
Alpha's Lies, My Freedom
Chapter 1
The morning of my eighteenth birthday arrived with the same gray drizzle that had been falling for three days straight. I pressed my face against the cool window of our small cottage, watching droplets race down the glass like tears I refused to shed. Today was supposed to be different. Today was supposed to change everything.
"Happy birthday, sweetheart." Dad's voice carried from the kitchen, rough with the chronic pain that never seemed to leave him anymore. I turned to find him leaning heavily against the doorframe, his left shoulder—the one that never healed properly after saving Alpha Axel—hanging at that familiar awkward angle.
"Thanks, Dad." I managed a smile, though my stomach churned with anticipation and dread in equal measure. Eighteen. The age when every werewolf's inner wolf was supposed to emerge, when the transformation that defined our very existence should finally claim me.
But as the hours crawled by, nothing happened. No sudden surge of power, no voice in my head welcoming me to my true nature, no shift in my senses that would mark my entry into full werewolf society. By noon, the absence felt like a physical weight pressing down on my chest.
The whispers started before I even reached the pack house for the evening meal. I caught fragments as I walked the familiar path—"cursed Graham bloodline," "what did you expect," "probably not even a real werewolf." Each word struck like a physical blow, but I kept my chin up, my mother's warrior pendant heavy against my throat.
"Look who finally decided to show up." Anaya's saccharine voice cut through the dining hall chatter as I entered. She sat at the high table beside Alpha Axel, her perfectly manicured fingers resting possessively on his arm. "How was your special day, Skylar? Any... developments?"
The hall fell silent. Every eye turned to me, waiting for confirmation of what they already knew. I felt my cheeks burn as I shook my head, the simple gesture feeling like a confession of failure.
"A late bloomer at eighteen," someone muttered from the back. "That's not late—that's broken."
"Maybe the Moon Goddess made a mistake with that bloodline," another voice added, barely concealing cruel amusement. "First her mother dies playing hero, then her father gets crippled, now this."
My hands clenched into fists, but I forced them to relax. Getting angry wouldn't change anything. It wouldn't bring my wolf, wouldn't heal my father, wouldn't restore the respect our family had lost along with my mother's life.
"That's enough." Alpha Axel's command silenced the room, but when I looked up hopefully, his dark eyes held no warmth. Only the cold duty of a leader maintaining order. "Skylar will find her wolf when the Moon Goddess wills it."
The words should have been comforting, but his tone made them feel like a dismissal. I ducked my head and made my way to one of the back tables, where the omegas and unmated wolves sat. My new place in the hierarchy, it seemed.
The next few weeks blurred together in a haze of subtle humiliations and not-so-subtle reminders of my new status. Pack members who had once greeted me with respectful nods now looked through me as if I were invisible. Training sessions that had been my refuge became exercises in endurance as I struggled to keep up without my wolf's enhanced abilities.
Worse was watching my father's decline. The stress of my situation, combined with his chronic pain, left him bedridden more often than not. The Pack Healer's visits became our lifeline, each one a reminder of how dependent we'd become on Alpha Axel's continued tolerance.
"He's getting worse," I whispered to the Healer one evening as she finished examining Dad. "Isn't there anything else you can do?"
She glanced toward the door, then back at me with sympathetic eyes. "I'm doing everything the Alpha permits, child. These treatments... they're expensive, and your family's standing..."
She didn't need to finish. I understood. We lived on Axel's charity now, and charity could be withdrawn at any time.
That night, I knelt beside my father's bed, holding his weathered hand in both of mine. "I'm sorry," I whispered. "I'm sorry I'm not what you and Mom sacrificed for."
His fingers tightened around mine with surprising strength. "You are exactly what your mother and I fought for," he said firmly. "A chance at life, at choice, at finding your own path. Your wolf will come, Skylar. And when it does, it will be magnificent."
I wanted to believe him. But as another sleepless night stretched ahead, doubt gnawed at me like a physical ache. What if my wolf never came? What if I was destined to remain forever on the outside, watching others live the life that should have been mine?
The questions haunted me as rain continued to streak down my window, each drop carrying away another piece of the hope I'd clung to for so long.
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