
Alpha Saves His Fated Mate
Chapter 1
The first wave of pain hit me like a sledgehammer to the spine, doubling me over as I gripped the kitchen counter. My apartment suddenly felt too small, the walls closing in as sweat beaded on my forehead despite the autumn chill seeping through the windows.
This was it. After twenty-two years of waiting, wondering, and enduring the whispered doubts about my 'late bloomer' status, my wolf was finally clawing her way to the surface.
"Not now," I gasped, my knuckles white against the granite. "Please, not now."
But the Moon Goddess had never been known for her timing. Outside, sirens wailed through the night—the third rogue attack this week had left half our patrol teams in the medical wing. The scent of wolfsbane still clung to my clothes from my shift at the pack borders, a bitter reminder of how close we'd all come to disaster.
Another spasm ripped through my bones, and I collapsed to my knees. This wasn't supposed to happen like this. First shifts were meant to be celebrated, surrounded by family and pack elders who could guide you through the transformation. Not alone in a cramped apartment while chaos reigned outside.
My phone buzzed against the counter above me, and I fumbled for it with shaking hands. Chris's name flashed on the screen—my boyfriend, my anchor, my everything. Relief flooded through me even as another wave of agony crashed over my body.
"Chris," I whispered when he picked up, my voice barely audible. "I need you. It's happening—my first shift. And the wolfsbane from patrol... I can feel it burning through my system."
"Phoenix? Baby, what's wrong? You sound—"
"The herbs," I cut him off, desperation making my words tumble together. "The special healing herbs my mother sent from home. They're in the blue tin on my dresser. I need them now, Chris. The wolfsbane is interfering with my shift, and without those herbs..."
I couldn't finish the sentence. We both knew what happened to wolves who couldn't complete their first transformation—especially when poison was involved. The lucky ones died quickly.
"I'm coming," he said, and I could hear movement in the background. "Just hold on, Phoenix. I'll be there in ten minutes."
The line went dead, and I curled into a ball on the cold kitchen tiles. My wolf was pacing frantically in my mind, her panic feeding my own. She had a name—I could feel it dancing just beyond my consciousness—but the wolfsbane was making everything hazy, disconnected.
Minutes crawled by like hours. The pain came in waves now, each one stronger than the last, my bones feeling like they were breaking and reforming under my skin. I tried calling Chris again, but it went straight to voicemail. Then again. And again.
By the time my phone finally rang, I could barely lift my head from the floor.
"Chris?" My voice was nothing more than a rasp.
"Phoenix, I... God, I'm so sorry." His voice was thick with something I couldn't identify—guilt? Fear? "I gave them to Catalina."
The words hit me harder than any physical pain. "What?"
"She was hurt in the attack tonight, and she said she was poisoned too, and she was crying, and I thought—I mean, she looked so weak, and you're always so strong, and I thought you could handle it better than—"
"You gave my medicine to Catalina." The statement fell from my lips like stones. "All of it?"
"She said she needed it more! She was already injured from last week's patrol, and—"
I ended the call.
Lying there on my kitchen floor, my body convulsing as my wolf clawed desperately for freedom while poison burned through my veins, I understood something with crystal clarity: Chris Bailey had just chosen his childhood friend over his mate's life.
The betrayal cut deeper than any physical pain. In our world, a mate's wellbeing came before everything—before pack, before duty, before old friendships. It was the most sacred bond the Moon Goddess bestowed upon us.
And Chris had shattered it for Catalina Adams.
My vision began to blur at the edges, darkness creeping in as my wolf's howls of anguish echoed in my mind. With the last of my coherent thoughts, I scrolled through my contacts until I found the emergency line I'd never thought I'd need to use.
Alpha Carson Roberts answered on the first ring.
"Alpha," I whispered, my words slurring as consciousness began to slip away. "I need... help..."
The sound of splintering wood was the last thing I heard before the darkness claimed me completely, my wolf's desperate cries fading into silence as strong arms lifted me from the cold floor.
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