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Rejected and Pregnant: Carrying the Alpha King's Forbidden Heir Novel Cover

Rejected and Pregnant: Carrying the Alpha King's Forbidden Heir

Rejected and exiled under cruel wolf laws, Aira escapes execution while secretly pregnant. Years later, she returns with a child whose presence unsettles every Alpha. When the Alpha Council moves to erase them, the Alpha King intervenes not to claim her, but to protect what the kingdom fears. Forced into the heart of power, Aira must survive a system designed to break the weak while carrying the heir who may change everything.
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Chapter 6

Aira woke before dawn.

Not from a sound.

Not from a dream.

But from something deeper.

A pull.

Sharp. Quiet. Insistent.

Her eyes opened slowly, her body going still as instinct took over. She didn't move. Didn't breathe too deeply.

She listened.

The inn lived around her in soft, familiar sounds. Wood creaked as it adjusted to the cold. Someone snored faintly upstairs. The fire had burned down to embers, glowing low beneath a blanket of ash.

Nothing unusual.

Nothing wrong.

And yet-

Everything felt different.

Aira sat up slowly, her movements controlled, deliberate. Her hand drifted to her stomach, pressing gently against the steady warmth there.

A faint flutter answered her.

Soft.

Reassuring.

"I know..." she whispered under her breath. "I feel it too."

Something was coming.

She didn't wait.

Pulling her cloak tightly around her shoulders, Aira slipped into the kitchen before anyone else stirred. Routine had become her shield something predictable in a life that no longer was.

Water.

Fire.

Bread.

Simple tasks.

Safe tasks.

But safety didn't last long.

As dawn broke, the inn filled faster than it should have.

Too fast.

The first group arrived before the sun fully rose hunters, their boots heavy with snow, their voices loud and careless. Then came traders, their wagons packed tight, their eyes sharper than men who simply sold goods.

And then-

Wolves.

Unmarked.

Unaffiliated.

Watching.

Aira kept her head down, her hands moving automatically as her senses stretched outward.

Counting.

Tracking.

Measuring.

Too many.

Far too many.

By midmorning-

She knew.

They weren't hunting her.

Not yet.

But they were circling.

Watching.

Waiting.

"Ale."

The voice came sharp, cutting through her thoughts.

Aira stepped forward without hesitation, pouring into the waiting mug with steady hands. She nodded once and turned-

And felt it.

Not touch.

Not movement.

Attention.

Focused.

Intent.

Her pulse quickened, but she didn't turn her head.

Didn't react.

She had learned that lesson well.

To react-

Was to reveal.

The confirmation came later.

Outside.

Alone.

She had stepped behind the inn to gather firewood, the cold biting harder away from the warmth of the building. Snow crunched softly beneath her boots as she moved toward the shed-

And then she saw them.

Two men.

Standing near the edge of the settlement.

Arguing.

Or pretending to.

Their voices carried, but their bodies told a different story.

Too still.

Too balanced.

Too ready.

Wolves.

Not ordinary ones.

Scouts.

Aira's chest tightened.

They hadn't found her.

But they were close.

Too close.

She turned away immediately, forcing her pace to remain even as she walked back inside.

Don't run.

Don't panic.

Not yet.

The rest of the day passed in a blur of controlled tension.

Aira worked.

Moved.

Breathed.

As if nothing had changed.

But her mind raced.

If they were scouts, then the council hadn't decided yet.

That meant she still had time.

Hours.

Maybe less.

Every exit.

Every shadow.

Every possible path-

She memorized them all.

By sunset, she had already decided.

She would leave.

Tonight.

Before the decision was made for her.

"You've got trouble clinging to you."

The innkeeper's voice came low, quiet enough that no one else would hear.

Aira stilled near the kitchen doorway.

"I don't want it to touch you," she replied softly.

The woman snorted under her breath. "Too late for that."

A pause.

Then-

"You leaving tonight?"

"Yes."

No hesitation.

No lies.

The innkeeper studied her for a long moment, her sharp eyes softer now-but no less knowing.

"Back path," she said finally. "Follow the stream. It bends east. After that, you're on your own."

Aira bowed her head slightly. "Thank you."

The woman waved her off like it didn't matter.

But it did.

It mattered more than she could say.

Night fell quickly.

Aira didn't wait.

She slipped out the back, her movements silent, practiced. Snow muffled her steps as she followed the narrow path behind the inn, her breath forming soft clouds in the cold air.

The stream appeared just as promised.

She followed it.

Step by step.

Heart steady.

Mind focused.

She had gone no more than a mile-

When it hit her.

The forest stilled.

Not gradually.

Not naturally.

Instantly.

Like the world had taken a breath-

And forgotten to release it.

Aira stumbled, her hand shooting out to grip the nearest tree as something pressed against her awareness.

Not pain.

Not fear.

Something else.

Vast.

Heavy.

Commanding.

Her heart began to pound.

"What...?" she whispered.

The air shifted.

And then-

Footsteps.

Not hidden.

Not rushed.

Certain.

Deliberate.

Aira turned slowly.

And froze.

He stepped from the shadows like he belonged to them.

Tall.

Broad-shouldered.

Wrapped in darkness that didn't quite hide him but seemed to obey him.

The moment his eyes met hers-

The world narrowed.

Silver.

Sharp.

Unyielding.

They locked onto her with a focus that sent something cold sliding down her spine.

Aira took a step back instinctively.

"Don't run."

His voice was calm.

Controlled.

Not loud.

But it carried weight.

Not a command.

But close enough.

Her body tensed anyway.

"I won't," she said, though every instinct inside her screamed to do the opposite.

He studied her.

Not like prey.

Not like possession.

But like something he had already decided mattered.

"You are far from where you should be," he said.

Aira swallowed. "I don't belong anywhere."

Something flickered in his expression.

Recognition.

Confirmation.

His gaze dropped briefly.

To her stomach.

The air tightened.

The forest held its breath.

Then-

He looked back at her.

And everything changed.

"You are under my protection now."

The words landed heavily.

Aira's breath caught.

"I didn't ask for-"

"I know," he interrupted, his tone quieter now-but no less absolute. "That is why it stands."

Her heart raced, confusion and fear tangling together.

"Who are you?" she asked.

He hesitated.

Just a fraction.

As if deciding how much to reveal.

Then-

"Someone," he said slowly, "who will make sure you are not erased."

Behind him, the shadows shifted.

Not wind.

Not illusion.

Presence.

Other wolves.

Powerful ones.

And they were retreating.

Not because they chose to.

But because he willed it.

Aira's knees nearly gave out.

Because deep down-

She knew.

This wasn't a scout.

Wasn't a wanderer.

Wasn't anything ordinary.

This-

Was authority.

This was power the council answered to.

The kind that didn't chase.

Didn't beg.

Didn't explain.

It decided.

And it had just decided-

Her fate.

Her breath trembled as the realization settled fully.

He hadn't found her by accident.

He had come for her.

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