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The Crippled Alpha's Secret Reborn Mate

The Crippled Alpha's Secret Reborn Mate

Author: Zi Ya
Genre: Werewolf
I was forced to attend the grand Bloom Gala. My stepsister, April, glided towards me in her emerald dress and pressed a glass of champagne into my hand. "Drink this. You must be nervous," she smiled, as sweet as poison. It was this exact glass of drugged wine that started my ultimate ruin. After drinking it, I lost consciousness and was dragged to the Nightingale Pavilion, where I was forcibly mated by Alpha Hamilton. April then orchestrated a grand show, leading the entire party to "discover" my scandal. I was instantly branded a shameless Omega, paraded as a disgrace, and became nothing but a stepping stone for Hamilton's ambition to take the throne. When I was no longer useful, he chained me in a damp dungeon and slid a silver blade into my pregnant belly. I screamed silently as the life drained from me, the warmth of my unborn child turning cold. April just stood there, watching my gruesome death with hidden malice. Until I died, I couldn't accept it. Why did my own family weave such a vicious web just to destroy me for power? The sharp sound of shattering glass suddenly pulled me back from the nightmare. I stared down at my pale, unscarred hands and flattened my palm against my stomach. It was empty. Safe. I had been reborn to the night I was sixteen, right before the trap was sprung. Looking at April's expectant eyes, I calmly tipped the poisoned champagne into a potted fern. The lamb they had led to slaughter was dead, and the wolf had returned for blood.
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Chapter 1

Ariel POV:

Squelch-

The searing agony of a silver blade sliding into my belly.

The pain was so vivid, so blistering. I felt every inch of the blade's advance.

Life drained from me. I could feel it, warm and wet, surging from the wound, soaking through my gown, spreading across the cold stone floor. The warmth of my unborn child turned cold. That tiny flame that had flickered inside my belly, that small light I had never even gotten to cradle in my palms, was slowly, inexorably being snuffed out.

I tried to shield my stomach, but the iron chains bit into my wrists, pinning my arms mercilessly above my head.

A scream tore through my throat, yet no sound came out. My mouth gaped wide, my lungs filling with the rancid, rotting air of the dungeon, but my vocal cords felt severed, leaving nothing but a silent, empty howl.

Alpha Hamilton Blackwood's voice echoed through the suffocating darkness, an ice-cold blade pressed against my ear.

"You are nothing but a stepping stone to the throne, Ariel."

His tone was flat, almost conversational. As if he were not killing the mate carrying his child, but merely disposing of a tool that had outlived its usefulness.

Darkness began to devour my vision from the edges in. The last thing I saw was my stepsister April standing in the shadows behind him, her emerald gown melting into the blackness, only her smile remaining distinct-sharp as a knife.

-

The damp, metallic smell of the dungeon was replaced by the scent of roses and expensive perfume.

A waltz began to play, its melody drifting from the grand ballroom of the Blackwood estate. A beautiful, haunting tune-and I knew it. It coiled around my throat like a snake, and I knew it.

My breath hitched.

That music. It was the key.

My heart lurched. The champagne flute slipped from my unsteady grip-fell to the stone terrace-and shattered.

The sound was sharp and clean, splintering the darkness, wrenching me out of the nightmare. The dungeon, the iron chains, the burning wound in my belly-all of it fell away. I was standing in the ballroom. The gilded hall solidifying around me, the chandeliers blazing. I was here. Not there. Now. Not then.

I stared down at my hands, pale and unscarred. My fingers trembling, I flattened my palm against my stomach.

It was flat. Empty. Safe.

I was alive.

My reflection stared back at me from the dark glass of the patio door. A girl of sixteen, with wide, violet eyes and a face still holding the softness of youth. I was wearing the pale lavender gown.

The dress. The one they forced me into. The beginning of my shame.

I died. I remembered that blade. I remembered the temperature of the flame in my belly as it went out. I remembered my own blood pooling on the dungeon stones, turning from warm to cold. I remembered Hamilton's voice, flat as a weather report. I remembered April's smile, knife-sharp in the darkness.

And then, I woke up here. In my sixteen-year-old body. On the night before I was destroyed. In this dress, still clean. At a moment when everything could still be undone.

I had been reborn.

That thought sank like a stone into still water. No ripples. No ecstasy. Only a cold, bone-deep certainty. I had been reborn-and I remembered everything.

"Ariel, are you alright? You look terribly pale."

I turned. April Sullivan, my stepsister, glided towards me. Her emerald green dress shimmered like snakeskin under the moonlight. Her smile was as sweet as poison.

