LOGIN(Elara's POV)
The first sensation was the grit of the pavement against my cheek. Then, the cacophony. A chorus of harsh voices, laced with disgust and something akin to morbid entertainment, washed over me. My head throbbed, a dull ache behind my eyes mirroring the dull ache in my soul. I pushed myself up, wincing as my palms scraped against the rough asphalt, and blinked, trying to make sense of the blurry scene.
"Look at her, the poor thing,” a woman’s voice, sharp as shattered glass, cut through the clamor. “She's got a belly like that, you'd think she'd have more sense than to wander around like a lost pup."
"Pregnant omegas," a man grumbled, his words thick with prejudice, “they're a menace. Always causing trouble."
Trouble? I blinked again, trying to piece together the fragmented memories. A car, headlights blinding, a screech of tires, the sickening lurch of my stomach, the taste of bile rising in my throat. I'd almost been hit. My fingers instinctively went to my stomach, tracing the gentle curve that was growing more prominent with each passing day.
A cruel chuckle rippled through the crowd. “Maybe she’s a rogue, who knows who got her pregnant. Probably doesn’t even know herself.”
The words were like tiny barbs, sinking into my already wounded heart, and each one echoed a fear I had never dared voice. I wasn’t a rogue, I was mated, I was someone. Or, at least, I thought I was.
A wave of nausea washed over me, a combination of the jarring memories and the acrid scent of exhaust fumes clinging to the air. I pushed myself to my feet, ignoring the dizzying sway in my vision, and walked away from them as quickly as I could, each step a painful reminder of how lost and alone I felt. My mind flashed back to the image of my husband, his body entwined with hers, a grotesque replay that tore at my insides.
Earlier today, I had been so happy. So hopeful. The ultrasound appointment had confirmed it - twin heirs. A boy of little boys to fill the empty spaces of our too-large, too-cold house. I had envisioned Damon’s face when I told him, the flicker of joy I was so desperate to see in his eyes. Instead, I had seen… disgust. Betrayal. And now, here I was, adrift in the shadows, the promise of a happy family a cruel joke played on my heart.
The road I stumbled along gave way to a narrow alleyway, the stench of stale garbage and something metallic clinging to the air. It was dark, the only light a sliver of moon peeking between the towering buildings. I should probably go back home, but the thought sent a ripple of revulsion through me. Home. That word felt like a cruel mockery of everything I had ever longed for.
A growl, low and guttural, broke through the silence. Another, a snarl of challenge. Fear, sharp and cold, pierced my earlier despair. My hand went to my throat, touching the small, barely there scar where my power used to pulse. I hadn't let it out in so long, not since they said it was too "dangerous", not since I willingly gave it up for him.
I peered into the gloom and saw them, three shadows circling an alpha who lay crumpled on the ground. Rogues. They moved like predators, their eyes glinting in the dim light, and the alpha on the ground… He was in terrible shape. This wasn't going to be a quick mugging. They wanted to kill him.
The world seemed to narrow, my heightened omega senses overwhelmed with the pungent scent of blood and the raw stench of malice. My heart hammered against my ribs, each beat a frantic drum against the silence of the alley. A low, guttural sound escaped me, a sound I had not heard in years, a purr of untapped power, ancient and wild, echoing in the darkness.
Without thought, without hesitation, I moved. It was like watching myself from afar, a ghost controlling my limbs. The long dormant power within me stirred like a restless beast, clawing its way to the surface, hungry and raw. My vision pulsed, the darkness around me becoming a tapestry of swirling colors, energy coursing through my body, through my veins.
A hand, no longer soft and compliant but hard and sharp, shot out, a surge of uncontrolled energy blasting the rogue closest to me into the wall. He didn't even see it coming. The other rogues paused in their attack, their eyes widened in shock and a strange form of recognition that I did not understand.
The alpha on the ground shifted, his eyes locking with mine, a flicker of surprise, of something else - something akin to gratitude, perhaps, before they slid shut again. The other rogues turned their attention towards me, baring their teeth and growling, but now their prey was forgotten.
They were mine now.
I reached deep into the well of power that I thought had been extinguished, my lips pulling back in a silent snarl as my own fangs finally resurfaced. The alley was no longer dark, but now filled with the raw, pulsing energy that was me.
I was no longer just Elara, the meek omega.
I was something else.
And the rogues had no idea what they were in for.
