My father, the Alpha Supreme, sealed my powers and sent me to the Turner Pack as a test. He wanted to see if my Fated Mate, Ignatz, would love the girl, not the Royal title.
Ignatz failed. For five years, I was his slave, the "No-Wolf" he kept around to clean up after his mistress.
When I discovered I was pregnant with his child, I thought he might finally show mercy. Instead, he looked at me with pure disgust.
"I will not have a weak, wolfless bastard tainting my bloodline," he roared.
"Get rid of it."
I begged. I screamed. But his mother and mistress watched with glee as the doctor scraped my womb clean, killing the only thing I had left.
Hours later, bleeding and hollowed out, I was dragged onto the floor of the pack's banquet hall. Ignatz stood on the stage, holding his mistress's hand.
"I, Ignatz Turner, reject you, Genevieve, as my mate," he announced, treating me like garbage to be discarded.
He thought he was breaking a weak human. He didn't realize he was unlocking a monster.
The pain of the rejection didn't kill me; it shattered the seal on my powers. The scent of ozone and Royal Lilies exploded through the room, bringing every wolf to their knees.
My bones cracked, reshuffling into the massive form of the legendary White Wolf.
As my father's Royal Guards blew the doors off their hinges, I looked down at Ignatz, who was now trembling in the dirt.
"I accept your rejection," I growled.
Now, the hunt begins.
Chapter 1
Genevieve POV
The heavy stench of sex and musk clung to the stale air of the apartment. It was a choking miasma-a blend of cedar, which was Ignatz's natural signature, and the cloying, overly sweet perfume that belonged to Evelyn. It coated the back of my throat like ash, tasting of betrayal.
I pushed myself up from the thin, lumpy mattress wedged in the corner of the kitchen, my body aching from the hard floor. The Turner Pack didn't waste proper beds on "No-Wolves," even if that No-Wolf was the Alpha's Mate.
*Be calm,* I told my inner wolf. She was pacing inside my chest, a restless shadow scratching at the cage of my ribs. She wanted to rip the throat out of the woman sleeping in the master bedroom. She wanted to howl and force the Shift that I had been suppressing for five long years.
"Not yet," I whispered, my voice raspy with disuse. "Father said we must wait. We must be sure."
My father, Arlington Foley, the Alpha Supreme, had sent me here with a sealed scent and suppressed powers. It was a test. A cruel, agonizing test to see if my Fated Mate, Ignatz Turner, would love the girl, not the title or the White Wolf bloodline.
I hadn't failed. He had.
I stood up, my knees cracking in protest, and began the morning routine. Eggs, bacon, toast. The smell of grease made my stomach turn, a violent wave of nausea I hadn't felt before.
Ignatz walked into the kitchen ten minutes later. He was shirtless, his Alpha aura radiating a low-level pressure that usually made Omegas cower. To me, it just felt like a dull headache.
"Coffee," he grunted, not deigning to look at me. He sat at the small table, scrolling through his phone.
I placed the mug in front of him. My hand trembled slightly-fatigue, I told myself. "Here, Ignatz."
He looked up, his lip curling in a sneer. "It's Alpha Ignatz to you, Genevieve. And God, you look like a corpse. Put some makeup on. You're embarrassing me."
"I'm sorry," I said, the words tasting like bile. "I didn't sleep well."
"If you possessed a wolf, you wouldn't need so much sleep," he scoffed, taking a bite of the bacon. "I need a Luna who can run beside me, Genevieve. Not a human burden who can barely lift a frying pan. The pack is weak because you make me look weak."
My heart constricted. Five years ago, when the Moon Goddess first snapped the mate bond into place, I felt a spark. It was faint, but it was there. I thought I could nurture it. I thought my love would be enough.
"I do my best for the pack," I said softly.
"Your best is worthless," he spat, the words landing like a physical blow.
Just then, the bedroom door opened. Evelyn Hooper emerged, wrapped in a silk robe that cost more than my entire existence in this pack. She was a high-ranking warrior's daughter, blonde, curvaceous, and utterly devoid of a soul.
"Morning, darling," she purred, gliding past me as if I were nothing more than furniture. She sat on Ignatz's lap, nuzzling his neck. "Mmm, you smell delicious."
Ignatz's face transformed. The cruelty vanished, replaced by a predatory, infatuated grin. "And you smell like paradise, Evelyn. Like a true Luna."
He looked at me over her shoulder, his eyes cold. "See? That is what a mate should smell like. You? You smell like dishwater."
I turned back to the sink, gripping the edge until my knuckles turned white. My inner wolf let out a low, vibrating growl that rattled my bones. The suppression spell my father placed on me was straining. My scent-the scent of winter frost and royal lilies-wanted to burst out.
*Hold it,* I commanded myself. *Just a little longer.*
"Genevieve!"
