
My Alpha Demanded I Save His Mistress’s Life
Chapter 2
I woke to the smell of antiseptic and the low hum of medical equipment.
My ribs felt like someone had taken a hammer to them. Every breath pulled tight and sharp. I tried to shift my weight and the pain flared white-hot down my right side. I went still.
The medical wing. I was in the Shadowvale medical wing.
Memory came back in pieces. The trail. The rogues. Too many of them, moving too fast, like they knew exactly where I would be. I had shifted mid-run but there were four of them and they hit me from three sides at once. Teeth in my shoulder. Claws raking down my ribs. The taste of blood in my mouth.
Then nothing.
I blinked at the ceiling. White tiles. Soft light. The beep of a monitor somewhere to my left. My wolf stirred inside me, groggy and hurting, but alive. I reached for her and felt her press back — a small, tired comfort.
Then I heard his voice.
It came through the partition beside my bed. Thin medical fabric, the kind that gives privacy without soundproofing. Xavier's voice, low and clipped in that particular register that meant he was giving orders and expected them followed.
"How soon can we run the compatibility panel?"
A pause. Then the pack healer's voice, older, cautious. "Alpha, she's still recovering from—"
"I understand that." Xavier's tone sharpened. Not quite an Alpha command, but close. "I'm asking how soon."
"Forty-eight hours. Maybe less if the sedation clears faster."
"Make it less."
Another pause. Longer this time.
"Alpha Xavier," the healer said carefully, "a kidney donation is not a minor procedure. Even with our healing, there are risks. And Lily has sustained significant trauma. Her body needs time to—"
"Camilla doesn't have time." His voice went flat. Final. "Run the panel as soon as she's stable enough to consent. I'll handle the rest."
Footsteps. The sound of a door closing.
I lay very still.
My wolf, who had been quiet and hurting a moment ago, began to howl. Not out loud. Inside. A sound that started low in my chest and climbed until it filled every corner of my skull.
He was going to ask me for my kidney.
For Camilla.
I pressed my fingers against the scar beneath my ribs — the one he had never seen, never asked about, never known existed. The place where they had taken the first one. For him. When I was fifteen and he was eighteen and dying, and I had believed, with the absolute certainty of a young wolf who had just recognized her fated mate's scent for the first time, that the Moon Goddess would make it right.
I had been wrong.
I closed my eyes and felt the mate bond hum faintly at the back of my mind. Still there. Still pulling. Eight years of that pull, and it had never once pulled him toward me when it mattered.
I did not cry. I had learned a long time ago that crying changed nothing.
I waited.
---
He came the next evening.
I was awake. Sitting up, barely, with pillows wedged behind me and my ribs wrapped tight enough that breathing felt like work. The healer had cleared me for visitors an hour ago. I knew he would come. I also knew, in the way you know things that live in your bones, exactly what he was going to say.
Xavier stepped through the door and stopped just inside it. He looked tired. There were shadows under his eyes I hadn't seen before. His shirt was wrinkled. He had been running himself into the ground for her.
He held a small black box in his right hand.
My wolf went very, very still.
"Lily." He crossed the room and sat in the chair beside my bed. Not on the bed. The chair. Close enough to reach for my hand, but he didn't. "How are you feeling?"
"Sore," I said.
He nodded. Looked down at the box in his hands. Turned it over once. Then he looked up at me, and I saw something in his face I had seen a hundred times before — guilt, and the particular kind of resolve that comes when an Alpha has already made a decision and is simply waiting for the world to catch up.
"I need to ask you something," he said.
I said nothing.
He opened the box.
The ring inside was moonstone. Pale and luminous, set in silver, traditional in every detail. A promise ring. The kind an Alpha gives his mate before the marking ceremony. The kind I had imagined, in a thousand different quiet moments over eight years, he might finally give me.
He held it between us.
"I want to mark you," he said. "I want to make you my Luna. In front of the pack. The full ceremony. Everything you've been waiting for."
I looked at the ring. I looked at his face. I waited.
"Camilla needs a kidney," he said. "Her doctors say she has weeks, maybe less. You're a match. The healer confirmed it this morning."
There it was.
"I owe her family a debt," he continued, and his voice dropped into something softer, something that sounded almost like pleading. "Her mother saved my life when I was eighteen. I wouldn't be here without that sacrifice. I can't let Camilla die when I have the ability to save her."
He leaned forward.
"Do this for me," he said quietly. "Help me repay what I owe. And I swear to you, Lily — I will mark you. I will stand in front of the entire pack and make you my Luna. No more waiting. No more delays. You'll have everything you've wanted."
He held out the ring.
I stared at it.
Eight years. Eight years of waiting for this exact moment. Eight years of believing that if I was patient enough, devoted enough, useful enough, he would finally see me. Finally choose me. Finally understand that the Moon Goddess had tied us together for a reason.
And here it was. The ring. The promise. The ceremony.
All I had to do was bleed for him one more time.
Something inside my chest went very quiet. Very still. It was not grief. It was not even anger. It was clarity.
I looked at Xavier — at the exhaustion in his face, the guilt in his eyes, the ring in his hand — and I understood, with a cold and absolute certainty, that he had never seen me at all.
I reached out.
He leaned forward, relief already softening his expression.
I took the ring from his hand.
And then I threw it.
Hard.
It hit the far wall with a crack that made him flinch. The moonstone shattered. Pieces of silver skittered across the floor.
Xavier stared at the wall. Then at me.
"Get out," I said.
My voice was low. Steady. So quiet he had to lean in to hear it. But there was something in it — some quality I had never used before, some edge I didn't know I had — that made his wolf pull back inside him like it had been struck.
"Lily—"
"Get. Out."
He stood. Slowly. His Alpha aura flickered, uncertain, like he was trying to decide whether to push. I looked at him and did not blink and did not move and did not soften.
He left.
The door closed behind him.
I sat alone in the medical wing with my broken ribs and the shattered ring on the floor and the mate bond still humming faintly at the back of my mind.
I pressed my fingers against the scar beneath my ribs and held them there.
I did not cry.
---
Jessica came the next morning.
I was awake. I had been awake all night. The healer had offered me more sedation and I had refused. I wanted to feel everything. I needed to.
Jessica appeared in the doorway with a cup of tea in her hands. She didn't knock. She just walked in, set the tea on the table beside my bed, and sat down in the chair Xavier had occupied the night before.
She didn't ask how I was. She didn't ask what happened. She just sat there, her hands folded in her lap, and waited.
The tea smelled like dried mountain herbs. My favorite. She had remembered.
I looked at her. At the steadiness in her face. At the way she was simply present, without expectation, without agenda, without needing me to perform anything for her.
Something in my chest cracked open.
Not grief. Not yet. But the beginning of something that felt like it might, eventually, be freedom.
I reached for the tea. My hands shook slightly. Jessica pretended not to notice.
I took a sip. It was perfect.
"Thank you," I said quietly.
Jessica nodded. She didn't smile. She didn't offer comfort. She just sat with me in the silence, and for the first time in weeks, the silence didn't feel like abandonment.
It felt like the beginning of clarity.
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