LOGINI changed into the nicest dark jeans I owned and a navy button-down shirt, the only outfit I had that wasn’t meant for funerals or job interviews.
The door opened without a knock. Martin stepped in, his hands clasped behind his back in that formal way of his.
“Mr. Noah? I’m here to escort you to the dining hall.”
I nodded, glancing at the scattered clothes still on the bed. "I’ll deal with them when I get back," I thought.
I followed him through the long corridors. The dining hall was enormous, and there's a long, polished table that could easily seat twenty people.
Ethan sat at the head, scrolling on his tablet. The moment I stepped inside, he looked up, eyes locking on me, and gestured to the chair immediately beside him.
I sat down slowly, hyperaware of every movement. His Alpha scent hit me like a quiet wave, it made my Omega instincts purred, urging me to lean closer, to relax into it, to trust. I locked every muscle in place and stared straight ahead.
A woman I hadn’t seen before appeared with the first course. A creamy soup I was pretty sure had a French name I’d never pronounce right. I picked up the spoon, but my hand trembled so badly the silver clinked against the bowl.
“You don’t have to be nervous,” Ethan said quietly. “It’s just dinner.”
“I’ve never eaten in a room that costs more than my entire education,” I shot back before I could stop myself.
The corner of his mouth twitched, almost, but not quite, a smile. “Fair point.”
We ate in silence for a while. The soup was impossibly good, velvety, rich, better than anything I’d ever made or been served. I was so focused on not spilling it that I didn’t notice Ethan watching me until I lifted my head and found his gaze fixed on mine.
Everything in me froze.
His eyes weren’t cold or clinical like they’d been earlier. They were dark, intense, almost hungry. Like he was seeing something he hadn’t expected. My pulse slammed against my throat. Heat crawled up my spine and into my face. I dropped my gaze fast, staring at the half-eaten soup like it might save me.
I could feel him still looking. The air between us thickened, causing my skin to pickle. I wanted to disappear. I wanted to ask what he was thinking. I wanted to look up again and see if that look was still there. But I forced myself to remain still, unable to continue eating.
“Tell me about yourself,” Ethan said suddenly, breaking the tension.
I startled. “What?”
“I realized I don’t know much about you. Beyond the obvious.”
“There’s not much to tell.” I forced a small, dry laugh. “I worked retail and delivery jobs before this. I like reading. I’m good at being forgettable.”
“Why would you want to be forgettable?”
“It’s easier than being compared to someone better and coming up short every time.”
The words came out sharper, more bitter than I meant. Ethan’s eyes sharpened too. He squinted slightly, studying me like he was trying to see past the surface for the first time.
“Is that what you think? That you’re lesser?”
“I don’t think it. I know it.” My voice cracked on the last word.
“Tommy was the golden child. Charismatic, strong-scented, everything an Omega should be. I was the spare parts. The one nobody notices unless I’m standing next to someone worth noticing.”
“That must have been difficult.”
I shrugged, trying to make it casual. “It’s just how things are. I made peace with it a long time ago.”
“Did you?”
The quiet question caught me off guard. Before I could answer, Martin appeared with the main course: perfectly seared steak, roasted vegetables arranged like a painting, some kind of herb sauce I didn’t recognize. The interruption saved me from having to respond.
We ate again in silence, but it wasn’t the same. The air felt heavier now, like something had cracked open between us and neither of us knew how to close it.
“The first pack dinner is tomorrow night,” Ethan said eventually. “Most of the high-ranking members will be there. They’ll want to meet you properly.”
My stomach plummeted. “Tomorrow?”
“Is that a problem?”
“I just thought I’d have more time to prepare.”
“How do you mean?”
I set my fork down harder than I intended. “Let’s say… to learn how to act like I belong here. Figure out what I’m supposed to say. Not embarrass you in front of your pack.”
Ethan placed his own fork down carefully and turned to face me fully. “You don’t need to be anyone other than yourself. I’m not asking you to perform.”
“Yes, you are.” My voice came out low but steady. “That’s exactly what this whole arrangement is. A performance.”
He didn’t answer. Because I was right, and we both knew it.
After dinner, I escaped back to my suite. I rearranged the clothes on the bed, folded everything, hung what needed hanging—small, mindless tasks to keep my hands busy.
When I was done, I called Sarah.
“How is it?” she asked the second she picked up.
“Weird. Uncomfortable. It feels like playing dress-up in someone else’s life.”
“And Ethan?”
“He’s polite. Distant. Exactly what you’d expect from someone who hired a stand-in mate.”
“I hate this so much.”
“Yeah. Me too.”
We talked for almost an hour about safe, ordinary things. Dad’s treatment was going smoothly, her next shift was a double, the neighbor’s cat kept sneaking into our apartment again. Normal life felt impossibly far away, like it belonged to another person.
After we hung up, I stood at the window staring out at the dark forest. Somewhere out there, pack members were living real lives. Tomorrow I’d have to walk into a room full of them and pretend I belonged at Ethan’s side.
I pulled the curtains closed and climbed into the massive bed. It was too soft, too big. I curled up on one side and tried not to think about the way Ethan had looked at me across the table.
Suddenly, there's a soft knock on the door. Before I could respond, the door opened Martin stepped inside.
“Mr. Noah, Alpha Ethan requests your presence.”
My heart lurched into my throat. I sat up fast, sheets pooling around my waist.
