Laila POV
Six years later.
I caught myself in the bathroom mirror and had to just stop. Stare.
The woman looking back at me didn't feel like me. Not the me I used to know anyway.
I tilted my head, studying how my face had changed. The girl who ran from Jason's pack was long gone. That skinny, pale thing who could barely hold herself together.
This body now? It was curvier in all the right places. Stronger too. My skin held warmth, color. I actually looked alive. The supernatural grace and power that should have come with my wolf at fourteen had finally arrived.
My hair wasn't that lifeless mousy blonde anymore. Now it was dyed chocolate brown, falling in thick waves that moved with an otherworldly fluidity I never used to have.
I leaned closer to the glass. Searching for scraps of the old me. The girl desperate for Jason's approval.
I almost laughed because I couldn't find her. Good. She was better off buried.
The turning point came after Ava. My wolf finally appeared during the week after I gave birth to her. My wolf told me she had been suppressed by something before that had kept her locked away. The pain and desperation of giving birth alone seemed to break whatever chains had held her back, freeing her to protect both me and my daughter.
Something inside me woke up then. Healing faster. Senses sharpening. My body shifting bit by bit into what it was meant to be.
And with those changes came a new name. Laila died the night I gave birth to Ava. Vanessa Harper had to be born in her place. Vanessa was not weak. Not small. She was someone who could walk into a room and people listened.
More importantly, with the new name, Jason and his pack would never find out my secret Ava, even if they suddenly wanted to.
Ava was my daughter and only MY daughter. I didn't want to make things complicated.
A knock pulled me out of my head.
I called "Come in," Marcus poked his head in, holding up yet another envelope—cream paper, flowing script, same damn sender.
Jason.
I didn't even have to look. Jason's pack had been sending proposal after proposal. Stacking them up like bricks in my drawer.
"File it," I said without blinking.
He shifted, still standing there. "But Vanessa, this could be huge. Moon Ridge has connections everywhere—"
I cut him off. "I said file it."
My tone left no cracks for him to slip through. He went, probably chewing on it the whole way out.
I turned back to my computer. Six years I'd been living in the human world building something solid. Being caught between two worlds had given me insight no one else had.
Humans wanted werewolf products. Werewolves wanted things that humans specialized in. My little company was the bridge between them.
Everyone wanted to work with Vanessa Harper.
Everyone, including Jason's pack. But I never let that happen.
My phone buzzed on the desk. A text from Ava's school. Emergency - please come immediately.
I grabbed my keys, my heart already racing. By the time I reached the school, I was prepared for the worst.
Mrs. Henry met me at the infirmary door, her face grave. "Ava collapsed during recess. She's stable now, but..."
I pushed past her to see my daughter lying on the small cot, pale and too still. Ava's eyes fluttered open when she heard my voice.
"Mama? I got dizzy and everything went dark."
My throat tightened. "It's okay, baby. Mama's here."
Mrs. Henry pulled me aside while the school nurse checked Ava's vitals. "This isn't the first time, Vanessa. She's been more tired lately, smaller than other children her age. That's unusual for werewolf children - they're typically stronger than human kids."
She hesitated before continuing. "I know this is personal, but... have you considered that Ava's father might have answers? About her heritage, her health?"
Each question was a knife. "Ava's father isn't in the picture."
"I understand. It's just... she asks about him constantly. Draws pictures of a man with green eyes. Calls him 'the Alpha.'"
My blood went ice cold. Mrs. Henry continued explaining Ava's dreams about a big house in the forest, details she should never know.
Because Ava was describing Jason's pack house.
After getting Ava settled at home, I called Dr. Martinez. His nurse said the test results from last week were ready.
My chest went tight before I even heard the news. Dr. Martinez's voice was gentle but serious. "Ava has a rare congenital heart condition. She'll need surgery, and soon. We need to admit her to Mercy General immediately for pre-surgical preparation."
The drive to Mercy General felt endless. Ava sat in the backseat, quiet but alert. She'd been asking fewer questions lately. More tired. That scared me more than anything.
The hospital was impressive. State-of-the-art equipment. The best werewolf medical facility on the East Coast. It was also expensive as hell. But Ava was worth every penny.
We checked in at the front desk. The nurse explained that Dr. Martinez wanted to run a full panel. Blood work, imaging, the whole nine yards.
"How long will we be here?" I asked.
"The doctor will want to keep her for observation. Probably a week minimum before we can schedule the surgery."
My heart sank. One week of worry and waiting, then the surgery itself.
After getting Ava settled in her room, I went downstairs to handle the paperwork. Insurance forms, medical histories, emergency contacts. All the bureaucracy that came with crisis.
I was exhausted already. Emotionally drained from pretending everything was fine when nothing felt fine at all.
The elevator doors opened on the ground floor. I stepped inside, already thinking about coffee and how to rearrange my work schedule.
That's when I saw him.
Jason Bradshaw.
The world stopped.
Six years melted away like they'd never happened. I was eighteen again, standing on his doorstep with a pregnancy test hidden in my pocket and hope bleeding from my chest.
Did he remember me? What would he say? What would I say?
