
Alpha Saves His Fated Mate
Chapter 2
The first thing I became aware of was the steady beeping of medical equipment, a rhythmic sound that seemed to anchor me to consciousness. My eyelids felt heavy as lead, but I forced them open to find myself staring at an unfamiliar ceiling—white tiles instead of the cracked plaster of my apartment.
Pack house medical facility. The antiseptic smell confirmed it before my vision fully cleared.
"You're awake." The deep voice drew my attention to the chair beside my bed, where Alpha Carson Roberts sat with his elbows on his knees, hands clasped. His usually immaculate appearance was disheveled—shirt wrinkled, tie loosened, dark stubble shadowing his jaw. His steel-gray eyes held a weariness I'd never seen before.
"Alpha?" My voice came out as a croak, throat raw as sandpaper. "How long—"
"Three days." He leaned forward, and something flickered across his face—relief? "You've been unconscious for three days, Phoenix."
Three days. The memory crashed back—Chris's betrayal, the wolfsbane burning through my system, my desperate call for help. But underneath the human memories, something else stirred. A presence in my mind that hadn't been there before.
*Hello, Phoenix.*
I gasped, my hand flying to my chest. The voice in my head was warm, feminine, and undeniably mine. My wolf. She was finally here.
*I'm Aurora,* she said, and I could feel her contentment at finally being able to speak to me. *We made it through together.*
"Your wolf emerged during the crisis," Alpha Carson said, as if reading my thoughts. "Aurora is beautiful—sunset-colored fur, just like her namesake. She fought hard to save you."
Heat crept up my neck. He knew her name. He'd seen my wolf form before I had.
"The wolfsbane should have killed me," I whispered, the medical reality hitting me. "A first shift with that much poison in my system..."
"It nearly did." His jaw tightened, and for a moment, the Alpha's controlled mask slipped, revealing something raw and protective underneath. "Healer Elias will explain the details, but you needed... unconventional treatment."
Before I could ask what that meant, the door opened and Pack Healer Elias Vance entered, his kind face breaking into a relieved smile when he saw me awake.
"Phoenix! Thank the Moon Goddess." He moved to check the monitors, his movements efficient and practiced. "You gave us quite a scare, young lady. The wolfsbane concentration in your blood was nearly lethal—especially during a first shift."
"How am I alive?" I asked, though part of me already suspected the answer from the way Alpha Carson's shoulders tensed.
"Alpha Carson used his healing ability," Elias said matter-of-factly, though his glance toward our pack leader held deep respect. "It's rare among Alphas—the ability to share their life force through blood. He gave you enough of his own strength to neutralize the poison and allow your wolf to emerge safely."
My breath caught. Alpha healing was legendary—a gift so rare that most wolves never witnessed it. And Carson had used it on me. A subordinate. A nobody who couldn't even shift on time.
"You saved my life," I said, looking at him with new eyes. The exhaustion on his face suddenly made sense. Sharing life force took a tremendous toll.
"Any Alpha would have done the same for a pack member in danger," he replied, but something in his tone suggested it wasn't quite that simple.
Elias cleared his throat diplomatically. "I'll leave you two to talk. Phoenix, you'll need another day of observation, but your recovery has been remarkable." He paused at the door. "Your wolf is strong. She'll serve you well."
After he left, silence stretched between Carson and me. I twisted my mother's ring—still on my finger, somehow—trying to process everything.
"There's something else you need to know," Carson said quietly. "About what's been happening while you've been unconscious."
A chill ran down my spine at his tone. "What do you mean?"
He pulled out his phone, his expression grim. "Catalina has been... active on social media. The pack members have been talking."
He showed me the screen, and my heart sank. Post after post showed Catalina looking pale and fragile, Chris hovering attentively beside her. The captions painted a picture of a selfless pack sister sharing her medicine with someone in greater need, while I was portrayed as hoarding healing herbs.
*Grateful for pack brothers like Chris who understand true need,* one post read. *Some wolves know the meaning of sacrifice.*
Another showed Chris bringing her soup, with the caption: *Real mates put their partner's wellbeing first. #PackFamily #TrueLove*
The betrayal hit me anew, sharper than before. Not only had Chris chosen Catalina over my life, but now they were spinning it as if I were the selfish one.
"The pack is talking," Carson said softly. "Many believe her version of events."
I closed my eyes, feeling Aurora's comforting presence wrap around my consciousness. When I opened them again, something had hardened inside me.
"Let them talk," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "I know the truth. And soon, so will everyone else."
Carson's eyes flashed with something like approval. "Rest now. You'll need your strength for what's coming."
As he stood to leave, I caught his wrist. "Thank you," I said. "For saving me. For everything."
He looked down at where my fingers touched his skin, and for a moment, I could have sworn I felt something electric pass between us. When his eyes met mine again, they held a depth of emotion that made my breath catch.
"Always," he said simply, and left me alone with my wolf and the growing certainty that my old life was truly over.
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