I saw it in her eyes, beneath the practiced concern. The same hidden malice that had watched me die.

"Here," she said, pressing a fresh glass of champagne into my hand. "Drink this. You must be nervous."

This was it. The drugged wine. The start of the end.

A low growl rumbled deep in my chest, the ghost of my murdered wolf. I forced a fragile smile, my lips feeling stiff.

"Thank you, April." My fingers tightened around the stem, my knuckles turning white. I didn't drink.

"Alpha Hamilton has been watching you all night," she purred, her voice a conspiratorial whisper. "You'll be his mate before the moon is high."

The signal. The trap was sprung.

My mind raced, calculating. I had less than an hour to unravel their web and weave my own.

I swayed, letting my body sag against the cool marble of a Roman pillar. "It's... a little stuffy in here."

A flicker of triumph flashed in April's eyes. She thought the drug was already working.

"Why don't you go rest in the Nightingale Pavilion? It's quiet there, and the air is much fresher," she suggested, her voice dripping with false sympathy.

The Nightingale Pavilion.

The name hit me like a physical blow, extinguishing the last ember of doubt. That was the place. The stage for my ruin.

I nodded weakly. "That sounds like a good idea. Could you do me a favor? Tell my attendant, Aniyah, to meet me there?"

April's smile widened. "Of course, sister. You go on ahead."

I watched her turn, her hips swaying as she walked away. The moment her back was to me, the mask of vulnerability fell from my face, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. I saw her stop, whispering to her own attendant, Autumn Price, and to Poppy Walsh-my attendant, my betrayer.

They laughed softly together.

I moved to a large potted fern near the edge of the terrace. With a steady hand, I tipped the contents of the champagne flute into the soil. The bubbles fizzed silently and disappeared.

I straightened my spine.

The lamb they had led to slaughter was dead.

What stood here now was a wolf, back from the grave and hungry for vengeance.

My gaze swept across the glittering ballroom, past the dancing couples, and locked onto him. Alpha Hamilton. He stood near the orchestra, a predator in a perfectly tailored suit. He caught my eye and raised his glass in a mock toast, a smirk playing on his lips. He thought he had already won.

I didn't look away.

I held his gaze, letting him see the stillness in my eyes. Then, I turned my back on him and walked towards the path that led to the Nightingale Pavilion.

Chapter 2

Ariel POV:

The night air was cool against my skin, a welcome relief after the stifling heat of the ballroom. White gravel crunched under my satin slippers as I walked the moonlit path, each step carrying me further from the gilded cage and deeper into the heart of the conspiracy.

My mind was a whirlwind of memories, but the panic was gone, replaced by a chilling clarity.

This trap wasn't just about destroying me. It was a move in a larger game, a power play between the Blackwood brothers. Hamilton wanted to forcibly mate with me, believing my connection to the Sullivan family would give him leverage against his brother, Brody.

And April... my dear stepsister wanted to be the one to "discover" the scandal. She would rush to Brody's side, the picture of a devastated sister, and win his favor with her performance.

A bitter laugh escaped my lips. Their ambitions were so transparent, so pathetically predictable.

I needed a substitute. Someone to take my place on that satin-draped bed in the pavilion.

An image formed in my mind, sharp and clear. Agnes Hicks. April's old nanny, fiercely loyal and blindingly devoted. But Agnes was also greedy, with a pathetic, fawning adoration for any Alpha who so much as glanced her way. She was perfect.

I remembered from my past life that Agnes was tasked with bringing a spare wrap for April tonight. Her route would take her right down this path.

Now, I just needed a reason for her to willingly drink the same drug meant for me.

My fingers brushed against the inner seam of my gown. There. A small, hidden pocket my mother-my real mother-had insisted on sewing into all my formal dresses for "emergencies." Inside, my fingers found a small, silk packet. Dried wolfbane, ground to a fine powder. I had taken it from the kitchen stores three days ago, a precaution born from the memories of my last life. Just a pinch among the apothecary jars, easy to miss. A dead girl's insurance policy, tucked into my sleeve before the ball began.

I needed a vessel. The lemonade. I had prepared a pitcher myself before the Gala, sweetened with honey to mask any bitterness, and left it among the other beverages at the service station near the kitchen corridor. No one had questioned it. Servants were invisible, and the work of an Omega even more so.

I veered off the main path, melting into the shadows of the manicured hedges. The layout of the Blackwood estate was etched into my memory, a map of past humiliations and future battlegrounds. I moved swiftly, avoiding the occasional guard patrol with an ease that would have terrified my sixteen-year-old self.