Laila's POV"Which pack did you belong to before, Vanessa?"The words hit like a freight train. My lungs forgot how to work. Jason's eyes—sharp, green, unrelenting—locked on me like he was hunting prey that had nowhere left to run.My mouth went dry. Every answer felt like walking into quicksand with weights tied to my ankles."I don't have anything to say about that," I managed, steady voice wrapped around shaky bones.His brows lifted, just a fraction. In this world, dodging wasn't neutral—it meant you were either hiding something ugly or guarding something explosive. Either way, not good."Interesting response," he murmured, tilting his head. "Most people are proud of their pack heritage."Think, Laila. Think."Most people aren't neutral liaisons," I shot back. "Pack ties make business messy."It was clean. Logical. Believable enough. But I could see it—the way he tucked that p
Laila's POVTwo days.That's how long it had been since Ava's surgery—forty-eight hours of stale air, antiseptic floors, and the rhythmic beeping of machines that had become both lullaby and torment.Two days of living inside this sterile hospital room, counting every fragile heartbeat on the monitors like they might vanish if I dared blink too long.Dr. Martinez called the procedure a success. Better than expected, he'd said, as though those three words could erase years of fear.But success wasn't safety. "Well" didn't mean "finished." It meant a long road of recovery. Follow-ups. Specialists. Medication that insurance didn't fully cover. Bills that stacked like bricks on my chest every time I looked at them too long.I was buried in those bills when the air shifted.I didn't need to look up to know who stood in the doorway. His presence carried its own gravity.Jason. Again."Ms. Harper," he said, voice formal, like we were polite strangers instead of ghosts haunting each other. "I
Jason's POVI stumbled back into my room at the pack house like I'd just gone ten rounds with a freight train.This night was supposed to be simple. Business dinner. Shake hands. Trade empty promises with other Alphas. Maybe finally corner Vanessa Harper—the woman who'd been dodging me like I carried a disease—and pin her down for answers.Instead, I got… this.The woman who refused every offer I made? The one who reminds me so much of Laila. The one who poured coffee on Brittany and ordered us to be banned from her building. The one who bolted from that ballroom like death was on her heels after a call about her daughter.This woman was Vanessa Harper?There were too many coincidences. Too many threads pulling me in directions I didn't want to go.I ripped off my tie and went straight for the whiskey. The expensive stuff. The bottle I usually saved for when politics got so dirty I can't scrub the stink off. Tonight? I thought about the confusion and the ache that had taken up residen
Laila's POVThe world tipped sideways. Riley's words just kept looping in my skull, broken-record style, like the universe had picked the ugliest song and pressed repeat. Ava collapsed. Rushed to the hospital.I don't remember dropping the phone. Don't remember shoving Jason back or cutting through that ballroom with eyes on me like I'd lost my damn mind. Next thing I knew I was in my car, tires screaming down the street, my heart hammering inside my chest like my ribs couldn't hold it in.Collapsed. Resuscitated. The words circled like vultures, each pass squeezing my lungs tighter. A noose, that's what it felt like. A slow, choking noose.Not Ava. Please God, not my baby.I knew her condition was slipping. Doctors had their polite way of saying it—cautiously optimistic, let's wait, let's schedule. But I saw it. I saw it in her face every morning, that ghost-pale look, that too-old exhaustion on a six-year-old.I should've screamed at them sooner. I should've forced their hand. Sho
Laila's POVThe elevator was too small. Too bright. Too much like a cage.Jacob stood there in the doorway like he'd just walked into a war zone with no armor on. His face went from blank to oh shit real fast. It was obvious that he didn't quite understand what he walked in on, but that he knew he should regret it.Brittany's mouth opened and closed like a fish out of water. "Vanessa?" she repeated, tasting the word like it was poison.Jason's green eyes locked onto mine with laser precision. I could practically hear the gears grinding in his head, trying to connect dots that I'd spent six years keeping scattered."Where is Vanessa?" Brittany demanded, her voice climbing toward hysteria.I caught Jacob's eye and shook my head. Just slightly. A warning.I didn't want them to know I was Venessa. I didn't want Jason to dig in too much about who I had become.I just needed to clear them away."I didn't mean to interrupt," Jacob stammered, his Adam's apple bobbing as he tried to retreat. "
Laila's POV"Where is Ava's father?"The words hit me like a slap across the face. No warning, no warm-up, just Jason standing there, his green eyes locked on me the way he used to when he was trying to crack some complicated pack problem, or figure out why the quarterly reports weren't adding up. Only this time I was the problem."This has nothing to do with you, Jason." It came out sharp, way sharper than I meant, but maybe that was the point. Like I was throwing up bricks, stacking a wall before Jason could even get close.And then his jaw did that thing. That twitch that always used to drive me nuts during meetings, like the tiniest movement carried a whole storm behind it. Same Jason. Same temper tucked neatly under the surface."I was just asking," he said, but the way it came out—like there was something bruised sitting under the words.I hitched Ava higher on my hip. She's growing so fast it feels like she gains a pound every night, but in that moment, I needed her weight agai