“Now?”
Martin inclined his head. “He’s waiting in his study.”
I stared at the butler, my pulse roaring loudly in my ears. “It’s almost midnight. What does he want that can’t wait until morning?”
Martin’s expression remained perfectly neutral. “He did not say, sir. Only that it is important.”
Ethan’s POVI stood under the scalding spray longer than necessary, letting the water pound against my shoulders. Steam filled the bathroom, thick and blurring the edges of everything, but it couldn’t blur the memory of Noah’s face across the dinner table, wide-eyed, guarded, trying so hard not to let me see how much the whole evening unnerved him.I shut off the water, stepped out, and wrapped a towel low around my hips. The mirror was fogged; I swiped a hand across it and stared at the man looking back. I looked tired. Hungry in a way that had nothing to do with food.I reached for the bottle of body wash, then paused.It had been two years since anyone scrubbed my back.That small, intimate ritual belonged only to my mates. Tommy’s hands especially, stronger than they looked. He’d always taken his time, pressing his thumb into the knots between my shoulder blades until I melted against the tiles. The simple act had felt more vulnerable than sex sometimes. No one else had ever been
I changed into the nicest dark jeans I owned and a navy button-down shirt, the only outfit I had that wasn’t meant for funerals or job interviews.The door opened without a knock. Martin stepped in, his hands clasped behind his back in that formal way of his.“Mr. Noah? I’m here to escort you to the dining hall.”I nodded, glancing at the scattered clothes still on the bed. "I’ll deal with them when I get back," I thought.I followed him through the long corridors. The dining hall was enormous, and there's a long, polished table that could easily seat twenty people.Ethan sat at the head, scrolling on his tablet. The moment I stepped inside, he looked up, eyes locking on me, and gestured to the chair immediately beside him.I sat down slowly, hyperaware of every movement. His Alpha scent hit me like a quiet wave, it made my Omega instincts purred, urging me to lean closer, to relax into it, to trust. I locked every muscle in place and stared straight ahead.A woman I hadn’t seen befor
Ethan’s POVI barely made it out of Noah’s suite before my wolf clawed at the inside of my skin, demanding I turn around. Demanding I go back in there, lock the door, and finish what my eyes had already started.The image burned behind my lids even now. Noah standing there, fresh from the shower, water droplets trailing down from his navel, and disappearing beneath the towel that did nothing to hide the soft, heavy outline of his cock. It had shifted slightly when he moved, and the sight had punched the air straight out of my lungs.I forced myself down the hallway, clenching my jaw so hard my teeth hurt. I shoved through the double doors of my office and slammed them behind me, the sound echoing off the high ceilings. My hands shook as I braced them on the desk."Breathe. Just breathe." My subconscious said.A sharp knock interrupted before I could pull myself together.“Enter,” I growled.Marcus, my Beta, stepped inside. Tall, steady, annoyingly calm as always. His nostrils flared
The contract felt like it weighed a thousand pounds in my bag as I drove back to the small apartment I shared with Sarah.I gripped the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles turned white. I had just sold three years of my life, and I couldn’t even tell if I felt relieved or terrified.Probably both.Sarah was waiting up when I got home, sitting on our worn couch with her arms crossed. One look at my face and she knew.“You signed it.” It wasn’t a question.“I signed it.”She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. When she opened them again, tears were streaming down her face.“I understand why you did it. I even think it’s probably what I would have done in your position. But that doesn’t mean I have to like it.”I sat down beside her and pulled her into a hug. She clung to me like I was already gone.“Three years,” I whispered. “Then I come back and we figure out what normal looks like.”“What if you don’t come back? What if you…”“Shhh…” I cautioned her immediately as I disengaged
I did not go home right away. Instead, I drove to the cemetery where my brother was buried. His headstone was simple, just his name and dates. Thomas Carter. Beloved son, brother, and mate.I sat down on the grass in front of it, pulling my knees to my chest."I don't know what to do, Tommy," I said quietly. Talking to a gravestone felt pathetic, but I had no one else to ask."Ethan wants me to pretend to be you. Well, not you exactly. Just close enough that his wolf won't completely lose it."The wind rustled through the trees. No answers came from the dead.Tommy had been everything I was not. Confident, strong-scented, and charismatic. When he walked into a room, people noticed. When I walked into a room, people looked right past me to see if someone more interesting was behind me.We looked similar, though. Same dark hair, same blue eyes, same general build. If you didn't know us well, you might mistake us for twins instead of brothers two years apart. Ethan clearly thought the re
I couldn't take my eyes off the white walls as I continued to ponder on what to do. My father was three doors down, hooked up to machines that kept him alive, one expensive second at a time.Sarah, my younger sister, sat beside me. Her nurse scrubs were wrinkled from a double shift, and her eyes had that hollow look we both wore these days. She reached over and squeezed my hand without saying anything. We had run out of comforting words weeks ago.The doctor had been clear this morning. Dad needed a specialized treatment, something new and experimental that insurance would not cover. The cost made my stomach turn.Even if I worked three jobs for the next five years, I could not make that kind of money. And Dad did not have five years. He had months, maybe less."We'll figure something out," Sarah whispered, but her voice cracked. She did not believe it any more than I did.I nodded anyway, because that is what you do. You pretend there is hope even when you are drowning.My phone buzz







