
My Pregnant Escape From the Alpha Who Caged Me
Chapter 3
The dawn at Silver Creek was different from the mornings I had known at Blood Moon. There was no dread pooling in my stomach, no harsh shouts echoing through the halls. Just the soft chirping of waking birds and the steady, rhythmic breathing of the man sleeping in the chair beside my bed.
It had been weeks since the fire. Weeks since I died.
My body was healing, purging the last dregs of the wolfsbane that had poisoned me for years. But the emotional scars were slower to fade. Every morning, I woke up expecting to see silver bars. Instead, I saw Wes.
He never pushed. He never demanded. My wolf, weak but stirring, whined for him constantly, recognizing him as the father of the life growing inside me. But the old bond—the twisted, blackened thread connecting me to Hayes—still tugged at my soul. It was a phantom limb, an ache that throbbed whenever my mind drifted back to the life I had left behind.
"You're frowning in your sleep again," Wes’s voice was rough with sleep, startling me.
I sat up, pulling the thick quilt tighter around my shoulders. "Just thinking."
Wes stood and stretched, his shirt riding up to reveal the lean muscle of his abdomen. He offered me a hand. "Come on. The sun is just hitting the ridge. You need fresh air."
We walked to the edge of the territory, where the forest thinned into a rocky overlook. The wind here was sharp, carrying scents from miles away.
"Close your eyes," Wes instructed softly, standing behind me but not touching. "Tell me what you smell."
I inhaled deeply. "Pine. Damp earth. A fox den about two miles east."
"Deeper," he urged. "Find the rot."
I focused, pushing past the surface scents. And then I hit it—a sour, cloying smell drifting from the south. The Blood Moon pack. My stomach churned.
"I smell... fear," I whispered. "And anger."
"Hayes is losing control," Wes said, his voice devoid of pity. "His warriors are restless. Without your elixirs to calm their wolves, they’re edging toward feral."
He stepped closer, his chest brushing my back. The heat radiating from him made my knees weak. "You have power, Maeve. Real power. Hayes tried to bottle it, to steal it. But it belongs to you. You can shield your scent from him. You can hide from that bond."
"How?" I asked, trembling.
"Visualize a wall of ice," he murmured, his breath tickling my ear. "Freeze the connection. Don't fight it—just numb it."
I tried. I pictured the silver thread leading to Hayes and encased it in frost. The constant, nagging pull in my chest dulled. For the first time in years, silence.
I turned to face him, tears stinging my eyes. "Thank you."
Wes reached out, his hand hovering over my cheek before he pulled back, respecting the boundaries he had set for himself. "I will never control you, Maeve. I will only ever help you stand."
***
Miles away, inside the gloomy stone walls of the Blood Moon pack house, chaos reigned.
Hayes Miller paced his office, a glass of amber whiskey in his hand. He looked like a shadow of the Alpha he used to be. His eyes were bloodshot, dark circles bruising the skin beneath them. He hadn't slept properly since the fire.
The pack was falling apart. Fights broke out daily in the training yards. The warriors were aggressive, their wolves too close to the surface, agitated by the lack of the calming Moon Elixirs.
"Where is it?" Hayes roared, hurling his glass against the wall. It shattered, shards raining down on the expensive rug.
Nicole flinched, shrinking back against the bookshelf. "I'm brewing it, Hayes! It just needs to steep!"
"The Council representative is here *now*, Nicole!" he snarled, advancing on her. "If we don't have the tribute ready, they'll sanction us. Do you understand what that means? We lose our trade routes!"
"I know!" she shrieked, her hands shaking as she clutched a vial of dark purple liquid. "Here. It's ready. It's the same color as hers."
Hayes snatched the vial from her. He uncorked it, taking a sniff. It smelled floral, heavy... almost right. But something was off. A sharpness that stung the nose.
"It will have to do," he muttered, storming out of the room.
In the grand hall, Elder Thorne of the Royal Lycan Council waited. He was a stern man with a nose that could track a scent across an ocean. He watched impassively as Hayes approached, bowing low.
"Alpha Miller," Thorne said, his voice dry. "The Council has heard troubling rumors. Unrest in your ranks. We expect the quality of the Moon Elixirs to be... consistent."
"Of course, Elder," Hayes said, forcing a charming smile that didn't reach his dead eyes. "My mate... my late mate... left her recipes in capable hands. Her sister has perfected the batch."
He gestured to Nicole, who stepped forward, trembling in her designer heels. She presented the vial on a velvet cushion.
Thorne took the vial. He didn't even uncork it before his nose wrinkled. He pulled the stopper, took one shallow whiff, and immediately gagged.
"Goddess above!" Thorne choked, thrusting the vial away as if it were a venomous snake. The glass shattered on the stone floor, hissing as the liquid began to eat into the rock.
"Poison!" Thorne roared, wiping his mouth with a silk handkerchief. "You dare present this swill to the Council? This isn't a calming draught! This is hemlock and nightshade mixed with rotted lavender!"
The hall went silent. Every warrior, every servant stared at Nicole.
"I... I followed the notes!" Nicole stammered, her face pale. "It must be the humidity!"
"Notes?" Hayes turned on her, his voice dangerously quiet. The Alpha aura rolled off him in suffocating waves. "You said you knew the recipe by heart. You said you helped her make it."
"I did! I just..." Nicole backed away, hitting the wall.
"Get her out of my sight," Hayes ordered his guards. "Before I tear her throat out myself."
As Nicole was dragged away, screaming excuses, Hayes stood alone in the center of his crumbling kingdom. Humiliated.
Later that night, fueled by rage and confusion, Hayes kicked open the door to the small, dusty room in the servants' quarters where I used to sleep. He tore through the meager belongings I had left behind—threadbare clothes, dried herbs hanging from the ceiling.
He ripped up the floorboards in a frenzy, searching for anything that could save him. His fingers brushed against something hard wrapped in oilcloth.
A journal.
He opened it. The pages were filled with my handwriting, but the words were gibberish to anyone else. A cipher. A simple code we had invented as children, playing spies in the woods.
*A is for Alpha, B is for Beta...*
His hands shook as he translated the first entry.
*Day 450. Hayes made me take the bitter drink again. My wolf is screaming. He locked me in the dark because I smiled at the gardener. He says I am broken. I think he is breaking me.*
Hayes sank to the floor, the book falling from his numb fingers. The denial he had wrapped himself in for years—the belief that he was doing what was necessary, that I was the weak one—shattered.
He read on, page after page of my pain, recorded in the secret language of our lost childhood innocence.
"Maeve," he whispered into the silence of the empty room. "What have I done?"
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