/ Werewolf / REJECTED BY FATE, CLAIMED BY THE ALPHA KING / Chapter 3 – The Healer’s Hands

공유

Chapter 3 – The Healer’s Hands

작가: Sonia.C
last update 최신 업데이트: 2025-09-26 18:05:28

The first rays of dawn slipped through the flaps of the healer’s tent, soft and gold, painting faint streaks across the canvas. Aria stretched her sore arms, feeling the weight of exhaustion seep into her bones. She hadn’t slept at all.

The memories from last night—the laughter, the sneers, Damian’s cold rejection—had clawed their way into her chest again, leaving her raw and hollow. But she refused to let it break her. Not today.

Not when so many still needed her.

She tightened the ties of her healer’s apron and walked to the basin, pouring out the murky water and filling it anew. The crisp chill bit into her skin, shocking her awake, but she welcomed it. Pain was grounding. Pain reminded her she was alive.

Work. Heal. Keep moving.

Those had become her mantras.

When the wounds inside her screamed too loudly, she drowned them in the cries of others. When her chest ached with rejection, she silenced it with bandages, poultices, and remedies.

Her soul might be fractured, but her hands still had purpose.

The infirmary filled quickly. Word of her skill had spread, though no one would admit it aloud. Injured wolves trickled in, some carried by family, others limping on their own. The recent border clash had left the pack bruised and bloodied.

Aria moved among them with quiet efficiency.

She crouched beside a boy no older than twelve, his leg sliced open from knee to ankle. His mother wrung her hands anxiously, eyes darting to Aria with barely disguised disdain.

“Is there no one else?” the woman muttered. “An Omega treating my son…”

Aria’s lips tightened, but she kept her focus on the boy. His eyes brimmed with tears, his small frame trembling.

“You’ll be okay,” Aria said softly, her voice calm as a lullaby. “This will sting, but only for a moment. Do you trust me?”

The boy nodded quickly, eager for comfort even if his mother scowled.

Aria cleaned the wound carefully, her touch gentle, her movements precise. She hummed under her breath, an old tune her own mother used to sing when Aria was young. Slowly, the boy’s trembling eased, his breathing steadied.

“You’re brave,” Aria murmured as she stitched the gash with practiced hands. “Stronger than most adults I know.”

A faint smile tugged at the boy’s lips. “Really?”

“Really,” she said, winking.

By the time she tied the last stitch, his tears had dried. She wrapped the bandage snugly and patted his knee. “No running for a while, but you’ll heal well. And one day, you’ll have a scar to show off. A warrior’s mark.”

His chest puffed with pride at her words, though his mother sniffed in disapproval.

“Thank you,” the boy whispered anyway, his gaze lingering on Aria with gratitude his mother couldn’t erase.

Aria smiled back, warmth blooming in her chest. Those little sparks of kindness—those fleeting moments of connection—were what kept her going.

Not everyone was as appreciative.

Later, as she tended to a burly warrior with a dislocated shoulder, he sneered down at her.

“Careful, Omega,” he growled. “You break me, and you’ll wish you hadn’t.”

Aria swallowed her irritation. She had to climb onto the cot just to get enough leverage, her small frame dwarfed by his bulk. With practiced strength, she snapped his shoulder back into place.

The warrior howled, then immediately rotated his arm in disbelief. Relief flickered across his face, but he masked it quickly with a glare.

“Even a broken clock is right twice a day,” he muttered before stomping out.

Aria exhaled slowly, clenching her fists at her sides. No matter how many she healed, no matter how many lives she saved, she was still just an Omega in their eyes.

Still the rejected one.

Still the mistake.

But she forced herself to unclench her hands, to breathe. She wasn’t doing this for their approval. She was doing it because it was who she was. Because she couldn’t stand to see suffering when she had the power to ease it.

By midday, her body screamed for rest. Sweat clung to her hairline, her fingers cramped from endless stitching and bandaging. She sank onto a stool, sipping water from a clay cup, her gaze drifting to the entrance.

Wolves came and went, some limping, some groaning, some carried on stretchers. She tended to them all.

Yet every whispered insult, every suspicious glare, every muttered Omega trash scraped against her heart like sandpaper.

It would’ve been easier to shut herself off, to grow cold and detached. But Aria couldn’t.

When a young warrior sobbed over the loss of his brother, she sat with him long after his wounds were cleaned, letting him weep into her shoulder though others would mock him for it later.

When an elderly wolf winced at the stiffness of her hands, Aria massaged them gently with herbal oil, listening to the woman’s stories of her youth until her laughter filled the tent.

Aria gave them pieces of herself, even when they gave her nothing in return.

