
Not Just an Incubator: The Omega's Revenge
I thought I was the luckiest Omega in the world when the Alpha of the New Moon Pack chose me.
I was pregnant with his heir, sleeping in his bed, believing the warmth I felt was love.
But then I found the medical report hidden in his desk.
"Subject: Scent Modulator. Dosage: High."
It wasn't a fated bond. It was a drug. He was chemically forcing me to love him.
My best friend dragged me to a restaurant window, and I watched him kiss my cousin, Olivia.
Through the glass, I heard the words that shattered my soul.
"Just a few more months," Ethan told her, caressing her hand. "Once the incubator drops the brat, we'll dispose of her. Then we raise the heir as ours."
I was never his Luna. I was livestock. A walking womb chosen for my bloodline compatibility because his mistress was barren.
My father had tried to warn me with his dying breath, but I had been too blinded by the synthetic scent to listen.
Grief threatened to kill me, but the White Wolf inside me woke up screaming for vengeance.
I went back to the house. I didn't pack a bag. I went straight to the kitchen and brewed a tea of Wolfsbane and Mugwort.
I drank it all, weeping as I felt the bond to the baby snap.
Then, I walked into our bedroom, left the divorce papers on his pillow, and whispered into the mind-link:
"I, Ava Miller, reject you, Ethan Cole, as my mate."
As he screamed in my head, I blocked him and walked into the rain.
He thought he broke a weak Omega. He didn't know he had just unleashed a White Wolf.
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Chapter 6
Ava POV:
The first night in the neutral territory of Napa Valley was quiet. Unsettlingly quiet.
I lay still on the lumpy mattress of the small cottage Mrs. Davis had offered me. The air smelled of dried sage and sun-baked timber, a stark contrast to the sterile, expensive scent of ozone and leather that permeated Ethan's penthouse.
My hand drifted instinctively to my flat stomach.
The phantom pain was still there. It wasn't a sharp stab anymore. It was a dull, hollow ache, echoing like a room suddenly stripped of everything that made it a home.
I closed my eyes, and the memory of that night washed over me like a tidal wave of ice water.
I remembered the taste of the Wolfsbane potion. Bitter. Earthy. Metallic. It tasted like an ending.
I remembered the cramping. It felt like my body was wringing itself out, twisting my insides into violent knots until I was gasping on the bathroom floor. I hadn't screamed. I refused to let him hear me break.
But the physical pain of the abortion was nothing compared to what came next.
The Rejection.
I remembered standing in the bedroom, the storm raging outside matching the one tearing through my chest. I remembered speaking the words that every wolf fears, yet every wolf respects.
"I, Ava Miller, reject you, Ethan Cole, as my mate."
The snap of the bond hadn't felt like a knife. That would have been too clean.
It felt like a limb being ripped from a socket. It felt like a part of my soul—the part that the Scent Modulator drugs had chemically coerced into loving him—was being torn away with rusty pliers.
I had gasped, falling to my knees. The air had left my lungs.
But then, the silence came.
For months, I had lived with the constant, suffocating weight of his Alpha presence in the back of my mind. It was a heavy, oily pressure, always demanding, always watching.
When the bond snapped, that weight vanished.
It was replaced by a raw, bleeding void, yes. But it was *my* void. It was empty, and it was free.
I remembered leaving the divorce papers on his pillow. I remembered the photo of Olivia and him on his desk, their smiles mocking my stupidity.
I didn't burn the house down. I didn't steal his money.
I just disappeared.
Now, lying in this stranger's cottage, I took a deep, shuddering breath. My ribs expanded without resistance.
The Mind-Link was silent. No angry shouts. No deceitful whispers.
But beneath the silence, I felt it. A hum. A vibration in my blood that hadn't been there before.
The White Wolf.
She wasn't sleeping anymore. The Rejection hadn't killed her; it had unchained her. I could feel her pacing in the back of my mind, restless, strong, and simmering with ancient rage.
Mrs. Davis knocked gently on the door frame.
"Breakfast, child," she said softly.
She walked in with a tray. Herbal tea and toast.
"You were thrashing in your sleep," she noted, setting the tray down on the nightstand.
"Memories," I croaked. My throat was parched, scratching like sandpaper.
"Memories are ghosts," Mrs. Davis said, settling into the rocking chair in the corner. "They can haunt you, or they can guide you. But they cannot hurt you unless you let them."
I sat up, wincing as my abdominal muscles protested the movement. "How do I make them stop?"
"You don't," she said. "You replace them with new ones. Better ones."
She handed me a cup of tea. It smelled of chamomile and something sweeter—honeysuckle, maybe.
"Drink," she commanded gently. "It will help with the... hollowness. It soothes the spirit after a bond break."
I looked at her sharply. "You know?"
"I am old, Ava," she said, her eyes twinkling with a knowing light. "I have seen many wolves run to this valley. I know the smell of a broken bond. It smells like ozone and rain."
I took a sip. The warmth spread through my chest, chasing away some of the chill lodged in my bones.
"What do I do now?" I asked, my voice trembling. "I have no Pack. I have no mate. I have nothing."
Mrs. Davis leaned forward. Her face was lined like a map, full of roads I hadn't traveled yet.
"You have yourself," she said firmly. "And judging by what I saw in that alleyway with the Rogues, that is more than enough."
She pointed to the window, where the morning sun was bathing the vineyards in gold.
"Some wounds need time to close," she whispered. "But some power needs time to be tamed. The White Wolf is not a pet, Ava. She is a force of nature. If you do not learn to ride the storm, it will drown you."
I looked at my hands. They looked the same as they always had—pale, slender. But I could feel the energy crackling under the skin, waiting for a command.
"Teach me," I said.
Mrs. Davis smiled. "Eat your toast first. You can't conquer the world on an empty stomach."
I took a bite. It tasted like ash at first, but as I chewed, I tasted the butter. I tasted the bread.
I tasted life.
The old Ava, the submissive Omega who lived for a fake smile, was dead. She died on that bathroom floor.
I was someone else now. I didn't know her name yet, but I knew she was going to survive.
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