LOGINCaelen POV
(Flashback - 48 Hours Before)I woke before the alarm, the pale morning light slipping through the thin curtains as it always did. It hit the far wall first, warming the peeling paint instead of making it look tired. I stayed still, listening: pipes humming somewhere in the building, a neighbor’s radio muffled through the wall, footsteps above me. Ordinary sounds I’d heard a thousand times, but that morning they settled differently.When the alarm chimed softly and unassumingly, I shut it off immediately. My mother hated snoozing alarms, saying they taught the body to argue with itself. Even alone, I made the bed as soon as my feet hit the floor, sheets smoothed, pillow straightened, small acts of control in a room where nothing ever surprised me anymore.
The apartment was small but spotless. Everything had a place because it had to. The couch was secondhand, the table too small for more than two, the chair slightly uneven, but I arranged it all with care. Three plants sat on the windowsill, leaves turned toward the light. I watered them carefully while coffee brewed, counting drops: too much drowned them, too little made them brittle. I’d learned that the hard way.
The scent of instant coffee filled the room, sharp and familiar. I showered in the cramped bathroom, water pressure weak but warm, steam fogging the mirror until I stopped looking. I dressed in clean jeans and a sweater without holes, nothing fancy, just presentable, just enough.
Before eating, I checked my phone.
Good morning, sweetheart! Don’t forget Sunday dinner. I’m making your favorite. So proud of you!
I smiled without realizing it.
Wouldn’t miss it, Mom. Love you.
I set the phone face down, leaned back in the chair, and stared at the wall where my acceptance letter was pinned. Its edges curled slightly, but the words remained clear: Marketing assistant. Start date: Monday.
Two more shifts at the convenience store, I thought. Then I’d start my real career. It wasn’t impressive, but it was mine. Maybe in a few years, I could convince Mom to retire, let her rest for once.
Breakfast was simple: toast, eggs, and coffee. I ate slowly, scrolling through my schedule. Saturday evening shift, Sunday off, Monday is the start of everything I’ve worked for. I touched the letter again, fingers lingering as if it might vanish if I wasn’t careful.
At the café near campus, the doorbell jingled the moment I arrived. Mira was already there, her curly hair pulled back messily, fingers tapping her cup like she was vibrating. She grinned when she saw me.
“Three days,” she said. “Three days until we’re real adults.”
I laughed and slid into the seat across from her. “You say that like we haven’t been working since we were sixteen.”
“That was survival work,” she said, waving a hand. “This is career work. Totally different.”
We split a muffin, tearing it unevenly, neither of us caring who got the bigger half. Neither of us even checked who got the bigger half. She asked if I was nervous. I admitted I was terrified. What if they made a mistake hiring me? What if I wasn’t enough?
She told me to stop. Said I was brilliant. I called her biased. She said there’s a difference.
When she brought up dating, I felt my shoulders tense before I could stop them. I stared into my coffee instead of at her.
“I don’t know,” I said. “Maybe someday.”
She didn’t let it go, but she didn’t push hard either. Said I deserved romance, love, the messy, beautiful parts of life.
“I’ve seen what happens when Omegas date the wrong Alphas,” I whispered. “Control. Ownership. I’d rather be alone than belong to someone like that.”
She argued softly that not all Alphas were like that. I didn’t dispute it aloud, but didn’t believe it either. I told her I hadn’t met the exceptions yet.
“When you do,” she said, “I hope they deserve you.”
I laughed, a little bitterly. “That’s a fantasy.”
“Then you’ll find a Beta, or another Omega. Or you’ll be the first Omega to tame an Alpha with an actual soul.”
“I’m not taming anyone,” I said. “I’m focusing on my career, helping my mom, and maybe adopting cats.”
She laughed, and I did too. It felt good, warm, real.
When she left for work, I watched her go through the window, sunlight catching her hair. For once, nothing in my life felt like it was about to fall apart.
At the store, the fluorescent lights buzzed and flickered annoyingly. The smell of cleaning chemicals mixed with old hot dogs and stale coffee. I clocked in, restocked shelves, wiped counters, and nodded politely at regulars. Mrs. Ross asked about my mother. I said she was working too hard, as always. She told me my mother was lucky to have me.
Later, an Alpha in a tailored suit lingered too long. He commented on my scent and asked if I was an Omega. I kept my voice flat and professional, handed him his total, and told him to move along. When he left, I scrubbed the counter harder than necessary.
By 8:30 p.m., the store was quiet. Three men entered together, one an Alpha. I felt his presence before he spoke. When he leaned over the counter and asked for my number, I said no. When he pushed, I stayed calm. When his scent sharpened, I braced myself and told him to leave.
His friends dragged him out before it escalated. My hands trembled afterward. It never helped as much as I pretended it did.
At ten, I closed the store: swept, counted the register, filled out the report. The refrigerators hummed steadily, almost like breathing.
My mother called just before I locked up.
She sounded tired. I told her my shift was over. She told me to get home safely. We joked about who worked harder. She said she loved me. I said it back.
Just a few more months, I thought as I walked home. Once I settle in, I’ll convince her to slow down.
Sunday afternoon smelled like roast chicken and home. Her apartment was warm, cluttered with memories. Photos of me at every age lined the walls. She looked smaller than I remembered, thinner, but her smile was bright.