But not everyone left unscathed.

“Why waste your time?” a she-wolf scoffed as Aria tied a sling around her injured arm. “You’re not a real healer. You’re just playing pretend until someone competent shows up.”

Aria tightened the knot, perhaps a little more firmly than necessary. “You’ll find the sling supports the joint well enough. Unless, of course, you’d rather wait for someone more ‘competent’ while your arm hangs useless.”

The she-wolf glared but didn’t argue. She stormed out, muttering insults under her breath.

Aria sank back against the cot, biting her tongue. She rarely let her temper slip, but sometimes it was nearly impossible to stay silent.

They could tear her down all they wanted. But they couldn’t take away what she knew.

And she knew she was good at this.

She was meant for this.

As the day waned, Aria stepped outside to catch her breath. The sky blazed with streaks of crimson and gold, the setting sun painting the world in fire. She tilted her face toward it, closing her eyes as the warmth kissed her skin.

Her muscles ached, her back screamed, but a quiet pride curled in her chest. She had healed dozens today. Eased pain, soothed fears, saved lives.

And yet…

The moment she stepped outside, two passing wolves sneered at her.

“Look at her,” one said. “Parading around like she matters.”

“She thinks healing scratches makes her important,” the other snorted. “Still an Omega. Still nothing.”

Their laughter trailed behind them as they walked away.

Aria stood frozen, her throat tight, her chest hollow. For all her effort, for all the blood and sweat she poured into this pack, she was still invisible. Still disposable.

Her hands curled into fists at her sides. She wanted to scream, to demand that they see her, to force them to admit she mattered. But she didn’t.

Instead, she drew a long, steadying breath.

“Let them laugh,” she whispered to herself. “Let them sneer. My worth isn’t theirs to decide.”

The words wavered on her tongue, fragile and uncertain, but she clung to them anyway.

Because if she didn’t… she had nothing.

When she returned to the infirmary, the lanterns flickered low again, just as they had the night before. The scent of herbs and blood lingered in the air, heavy and sharp.

Aria sank onto her stool, cradling her head in her hands.

She was tired. Tired of fighting for scraps of respect. Tired of proving herself over and over only to be dismissed.

But as her hands pressed against her face, she remembered the boy’s shy smile, the old woman’s laughter, the warrior’s relieved tears.

Those moments were real.

Those lives were changed.

And if she had to bear the weight of rejection, of scorn, of invisibility to keep giving those moments to others… she would.

Because maybe—just maybe—her worth wasn’t in what the pack saw.

Maybe her worth was in what she gave, quietly, without recognition.

Her hands might be Omega hands, but they were healer’s hands. And they would not stop working.

Not now.

Not ever.

이 책을 계속 무료로 읽어보세요.
QR 코드를 스캔하여 앱을 다운로드하세요

최신 챕터

  • REJECTED BY FATE, CLAIMED BY THE ALPHA KING    Chapter 25: The Wolf’s Instinct

    The dungeon corridors were quiet, save for the low hiss of torches that lined the damp stone walls. Kaelen moved through them with measured strides, his shoulders squared, his jaw tight. He hadn’t planned to come here tonight—he had been restless, prowling the halls of his stronghold like a caged beast, unable to sleep. Something tugged at him, a pull he couldn’t ignore, guiding his steps downward.The air grew colder the deeper he descended, carrying with it the acrid sting of silver and wolfsbane. His wolf stirred uneasily in the back of his mind, pacing, restless.Why are we here? Kaelen thought, tightening his grip on the banister as he rounded another curve.But his wolf didn’t answer with words. Instead, a low growl reverberated through Kaelen’s chest, primal and urgent.And then—he smelled it.Faint, barely there, buried beneath the stench of pain and iron—but undeniable. Her.Kaelen froze mid-step, his head snapping up, nostrils flaring. The scent was fractured, dulled by torm

  • REJECTED BY FATE, CLAIMED BY THE ALPHA KING    Chapter 24: A Whisper from the Past

    The silence in the cell was deafening after Selene’s departure. Only the faint dripping of water somewhere in the distance kept time, a steady reminder of how long each second stretched. Aria sat slumped against the cold stone wall, her wrists burning against the silver chains, her skin raw and blistered.But it wasn’t just the physical pain gnawing at her—it was the hollow ache Selene’s words had left behind. The image of Kaelen whispering vows to Selene, of his hands cradling her like she was irreplaceable, clawed at Aria’s chest until she thought she might shatter from the inside out.Her wolf growled faintly, trying to anchor her, but even that low vibration of strength threatened to fade.I’m slipping, Aria thought, blinking against the tears blurring her vision. I can’t hold on much longer…And then, through the fog of despair, came a whisper. Not from her wolf this time—but from memory.A woman’s voice, soft and melodic, warm as sunlight."Aria, my moonflower, there will come a

