
The Alpha Who Refused to Let Me Go
Chapter 1
The knock at my door cuts through the winter silence like a blade.
I freeze at my desk, fingers still poised over my laptop keyboard, the quarterly report I'd been working on forgotten. The sound echoes through my small apartment—sharp, deliberate, demanding. Not the hesitant tap of a neighbor or the quick rap of a delivery driver. This knock carries weight, authority.
Then the scent hits me.
Pine. Leather. Something wild and distinctly male that makes my wolf stir restlessly beneath my skin for the first time in three years. My heart slams against my ribs as recognition crashes over me like a tidal wave.
No. It can't be. How did he find me?
-
I push back from my desk so violently that my chair crashes into the wall behind me. My hands shake as I press them against my chest, trying to calm the sudden riot of my pulse. The mate bond, dormant for so long, roars to life with a vengeance. Every nerve ending in my body lights up, responding to his proximity with an intensity that steals my breath.
Another knock, more insistent this time.
I wrap my arms around myself, backing away from the door as if it might burst into flames. Three years. Three years I've hidden in this human city, built a life where werewolves are nothing more than movie monsters and pack politics are someone else's nightmare. Three years of telling myself I was free.
The scent grows stronger, seeping under the door like smoke. My wolf whines, pressing against my consciousness with a desperate hunger I'd forgotten existed. She recognizes her mate, and she doesn't understand why we're not running to him.
Because he destroyed us, I remind her silently. Because he left us broken and bleeding and alone.
But my feet betray me, carrying me toward the door even as my mind screams warnings. My hand hovers over the deadbolt, trembling. Part of me—the part that still dreams of him on lonely nights—wants to fling it open. The larger part, the part that remembers the cold indifference in his eyes during those final months, wants to pretend I'm not home.
The knocking stops.
"Primrose." His voice penetrates the wood like it's paper, deep and commanding and achingly familiar. "I know you're in there."
The sound of my name on his lips after three years of silence makes my knees weak. I lean against the door, my forehead pressed to the cool wood, and close my eyes. How did he find me? I'd been so careful, covering my tracks, using human documentation, staying far from any werewolf territories.
"Open the door."
It's not a request. It never was with Gabriele. Even in our happiest moments, he'd carried that Alpha authority like a second skin, the expectation that the world would bend to his will. And for three blissful months, I'd been happy to let it.
Until he'd decided I wasn't worth his attention anymore.
"Go away," I whisper, but the words come out broken, barely audible even to my own ears.
Silence stretches between us, heavy with unspoken history. I can feel him on the other side of the door, can sense his presence like a physical weight. The mate bond thrums with an electric current that makes my skin feel too tight.
Then I hear the soft click of metal against metal.
My eyes fly open as the deadbolt slides back on its own. The door swings inward with deliberate slowness, and there he is.
Gabriele.
Three years have done nothing to diminish his presence. If anything, he seems larger than I remember, his broad shoulders filling the doorframe completely. His dark hair is shorter now, more severe, and there are new lines around his eyes that speak of sleepless nights and heavy burdens. But those eyes—those midnight-dark eyes that once looked at me like I was his salvation—are exactly as I remember.
Cold. Distant. Unforgiving.
He steps into my apartment without invitation, his gaze sweeping over my carefully constructed human life with obvious disdain. The small space that had felt cozy moments ago now seems cramped and shabby under his scrutiny. His presence fills every corner, making the air thick and hard to breathe.
"Interesting decorating choices," he says, his voice carrying that familiar edge of mockery. His eyes linger on my collection of human books, my laptop still open on the desk, the framed photo of my corporate team from last year's holiday party. "Playing house with the humans, Primrose?"
I force myself to straighten, to meet his gaze even though every instinct screams at me to submit to his Alpha aura. "How did you find me?"
He doesn't answer immediately. Instead, he moves deeper into my apartment, his movements predatory and controlled. When he turns back to me, something flickers in his expression—too quick for me to identify.
"Did you really think you could hide from me forever?" He tilts his head, studying me with an intensity that makes my skin crawl. "Did you think I would just let you go?"
"You already did," The words slip out before I can stop them, raw with three years of suppressed pain. "You let me go a long time ago."
Something dark flashes across his features, but it's gone so quickly I might have imagined it. "I never let you go, Primrose. You ran."
The accusation hits like a physical blow. "I ran?" My voice cracks with disbelief. "You stopped talking to me. You stopped touching me. You looked at me like I was—like I was nothing."
"Don't." The word comes out sharp as a whip crack. "Don't you dare play the victim here."
Victim? The word ignites something fierce and protective in my chest. My wolf snarls, pushing against my control. "Get out," I say, my voice stronger now. "Get out of my home."
His laugh is bitter, humorless. "Your home?" He gestures around the apartment with obvious contempt. "This isn't your home, Primrose. This is a cage you built for yourself. Your home is with me. Your home is Ravencrest."
"Ravencrest stopped being my home the day you decided I wasn't worth your time."
For a moment, something raw and vulnerable flickers in his eyes. Then his expression hardens into familiar lines of authority and determination.
"Pack your things," he says, his voice dropping to that Alpha tone that brooks no argument. "You're coming home with me."
The casual command sends fury racing through my veins. "I'm not going anywhere with you."
He takes a step closer, and I can feel the heat radiating from his body, can smell that intoxicating scent that still makes my wolf whimper with want. "This isn't a request, Primrose."
"And this isn't three years ago," I snap back, surprised by my own boldness. "You can't just walk in here and expect me to follow you like some obedient little Luna."
His eyes flash dangerously. "You are my Luna. You will always be my Luna."
The possessive certainty in his voice makes something deep in my chest clench painfully. But I force myself to stand my ground, even as the mate bond pulses between us like a living thing.
"Your Luna?" I laugh, but there's no humor in it. "Where was that conviction three years ago when I needed you most?"
He goes very still, his dark eyes searching my face with an intensity that makes me want to look away. But I hold his gaze, letting him see every ounce of pain and anger I've carried.
"You're coming with me," he repeats, but there's something different in his voice now. Something that sounds almost like uncertainty.
"No," I say firmly. "I'm not."
We stare at each other across my small living room, the air crackling with tension and unresolved history. The mate bond thrums between us, a constant reminder of what we once were, what we could have been.
What we'll never be again.
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