
My Alphas Rejected Our Pups
Chapter 4
The alarm clock's shrill cry pierced through the pre-dawn darkness at exactly 4:00 AM, just like it had every morning for the past four years. I rolled out of bed, my body moving on autopilot as I padded barefoot across the cold hardwood floor of our small apartment above The Pinecone Diner.
Ivy Wells. That's who I was now. Harper Mills had died in that snowstorm four years ago, and good riddance to her.
I pulled on my apron and tied my hair back in a messy bun, catching a glimpse of myself in the hallway mirror. The woman staring back looked older than her twenty-six years, with laugh lines around green eyes that had seen too much heartbreak. But she was stronger too. She had to be.
Downstairs in the diner's kitchen, I began the familiar ritual of mixing croissant dough, my hands working the butter into perfect layers while my mind wandered to the two sleeping angels upstairs. Wren and Finn. My miracle twins, born on a snowy February night with Agnes holding my hand and whispering encouragement.
They were four now, and every day they grew more beautiful—and more dangerous.
The front door chimed as Agnes shuffled in, her silver hair braided with tiny wildflowers despite the early hour. She'd become more than a friend over the years; she was the grandmother my children had never known they needed.
"How are my little wolves this morning?" she asked, settling into her usual spot at the counter with a cup of chamomile tea.
"Still sleeping, thank God." I slid a fresh blueberry muffin across to her. "Though Finn had another nightmare last night. He was growling in his sleep again."
Agnes's pale eyes sharpened with concern. "And Wren?"
"She crawled into bed with us around midnight, crying because she could 'feel the scary feelings' from Finn's dream." I sighed, wiping flour from my hands. "Agnes, I'm worried. They're getting stronger."
Before she could respond, the sound of small feet thundering down the stairs filled the diner. Wren appeared first, her curly blonde hair a riot of tangles and her green eyes—so much like Sterling's it made my chest ache—bright with excitement.
"Mama! Finn won't share the bathroom!"
Finn emerged a moment later, his dark hair sticking up at odd angles and those piercing gray eyes—Axel's eyes—already holding a stubborn set to them that reminded me painfully of his father.
"I was there first," he declared with the imperious tone of a tiny Alpha.
The authority in his four-year-old voice made the coffee mugs on the counter rattle slightly. Agnes and I exchanged a meaningful look.
"Finn," I said gently, kneeling to his eye level. "Remember what we talked about? Inside voices, gentle feelings."
His little face scrunched with concentration as he visibly pulled back whatever power had been leaking out. "Sorry, Mama."
Wren immediately brightened, the tension leaving her small shoulders. She was like a little emotional barometer, picking up on everyone's feelings whether she wanted to or not.
"Better," I murmured, kissing both their foreheads. "Now go get ready for school. Agnes will walk you today."
The morning rush passed in its usual blur of coffee orders and breakfast plates. The Pinecone had become the heart of Silverdale's small downtown, and I'd worked my way up from waitress to co-owner through sheer determination and eighteen-hour days. The locals had accepted Ivy Wells and her mysterious past without question—small mountain towns were good for that.
I was refilling the coffee station when the door chimed again, and something in the air shifted.
The man who walked in was tall—easily six-foot-four—with the kind of broad shoulders that filled out a flannel shirt perfectly. His dark hair was slightly mussed from the wind, and when he looked up from shaking snow off his boots, I caught sight of warm brown eyes that seemed to take in everything at once.
"Morning," he said, his voice a low rumble that made something flutter in my chest. "I heard this was the best coffee in town."
"Only coffee in town," I replied, forcing a smile as I grabbed a mug. "But it's good coffee."
He slid onto a stool at the counter, and I caught his scent—pine and leather, with something underneath that made my wolf stir restlessly. Not Pack, but definitely wolf. An Alpha, though he was keeping his presence carefully controlled.
"I'm Ron," he said, extending a hand. "Ron Harwell. I'm a photographer, just passing through to capture some of the mountain scenery."
His grip was warm and firm, sending an unexpected jolt of awareness up my arm. "Ivy," I managed. "Ivy Wells."
