The pager burned against my hip like a brand.
It’s not just me dying, little omega. Our son is next.
I slipped the device into my coat pocket without looking back. Let him wait in his own blood a little longer. Let the marble drink him in.
I walked down the private corridor, heels sharp against the floor, white coat flaring behind me like a coronation robe. My staff knew better than to ask questions. They had seen the Supreme Alpha on his knees. They had seen me walk away. Their silence was perfect.
Inside my office, I poured myself a glass of water and drank it slowly, tasting nothing. My hands didn’t shake. They never did anymore. Three years of carving power out of flesh and politics had burned the tremors out of me.
But my body remembered him.
The low throb between my thighs was traitorous. The way my n*****s had tightened when I stood close enough to smell his ruined Alpha scent — that was unacceptable. I crushed the unwanted heat with clinical detachment. I was no longer the soft, desperate omega he had knotted and discarded. That girl had died the night I ran with his child still hidden inside me.
Now I was the Queen Surgeon of Ruin.
And queens do not tremble.
Twenty-three minutes passed before I returned to the main hall.
He was still on his knees.
The pool of blood had widened beneath him, dark and glistening, like an offering at my altar. His broad shoulders were slightly slumped now, but his jaw remained locked in that stubborn line I used to trace with my tongue. Sweat slicked his dark hair to his forehead. His breathing had grown shallower, yet those golden Alpha eyes still tracked my every step with dangerous focus.
He looked like sin on its knees.
And I wanted to ruin him beautifully.
I stopped just outside the edge of his blood. Close enough that the hem of my coat nearly brushed the crimson stain.
“Still breathing,” I observed coolly. “Impressive. Most men with your toxin level would already be convulsing.”
His voice came out rough, edged with pain and that velvet Alpha growl that once made me slick in seconds. “Veron—”
I tilted my head. One look. That was all it took.
He stopped.
Smart.
“I told you,” I said softly, “you don’t get to use my name. Not until I allow it. If I ever allow it.”
One of his guards made a low, furious sound. Justin silenced him with a single glance. Even poisoned and bleeding, his command remained absolute.
For now.
I crouched slowly in front of him, careful not to let my knees touch the blood. Close enough to see the black veins crawling up his neck. Close enough to see the way his pupils dilated when my scent reached him — warm omega, sharp antiseptic, and cold control.
His nostrils flared. Hunger flashed across his face before he buried it.
“You kept the pup,” he rasped.
My heart didn’t skip. I wouldn’t give him that satisfaction.
Instead, I let a small, cruel smile curve my lips. “Did I?”
His eyes darkened. “Don’t play games with me. Not about this.”
I reached out and pressed two fingers lightly against the side of his throat, feeling his pulse hammer beneath my touch. Strong. Stubborn. Still fighting. The contact sent a spark straight down my spine — unwanted, electric, dangerous.
I withdrew my hand as if touching filth.
“You are in no position to make demands, Justin Halderman. You are in my clinic. On your knees. Bleeding on my floor. Your life is a privilege I have not yet decided to grant.”
He swallowed hard. I watched the movement of his throat with clinical interest… and something far less clinical.
“What do you want from me?” he asked. The words sounded like they cost him every shred of pride he had left.
I rose gracefully, looking down at the most powerful Alpha in the realm.
“Everything.”
The single word settled between us like a scalpel pressed against skin.
“I want your obedience. I want your signature on my contract. I want you to understand, bone-deep, that the man who threw me away no longer exists in my world. You are simply… a patient. A very expensive, very desperate patient.”
I stepped closer until the toe of my heel touched the edge of his blood.
“And if you want to live long enough to ever meet the child you never knew you had,” I whispered, voice velvet and venom, “you will stay exactly where you are until I return with the terms. No moving. No speaking to my staff. No Alpha commands. You will kneel like the supplicant you are.”
His chest rose and fell faster. I could smell it — the mix of fury, pain, and dark, unwanted arousal. His c**k was probably half-hard under that ruined uniform despite the poison. Alpha biology was so predictable.
I turned to leave.
“Ver— Doctor Sanchez.”
I paused.
He was breathing hard now, voice strained but steady.
“I will sign whatever you want,” he said. “Just… don’t let me die before I can fix what I broke.”
I looked over my shoulder, letting my gaze drag slowly over his kneeling form — the powerful body, the blood, the barely contained desperation.
“You still don’t understand,” I said softly. “There is no fixing this. There is only surviving me.”
I walked away, the echo of my heels the only sound in the vast hall.
Behind me, the Supreme Alpha remained exactly as I had left him.
On his knees.
Bleeding.
Waiting for my mercy.
And for the first time in three years, I felt truly, deliciously alive.
But as I reached the corridor, my pager buzzed again.
This time, the message was from my head of security.
Unknown operatives approaching the eastern perimeter. They’re searching for the boy.
My blood turned to ice.
I glanced back once more at the man still kneeling in his own ruin.
The game had just become far more dangerous than I anticipated.