There it was. The small table near the service wing where I had left the pitcher hours ago. The pale yellow liquid still glistened under the dim service lights. My hands were steady as I poured a glass, my movements economical and precise. I emptied the contents of the silk packet into the drink, swirling it gently until the powder dissolved completely.

With the glass in hand, I slipped back to the main path, concealing myself behind a thicket of fragrant, white rose bushes.

I didn't have to wait long.

A few minutes later, Agnes Hicks came bustling down the path, a garment bag clutched in her hand. Her face was set in its usual sour expression.

I stepped out from the shadows, letting my shoulder connect with hers. "Oh, I'm so sorry!" I gasped, reaching out to steady her as if I were about to fall.

Agnes recoiled, her eyes narrowing with disdain when she saw it was me. "Watch where you're going, Omega," she snapped, her voice sharp.

I ignored her tone, forcing a look of nervous urgency onto my face. I lowered my voice to a conspiratorial whisper. "Mrs. Hicks, I was waiting for you."

She blinked, her suspicion warring with her curiosity.

I held out the glass of lemonade. "Miss April sent this for you. She said you haven't been feeling well, and this has special herbs in it to help."

I let that sink in, then added the master stroke. "She said you need to be at your best to serve her and the future Alpha Brody."

At the mention of Brody's name, a greedy light sparked in Agnes's eyes. The prospect of being a trusted servant in a royal household was a lure she couldn't resist.

She snatched the glass from my hand. "About time she showed some appreciation," she muttered, and downed the entire drink in three long gulps.

"She's waiting for you in the Nightingale Pavilion," I lied smoothly, my gaze lowered to hide the cold triumph in my eyes. "She said she has something important to discuss with you."

Agnes, already feeling the first tendrils of the drug, puffed out her chest. She strode past me, her steps a little unsteady, heading directly for the trap.

I watched until her silhouette disappeared around a bend in the path.

The pawn was in place.

Now, I had to save Aniyah. My one true ally in a house full of enemies.

Chapter 3

Ariel POV:

I followed Agnes at a distance, my soft slippers making no sound on the gravel path. The Nightingale Pavilion glowed ahead, a jewel box of glass and wrought iron nestled among the weeping willows.

Inside, the air was thick with the cloying scent of night-blooming jasmine, an incense designed to heighten emotions and dull the senses. The warmth of the room, combined with the drug, was a potent cocktail. Agnes swayed on her feet, her eyes glazing over. She took two stumbling steps towards the opulent chaise lounge in the center of the room before her knees buckled and she collapsed onto the plush rug.

I moved quickly, checking her pulse. She was in a deep, dreamless sleep.

With a strength I didn't know I possessed, I dragged her onto the chaise. There was no pity in my heart, only the cold precision of a surgeon. I unfastened the top buttons of her drab servant's uniform, pulling the fabric askew to create a look of dishevelment, of a struggle that never happened.

For the final touch, I reached for the hem of my own lavender gown. My fingers closed on a delicate lace appliqué. With a sharp tug, I ripped it free. The sound of the tearing fabric was a declaration of war.

I pressed the scrap of lavender lace into Agnes's limp hand, a piece of manufactured evidence for April and her audience to find.

Then I heard it. Heavy, urgent footsteps approaching outside.

Hamilton.

He was right on schedule, no doubt plied with the same drugged wine by April to ensure his inhibitions were gone.

I darted behind a heavy velvet curtain that covered one of the glass walls, my heart a steady, rhythmic drum against my ribs. I held my breath.

The door swung open with a crash. Hamilton filled the doorway, his eyes clouded with lust and alcohol. He didn't even seem to notice the face of the woman on the bed. He saw only a vulnerable female form, a prize for the taking.

He let out a low, guttural growl and lunged.

I didn't watch. I listened. The sound of tearing fabric, a muffled groan from the unconscious Agnes. It was enough.

I didn't wait to hear more. I slipped behind the curtain, my hand finding the hidden latch of a small service door I'd discovered in my past life. It opened with a faint click.

I was out. Free. The cool night air felt like a baptism, washing away the filth of the scene I'd just orchestrated. I took a deep breath, filling my lungs, and smoothed my dress, erasing any sign of my escape.

The jasmine incense still clung to my gown, cloying and sweet. I knew its effects well-a slow-acting sedative, harmless in the open garden, but potent in the enclosed pavilion. Anyone who lingered too long in that room would be unconscious within minutes. April had chosen it deliberately, no doubt, to ensure I wouldn't struggle when Hamilton arrived.

