
Rejected and Pregnant: Carrying the Alpha King's Forbidden Heir
Chapter 5
The borderlands didn't announce their end.
There was no marker. No warning.
Just... change.
One moment, Aira was moving through wild, untamed forest where no banners flew and no laws hunted her. The next, the trees began to thin, the ground flattened into worn paths, and the air itself shifted.
It felt... watched.
She slowed immediately.
Instinct.
Her fingers tightened around the edge of her cloak as she pulled the hood lower over her face, shadowing her features. Every step forward felt wrong.
Like walking willingly toward a blade.
But behind her lay starvation.
And winter.
And death that came slowly.
Ahead-
At least there was a chance.
By noon, her supplies were gone.
Completely.
The last piece of dried bread had done nothing to quiet the hollow ache in her stomach. If anything, it made it worse.
By evening, the cold deepened.
Snow fell harder now, thick and relentless, clinging to her lashes, soaking into her boots until her feet burned with numbness.
Her body trembled not just from cold.
From weakness.
From strain.
From the life inside her demanding more than she had left to give.
Aira stopped behind a cluster of thin trees, her breath uneven as she pressed a hand against her stomach.
"You're hungry too..." she whispered softly.
The words came out fragile.
Honest.
"I know."
The wind howled faintly in response, carrying distant sounds with it.
Voices.
Her head snapped up.
Ahead, the road curved and beyond it...
Light.
Faint at first.
Then clearer.
A settlement.
Small.
Barely more than a cluster of buildings huddled together against the cold.
Smoke curled from chimneys. Lanterns flickered weakly against the falling snow.
A trading post.
The kind that lived on the edge of rules.
The kind that survived by not asking questions.
Aira's chest tightened.
That made it dangerous.
That made it perfect.
She didn't approach immediately.
Instead, she waited.
Watched.
Listened.
Dusk settled slowly, shadows stretching across the ground as the sky darkened. More lights flickered to life. Voices grew louder-human voices, mostly.
A few wolves.
But none carried the weight of command.
No Alpha.
No pack authority.
Good.
Still-
Not safe.
Nothing was.
Aira exhaled slowly, steadying herself.
Then she stepped onto the road.
The first person to notice her did so instantly.
A man stood near a cart, unloading crates with practiced ease. The moment she came into view, he stilled, his eyes narrowing as they swept over her from head to toe.
Taking in everything.
The mud-stained cloak.
The worn boots.
The exhaustion she couldn't fully hide.
"You lost?" he asked, his tone guarded.
Aira shook her head slightly. "No. Just passing through."
His gaze lingered.
Suspicious.
Measuring.
"Passing through doesn't put food in your stomach," he said bluntly. "Or a roof over your head."
"I can work," she replied quickly, her voice steady despite the tension coiling inside her. "Cleaning. Cooking. Anything."
The man didn't respond immediately.
Instead-
His eyes dropped.
Briefly.
To her stomach.
It was subtle.
But Aira saw it.
Felt it.
Something shifted in his expression.
Not kindness.
Not curiosity.
Something colder.
Calculating.
Her spine stiffened instinctively.
"I'm not staying long," she added, sharper this time.
The man blinked, as if catching himself. Then he jerked his chin toward the largest building at the center of the settlement.
"The inn," he said. "Food costs. Shelter costs more."
"I said I can work."
Another pause.
Then-
"Talk to the innkeeper," he muttered. "If she takes you."
Aira didn't thank him.
She didn't trust him.
But she moved anyway.
The inn hit her like a wave.
Heat.
Noise.
Life.
It slammed into her senses all at once, making her head spin as she stepped inside. The air was thick with the scent of food, smoke, and too many bodies crammed into one place.
For a moment, she just stood there.
Frozen.
Overwhelmed.
Snow melted at her feet, dripping onto the wooden floor.
"You."
The voice cut through the noise instantly.
Sharp.
Commanding.
Aira's head snapped up.
A woman stood behind the counter, her arms crossed, her sharp eyes locked onto Aira like she'd already decided she didn't belong.
"What do you want?" the woman asked.
"Work," Aira said immediately. "Food. A place near the fire. I won't cause trouble."
A snort.
"Everyone says that."
The woman stepped out from behind the counter and began circling her slowly.
Watching.
Assessing.
Judging.
Aira forced herself to stay still under the scrutiny.
"You're a wolf," the woman said.
"Yes."
"Alone?"
Aira hesitated.
Just for a second.
Then nodded. "Yes."
The woman's gaze sharpened slightly.
"Bad time to be alone," she muttered.
"I know."
A long silence stretched between them.
Then-
The woman sighed.
"Kitchen," she said, jerking her head toward the back. "You mess up, you're out."
Relief hit Aira so hard it nearly knocked the strength from her legs.
"Thank you," she breathed.
Work was relentless.
Scrubbing.
Sweeping.
Carrying.
Anything to earn her place.
Her body screamed in protest, exhaustion clawing at her with every movement but she pushed through it.
She had to.
Food came first.
Then survival.
Still-
She felt it.
Eyes.
Watching.
Some curious.
Some wary.
One...
Different.
Sharper.
Lingering longer than the others.
Aira didn't turn.
Didn't react.
She had learned that lesson already.
Attention-
Was dangerous.
By the time night settled fully, her body was barely holding together.
But her stomach-
For the first time in weeks-
Was full.
Warmth seeped into her slowly as she curled onto a thin pallet near the kitchen fire. The heat brushed against her skin, unfamiliar and almost overwhelming.
Safe.
Not truly.
But enough.
Her hand rested gently over her stomach.
A quiet habit now.
A silent promise.
Her eyes drifted shut.
And for the first time in a long time-
She dreamed.
Not of running in fear.
But of running free.
Strong.
Untouched.
Miles away-
Far beyond the fragile safety of the border settlement-
Alpha King Kael stood in silence, a parchment held tightly in his hand.
He had already read it.
Twice.
Still-
His eyes traced the words again.
Unregistered female wolf sighted.
No pack markings.
Possibly pregnant.
His fingers tightened slightly, the paper crinkling under the pressure.
The pull in his chest sharpened instantly.
Stronger.
Clearer.
Closer.
"Send no guards," he said.
The scout in front of him blinked in surprise. "Your Majesty?"
"No council agents," Kael continued, his voice calm but final. "No interference."
Confusion flickered across the scout's face. "Then... what are your orders?"
Kael's gaze lifted slowly.
Dark.
Focused.
Certain.
"I want her unaware," he said.
A pause.
"And alive."
The scout bowed quickly. "Yes, Your Majesty."
He turned and left.
But Kael didn't move.
Didn't look away.
His gaze had shifted beyond the walls.
Beyond the distance.
As if he could already see her.
Feel her.
The connection tightened in his chest, no longer vague.
No longer uncertain.
It was real.
And it was pulling him toward something the council had tried to bury.
"They moved too soon," he murmured.
A dangerous edge slipped into his voice.
"And now..."
His fingers curled slowly at his side.
"I move faster."
Unseen.
Unaware.
Unavoidable.
Their paths were no longer just crossing.
They were closing in.
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