Something flickered in his eyes—too quick to interpret—before his easy smile returned. "Nice to meet you, Ivy. This your place?"
"Co-owner," I said, pouring his coffee and trying to ignore how his presence seemed to fill the entire diner. "What brings a photographer to Silverdale? We're not exactly a tourist destination."
"Sometimes the best shots are in the places nobody thinks to look." He wrapped his hands around the mug, and I noticed the calluses on his fingers, the small scar across his knuckles. Working hands. "Plus, I like the quiet. Cities are too... crowded."
There was something in the way he said it that made me think he understood more about needing to disappear than he was letting on.
My phone buzzed against my hip, and I glanced down to see Silverdale Elementary's number on the screen. My blood turned to ice.
"Excuse me," I murmured, stepping into the kitchen to take the call.
"Ms. Wells? This is Principal Martinez. I'm afraid there's been an incident with Finn."
My knees nearly buckled. "What kind of incident? Is he hurt?"
"No, he's fine. But... Ms. Wells, I think you need to come in. There was an altercation on the playground, and the other child is in the nurse's office. He seems to be in some kind of shock."
I closed my eyes, already knowing what had happened. "I'll be right there."
When I emerged from the kitchen, Ron was still at the counter, but his casual demeanor had shifted to something more alert. Those brown eyes tracked my every movement as I untied my apron with shaking hands.
"Everything okay?" he asked.
The concern in his voice was genuine, and for a moment I wanted nothing more than to sink onto the stool beside him and let someone else carry the weight of my secrets. Instead, I forced another smile.
"Just a school thing. I have to run."
I was almost to the door when his voice stopped me.
"Ivy."
I turned back, and something in his expression made my pulse quicken.
"If you ever need anything," he said quietly, "I'm staying at the Pine Lodge. Room twelve."
The drive to the school passed in a blur of worst-case scenarios. By the time I reached the principal's office, my hands were shaking so badly I could barely turn the doorknob.
Finn sat in a chair that was too big for him, his little legs swinging as he stared at his shoes. The moment he saw me, his face crumpled.
"Mama, I didn't mean to!"
I scooped him into my arms, breathing in his familiar scent of apple juice and playground dirt. "It's okay, baby. Tell me what happened."
"Tommy was being mean to Sarah," he whispered against my neck. "He pushed her down and made her cry. I told him to stop, but he wouldn't listen. And then... and then I got really mad, and Tommy fell down too."
Principal Martinez cleared her throat. "Ms. Wells, Tommy Henderson is a second-grader. He's nearly twice Finn's size. But when your son... spoke to him, Tommy collapsed. He's been unconscious for twenty minutes."
My blood turned to ice water. This was it. This was how our carefully constructed life came crashing down.
"I understand this is unusual," Principal Martinez continued carefully, "but I'm going to have to recommend that Finn be evaluated by a specialist. His behavior today was... concerning."
I held my son tighter, feeling his small body tremble against mine. Four years old, and already his power was beyond his control. What would happen when he got older? When he got stronger?
"Of course," I heard myself say. "Whatever you think is best."
But even as I spoke the words, I was already planning our escape. We'd done it once before. We could do it again.
The sun was setting by the time I finally locked up the diner, Wren and Finn flanked on either side of me as we stepped out into the crisp mountain air. My mind was spinning with logistics—how much money we had saved, where we could go, how to disappear again without Agnes getting hurt.
That's when I saw him.
Ron Harwell stood leaning against a black pickup truck, his camera hanging around his neck like he'd just finished a photo shoot. But his attention wasn't on the scenic mountain backdrop.
It was on my children.
More specifically, it was on Finn's face as my son looked up at me with those unmistakable gray eyes—the same shade as storm clouds, the same shade as Axel Rowe.
Ron's expression shifted from casual interest to something much more dangerous. Recognition. Understanding. And beneath it all, a calculating intelligence that made every instinct I had scream danger.
Our eyes met across the parking lot, and in that moment, I knew our four years of peace had just come to an end.
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