The shrill voice of Meredith Turner, Ignatz's mother, cut through the air. She stood in the doorway, her face pinched and etched with perpetual disapproval.
"Why are you standing there?" she snapped. "The hunters just brought in a fresh kill. The carcasses need cleaning before the feast tonight. Get to the slaughter shed. Now."
"But I haven't eaten..." I started.
"Omegas eat only after the work is done," Meredith hissed. "Go. You are a stain on my son's reputation. The least you can do is clean up the mess."
I walked out the back door, the morning chill biting through my thin t-shirt. The slaughter shed was a grim place, reeking of iron and death. For hours, I scrubbed blood from the concrete, my hands numb, my back screaming in protest.
Every muscle in my body felt tight, like a rubber band stretched to its breaking point.
*Shift,* my wolf pleaded. *Let us Shift. Let us heal.*
I stumbled toward the edge of the forest, gasping for air that felt too thin to fill my lungs. A wave of dizziness hit me, so strong the world tilted on its axis. I leaned against a tree, sweat beading on my forehead.
Through the trees, I saw them. Ignatz and Evelyn. They were laughing, chasing each other in a playful game of tag. Evelyn pretended to trip, falling gracefully onto the moss. Ignatz was there in a second, scooping her up, kissing her forehead with a tenderness he had never shown me.
The pain in my chest wasn't just heartbreak. It was physical. A sharp, cramping pain in my lower abdomen.
I reached out with my mind, trying to push through the static to my mate.
*Ignatz... please... something is wrong. I need help.*
The Mind-Link opened for a fraction of a second. I felt his annoyance, sharp and hot.
*Stop whining, Genevieve. Don't interrupt me.*
The link slammed shut.
I slid down the tree trunk to the cold ground. The sun was setting, casting long, jagged shadows. My body gave a violent jerk. The Shift was coming. It usually came with the full moon, but the stress was triggering a biological response I couldn't control.
But it wasn't just the Shift.
My hand drifted to my stomach. A warmth, faint but undeniable, pulsed there. A second heartbeat.
I froze. The realization hit me like a physical blow.
I was pregnant.
From the one night, three months ago, when Ignatz had come home drunk and mistaken me for Evelyn in the dark. He had never acknowledged it.
Inside the pack house, I heard laughter. Glasses clinking. They were starting the feast without me.
I curled into a ball on the frozen earth, the cramp intensifying into a searing agony. I was the Princess of the Royal Pack, the daughter of the Alpha Supreme, carrying the heir to two bloodlines.
And I was going to die alone in the dirt.
Genevieve POV
I survived the night. But only just.
The Shift didn't happen. I fought it back, battling the transformation inch by agonizing inch, forcing my bones to stay set and shoving the fur back beneath my skin. If I Shifted now, if I let the wolf loose, the white fur would give everything away. Not like this. Not when I was weak.
I dragged myself back to the apartment as the sun bled over the horizon. My body felt hollowed out, scraped clean of energy, but my mind was strangely clear.
I was pregnant.
My hand drifted to my lower abdomen. A tiny spark of hope ignited in the ashes of my heart. A pup. Our pup. Surely, this would change things. Ignatz was obsessed with legacy, with bloodlines. Even if he hated me, he would love his child. He had to.
I washed the dirt off my face and walked into the living room. The air in the room was thick, choking and poisonous.
Evelyn was draped across the sofa, sobbing into a handkerchief with practiced theatricality. Ignatz was pacing, his fists clenched at his sides. Meredith stood by the window, looking like a vulture waiting to pick the bones clean.
"There she is!" Evelyn shrieked, pointing a manicured finger at me. "The thief!"
I blinked, leaning against the doorframe to keep my legs from buckling. "What?"
"My grandmother's necklace," Evelyn wailed. "The diamond choker. It's gone! I saw her lurking near my jewelry box yesterday!"
"I didn't touch your things," I said, my voice steady despite my exhaustion. "I was cleaning the slaughter shed all day. Ask your mother."
Meredith turned, her eyes gleaming with malice. "I saw you sneak back into the house, Genevieve. Don't lie."
Ignatz marched over to me, his Alpha aura flaring hot and angry. It hit me like a physical wave, sucking the oxygen from the room. "You steal from my future Luna? You ungrateful wretch."
"I didn't..."
"Shut up!"
His hand connected with my face.
The impact sent me sprawling to the floor. I tasted copper. My hand instinctively went to my stomach to protect it.
"Ignatz, please," I gasped, looking up at him. "I have something to tell you. It's important."
"I don't want to hear your lies," he growled.
Suddenly, Evelyn gasped. A sickly sweet, artificial scent flooded the room. It cloyed at the back of my throat, smelling of rotting roses and heavy, synthetic musk.
"Oh, Ignatz," she moaned, arching her back. "It's... it's my Heat. It's starting."
