
My Fated Alpha Found Me Years Too Late
Chapter 2
Three years. One thousand and ninety-five days since I'd fled the Moonveil Pack with nothing but the clothes on my back and the heart in my chest that wasn't mine. Now, I stood behind the counter of my own flower shop, arranging a bouquet with the same careful precision I'd once used to serve the pack that had discarded me.
The bell above the door chimed, and I looked up with the smile I'd practiced until it felt natural. 'Welcome to The Luna's Bloom. How can I help you today?'
The shop had become my sanctuary in Silverfang territory—a small waterfront space with large windows that let in streams of sunlight. The walls were lined with vases filled with blooms I'd arranged not by color or season, but by the emotions they seemed to carry. Grief, hope, resilience—flowers spoke in ways words sometimes couldn't.
'Just browsing,' the customer murmured, but I noticed how her fingers lingered over the arrangement of white moonflowers and blue forget-me-nots. I'd placed them together because they seemed to whisper of memories worth keeping and wounds worth healing.
As she left with a bouquet that looked nothing like what she'd come in for, Maren Cole—the Silverfang healer who'd become my first real friend—leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed. 'You've got that look again,' she said with a knowing smile.
'What look?'
'The one where you're arranging flowers and suddenly you're a million miles away. Thinking about him, aren't you?'
I didn't need to ask who she meant. 'He'll be on patrol soon,' I said, checking the clock. Sure enough, the shop door opened precisely at 2:15 PM, and Dane Powell walked in.
He didn't speak immediately. He never did. Instead, his eyes—steady, observant eyes that held shadows I recognized—surveyed the shop before settling on me. Then on the sunflowers.
'The usual?' I asked, already reaching for the one sunflower in the bunch that faced slightly away from the others. The lonely one. The one that somehow matched the quiet solitude in his gaze.
Dane nodded, setting a single bill on the counter—always exact change, never a tip, because tips implied obligation and he never wanted me to feel obligated. 'How's business?'
'Good,' I said, wrapping the stem in paper. 'Better than good.'
He took the sunflower, and for a moment, our fingers brushed. Something warm and unspoken passed between us—not the desperate, demanding pull I'd felt with Colton, but something steadier. Something that asked for nothing.
The shop door burst open again, this time with a crash that made me jump. A man stumbled in—disheveled, reeking of alcohol, with the unmistakable wildness of a former rogue who hadn't fully adjusted to pack life.
'You!' he slurred, pointing at me. 'Discount. Now.'
Before I could respond, he lurched forward, knocking over a display of daisies. His hand grabbed my wrist, hard enough to bruise. 'I said discount! Do you know who I am?'
I tried to pull away, but he tightened his grip. 'Let go,' I said, my voice steadier than I felt.
The air in the shop changed. Dane moved with the fluid precision of a Beta, not rushing, not shouting. He simply stepped forward and released a controlled wave of his Beta aura—not the crushing dominance of an Alpha, but something equally powerful in its restraint.
The rogue's eyes widened in sudden, sobering fear. He dropped my wrist and stumbled backward, nearly falling over himself in his haste to escape.
Dane didn't chase him. He didn't need to. When the door slammed shut, he turned to me, and the power in his eyes softened. 'Are you okay?'
Three simple words, asked with such quiet concern that it made my throat tight. I nodded, rubbing my wrist where the rogue's fingers had left red marks.
'I should have been here sooner,' he said, and I could hear the self-reproach in his voice. 'I heard the commotion from outside.'
'It's fine,' I said. 'You're here now.'
And that was the moment I realized how safe I felt with him—not because he'd saved me, but because he'd asked if I was okay afterward. Because he stood beside me instead of in front of me.
The shop door opened again, and a customer walked in, oblivious to what had just happened. Dane stepped back, giving me space, but his eyes never left mine.
'I'll finish my patrol,' he said, and I nodded, watching him walk away with the sunflower in his hand.
I didn't know then that across the border, in the territory I'd fled, Colton Owens was stepping out of his car, his wolf suddenly howling with recognition as the wind carried my scent to him for the first time in three years.
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