
Realized I Was Just His Stand-In Mate
Chapter 3
Consciousness returned like a slow tide, bringing with it the unfamiliar sensation of Egyptian cotton against my skin and the distant hum of city traffic. My eyes fluttered open to find myself in a room that screamed luxury—floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the downtown skyline, marble surfaces gleaming in the morning light, and furniture that probably cost more than most wolves made in a year.
Panic hit me like ice water.
I bolted upright, my head spinning from the sudden movement and the lingering effects of last night's whiskey. The silk nightgown I wore wasn't mine—someone had changed me out of my ruined ceremonial dress. The implications made my stomach churn.
"Oh God, oh God," I whispered, scrambling out of the king-sized bed. My bare feet hit cold marble as I frantically searched for my clothes, for any clue about where I was or how I'd gotten here. "How much does a place like this cost? I can't afford—"
Memories crashed back in fragments. The alley. The rogues. Strong arms catching me as I fell. But everything after that was a blur of alcohol and exhaustion.
I had to get out. Now.
I rushed toward what I hoped was the exit, my heart hammering against my ribs. The door handle was smooth and cold under my palm, and I yanked it open with desperate force—
Only to collide face-first with a solid wall of muscle.
The impact sent me stumbling backward, but steady hands caught my shoulders before I could fall. I looked up, ready to apologize or scream or both, and found myself staring into the most striking amber eyes I'd ever seen.
The man was tall, easily six-foot-three, with dark hair that looked like he'd run his fingers through it and a face that belonged on magazine covers. He wore a simple black t-shirt and jeans, but there was something about the way he carried himself—controlled, confident, dangerous—that marked him as more than he appeared.
"Easy," he said, his voice that same deep rumble I remembered from the alley. "You're safe."
I jerked away from his touch, my back hitting the wall. "Who are you? Where am I? I need to leave, I can't pay for this place, I don't have any money—"
"Emelia." The way he said my name, gentle but firm, cut through my panic. "Breathe."
I stared at him, recognition flickering at the edges of my memory. Something about those eyes, the set of his shoulders. "I know you."
A small smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. "Ezra Knox. We were neighbors, a long time ago. Before you moved to Eclipse territory."
The name hit me like a physical blow. Ezra. The quiet boy who'd lived next door, who'd helped me with my math homework and walked me to school when the other kids were cruel about my orphan status. Who'd disappeared from my life when I was sixteen and Alpha Damon had claimed me.
"Ezra?" My voice came out as barely a whisper. "But you're... you're so..."
"Different?" He stepped back, giving me space while holding up a paper bag and a steaming cup. "Hangover remedies and breakfast. You're going to need both."
The smell of coffee and fresh pastries made my empty stomach clench with hunger, but I couldn't focus on food. Not when my entire world had imploded in the span of twelve hours.
"I can't stay here," I said, wrapping my arms around myself. "I don't have money for a hotel like this. Damon froze my accounts, and I can't—"
"It's handled." Ezra's tone was matter-of-fact, as if paying for penthouse suites was something he did every day. "And you're not going anywhere until you've eaten and we've talked."
Something in his voice—not commanding like an Alpha's, but absolutely immovable—made me stop arguing. He gestured toward the sitting area, where a low table waited between two leather chairs.
"Please," he said simply.
I found myself moving toward the chairs, my legs still unsteady from shock and hangover. Ezra set the coffee in front of me, and I wrapped my hands around the warm cup like a lifeline.
"How did you find me?" I asked, taking a tentative sip. The coffee was perfect—strong enough to cut through my mental fog but smooth enough not to upset my queasy stomach.
"I keep track of threats in the gray zones." He settled into the chair across from me, his movements fluid and controlled. "When three rogues turned up in an alley with broken bones, talking about the Eclipse Pack COO, I put two and two together."
Shame burned in my chest. "You saw me at my lowest point. Drunk, helpless, pathetic—"
"Strong enough to walk away from a life that was killing you slowly," he interrupted, his amber eyes intense. "That takes courage, Emelia. More than most wolves have."
The unexpected validation made my throat tight with emotion. When was the last time someone had looked at me with respect instead of pity or calculation?
"What happens now?" I asked, setting down the coffee with shaking hands. "Damon's already spreading lies about me stealing pack secrets. No one will hire me. I have nowhere to go."
Ezra reached into his jacket and pulled out a manila folder, placing it on the table between us. "Actually, you do."
I stared at the folder like it might bite me. "What is that?"
"A job offer."
My heart stuttered. "From who?"
"Obsidian Pack."
The name hit me like a slap. Obsidian Pack—Eclipse's biggest rival, the one territory Damon considered a genuine threat to his dominance. Taking a job there wouldn't just be moving on. It would be an act of war.
"You're joking," I whispered.
"Alpha Kieran has been watching your work for years," Ezra said, his voice steady and serious. "He knows you're the real power behind Eclipse's success. The strategic mind that turned a struggling pack into a commercial empire."
I opened the folder with trembling fingers. The contract inside was more generous than anything I'd ever seen—a salary that dwarfed what Damon had paid me, full benefits, housing allowance, and a signing bonus that would set me up for life.
"He can't be serious," I breathed. "Damon will declare war. He'll—"
"He'll bluster and threaten and ultimately do nothing," Ezra said calmly. "Because without you, Eclipse is already bleeding money. He can't afford a war with Obsidian, and Alpha Kieran knows it."
I looked up from the contract to find Ezra watching me with an expression I'd never seen in Damon's eyes. Not possession or calculation, but genuine respect. Like he saw me as an equal, not a useful tool.
"Why?" I asked. "Why would your Alpha risk this for me?"
Something flickered in Ezra's amber gaze, too quick for me to interpret. "Because talent like yours shouldn't be wasted on wolves who don't appreciate it."
The pen felt heavy in my hand as I stared at the signature line. Signing this contract would make me a traitor in Damon's eyes, an enemy of everything I'd spent eight years building. But what was the alternative? Homelessness? Exile? Slow starvation while Damon's lies poisoned every potential opportunity?
I thought about last night—about standing at that altar while Damon asked me to hand over my bridal bouquet to his ex-lover. About the tattoo on his chest that he'd never removed despite years of promises. About eight years of being taken for granted, dismissed, treated like a useful accessory rather than a partner.
Revenge wasn't the only thing driving me as I pressed pen to paper, but I'd be lying if I said it wasn't part of it. The idea of using my knowledge and skills against Eclipse, of showing Damon exactly what he'd thrown away, sent a dark thrill through my chest.
I signed my name with a flourish, the ink dark and permanent against the cream-colored paper.
"Welcome to Obsidian Pack," Ezra said, and there was something almost like pride in his voice.
I looked up at him, this man who'd appeared like a guardian angel in my darkest hour, and felt something shift inside me. Not love—I was too broken for that—but the first stirring of hope I'd felt in years.
"What happens now?" I asked.
Ezra's smile was sharp as a blade. "Now we show them what they lost."
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