
My Alpha Watched His Lover Destroy My Mother
Chapter 2
I wake up in a room that smells like bleach and other people's laundry.
For one merciful second, I don't remember. I just stare at the water-stained ceiling above a cot that's two inches too short, listening to pipes knock inside the walls. Then my neck throbs where the needle went in, and everything comes back in a single, crushing wave.
The servants' quarters. He put me in the servants' quarters.
I'm still cataloging the bruises on my arms when the door opens. Marcel doesn't knock. Alphas never knock.
He's dressed for his morning run—dark clothes, hair still damp. Clean. Unbothered. He looks around the small room like he's assessing a property dispute, not facing the woman his pack nearly destroyed twelve hours ago.
"You're awake." He says it like he's relieved about something minor. Like a delayed shipment finally arrived.
"Marcel." My voice comes out rough. I sit up, and the room tilts. "Last night—"
"Was unfortunate." He cuts me off without raising his voice. That's the thing about Marcel—he never needs to shout. "Your constitution is weaker than I anticipated. The stress of the ceremony preparation clearly overwhelmed you."
I stare at him.
"My constitution," I repeat.
"The ceremony is postponed." He adjusts his watch. "Indefinitely, until we determine whether you're suited for the demands of the Luna role. In the meantime, you'll resume your household duties. It will keep you occupied."
Something in my chest goes very still and very cold.
"I was injected with wolfsbane," I say. "Raquel—"
"Macy." His eyes finally meet mine, and the Alpha Command in them is a wall. "Let it go."
The words hit me like a closed fist. Not the Command—he doesn't bother using it this time. Just the casual certainty that I will obey. That I always will.
He leaves without closing the door all the way.
I sit on the cot for a long time after that, listening to the sound of the pack moving through its morning. Somewhere above me, someone laughs.
---
By evening, I am standing behind a serving cart, pouring Riesling into crystal glasses that cost more than my mother makes in a month.
The visiting delegation from Granite Ridge Pack fills the long dining table—six wolves in tailored jackets, radiating the easy confidence of people who have never once questioned whether they belong in a room. Their Alpha, a broad-shouldered man named Reeves, has been talking for the better part of an hour. Laughing loud. Making himself comfortable.
At Marcel's right hand, Raquel leans forward in her chair, fingers brushing his arm when she makes a point. She's wearing green tonight—the color of someone who feels safe.
The wolfsbane is mostly out of my system. Mostly. My hands only shake a little as I move down the table.
"Taylor, I have to ask." Alpha Reeves swirls his glass, watching Marcel with the amused curiosity of someone who has heard rumors. "Word on the circuit is you had a Luna candidate. What happened with that?"
I go still behind Marcel's chair.
A half-second pause. The length of a decision being made.
Then Marcel laughs—an easy, sociable sound I've never heard him use in private. "Still searching, I'm afraid. You know how it is. The bond makes fools of all of us."
I reach forward and fill his glass.
My hand is perfectly steady. I make it be perfectly steady, because I will not give him the satisfaction of shaking, and I will not give Raquel the satisfaction of watching me fall apart at the table she's stolen from me. The wine pours in a smooth, thin arc. Deep gold in the candlelight.
Marcel doesn't look at me.
Neither does anyone else.
That's the part that's hardest to explain—the invisibility. How someone can hollow you out entirely and still expect you to refill their glass.
I move to the next chair.
---
The hospital at night smells like antiseptic and something older underneath. Grief, maybe. The particular exhaustion of bodies that have stopped fighting.
Mama's room is at the end of the Omega ward, behind a door with a broken latch that she's propped shut with a folded piece of cardboard. I ease it open and slip inside.
She's smaller than I remembered. That's the fading aura—it doesn't just weaken the wolf, it seems to shrink the person. She's sitting up against the pillow with a book she isn't reading, and when she sees me, her face does something complicated.
"Macy." She reaches out, and I go to her, and I arrange myself on the edge of the bed the way I have since I was small, and I try to angle my arms so she won't see the bruising.
She sees it anyway. Of course she does.
"Baby." Her voice cracks on the word. Her fingers find my wrist, feather-light, and she turns my arm carefully in the dim light. I watch her read the evidence the way only a mother can—not just the bruise, but everything it means.
"It's nothing," I say.
"Macy." She says my name like a prayer and a warning at once. "Leave. Leave tonight. It doesn't matter where—rogue territory, the eastern border, anywhere that isn't here."
"I won't leave you."
"You have to."
"Mama." I take her hands in mine, careful of the IV line taped to her forearm. Her fingers are cold. "I'm not going anywhere without you. We're going to figure this out together, okay? I just need a little more time."
She looks at me for a long moment with the eyes of someone who loves me more than I understand.
"You have so much of your father's stubbornness," she says finally, her voice gone soft.
I almost smile. Almost.
I stay until she falls asleep, and then I sit in the dark beside her bed, listening to her breathe, trying to think of a plan that doesn't require me to be someone I'm not.
I haven't found one yet.
But I'm still looking.
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