Now, for Aniyah.

My memory served me well. In my past life, April had played a double game-publicly telling me she would send Aniyah to the Nightingale Pavilion, while secretly dispatching her own attendant, Autumn, to intercept Aniyah halfway. Autumn would claim there had been a change of plans, that I had moved to the east rose garden instead. A secluded spot, far from the main festivities, far from any witness. There, they would dose her with Moonpetal-a herb that induced deep sleep and erased the last hour of memory. Aniyah would wake confused, remembering nothing, unable to testify to where I had truly been.

April's strategy was elegant, in its own vicious way: isolate my only ally, then destroy me in the pavilion with no one left to speak for me.

I moved through the labyrinthine gardens with a purpose that belied my supposed ignorance of the estate.

Anxiety gnawed at me. Aniyah was the only person who had shown me genuine kindness in that suffocating Sullivan household. I would not let her suffer for her loyalty. Not in this life.

The east rose garden revealed itself gradually-first the trellis arches draped in climbing roses, then the stone benches tucked between the hedges. I rounded the final corner and stopped.

A figure was slumped on the far bench, half-hidden by a cascade of white roses. I couldn't see the face from this distance-just the outline of a woman's body, unnaturally still, one arm dangling limp over the edge of the seat.

My stomach dropped. I quickened my pace, gravel crunching beneath my slippers, my breath coming in short, shallow bursts. Ten steps. Five. Three.

Then I saw the uniform. The muted grey wool. The white apron with its fraying hem-the one Aniyah had mended three times rather than ask the Sullivans for a replacement. And on the bench beside her, a shawl I recognized as her own, carelessly tossed aside by whoever had dragged her here.

It was Aniyah.

I broke into a run, my heart pounding with a different kind of fear now. I dropped to my knees on the cool grass beside her, pressing shaking fingers to her throat. Her pulse was slow-too slow-steady but faint, like the heartbeat of someone in a drugged sleep rather than natural rest. Her skin was cool and clammy. I cupped her face and gently patted her cheek. Nothing. Not a twitch. Not a murmur.

I leaned closer, watching the shallow rise and fall of her chest. Each breath was so faint I had to hold my own to detect it. I pulled her upright against the bench back, arranging her so she could breathe easily, and chafed her cold hands between mine, trying to warm them.

A chill that had nothing to do with the night air crawled down my spine. I remembered the Moonpetal from my past life-how its victims looked exactly like this: peaceful, motionless, utterly unreachable. No herb, no antidote, no ally I could call without exposing everything. I was alone, with nothing.

I sat back on my heels, still gripping Aniyah's hands, my mind racing through a dozen half-formed plans. None of them worked. I needed something I didn't have.

Then a shadow fell across the moonlit path behind me. I felt it before I saw it-a presence, heavy and watchful, the kind of stillness that didn't belong to gardens or statues.

I turned my head.

A tall, powerful silhouette stood on the far side of the clearing, cloaked in the deep shadows cast by the moonlight. He was utterly still, a predator at rest.

He turned and walked toward me, his movement slow and deliberate, carrying none of the hesitation one would expect from a man leaning on a cane. Each step was measured, controlled-the gait of someone who had learned to turn weakness into a weapon. The silver handle of his cane caught the moonlight with a soft, cold gleam, and the slight drag of his left leg was the only concession to the limp everyone whispered about.

He stopped a few paces from me, close enough that I could feel the weight of his presence-a quiet, suffocating pressure against my skin, like standing at the edge of a deep lake.

The moonlight caught his face, and my blood ran cold.

It wasn't Hamilton. It wasn't Brody.

A pair of piercing amber eyes met mine, calm and assessing. The sharp line of his jaw, the shadowed hollows beneath his cheekbones, the faint scar that traced the edge of his left temple-details I remembered from another life, from whispered court gossip and distant glimpses across crowded throne rooms. But standing this close, those details coalesced into something far more immediate. He was taller than I remembered. Broader. The air around him seemed to tighten, as though the night itself was holding its breath.

My breath caught in my throat. I knew him.

Alpha Damon Blackwood. The forgotten prince. The so-called "crippled" Alpha who had been exiled to the borders, only to return and burn his brothers' kingdoms to the ground.

What was he doing here? My perfectly laid plan had just collided with the one variable I hadn't accounted for.

"Ariel Sullivan." His voice was low, smooth as aged whiskey. "Out for a midnight stroll?"

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