It was a lie. A Heat didn't come on like a light switch. It built up over days. But Ignatz, blinded by lust and stupidity, didn't care. His pupils dilated until his eyes were almost black.
"Get out," he snarled at me. "Get out of my sight before I kill you."
"Ignatz, I'm pregnant!" I screamed the words.
Silence crashed into the room.
Evelyn stopped moaning.
Meredith froze.
Ignatz blinked, the lust clearing for a second, replaced by pure shock. Then, disgust.
"Pregnant?" He looked at me as if I were a cockroach. "With whose bastard? You're a No-Wolf. You can't carry an Alpha's child."
"It's yours," I cried. "From that night... three months ago."
"I was drunk," he said coldly. "That was a mistake. A disgusting mistake."
"It's a life! Your heir!"
"I will not have a weak, wolfless bastard tainting my bloodline!" Ignatz roared. "Get rid of it."
My blood ran cold. "What?"
"You heard me. Go to the Pack Doctor. Get rid of it. Or I will throw you out into the Rogue lands right now."
"No," I whispered, backing away. "I won't."
Evelyn stood up, her eyes narrowing. She walked over to me, a cruel smile playing on her lips.
"She pushed me!" she suddenly screamed, throwing herself backward onto the floor.
It was so obviously staged, a child could have seen through it. But Ignatz didn't want to see.
"You dare touch her?" Ignatz lunged.
He didn't just hit me this time. He used the Alpha Command.
"KNEEL!"
The word was a hammer against my soul. My body betrayed me instantly. My knees slammed into the hardwood floor with a sickening crack. I couldn't move. I was paralyzed by his voice, bound by the ancient law of our kind.
"You are a danger to this pack," Ignatz spat, looming over me. "You attacked my chosen mate. You lie about carrying my child to trap me."
"Mother," he turned to Meredith. "What is the punishment for harming a high-ranking wolf?"
"Imprisonment," Meredith said, her voice dripping with satisfaction. "Until she learns her place."
"Take her to the warehouse," Ignatz ordered the warriors who had just rushed in. "The cold one."
"Ignatz, please!" I begged as two burly warriors grabbed my arms. "The baby... the cold will kill it!"
"Good," he said, turning his back on me to help Evelyn up. "Problem solved."
They dragged me out.
I was thrown into the metal storage warehouse on the edge of the territory. It was winter, and the building had no heating. The floor was concrete ice.
The heavy iron door slammed shut, plunging me into darkness.
I curled up in the corner, trying to share my body heat with the tiny life inside me.
*Hold on,* I whispered to the baby. *Please, hold on. Grandpa is coming. He has to know.*
I tried to Mind-Link my father, but the distance was too great, and the cold was sapping my energy with terrifying speed.
Hours passed. The cold seeped into my marrow.
Then, the pain started. Not the cramp of hunger, but a sharp, tearing sensation deep in my womb.
"Ignatz!" I screamed, reaching for our link.
*Ignatz, help me! The baby!*
The link was dead. He had blocked me completely.
I felt a warm wetness spread between my legs, stark against the freezing concrete. The smell of iron filled the small space.
"No," I sobbed, clutching my stomach. "No, no, no..."
I was the daughter of the most powerful wolf in existence. I had royal blood. And I was bleeding out on a dirty floor, while my mate laughed in a warm house a mile away.
As the darkness took me, I felt something snap inside my chest.
Not a bone.
Not a muscle.
It was my heart.
Genevieve POV
Pain wasn't just a sensation; it was a spectrum.
It was the violent red of a scream trapped in a throat. It was the suffocating black of unconsciousness. It was the blinding, clinical white of a hospital light burning through my eyelids.
I woke to the sickening slide of cold metal moving inside me.
I tried to scream, to thrash, but my limbs felt like lead. My throat was a desert, cracked and dry.
"She's awake," a voice muttered. It was the Pack Doctor, Dr. Thorne. He wouldn't look at my face, his eyes fixed on his instruments with a coward's intense focus.
"Finish it," Meredith's voice cut through the haze, sharp and indifferent as a butcher's knife. "Clean it out. Make sure there's nothing left."
"No..." I rasped, the sound barely a ghost of a whisper. "My baby..."
"There was no baby," Meredith sneered, leaning over me. Her face swam into view-distorted, ugly, a mask of triumphant malice. "Just a clump of cells. A mistake. And now, it's gone."
The doctor scraped. I felt the vibration of it in my bones. It was a hollow, scooping sensation that dredged the life right out of me.
Deep inside my chest, my wolf let out a sound I had never heard before.
It wasn't a growl. It wasn't a snarl.
It was a keen. A long, high-pitched wail of absolute mourning that vibrated through the marrow of my soul.
*Gone. Gone. Gone.*
They left me there on the cold steel table, shivering, hollowed out, and bleeding.
Time lost its meaning. It could have been hours; it could have been days.
