
From Omega to Silver Wolf
Chapter 3
The afternoon sun streamed through the tall windows of the pack library, casting long shadows across the worn wooden tables. I hunched over a stack of dusty journals, my eyes burning from hours of reading. These were the personal accounts of late bloomers—wolves who didn't shift until well past the normal age. Some never shifted at all.
My fingers trembled slightly as I turned another yellowed page. Each story felt like looking into a mirror: the shame, the whispers, the pitying glances. But unlike me, most of these wolves eventually found their inner beasts. What made me different? What kept my wolf buried so deep?
I sighed and gathered several dog-eared pages I'd marked for closer reading. As I stood, my elbow knocked against the stack, sending papers fluttering to the floor like autumn leaves.
"Need a hand?"
I startled at the voice, nearly dropping the remaining papers. Beta Ethan Parker knelt beside me, gathering the scattered pages with careful hands. I hadn't heard him approach—a testament to how absorbed I'd been in my research.
"Thanks," I murmured, avoiding his eyes. I'd made enough of a spectacle of myself lately without adding clumsiness to my list of failures.
Ethan rose, handing me the collected pages. His eyes—a warm amber that reminded me of honey in sunlight—studied my face with an intensity that made my cheeks warm.
"You stood up to him," he said quietly. "That was brave."
I shrugged, uncomfortable with his praise. "That was stupid. I'm just tired of being everyone's doormat."
"It wasn't stupid," Ethan insisted, his voice gentle but firm. "It was long overdue."
Something in his tone made me look up. The Beta's expression held none of the mockery or pity I'd grown accustomed to seeing. Instead, there was something that looked almost like... admiration?
He hesitated, glancing around the empty library before leaning closer. "I sent you a mind-link last year," he admitted. "After the winter solstice ceremony. I thought you deserved better than how he treated you."
My breath caught. Mind-links were intimate communications, usually reserved for pack announcements or close relationships. I'd never received a personal mind-link from anyone except my parents.
"I didn't get it," I whispered, confusion washing over me. "I've never received mind-links from anyone in the pack except Alpha Marcus."
Ethan's brow furrowed. "That's... unusual. Even wolfless pack members should be able to receive, if not send."
He seemed to debate with himself for a moment before reaching past me to a shelf of leather-bound books. His arm brushed mine, sending an unexpected tingle across my skin.
"Here," he said, pulling down a worn volume. "This might help."
He opened it to a chapter titled "Fear-Suppressed Wolves: When Trauma Delays Shifting." His finger underlined a passage as he handed it to me.
"Sometimes it's not that the wolf isn't there," he said softly. "Sometimes she's just waiting for you to be ready to hear her."
Our fingers touched as I took the book, and for a heartbeat, I could have sworn I felt something stir deep inside me—like the echo of a distant howl.
* * *
The next morning, I made my way to Healer Elara's cottage at the edge of the pack grounds. My leg throbbed dully beneath the bandage, a constant reminder of Jake's betrayal.
Elara Vance was ancient by werewolf standards—at least eighty, though she moved with the grace of someone decades younger. Her silver hair was always braided neatly down her back, and her eyes held the wisdom of countless seasons.
"Let's have a look at that leg," she said, patting the examination table.
I rolled up my jeans, wincing as the fabric caught on the bandage. Elara unwrapped it with practiced hands, her expression neutral as she examined the healing claw marks.
"The wound is clean," she murmured, applying a sweet-smelling salve. "No infection."
As her fingers worked, her movements suddenly stilled. Her head tilted, eyes narrowing as she studied me with an intensity that made me squirm.
"What?" I asked, unnerved by her scrutiny.
"Your aura," she said, her voice barely above a whisper. "There are silver flecks in it. I've never seen that in a wolfless before."
My heart skipped. "What does that mean?"
Elara shook her head, resuming her bandaging. "Probably just stress," she said, though her tone lacked conviction. "The body responds to emotional upheaval in strange ways."
I left her cottage with fresh bandages and a mind full of questions. Silver flecks? Could that mean my wolf was finally stirring?
* * *
The midday sun beat down mercilessly on the training grounds as I made my way across the packed dirt. I should have been exempt from training with my injury, but I couldn't bear another day confined to my room with nothing but my thoughts for company.
"Well, look who decided to grace us with her presence," Kevin Moss called out, his voice carrying across the yard. "The omega who thinks she's too good for pack meetings."
I kept my eyes forward, ignoring the snickers that rippled through the gathered wolves. Kevin was Jake's most loyal follower, always eager to curry favor by targeting those beneath him.
"Since you're here," Kevin continued, stepping into my path, "why don't you show us your defensive skills? Or did you leave those in the forest with the rogues?"
Before I could respond, he lunged forward, sweeping my legs out from under me with practiced ease. I hit the ground hard, pain shooting up my injured leg as dirt filled my palms.
Laughter erupted around me as I struggled to catch my breath. Through watering eyes, I saw Ethan step forward, his face tight with anger. But Jake's voice cut through the yard like ice.
"Stand down, Beta," he commanded, and Ethan froze, his fists clenched at his sides.
I forced myself to my knees, then to my feet, brushing dirt from my palms. My cheeks burned with humiliation, but I refused to give them the satisfaction of seeing me break.
As I straightened, I caught Ethan's gaze across the yard. In his eyes, I saw not pity, but a quiet rage on my behalf—and something else I couldn't quite name.
Something that, for the first time in years, made me feel like I wasn't alone.
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