
I Saved An Alpha, He Recovered and Rejected Me
Chapter 2
The first thing I noticed wasn't the sterile smell of antiseptic or the steady beep of machines. It was the scent—pine and storm, wild and untamed, filling my lungs like a drug I didn't want to crave.
My eyes fluttered open to white ceiling tiles and the soft hum of medical equipment. Everything felt heavy—my limbs, my eyelids, even my thoughts moved through thick fog. Where was I?
"You're awake."
The voice was deep, controlled, but underneath it ran something raw and barely leashed. I turned my head slowly, my neck protesting the movement, and found myself staring into the most intense pair of amber eyes I'd ever seen.
He stood beside my bed like a sentinel—tall, broad-shouldered, with dark hair and a face that belonged on magazine covers rather than in hospital rooms. But it was his eyes that made my breath catch. They burned with an intensity that made me want to shrink into the thin hospital blanket.
"Where..." My voice came out as barely a whisper, throat raw and scratchy. "Where am I?"
"Silver Bay General. Private wing." His voice remained carefully neutral, but those amber eyes never left my face. "You've been unconscious for eighteen hours."
Silver Bay. That was... that was two hundred miles from the yacht. From Charles. From everything.
Memory crashed over me like another wave—the wedding, the humiliation, Charles's cruel laughter, the moment I chose the ocean over the pain. My chest tightened, panic beginning to claw its way up my throat.
"The water," I whispered. "I remember falling, and then—"
"I pulled you out." His jaw clenched, and for a moment, something fierce and possessive flashed across his features before he controlled it. "You were under for nearly three minutes. The doctors weren't sure..." He stopped, running a hand through his dark hair. "I'm Owen Blackstone."
The name hit me like a physical blow. Owen Blackstone—Alpha of the Bloodstone pack, one of the most powerful werewolves on the West Coast. I'd heard Charles mention him before, always with a mixture of respect and wariness.
"Why?" The word slipped out before I could stop it. "Why did you save me?"
Something shifted in his expression, becoming almost... tender. He took a step closer to the bed, and that intoxicating scent grew stronger. "Because the moment you hit the water, I felt it. The bond. You're my—"
"No." The word exploded from my lips with violent force. "No, no, no!"
Panic seized me completely. Not again. I couldn't do this again. The machines around me began beeping frantically as my heart rate spiked. Owen reached toward me, concern etching his features, but I scrambled backward, pressing myself into the corner of the bed.
"Don't touch me!" I yanked at the IV in my arm, not caring about the sharp pain or the blood that began to trickle down. "I won't do this again! I won't be anyone's mate!"
"Juliet, please—" Owen's voice carried that Alpha authority, but he stopped himself, visibly fighting against his instincts. "You're hurt. You need medical care."
"I need to leave!" I pulled the IV free completely, ignoring the nurse who rushed in at the sound of alarms. "I need to get out of here!"
I tried to swing my legs over the side of the bed, but my body betrayed me. Three days without food, major trauma, and whatever medications they'd given me made my limbs weak and unsteady. I would have fallen if Owen hadn't caught me, his hands gentle but firm on my shoulders.
The contact sent electricity through my system—not the painful jolt of a broken bond, but something warm and healing that terrified me more than pain ever could.
"Let me go," I whispered, but my voice lacked conviction. My body wanted to melt into his touch, to accept the comfort he offered. That terrified me most of all.
Owen's amber eyes searched my face, and I saw the exact moment he made his decision. The tenderness disappeared, replaced by cold calculation. He released me and stepped back, his expression becoming businesslike.
"Nurse, please give us a moment," he said without taking his eyes off me. The woman hesitated, but something in his tone made her comply.
When we were alone, Owen walked to a small table and picked up a folder. He opened it, scanning the contents with the air of someone reviewing a business contract.
"Your medical bills," he said, his voice now completely devoid of warmth. "Emergency helicopter transport, trauma surgery, three days in intensive care, medications, and ongoing treatment. The total comes to $847,000."
I stared at him, my panic momentarily forgotten. "What?"
"You heard me." He set the folder on the bedside table with a sharp snap. "I paid for your life, Juliet Mills. Every cent of it."
The coldness in his voice was so complete, so different from the gentle concern he'd shown moments before, that it took me a moment to process his words.
"I don't understand."
"It's simple." Owen's amber eyes were now calculating, almost predatory. "You tried to throw your life away. I bought it back. Now you owe me."
Something about his tone, the way he spoke about my life like a commodity, sparked anger in my chest. It was better than panic, better than the suffocating fear. Anger I could handle.
"I never asked you to save me."
"No, you didn't." His smile was sharp, lacking any warmth. "But since you clearly don't want to die—evidenced by your current breathing—I suggest you figure out how to pay me back."
I stared at him, trying to reconcile this cold businessman with the man who had looked at me with such tenderness moments before. "You're serious."
"Deadly serious." He pulled out his phone and scrolled through something. "I run several businesses in Silver Bay. I'm sure we can find something suitable for your... skill set."
The way he said it made my cheeks burn with humiliation, but it also grounded me. This I understood. This was transactional, clean. No emotions, no bonds, no promises that would be broken. Just debt and obligation.
"Fine," I said, my voice steadier than it had been since I woke up. "I'll work for you. But this is business. Nothing else."
Something flickered across his features—disappointment, maybe, or relief. "Agreed. Business only."
He moved toward the door, then paused. "There are clothes in the closet. When you're ready to be discharged, my driver will take you to an apartment I've arranged. Rent will be deducted from your wages."
"Wait." I stopped him before he could leave. "I need scissors."
Owen frowned. "Scissors?"
"Hospital scissors. From the nurse's station."
He studied my face for a long moment, then nodded. "I'll send some in."
After he left, I sat in the sterile silence, staring at my reflection in the black screen of the television. My hair hung in long, tangled waves past my shoulders—hair that Charles used to run his fingers through, hair he'd claimed to love.
When the nurse brought the scissors, I didn't hesitate. Each cut was deliberate, severing not just hair but every connection to the woman who had loved so foolishly, who had given everything and received nothing but cruelty in return.
The long strands fell to the hospital floor like pieces of my former self. When I was done, my hair barely brushed my shoulders, and the face looking back at me in the mirror was that of a stranger.
Good. Juliet Mills had died in the Pacific Ocean.
Whoever I was going to become would be stronger.
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