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The Forbidden Alpha's Mate
img img The Forbidden Alpha's Mate img Chapter 3 RAY'S POV
3 Chapters
Chapter 6 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 7 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 8 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 9 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 10 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 11 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 12 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 13 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 14 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 15 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 16 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 17 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 18 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 19 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 20 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 21 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 22 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 23 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 24 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 25 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 26 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 27 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 28 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 29 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 30 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 31 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 32 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 33 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 34 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 35 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 36 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 37 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 38 LEVI'S POV img
Chapter 39 RAY'S POV img
Chapter 40 LEVI'S POV img
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Chapter 3 RAY'S POV

I couldn't sleep.

I sat on the floor with my back against the wall and stared at the barred window and thought about markers, about contracts, about a handler who found me two years ago in the neutral corridor and offered me a cleaner life and I took it because I was tired and hollow and not thinking clearly enough to ask the right questions.

Two years of thinking I was free while someone held the string.

The bond hummed in my chest. Quieter now than it had been in the clearing. Not the roaring chaos that had nearly taken my knees out. Something steadier, something that knew exactly where Levi was in this building without me having to look for him.

That was new.

That was a problem I didn't have the energy to deal with tonight.

I pressed my fist against my sternum and breathed through it and my wolf pressed back from the other side like it was trying to tell me something I already knew and wasn't ready to hear.

The door opened.

A woman stepped in.

Small. Golden skin, dark hair shot through with early grey pulled back neatly. She carried a medical kit and moved into the room with the ease of someone who had walked into difficult situations so many times that difficult had stopped being a thing she noticed.

"Mina Lee." She sat in the chair without asking, "Pack healer. Your injuries need proper treatment."

"I'm fine."

"You have a split lip, two bruised ribs and a cut on your forearm that needs cleaning." She opened the kit and looked at me, "Sit up properly."

I sat up properly.

She worked quietly. No wasted movement, clean and efficient and completely unbothered by the fact that I was watching her the way I watched everything, looking for the thing underneath the thing.

She was careful. Practiced, the kind of careful that came from years of treating wolves who didn't want to be touched and had learned to do it anyway without making them feel it.

She cleaned the cut on my forearm.

And slowed.

Just slightly. Just for half a second. Her hands didn't stop moving but they lost their rhythm and her eyes dropped to the old scar tissue beneath the fresh cut and stayed there a beat too long.

Old scars. Years old. Layered, the kind of scarring that came from a very specific kind of fire, not a fight, not a blade. Something larger, something that had covered a lot of ground very fast.

I watched her face.

She gave nothing away.

But her hands had slowed and her eyes had recognized something and whatever that something was had cost her a small, fast, carefully controlled reaction that she covered almost immediately.

Almost.

"You've seen scars like these before," I said.

She didn't answer. Kept working.

"Not on a patient," I said. "On a file."

She stilled for just one second.

Then kept moving.

"You should get some sleep," she said, "The ribs will ache for a few days, don't aggravate them."

"Mina."

She closed the kit. Stood and moved toward the door with the same unhurried calm she'd walked in with.

"Mina."

She stopped.

Stood with her back to me for a moment that stretched longer than it should have.

When she turned her face was still composed. Still giving nothing away, but her eyes were different. They were carrying something. Something old and heavy that had been waiting a long time for somewhere to be set down.

Some things don't stay buried no matter how carefully you dig the grave. I had learned that the hard way. Standing in her eyes right now was the look of a woman who had learned the same thing.

"East wing," she said quietly, "Medical archive. End of the corridor." She paused, "I left the light on."

She left.

I stared at the closed door.

She left the light on.

Not forgot, not accident but deliberately. She had pulled something out and left the light on and walked away and let me decide what to do with it.

I was on my feet before I finished the thought.

The compound was quiet. Late enough that the corridor rotation had thinned to two guards on the main passage. I went around through the supply route, low and fast against the wall, and found the east wing exactly where instinct said it would be.

Medical rooms. Storage, the smell of antiseptic and old paper and underneath it something that felt like waiting.

At the end of the corridor, a light under a door.

I pushed it open.

Filing cabinets, supply logs, medical records going back years. And on the desk, a single folder sitting in the center of a cleared space. Not misfiled, not buried but paced, like someone had made a decision and arranged the room around it.

I opened it.

First page. A contract.

Formal and sealed. Dated five years and three months ago, two months before Shadowmoon burned.

I read it standing up because my legs hadn't decided yet whether they were going to keep working.

Clinical language, transaction terms, a pack, a location, a timeline and payment structured around completion and silence and the kind of precision that meant someone had spent time on this. I had thought about it carefully and had made sure it would hold.

My pack.

My wolves.

Forty seven names I didn't need written down to remember.

Some truths don't hit you like a wave. They hit you like a door swinging shut in a room you didn't know you were locked inside, quiet, final, and suddenly airless.

I had spent five years carrying the weight of that night. Running contracts and sleeping rough and moving between territories because moving was the only thing that made the weight manageable. I had blamed the border run, blamed the timing and blamed myself in every version of the story I had built to survive it.

It had been a transaction.

I turned to the last page.

Found the signature.

The room tilted.

I read the name once.

Read it again.

Victor Morgan.

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