(Elara’s POV)The cell door creaked open just enough for the shadow to slip inside. My heart seized half terror, half relief when I recognized the familiar figure crouched in the dim light.“Kaelen…” I whispered, my voice cracking.He crouched closer, careful not to make a sound. The faintest trace of moonlight caught his profile, strong, sharp, impossibly beautiful. My chest ached with a longing I tried to deny, but the exhaustion, the pain, the isolation all of it made his presence a lifeline.“I had to see you,” he murmured. “I couldn’t leave you here like this.”I wanted to reach out, to throw myself into his arms, but my wrists were shackled, and my body still ached from the council’s cruelty. Instead, I simply stayed still, letting him approach.“You’re hurt worse than I imagined,” he whispered, eyes scanning my bloodied dress and the bruises forming along my thighs. His hands hovered over me for a moment, and I could feel the
(Elara’s POV)The shadow lingered just beyond the faint light, and I dared not move. My wrists throbbed where the silver cuffs bit into my skin, but all I could think of was the presence before me. Powerful. Familiar. Impossible.A whisper, barely audible, floated across the cold stone.“Elara…”I froze. My breath hitched. The voice soft, deliberate, threaded with concern made my chest tighten in a way I hadn’t felt in days. I wanted to leap forward, to grab him, to feel the warmth of him beside me, but instinct told me to wait. Wait. Observe. Protect yourself.The chains rattled lightly as I shifted. My power hummed, instinctively reaching, sensing the presence in the darkness. My heartbeat synchronized with the energy that radiated from him strong, protective, steady.Kaelen.I had barely allowed myself to hope. After the council’s betrayal, after Clara’s gloating, after Damon’s cold indifference, I hadn’t let anyone
(Elara’s POV)The door slammed behind me, the iron echoing like a death knell. Darkness swallowed everything immediately the smell of damp stone, the chill biting through my bloodied dress, and the sharp tang of iron in the air. My wrists ached where the silver cuffs bit into my skin, but the cold was worse. It crept into my bones and settled there, heavy, unyielding.I stumbled forward, the chains clinking with every step. The guards had gone before I even had a chance to call out. Alone. Truly alone.I sank to the floor, the rough stone cold against my bloodied thighs. I pressed my hands to my belly, fingers brushing against the damp fabric and sticky warmth. The babies kicked small, desperate movements that made me ache with fierce love. They are still here. They are still alive.I leaned my forehead against the wall, pressing into the unforgiving stone. My breaths came fast and shallow, my body trembling, my thoughts racing. Wh
(Elara's POV) I reached down, fingers trembling, I wanted to confirm… and I did. Warmth. Wet. I lifted my hand. Blood. Fresh. Bright. Spreading. My white dress—chosen so carefully, so quietly, to look soft, pure, to make the council see me as something other than tainted—was ruined. The scarlet stain bled through the front like an accusation, like a warning, like a curse. I had wanted to look like the innocent one. Now I just looked... broken. I clutched my belly, breath shallow, hands slick, too afraid to move, too afraid to not move. And Clara… She stood there. Looking right at me like she saw nothing. “Oh dear,” she said with mock sympathy, her voice syrupy and cold. “So sorry, but your trial’s been rescheduled.” My ears rang. What? She stepped closer, smiling like she’d just won a game. “It’s this morning, not tomorrow. I do hope you’re prepared… because after this trial, you might actually want to run.” She grabbed my arm. I didn’t resist. I couldn’t. I couldn’t
(Elara's POV)I reached down, fingers trembling, I wanted to confirm… and I did.Warmth.Wet.I lifted my hand.Blood.Fresh. Bright. Spreading.My white dress—chosen so carefully, so quietly, to look soft, pure, to make the council see me as something other than tainted—was ruined. The scarlet stain bled through the front like an accusation, like a warning, like a curse.I had wanted to look like the innocent one.Now I just looked... broken.I clutched my belly, breath shallow, hands slick, too afraid to move, too afraid to not move.And Clara…She stood there.Looking right at me like she saw nothing.“Oh dear,” she said with mock sympathy, her voice syrupy and cold. “So sorry, but your trial’s been rescheduled.”My ears rang.What?She stepped closer, smiling like she’d just won a game. “It’s this morning, not tomorrow. I do hope you’re prepared… because after this trial, you might actually want to run.”She grabbed my arm.I didn’t resist. I couldn’t. I couldn’t find my voice. No
(Elara's POV)The forest was humming.Not with wind. Not with birdsong. But with something older—a pulse beneath the earth, like a second heartbeat I’d forgotten how to hear.I was barefoot, dressed in white. The trees whispered as I passed them, their leaves shifting like murmuring mouths. The moon above was swollen, crimson, watching me.“Come home,” a voice said.I turned.She was standing just beyond the fog. My wolf.She looked like me—but wilder. Taller. Hair darker. Eyes like a starless sky.Her bare feet didn’t stir the ground. Her long fingers curled and uncurled by her sides as if she didn’t know what to do with them. And yet… there was power in the way she stood.She took a step forward.“I waited,” she said.Another step. Her voice echoed inside my bones, not my ears.“I called. You gave them your silence.”“I had no choice,” I whispered, heart thudding.“You did,” she replied. “You gave me away for them.”She reached out her hand.And I, trembling, reached back.The momen