She insisted it was a celebration: my first real job. She said my father would be proud. We cooked together in comfortable silence, grief and joy woven so tightly they felt like the same thing.
Mira arrived with her usual energy. Dinner was loud, full of laughter. My mother talked about dating. I groaned. Mira rescued me by asking for seconds of pie.
After she left, my mother sank into the couch, exhaustion finally showing. She took my hand, told me she was proud, and urged me to stay kind, to never let anyone make me feel small.
I hugged her longer than usual. Something in her voice made my chest ache, though I didn’t know why.
When I left, she waved from the window until I turned the corner. The sunset turned the street to gold. I felt content, hopeful.
I didn’t know how close I was to losing all of it.
Aldric POVDay 5Victoria and Richard arrived together, which was how my parents had always arrived at things that mattered, not separately and not making an entrance, but together, with the quiet solidarity of two people who had been through enough in forty years of marriage to have stopped requiring drama as a vehicle for significance.My mother had been to the hospital twice since the night of the surgery. She had sat in the waiting room, and she had held my hand, and she had not once told me that everything would be fine, which was the correct choice, because she knew as well as I did that telling people things will be fine before you have any evidence for it is a form of self-protection dressed as reassurance. What she had said instead, at two in the morning with blood on my shirt and both of us waiting for a door to open at the end of a corridor, was, "I am here," and that had been true and therefore worth saying.Now, in the recovery room, she went directly to Caelen in the way
Caelen POVThey moved me out of the ICU on the third day.It was, the nurses explained with the measured cheerfulness of people who had learned to calibrate optimism to the exact level that would not feel like an insult, a very good sign. A sign that my body was doing what it was supposed to do, which was the least my body owed me after everything it had put us both through. I did not say that. I thanked them instead, because the nurses had been kind and relentless and had woken me at intervals throughout the night to check numbers on machines that I had learned to read the way you learn to read a foreign language, clumsily, slowly, but with a growing sense that the grammar was not entirely beyond you.The regular recovery room was smaller than the ICU bay and smelled less aggressively of antiseptic, which should have been a comfort and mostly was. There was a window. Real light came through it in the mornings, grey London light that was not beautiful in any ordinary sense but that fe
Caelen POVWhen Dr. Rashid arrived mid-morning to assess the ventilator question, I felt something I had not expected to feel toward her, given what I knew she had said to Aldric in the operating room. She had pulled my husband two steps away from me and asked him to choose between me and our son. She had said it because it was the truth and because he had deserved to know it, and he had refused in the way that was entirely him, and they had both saved us. I understood that. I understood it in the particular way you understand things when the alternative would have been your death.I was alive because she had accepted no as an answer. Because she had found Dr. Osei and found a third option and fought for both of us simultaneously when the easier path would have been to make the choice she had asked Aldric to make.Her eyes met mine when she came through the door and something passed between us that did not need words, which was fortunate because words were still beyond me. She checked
Caelen POVThe first thing I was aware of was sound.Not words, not anything I could make sense of, just the low, consistent rhythm of machines and the distant murmur of voices speaking in the careful register that people use when they are trying not to disturb something fragile. The sound reached me before anything else did, before light or sensation or the understanding of where I was, and for a long moment I existed only inside it, somewhere between asleep and not asleep, not quite able to cross the distance between those two things.Then pain arrived.It came from my abdomen, deep and insistent, radiating outward in waves that did not care about anything except their own existence. I had been in pain before, through the preeclampsia diagnosis and the weeks of modified bed rest and the contractions in the warehouse that had felt like my body trying to turn itself inside out, but this was different. This was the pain of something having been done to me rather than something happenin
Aldric POVThe NICU was quieter than I expected. Softer, somehow, despite all the machinery, as if the room understood what kind of people entered it and had arranged itself accordingly. A nurse met me at the door and walked me through without ceremony, past rows of incubators, past other families in other vigils that I tried not to look at because their grief was not mine to witness.And then she stopped, and I looked through the clear wall of the incubator, and I saw my son.He was so small. I had known he would be small, had understood that intellectually from every conversation with every doctor across the past eight months, but knowing it and seeing it were two entirely different countries with no road between them. He was smaller than I had imagined even in my worst imagining. His hands were barely the size of my thumb. His chest rose and fell with the careful, effortful rhythm of someone working very hard at something that was supposed to be automatic. There were tubes, more th
Aldric POVThey told me to wait outside.Two words that should not have been capable of undoing me, not after everything the night had already done, and yet I stood in the corridor outside the ICU with blood drying on my shirt and my hands completely useless at my sides, and I understood that this was the part where all the things I could not control were going to have their say.The waiting room was small and aggressively neutral. Pale walls, chairs bolted to the floor, a water dispenser in the corner that kept making a small clicking sound every few minutes like it was trying to fill a silence it could not possibly touch. At two in the morning, it was empty except for me. The fluorescent lights had none of the drama of the operating room, just flat, relentless brightness that made everything look slightly wrong, including my own hands when I looked down at them.Caelen's blood, on my shirt, along the collar, dried now to the color of rust. I had not noticed it until I sat down and t







