The doctor's knock feels like a death sentence. Three sharp raps against our front door that echo through our modest townhouse like the crack of a judge's gavel. I sit frozen at the kitchen table, my fingers clutching the edge so hard my knuckles turn white. Mum meets my eyes across the room, her face a mask of forced calm that doesn't reach her eyes. Dad's hand squeezes my shoulder, a gentle pressure that's meant to reassure but only amplifies the terror coursing through me. This is it. Five days before my twenty-first birthday, and the Council has sent their blood collector right on schedule.
"I'll get it," Dad says, his voice steady despite the wild thrum of his heartbeat that my sensitive ears can detect.
He moves to the door with the measured steps of a Beta who's spent decades perfecting the appearance of control. I watch him smooth his expression before he pulls the door open, revealing the thin man in the pristine white coat on our porch.
"Beta Blackwood." The doctor nods, his voice as sterile as his appearance. "Council Directive 117 requires testing of female Subject Sophia Blackwood, in preparation for her twenty-first year."
No greeting. No pleasantries. Just the cold recitation of the directive that might tear our family apart in less than a week.
Dad steps aside. "Please come in, Doctor."
The doctor enters our home like he's stepping into a lab rather than someone's living space. His eyes sweep across our worn furniture, the hand-knitted throws draped over the couch, the family photos hanging slightly crooked on the wall. There's nothing clinical about our home, it's warm, lived-in, loved. The opposite of everything this man represents.
"Subject is present. Good." He spots me at the kitchen table, not bothering to address me directly. I'm not a person to him. I'm a subject, a potential commodity in the Council's twisted system.
Mum moves beside me, her hand finding mine under the table. Her fingers are ice cold.
"Let's proceed." The doctor sets his black case on our kitchen table, unzipping it with mechanical precision to reveal rows of empty vials, needles, and testing equipment.
Dad returns to my other side, creating a protective barrier that we all know is meaningless if my blood reveals what they've feared for years.
"Arm, please." The doctor snaps on latex gloves.
I extend my left arm, trying to control its trembling. The inside of my elbow looks pale and vulnerable under the kitchen light, blue veins visible beneath my skin.
"Hold still." His fingers are cold through the latex as he ties the tourniquet above my elbow.
I wince as the needle pierces my skin, watching with a strange detachment as my blood, the blood that could determine my entire future, flows into the vial. He fills three of them, each marked with barcodes rather than my name. I'm already being reduced to a number in their system.
"Does it have to be three?" Mum asks, her voice tight.
The doctor doesn't look up from his work. "Protocol requires duplicate testing and archiving."
When he's done, he places a cotton ball over the puncture site, not even bothering to instruct me to hold it. Mum’s hand reaches out to press it for me while the doctor labels the samples with efficient movements.
"Results will be processed according to Council timeline. If Subject scores above threshold, representatives will arrive to collect her before her twenty-first birth date." He recites this like he's reading a weather report, not potentially announcing the end of my freedom.
"And if she scores below?" Dad asks, though we all know the answer.
The doctor pauses, glancing up at him with mild irritation. "Then no action will be taken. But preparations are recommended. Historical data indicates subjects from Beta lineages with early presentation of omega traits typically score well above threshold."
My stomach drops. He's already categorised me as a likely match. I wonder how many girls he's tested, how many he's seen taken away.
"When exactly will we know?" Mum presses.
"You will be informed if collection is required." The doctor zips his case closed with a sharp sound that makes me flinch. "Not before. Council protocol."
Dad escorts him to the door with rigid politeness that barely masks his hostility. I remain frozen at the table, staring at the small cotton ball on my arm now spotted with blood, my blood, which might condemn me to become some alpha's property in less than a week.
When the door closes behind the doctor, the three of us sit in silence, the ticking of our old kitchen clock suddenly deafening. Through the window, I watch the doctor get into his sleek black car and drive away, carrying those vials that contain my future in their glass confines.
"Let's move to the living room," Mum finally says, her voice softer now that the Council representative is gone. "I made tea earlier."
I follow my parents to our small living room in a daze. The couch sags slightly as we all sit together, the familiar depression in the cushions somehow comforting despite everything. Mum pours tea from the pot on the coffee table, her hands shaking slightly, causing the ceramic to clink against the cups.
Dad stares into the distance, his jaw working as if chewing on words he's afraid to speak. The silence stretches between us, full of everything we've been avoiding discussing for years.
"What happens now?" I finally ask, my voice sounding small even to my own ears.
My parents exchange a look, one of those mated-people glances that contain entire conversations. Mum’s eyes are pleading, Dad's resigned.
"Sophia," Mum begins, setting down her untouched tea. "We need to talk about what happens if… when the Council comes."
My heart stutters. "You mean if my test…"
"There's no 'if' about it, sweetheart," Dad interrupts gently. "We've known since your first heat that you'd likely test high. The intensity, the way other wolves respond to your presence... you're a rare omega. Exactly what they look for."
The words hit me like physical blows. Of course, I've always known I was an omega, that much was clear from puberty. But hearing Dad say so bluntly that I'll test high enough for the Council to claim me makes everything horribly real.
"So what do we do?" I whisper, though part of me already knows the answer. We've lived under Council law all my life. There is no fighting it.
Mum reaches for my hands, her grip almost painful. "You run."
I stare at her, certain I've misheard. "What?"
"If they come for you, when they come, you need to run," she repeats, her eyes fierce. "Head south, toward the more progressive packs. Your father and I will hold them off as long as we can."
"Are you insane?" I pull my hands away. "They'll kill you both! The Council doesn't tolerate interference with the Omega Directive. Everyone knows that.”