MARBLE ON THE FLOOR
The first thing I noticed was the sound.
Not the frantic footsteps of my staff trying to contain the breach. Not the low, clipped voices of the guards who had no right to be here. No.
The drip.
Slow. Deliberate. Insistent.
Blood has its own language, and it never hurries. It knows the world will eventually kneel to it.
Drip.
Drip.
Drip.
I didn’t look up right away. My gloved hands stayed steady as I tied off the last suture on my current patient, the needle sliding through torn flesh like silk through skin. The man beneath me shuddered once, then went still. Perfect.
“Monitor him,” I said, voice cool, clinical. “Page me if the pressure drops.”
“Yes, Doctor Sanchez.”
Only then did I peel off the gloves, the latex snapping against my wrists like a promise. Only then did I turn.
The double doors of the Black Veil Clinic stood wide open.
They were never open.
A line had been drawn in marble and blood three years ago, and no one crossed it without my invitation. Not kings. Not Alphas. Certainly not the man who had once chosen another woman over me and the secret I carried in my belly.
Yet here he was.
A dark, glistening trail cut across my pristine white floor, staining everything it touched. The scent of it hit me—copper and something sharper, something synthetic laced with his own Alpha musk. Poison. Slow. Elegant. The kind that doesn’t kill quickly; it makes you watch yourself rot.
I followed the trail with my eyes, heels clicking softly, until it ended at his knees.
Justin Halderman.
The most powerful Alpha in the realm, reduced to this.
He looked… ruined already. Shoulders still broad enough to block out the light, jaw still cut like the blade I once traced with my tongue in the dark. But the fracture was there, deep under the skin. Sweat beaded at his temples. Veins stood out along his throat, threading black beneath the golden tone I used to bite. His chest rose and fell in shallow, controlled bursts, like even breathing cost him pride.
My gaze lingered on the way his shirt clung to the hard planes of his abdomen, soaked through with blood and sweat. The fabric stretched over muscle that still remembered how to pin me down and make me beg. Three years, and my body still catalogued him like a traitor—heat licking low in my belly, unwanted, unwelcome. I crushed it instantly.
He lifted his head.
Our eyes met.
For one treacherous heartbeat, something raw flickered across his face—recognition, hunger, the ghost of the man who had knotted me so deep I felt it for weeks after I ran. Then it was gone, swallowed by pain.
I felt nothing in return.
Or rather, I felt everything I wanted to feel: the slow, delicious burn of revenge uncoiling in my veins like the poison in his.
“You’re bleeding on my floor,” I said.
The words dropped like a scalpel. One of his guards flinched. Justin didn’t. His jaw flexed, but he kept his hands pressed to the wound at his side, blood seeping between those long fingers I used to suck clean.
“Veronica—”
I raised one hand. Not a command. A fact.
He stopped.
I stepped closer, close enough to smell the ruin on him—his Alpha scent spiked with agony and something darker, something that still pulled at the omega in me like a hook. My n*****s tightened under my scrubs. I ignored it. I had learned to ignore a lot of things since I fled with his pup growing inside me.
“Name,” I said flatly.
His voice came out rough, scraped raw. “Justin Halderman.”
“Condition?”
“Systemic toxin. Unknown compound. Progressive organ failure. I have maybe forty-eight hours.”
Clinical. Good boy. He was learning.
I crouched just enough to study the discoloration spidering across his collarbone, the way his pupils fought to stay focused. Close enough that if I leaned in, my breath would ghost over the pulse hammering in his throat. Close enough to remember how that pulse felt under my teeth when he was buried knot-deep inside me, growling my name like a prayer.
I straightened.
“I won’t treat you.”
The room detonated with tension. One guard took a half-step forward before his Alpha’s glare pinned him in place. Justin’s hands curled into fists on his thighs, knuckles white, but he stayed on his knees. Blood pooled wider beneath him, warm and obscene against my marble.
“Why?” The word was quiet. Not a demand. A plea wrapped in velvet and steel.
I smiled. Not kind. Never kind.
“Because I don’t accept uninvited patients. And I don’t treat cases I don’t want.”
It would have been easier for him if I’d screamed. If I’d cried. If I’d thrown the three years of silence, the secret pup I raised alone while he crowned his Alpha Princess and forgot the omega he ruined. But I gave him nothing but ice.
He exhaled, slow and pained, the sound dragging over every nerve I still had tuned to him. “Then tell me what you want.”
There it was. The negotiation. The moment the most powerful man in the realm offered me the leash.
I let the silence stretch, savoring it. Three years ago he had stood over me in silk sheets, c**k still wet with my slick, and told me his choice was made. The Princess. The alliance. The future that didn’t include the bastard growing in my womb.
Now he knelt in my blood and my power, eyes locked on mine like I was the only thing left worth begging for.
I turned away, giving him my back, the sway of my hips deliberate. My white coat flared like a queen’s robe. Let him watch. Let him remember what he threw away.
“If I decide to take your case,” I said over my shoulder, voice velvet and venom, “you’ll be given terms. My terms.”
I was almost to the corridor when his voice cracked through the air—low, broken, edged with that Alpha growl that used to make me wet in seconds.
“Veronica.”
I stopped. Didn’t turn.
“You don’t get to use my name,” I said softly. “Not here. Not ever again.”
The silence that followed was so complete I could hear his heartbeat falter.
I glanced back once. Just once.
His eyes were on fire—pain, fury, and something far more dangerous. Hunger. The same hunger that had once ruined us both.
I let my own gaze drop to the growing pool of blood between his knees, then back up to his face. Slowly. Possessively.
“If you want to live,” I whispered, “you’ll wait. Right there. On your knees. Until I decide you’re worth saving.”
I took one more step.
Behind me, I heard the wet sound of him shifting, the low groan he couldn’t quite swallow. My core clenched at the noise—traitorous, slick, already imagining how sweet his ruin would taste when I finally let him break.
Then my pager buzzed against my hip.
Unknown number.
A single text lit up the screen.
It’s not just me dying, little omega. Our son is next.
My fingers tightened around the device until the edges bit into my palm.
I didn’t look back.
But the smile that curved my lips was sharp enough to cut glass.
The game had just begun.