
When My Alpha Took Our Pup to Save His Lover’s Son
Chapter 4
He came before dawn.
I heard his footsteps on the frozen path — the particular rhythm of them, the one I had memorized over years of sharing a bed, of listening to him move through dark hallways without turning on lights. I knew the sound of him the way you know the sound of your own heartbeat. And I hated, in that moment, that I still did.
Winter was asleep against my side. The thin blanket was pulled to her chin. Her breathing had finally smoothed out sometime after midnight — still careful, still with that wet catch underneath, but steadier. I had stayed awake counting the interval between each breath. I had not slept at all.
The latch moved. Not all the way. Just enough.
His voice came through the gap in the door, low and measured. Cassian at his most careful, which was always when he was about to do something he already knew was wrong.
"Rowen crashed an hour ago. The healer needs marrow. Winter is the closest biological match we have."
I sat up.
"She has pneumonia," I said. "She has a fever. You are not touching her."
"It's been authorized. I've already spoken with —"
"She is five years old and she cannot breathe properly and you will not —"
The door opened. Not all the way. Just enough for him to reach through.
I do not know how it happened so fast. One moment Winter was warm against my side, and then his hands were around her, and she made a small confused sound — not quite awake, not quite understanding — and I was on my feet screaming through the link before my body had fully caught up with what my eyes were seeing.
*Cassian. Cassian, stop. She is sick. She is running a fever. Cassian, please, please don't do this, she is our daughter, she is OUR DAUGHTER —*
The wall came down between us like a door slamming in a wind.
Not a gradual dimming. A cut. Clean and total. His Alpha wall, full force, dropping across the mate-link and severing my voice from his consciousness the way you hang up a call.
I hit the cabin door with both hands and it held. He had locked it behind him. I could hear Winter — one small confused cry, still half-asleep, *Mommy?* — fading across the yard as he carried her toward the healer's quarters, her voice thinning with distance, thinning, gone.
I stood with my palms flat against the door.
Sable did not howl. She did not pace. She simply rose inside me — all the way up, full and silent, the way a wolf rises when it has made a decision and is waiting only for the ground beneath its feet.
Something settled in my chest. Not peace. Not collapse.
Stillness.
The kind that comes after the last thing breaks.
---
I do not know how long I stood there.
At some point I became aware of the cold again. The cracked window seal. The dead fireplace. My own breath making small white clouds in the dark.
At some point after that, I became aware of my hands. I looked down at them — steady, both of them, flat against the door. I turned them over.
Then I went to the cot, reached under the thin pillow, and found the hairpin I had moved there yesterday. Not with any plan. Just with the particular instinct of a woman who has spent three months understanding, slowly, that the time was getting close.
My grandmother had taught me the lock trick. A small, dry woman with quick fingers and the firm belief that a she-wolf who couldn't get herself out of a room wasn't paying attention. I had been twelve. I had thought it was a game.
It took me four minutes.
The door swung open into the cold and I walked out.
---
The healer's quarters were dark except for one low lamp in the back room.
I did not announce myself. I did not knock.
Winter was on the far cot. Alone. The healer was not in the room — whether gone to report, or to tend Rowen, or simply because he had done what was asked of him and moved on, I neither knew nor cared. My daughter was alone on a cot in a room that smelled of antiseptic and old wood, still in her nightclothes, a thin white bandage taped to the inside of her left arm.
Her eyes were open.
She was not crying. She was just looking at the ceiling with the focused, careful expression she wore when she was working very hard at something adults could not see.
I crossed to her in four steps and gathered her up, blanket and all, and held her against my chest and felt her arms come up around my neck — slow, then tighter, then so tight that she shook with it, a single full-body tremor that moved through us both and then stilled.
She did not say anything. She pressed her face into my neck and did not let go.
I held the back of her head with one hand and breathed.
*Okay,* Sable said, from somewhere very deep and very certain. *Now.*
---
I was calm the whole time. That is the part I remember most clearly.
Not numb. Not dissociated. *Calm* — the way water is calm after it has found its level and stopped moving.
I went back to the outer cabin for the bag I had half-packed three weeks ago and finished packing the rest. Documents first. The evidence file I had been building, the dated photos, the correlation charts, the forwarded communications. Then Winter's drawings — all of them, rolled carefully and secured with a rubber band. The emergency fund I had been quietly building in cash since the month Cassian rerouted the third pack resource disbursement to Katherine's cottage. One change of clothes each. Winter's medication.
I left everything else.
I left the Luna mark jewelry on the dresser in a line.
I left the mate-bond papers — both copies, the originals, the ceremony record — on Cassian's study desk. I did not leave a note.
The front door of the pack house was unlocked. It was always unlocked. Ironclaw had never needed to lock its doors from the inside because the Alpha's wall was supposed to be protection enough.
I walked out into the cold with Winter against my chest, her small arms still looped around my neck, the bag over my shoulder, and I did not look back at the house.
Sable walked with me, step for step, her presence solid and low and purposeful beside mine.
The car was where I had left it. I buckled Winter into the back seat, tucked the blanket around her, and watched her eyes close before I had finished. Still feverish. Still carrying that wet catch in her chest. But breathing. Warm in the blanket. Here.
I got in the front seat.
Started the engine.
Pulled out through the pack house gates as the sky began, very slowly, to go gray at the edges.
I pressed my thumb once against the inside of my wrist — where the mate-bond pulse used to beat, where it still beat now, faint and ragged, like a signal from a station going off-air. I felt it. I let myself feel it.
Then I put both hands on the wheel and drove west.
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