The silence was eventually broken by heavy boots. Warriors. They didn't speak; they just grabbed me.
My legs refused to work. They didn't care. They hauled me off the table by my arms, my bare toes dragging uselessly against the linoleum, scraping raw skin.
"The Alpha requires your presence," one of them grunted, his tone devoid of pity.
They dragged me through the corridors and threw the double doors of the main banquet hall open.
The assault on my senses was immediate.
The room was a galaxy of fairy lights and expensive floral arrangements. The air reeked of roasted meat, champagne, and the cloying sweetness of perfume-a nauseating contrast to the metallic tang of blood that clung to me.
The entire pack was there. Drinking. Laughing. Celebrating.
Ignatz stood on the raised dais, holding Evelyn's hand. He didn't just look happy; he looked victorious. He stood with the arrogant posture of a man who believed he had conquered his own fate.
He looked like a king, not a father who had just murdered his own child.
The warriors swung me forward, throwing me onto the polished floor at the foot of the dais. I landed hard, my hospital gown riding up, exposing the bloodstains on my thighs.
The music cut out. The laughter died. The room fell into a suffocating silence.
"Genevieve," Ignatz said, his voice booming, amplified by his Alpha command. "You have brought nothing but shame to this pack. You are weak. You are deceitful. You are wolfless."
I pressed my palms against the cold floor, my fingers trembling.
My body was broken, shattered by the procedure, but something deep inside the wreckage was stirring.
The seal my father had placed on my core to hide my scent-it had been weakened by the trauma. The grief wasn't just hurting me; it was burning through the barriers.
*Let us out,* my wolf whispered.
Her voice wasn't a plea anymore. It was a command.
"I have made my decision," Ignatz announced, sweeping his gaze over the crowd. "I need a Luna who is strong. A Luna who carries the favor of the Moon Goddess."
He looked down at me, his eyes cold, devoid of the warmth that had once been there.
"I, Ignatz Turner, Alpha of the Turner Pack, reject you, Genevieve Foley, as my mate."
The words hit me with the force of a physical blow.
The Mate Bond-that thin, golden thread that had tethered my soul to his for five agonizing years-didn't just break. It snapped.
The pain was blinding, a white-hot severance that felt like my soul was being ripped in half. I gasped, clutching my chest, falling forward onto my elbows.
"Accept it!" Evelyn jeered from the stage, her voice shrill and ugly. "Accept it and leave, you mutt!"
I stared at the floor. I saw my own blood on the hem of the gown. I saw the dirt ground into my skin.
And then, I saw the light.
It wasn't coming from the fairy lights. It was coming from me.
A silver-white luminescence began to bleed from my pores. The pain of the rejection didn't kill me. It fueled me. It was the final hammer blow that shattered the lock on my power.
The air in the room grew instantly heavy, the pressure dropping as if a storm had materialized indoors.
Static electricity crackled, popping the balloons and shattering the delicate stems of champagne glasses in the guests' hands.
The scent exploded outward-not the smell of a weak omega, but the overpowering aroma of rain-drenched lilies and ozone.
The scent of the Royal White Wolf.
It filled the hall, choking out the stench of cheap perfume and hypocrisy.
I stood up. I didn't struggle. I didn't tremble.
My eyes, usually a dull, muddy brown, ignited with a liquid silver fire.
I looked at Ignatz. He had taken a step back, his face draining of color. I could hear his wolf whining, cowering deep inside his mind, recognizing a predator far superior to itself.
"You want me to accept?" I asked.
My voice was no longer the raspy whisper of a victim. It was layered, echoing with the authority of a thousand ancestors. It was an Alpha voice. No-it was an *Alpha Supreme* voice.
"I, Genevieve Foley, Princess of the Royal Pack, daughter of Arlington Foley..."
Gasps rippled through the room like a shockwave. Meredith dropped her wine glass, red liquid splashing like blood across her shoes. Ignatz's jaw hit the floor.
"...accept your rejection."
The bond dissolved completely. But instead of the emptiness of a rejected mate, I felt a rush of power so pure, so unadulterated, it felt like inhaling starlight.
I threw my head back and screamed.
My body cracked, bones rearranging in milliseconds, the sound echoing like gunshots in the silent hall.
The Shift took me.
Where a broken girl had crouched a moment ago, now stood a massive wolf. My fur was pure white, glowing with an ethereal moonlight. I towered over them, twice the size of Ignatz.
I let out a roar that shattered every window in the banquet hall, sending shards of glass raining down like diamonds.
Then, the air around me began to swirl with darkness.
My father's emergency failsafe-a teleportation spell woven into my very bloodline, triggered by the full release of my power-activated.
But before the void swallowed me, I saw one last thing.
I saw Ignatz falling to his knees, clutching his chest, his face twisted in the agonizing realization of exactly what he had just thrown away.