
After My Alpha Claimed Me, I Ran Away
Chapter 1
The pestle felt heavy in my cramped, aching fingers. I brought it down hard against the dried yarrow root, grinding it into a fine powder. The Moonveil Pack’s Omega healing ward was little more than a dilapidated shack at the edge of the territory. It smelled constantly of cheap bleach, damp wood, and the bitter tang of medicinal herbs. But the smell I couldn't ignore today was the scent of my own fear.
I stopped grinding and stared at the crumpled piece of paper resting on the edge of my scratched wooden counter.
*Final Notice: Medical Termination and Eviction.*
The words blurred as my eyes stung. My mother, Amy, was lying in the back room, her breathing shallow and rattling. The pack charged exorbitant fees for Omegas to receive even basic care, and I was out of time. If I didn't pay her medical debts by tomorrow morning, they would cut off her treatments and throw us out of the ward. She was too weak to survive a week outside these walls, let alone a winter.
The heavy wooden door banged open, hitting the wall with a loud crack.
I flinched, instinctively pulling my shoulders inward to make myself smaller. Three Delta warriors swaggered into the cramped clinic. They smelled of pine needles, sweat, and the casual arrogance of wolves who knew they could do whatever they wanted to someone like me.
"Look what we have here," the lead Delta smirked, leaning heavily against my workstation.
"Please," I murmured, keeping my eyes cast downward. "I'm working."
He shifted his weight, and his elbow deliberately caught the edge of my mortar. The heavy stone bowl tipped over, crashing onto the filthy floor. Hours of carefully prepared yarrow root scattered into the dirt.
My breath hitched. I dropped to my knees, my hands hovering over the ruined medicine.
"Oops," the Delta snickered.
"Why do we even let a wolfless Late Bloomer touch pack medicine?" his companion sneered, kicking a piece of the broken mortar closer to my knee. "She’s twenty and hasn't even shifted. You'll probably poison someone, Omega."
I bit the inside of my cheek so hard I tasted copper. My wolf was a silent, dead thing inside me, a fact the pack never let me forget. I didn't snap back. I didn't defend myself. I just kept my head down and started sweeping the ruined powder into a pile with my bare hands. Pride was a luxury I couldn't afford. Not when my mother's life was on the line.
Hours later, the clinic was dark. I sat on the edge of my lumpy mattress in our tiny living quarters, staring at the pathetic pile of dollar bills and coins in my lap. Forty-three dollars. The debt was in the thousands. I buried my face in my hands, a silent sob tearing through my chest. I had failed her.
*Chime.*
My pack-issued communication device lit up on the nightstand, casting a harsh blue glow across the dark room. I wiped my eyes and picked it up, expecting another automated warning from the pack treasury.
Instead, my breath caught in my throat.
*Incoming Transfer.*
*From: skkk*
*Amount: $15,000.00*
*Memo: Medical Debt Cleared.*
I stared at the screen, my heart hammering against my ribs. Fifteen thousand dollars? Who was 'skkk'? It had to be a mistake. A cruel joke. But as I refreshed the screen, the official pack treasury seal glowed green. The debt was gone. My mother was safe.
Before the relief could even settle in my bones, a sharp, piercing ring echoed directly inside my skull.
I gasped, dropping the device. Because of the Moonveil Pack's strict communal registry system, any massive financial anomaly triggered an automated alert on the public mind-link.
Instantly, the mental silence was shattered by a cacophony of overlapping voices.
*Did you see the registry?*
*Fifteen grand? To Juliana Carr?*
*The Omega? Where the hell did she get that kind of money?*
*She must have stolen it. Or worse.*
The vicious whispers echoed in my head, a tidal wave of pack judgment. I clamped my hands over my ears, even though it did nothing to block out the mind-link. The money saved my mother, but it had just painted a massive target on my back.
The next morning, the courtyard was a gauntlet.
Every wolf I passed stopped to stare. The higher-ranked members didn't even bother to hide their disgust, their eyes tracking me like I was a diseased animal. I kept my chin tucked, hugging my thin jacket tighter around my body as I hurried toward the clinic.
"Jules!"
I stopped. Samantha Munoz was jogging toward me. Samantha was a Beta, and my closest friend—or at least, the closest thing I had to one. She smelled of expensive vanilla and the easy privilege of a secure rank.
She reached out, wrapping her hand around my arm. The touch was meant to look comforting, but her grip was tight, almost restrictive.
"Are you okay?" she asked, her voice hushed. Her eyes darted around the courtyard. "Everyone is talking about the registry alert."
"I don't know what happened, Sam," I whispered, desperate for her to believe me. "It was anonymous."
Samantha’s eyes narrowed slightly, a flicker of something cold crossing her expression before she masked it with deep concern. "Jules, you have to tell me the truth. The upper ranks are starting rumors. They're saying you're sneaking out past the borders. They're saying you're selling your body to rogues to pay for your mom's care."
The accusation felt like a physical slap. "What? No! I would never—"
"I’m just telling you what they’re saying," she interrupted, her voice dripping with pity that felt suffocating. "You can't just come into that much money without consequences, Juliana. People are going to demand answers."
Before I could form a defense, my device vibrated sharply in my pocket.
I pulled out of Samantha's grip, turning away slightly to shield the screen from her prying eyes. I pulled the phone out. It wasn't a standard pack notification. It was a private, heavily encrypted message.
*From: skkk*
*Meet me at the northern boundary tonight. Midnight. Come alone.*
I stared at the glowing text, my blood running cold. The northern boundary was deep in the woods, miles from the safety of the pack house. My fingers trembled as I locked the screen. I was terrified of what awaited me in the dark, but as the whispers of the pack continued to crawl through my mind, I knew I didn't have a choice. I had to know who bought my mother's life.
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