
After My Alpha Banished Me While Pregnant
Chapter 5
The lab door opened without warning.
I looked up from my laptop, my hand instinctively moving toward the stack of evidence files Bryce and I had been organizing. But it was only Petra, carrying two paper cups of coffee and wearing an expression I'd learned to recognize over six years of friendship—the one that meant she was about to say something I didn't want to hear.
"You're spiraling," she said, setting one cup on my desk.
I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist. "I'm working."
"You're fortifying." Petra pulled up the second chair and sat, her dark eyes steady on my face. "Julia, I've watched you build walls for six years. I understand why. But Dorian Powell is not Calvin Crawford."
My throat tightened. "I know that."
"Do you?" She leaned forward, her voice gentle but relentless. "Because every time that man does something kind, I see you flinch. Every time he shows up without being asked, you look for the angle. You're so busy protecting yourself from what Calvin did that you can't see what Dorian's actually offering."
I stared at my coffee cup, at the steam rising in thin spirals. "He defended my credentials to those enforcers. He runs behind me every morning. He funded my research before he even met me."
"Exactly," Petra said. "And you're terrified of all of it."
The words landed like a physical blow because they were true. I was terrified. Terrified of wanting something, of believing in something, of letting someone close enough to destroy me the way Calvin had.
"What if I'm wrong again?" The question came out barely above a whisper. "What if I let him in and he—"
"Then you survive it," Petra interrupted firmly. "The same way you survived Calvin. But Julia, you can't let one man's betrayal kill your capacity for a real mate bond. That's letting Calvin win twice."
Before I could respond, there was a soft knock on the door.
Bryce appeared in the doorway, his expression carefully neutral in that way that meant he was excited about something but trying not to show it. Behind him stood Dorian, carrying a wooden crate.
"Beta Powell brought something," Bryce announced.
Dorian stepped into the lab, and I caught the scent immediately—earth and growing things, the distinctive mineral-rich soil of Moonveil territory. He set the crate on the empty section of desk, and I saw what was inside.
Botanical specimens. Not the common varieties available at any pack market, but rare healer-grade plants—moonflower root still attached to rich black soil, silverwolf moss in perfect condition, three different species of bone-knitting herbs I'd only read about in advanced texts.
"I noticed your windowsill collection," Dorian said quietly, looking not at me but at Bryce. "Thought you might want to expand your inventory. These are from the Moonveil conservatory. They're tricky to cultivate, but the healer there said if anyone could manage it, it would be you."
Bryce's carefully neutral expression cracked. He moved toward the crate like it held treasure, his fingers hovering over the moonflower root with something close to reverence.
"This is a mature specimen," he breathed. "These take seven years to develop proper healing properties. You can't just buy these."
"No," Dorian agreed. "You can't. But the Moonveil healer owed me a favor, and when I told her about your mother's work—and about a certain six-year-old with an exceptional understanding of botanical medicine—she insisted I bring the best samples we had."
Bryce looked up at him, his eyes—so much like Calvin's, so much sharper—searching Dorian's face for something. Whatever he found there must have satisfied him, because his expression softened into something I rarely saw: genuine, unguarded pleasure.
"Thank you," Bryce said. Then, more formally: "Beta Powell, I believe I may have misjudged certain aspects of your character."
Dorian's mouth curved slightly. "High praise."
"Don't let it go to your head," Bryce replied, but he was already carefully lifting the moonflower root from its container, his attention fully absorbed.
I watched them—my son and this Beta who'd somehow bypassed every test and defense Bryce had constructed—and felt something crack open in my chest. Dorian hadn't brought the plants to impress me. He'd brought them for Bryce, because he'd paid attention to what my son cared about, because he understood that winning my heart meant earning my son's trust first.
Petra caught my eye and raised one eyebrow, her expression saying everything she didn't need to voice aloud.
I pressed my thumb against my wrist and made a decision.
"Dorian," I said quietly. "Can I speak with you? Outside?"
He nodded, following me into the corridor. I closed the lab door behind us, leaving Bryce and Petra with the botanical specimens.
The hallway was empty, morning light slanting through the high windows. I could hear the packhouse waking up around us—footsteps, voices, the ordinary sounds of pack life that suddenly felt very distant.
"I need to tell you something," I said, the words coming faster than I'd planned. "Calvin's filing for custody. He's frozen my funding. He's using pack law to corner me, and I—"
I stopped, pressing my thumb hard against my wrist. Dorian waited, his expression patient.
"I'm going to Silas Voss," I continued. "I'm requesting a Lycan-sanctioned pack council hearing. I have evidence—everything Calvin stole, everything he lied about. But it's going to get ugly. Very ugly. And I need you to know that before—"
Before what? Before I let myself want this? Before I admit that I've been falling for you since the first morning you ran behind me instead of ahead?
"Before you decide whether you want to be involved in this mess," I finished lamely.
Dorian looked at me for a long moment. Then he said, very quietly: "Julia, I've been involved since the moment I read your first research paper two years ago. Everything since then has just been me trying to catch up to where my wolf already knew we were going."
My breath caught.
"So yes," he continued. "I want to be involved. In the hearing, in the fight, in whatever comes next. If you'll let me."
I pressed my thumb against my wrist one more time, feeling my pulse hammer beneath the skin.
"Okay," I whispered.
Dorian's hand found mine, his fingers warm and steady. He didn't pull me closer, didn't demand anything. Just held my hand in the empty corridor while the packhouse woke around us.
Inside the lab, I could hear Bryce explaining the cultivation requirements for moonflower root to Petra, his voice bright with enthusiasm.
Outside, somewhere in this territory, Calvin was preparing his custody case, confident he'd already won.
He had no idea what was coming.
I squeezed Dorian's hand once, then released it and pulled out my phone. The email to Silas Voss was already drafted, formal and precise, requesting a Lycan-sanctioned hearing under Article 3 of pack law—the provision that allowed any wolf to bypass pack-level justice and appeal directly to the Lycan King's authority.
I read it through one final time, my thumb hovering over the send button.
Then I pressed send and watched the message disappear into the ether, carrying with it the end of Calvin's carefully constructed lies and the beginning of something I'd stopped believing was possible six years ago.
Justice.
You may also like