  • REJECTED BY FATE, CLAIMED BY THE ALPHA KING    Chapter 23: Taunted in the Dark

    The cold of the silver-lined cell was something Aria thought she could endure, but the wolfbane had burned her veins until every breath was like swallowing fire. She lay on the damp stone floor, her hair plastered to her face, her skin clammy with sweat. Her wolf’s voice still lingered faintly in her mind after those haunting visions—urging her to endure, to survive. You are not done yet, Aria. Rise. The moon will not abandon you.But her body screamed in contradiction. Her wrists bore angry welts from the silver chains, and each time she shifted her weight, they reopened with a sting sharp enough to blur her vision. She could hear faint sounds of life beyond her prison: guards laughing, footsteps pacing the corridor, the faint howls of wolves in the distance. Each sound was a cruel reminder that the world outside carried on as though she didn’t exist.Her eyelids fluttered shut, if only to escape the sight of her own frailty. Yet, the sound of heels clicking against the stones snappe

  • REJECTED BY FATE, CLAIMED BY THE ALPHA KING    Chapter 22: Shadows Between Life and Death

    The door to Aria’s cell shrieked open, ripping her from a shallow, shivering sleep. She blinked into the dim corridor light as two guards stepped inside, their faces hidden in shadow, eyes glinting with malice.“Up,” one barked, yanking the chain fixed to her shackles.The sudden pull jerked her forward, and she stumbled to her knees, pain lancing through her raw wrists and ankles. The silver’s bite made her head spin.“I said up!” The other kicked her ribs, forcing a sharp cry from her lips.With what little strength remained, Aria dragged herself to her feet. Her legs shook beneath her, weak from days of malnourishment and constant burning pain.They didn’t explain where they were taking her. They didn’t need to. The glint of the syringe in the first guard’s hand told her enough. Wolfsbane.Her stomach dropped.“No…” The whisper barely left her throat before they dragged her out of the cell.The chamber they brought her to wasn’t much larger, but the difference was immediate. This r

  • REJECTED BY FATE, CLAIMED BY THE ALPHA KING    Chapter 21: Shackles of Fire

    The iron-banded door clanged shut, and the echo traveled down the stone corridor like a death knell. Aria stood motionless, her wrists still bound in shackles, as the guards shoved her forward into the waiting chamber.The cell was nothing like the holding rooms aboveground. This one had been designed for wolves who refused to yield. It reeked of damp earth, blood, and despair.But it wasn’t the stench that made her stomach twist—it was the gleam of silver lining every seam of the stone walls. Thin bands of polished metal crisscrossed like veins, pulsing faintly in the moonlight that filtered through the barred slit of a window high above.Aria’s wolf whimpered the moment they crossed the threshold. The silver’s energy licked at her skin, sharp as knives. She stumbled.The guards sneered. “Don’t like your new home, traitor?” one jeered, jerking her forward.The other yanked the shackles tight. “You should be grateful. Some prisoners don’t even get a cot.”Aria’s eyes flickered to the

  • REJECTED BY FATE, CLAIMED BY THE ALPHA KING    Chapter 20: Shackled

    The moonlight spilled cold silver through the infirmary windows, painting pale streaks across Aria’s weary frame as she sat at her desk. She hadn’t slept a wink. Her wolf still prowled inside her, restless and unsettled, repeating its warning in low, steady growls.Danger.But nothing had happened—yet.Aria had tried to lose herself in work, grinding herbs, reorganizing tinctures, cleaning wounds that weren’t there. Anything to occupy her hands and silence her mind. Yet unease lingered. She couldn’t shake the sense that the air itself was waiting to break.The sound of laughter cut through the night. She stiffened.Not the warm laughter of companionship. This was sharp, mocking.She rose slowly, crossing to the door and pushing it open. Her stomach sank when she saw Selene approaching with two of her attendants, each of them carrying smug smirks. Selene’s honey-blonde hair gleamed in the moonlight, her emerald eyes fixed directly on Aria with a look that made her wolf bristle.“Well,

더보기
좋은 소설을 무료로 찾아 읽어보세요
GoodNovel 앱에서 수많은 인기 소설을 무료로 즐기세요! 마음에 드는 책을 다운로드하고, 언제 어디서나 편하게 읽을 수 있습니다
앱에서 책을 무료로 읽어보세요
앱에서 읽으려면 QR 코드를 스캔하세요.
DMCA.com Protection Status