
My Alpha Let Our Son Die For His Mistress's Bastard
Chapter 2
I stared at the photos on my phone until my eyes burned, each image searing itself into my memory. Ryker's hands tangled in blonde hair that wasn't mine. His mouth pressed against lips that had never carried his child. The little boy with his father's gray-blue eyes, celebrating birthdays I'd never been invited to.
Moonshade. The word echoed in my mind like a death knell.
My fingers trembled as I scrolled to my contacts, finding a number I hadn't dialed in five years. The phone rang once, twice—
"Harper?" My father's voice cut through the silence, sharp with surprise and something deeper. Concern, maybe. Or guilt.
"Dad." The word felt foreign on my tongue. "It's me."
"My daughter." Sterling's tone softened, and I could picture him in his study at the Royal Pack compound, probably staring out at the mountains we used to hike together before everything fell apart. "What's wrong? You sound—"
"I need the antidote to Moonshade."
Silence stretched between us, heavy and electric. When Sterling spoke again, his voice had dropped to a lethal whisper that reminded me why other Alphas feared the Alpha King.
"Who dared to poison my daughter?"
The raw fury in his words almost broke my composure. Almost. But I'd learned to bury my emotions deep over the past five years, to smile and nod and play the perfect Luna while my soul slowly suffocated.
"I'll handle it myself," I said, my voice steady despite the storm raging in my chest. "Can you get me the antidote within three days?"
Another pause. I heard papers rustling, probably maps or pack documents. "Three days... Harper, that's the night of the full moon. If we time the antidote with the moon's peak power, it won't just neutralize the Moonshade. It'll fully awaken your wolf. Are you prepared for that?"
My reflection stared back at me from the darkened window—pale, hollow-eyed, a ghost of the fierce woman I used to be. "I'm ready."
"Good." The single word carried years of unspoken apologies and regrets. "I'll have Kieran deliver it personally. Harper... when this is over, when you're ready, come home. The Royal Pack will always be your sanctuary."
I ended the call and let the phone slip from my fingers onto the leather couch. For the first time in years, something that felt like hope flickered in my chest. But it was a cold hope, sharp-edged and hungry for justice.
The sound of car doors slamming jolted me from my thoughts. Through the study window, I watched Ryker's black SUV pull into the circular driveway, followed by a sleek silver sedan. My heart clenched as I recognized the blonde woman stepping out of the passenger seat—Maren, even more beautiful in person than in the photos. Behind her, a small boy with dark hair tumbled out of the backseat, his face bright with excitement.
Damian. The child who'd pushed my Noah toward the rogues. The child Ryker had chosen to save.
I forced my expression into neutral lines and walked to the front entrance, arriving just as Ryker pushed through the heavy oak doors. His face was carefully arranged in what I'd learned to recognize as his 'difficult conversation' expression.
"Harper, sweetheart." He moved toward me with his hands outstretched, but I stepped back just enough to make the gesture awkward. "I have someone I'd like you to meet."
Maren glided into the foyer like she owned it, her designer dress perfectly pressed despite the morning's rain. But it was the boy who captured my attention—Damian stood close to Ryker's side, and the resemblance was unmistakable. The same gray-blue eyes, the same stubborn jawline, even the same way of tilting his head when curious.
How had I been so blind?
"This is Damian," Ryker said, his voice taking on that gentle tone I'd heard through the phone. "I've been working with the council to arrange his adoption. He lost his parents in a rogue attack, and I thought... with Noah gone, maybe we could give him a home."
The lie rolled off his tongue so smoothly I almost admired the performance. Damian looked up at me with those familiar eyes—Noah's eyes, I'd thought once, but now I knew better.
"Hello, Damian," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper.
The boy smiled shyly and pressed closer to Ryker's leg. "Are you going to be my new mommy?"
The innocent question hit me like a physical blow. Behind him, Maren's lips curved in what might have looked like a kind smile to anyone else. But I caught the flash of triumph in her green eyes, the subtle way she positioned herself as if she belonged here.
"And this is Maren," Ryker continued, oblivious to the silent war being waged between the two women in his foyer. "She's been caring for Damian at the children's home. I thought it would be easier for him to adjust if she stayed for a few weeks, helped with the transition."
"Of course," I said, each word carefully measured. "We wouldn't want Damian to feel... displaced."
Maren's smile widened. "You're so understanding, Luna Harper. I was worried you might find my presence... intrusive."
The way she said my title made it sound like a joke we were all in on. I met her gaze steadily, letting a small smile play at the corners of my mouth.
"Not at all," I replied. "I believe in taking care of family."
Something flickered in her expression—uncertainty, maybe, or the first hint that this game might not go as smoothly as she'd planned.
Ryker clapped his hands together, breaking the tension. "Well then, let's get you both settled. Damian, would you like to see your new room?"
As they headed upstairs, Maren's hand casually brushing Ryker's arm, I remained in the foyer. The silence felt heavy, oppressive, but beneath it I sensed something else—a stirring, like the first tremor before an earthquake.
That evening, I found Wren in the kitchen, quietly preparing dinner. The Omega had been with our household since she was sixteen, following in her mother's footsteps as head of domestic staff. More importantly, she was one of the few people who'd genuinely mourned Noah's death.
"Wren," I said softly, glancing around to ensure we were alone. "I need your help with something. Something important."
She looked up from the vegetables she was chopping, her brown eyes immediately alert. "Of course, Luna. Anything."
"I need you to access Ryker's study. Tonight, when everyone's asleep. There are files I need—financial records, military deployment schedules, alliance agreements. Can you photograph them without being detected?"
Wren's knife stilled against the cutting board. "Luna... that sounds dangerous."
"Everything's dangerous now," I said quietly. "But I need to know what we're really dealing with. Can you do it?"
She nodded slowly. "For Noah. And for you."
Later that night, I stood in Noah's bedroom, untouched since the day he died. His stuffed wolf sat on the perfectly made bed, button eyes staring accusingly at me. I picked it up, pressing my face into the soft fur that still smelled faintly of my little boy.
"I'm sorry," I whispered into the silence. "I'm so sorry I couldn't protect you."
Outside the window, clouds drifted across the moon's face, casting shifting shadows across the room. But as I held Noah's toy closer, something stirred deep in my chest—a flutter, like wings beating against a cage.
My wolf. After five years of silence, she was beginning to wake.
The sensation was faint, barely perceptible, but it was there. A spark of something wild and fierce, something that had been drugged into submission but refused to die completely.
Two more days until the full moon. Two more days until I reclaimed everything that had been stolen from me.
I smiled in the darkness, and for the first time since Noah's funeral, it felt genuine.
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