought of ripping me away from Jaxon amused him.“You’re bluffing,” I whispered, though my voice shook.His chuckle on the other end was low, de
Jaxon’s hand was still wrapped around my phone, his grip firm as though the buzzing device might slip away and betray us further if he let go. His eyes—sharp, stormy, and unbearably intense—burned into mine.“How does he know, Elara?” His voice was low, but the restraint in it was terrifying. “Tell me how Cyrus knows you’re pregnant.”The word pregnant hung in the air like an unspoken accusation, even though I knew Jaxon wasn’t angry about the baby. No, it was the fact that Cyrus had thrown it at him like a weapon, cutting straight through the fragile happiness we had started to build.My throat felt tight. “Jaxon, I…” I couldn’t finish. Every excuse sounded weak, every silence suspicious.He set the phone down on the table with a deliberate motion, like it might explode. The veins in his hand stood out, his jaw clenched so tightly it hurt
Jaxon noticed instantly, his eyes narrowing.“Why is he calling you this late?”I froze, staring at the phone as it buzzed across the table, the glow of Cyrus’s name on the screen almost blinding me. My pulse hammered so loud it drowned out the sound of everything else.I had no answer—at least, not one that wouldn’t shatter the fragile thread holding us together.And as the phone kept buzzing, Jaxon’s jaw tightened.“Elara,” he said, his voice low, almost dangerous. “Answer it. Put it on speaker.”I swallowed hard, my throat suddenly bone-dry. His tone left no room for excuses. No softness. Just raw demand, an Alpha testing the limits of my silence.“I…” My hand hovered over the phone. Every nerve screamed at me not to answer, but Jaxon’s eyes pinned me down. Those dark, stormy eyes that once made me feel safe now felt l
Jaxon turned back to me, his jaw tense, eyes dark with a storm I couldn’t quite read. He didn’t look angry—not exactly. It was something else.“Elara.” His voice was low, careful, as if testing the weight of my confession. “You should have told me sooner.”I pressed my lips together, staring down at the glowing city lights below us. “I wasn’t sure. I’m still not sure. I didn’t want to say anything until I knew for certain.”He ran a hand through his hair, pacing the narrow balcony once before stopping in front of me again. “But you’ve been feeling like this for a while, haven’t you?”I swallowed, guilt pricking at me. “A few weeks.”“A few weeks?” His tone rose, a mixture of disbelief and something sharper. “And you didn’t think I had the right to know?”The words stung, but I forced myself to hold his gaz
The city glittered beneath us, a restless sea of lights that refused to sleep. The night air was cool, the kind that licked against bare skin and raised goosebumps, but Jaxon’s warmth pressed into me from behind, anchoring me against the balcony railing.“Are you cold?” he murmured into my hair, his breath sliding down my neck.I shook my head, though I shivered anyway. Not from the chill—but from him. The way his hands curved possessively around my waist, the way his chest rose and fell against my back like he couldn’t get close enough.“I shouldn’t want this right now,” I whispered, my voice catching, “not when everything else is falling apart.”“You think too much,” Jaxon countered, his lips brushing over the shell of my ear. “Sometimes you just… feel.”My breath hitched when his mouth found the tender spot at my