Chapter One: Let Her Go
Elara – POV
The air thickened first, a raw surge of power slamming down the corridor like a predator's roar made silent. No sound. No warning. Just dominance that buckled my knees and stole my breath. My fingers clenched the stack of reports, knuckles whitening as I flattened against the icy stone wall. An Alpha? No. Something far deadlier. I dropped my gaze, heart hammering, instincts screaming to vanish. Omegas like me didn't stare. We didn't exist. So I held still, a ghost in the shadows, as deliberate footsteps prowled past. Only when the echo faded did I dare inhale.
Our pack’s mornings carried the same harsh scent: rusted iron from the gates, damp soil from the forest edge, and the bitter tang of restraint. Routine wasn’t comfort; it was a chain. I worked in the administrative wing beneath the council hall, buried in stone older than the current Alpha’s reign. Logs, ledgers, supply inventories, and schedules, mundane yet vital, enough to keep me visible but overlooked. Utility was armor for omegas without mates. Belonging was claimed by bite marks and bonds; those of us left unmarked learned quickly that usefulness was the only protection.
My family embodied omega perfection. Mother mated at nineteen, her neck blooming with the mark of fate. My sister trailed her path, claimed and cherished. Me? At twenty-three, still blank. Early on, they whispered of youth. Then patience. Now, silence hung heavy, laced with pity. Unmarked omegas unsettled the pack, too untethered to trust, too exposed to dismiss. So I adapted: eyes down, scent muted, words rationed. Survival demanded it.
By the time I finished work, the sun had already begun to set, soft light filtering through the narrow openings above. Voices drifted faintly from the central square, laughter, conversation, the quiet ease of people returning to those who mattered to them. I took the longer path home like I always did. Fewer people. Fewer chances of being noticed. It should have been routine. It should have been safe.
“Working late again, Elara?” His voice slithered from the shadows.
My steps slowed before I could stop myself. I knew that voice. I turned just enough to acknowledge him.
Darius, the Alpha’s son, always a thorn in my flesh, always blocking my path, leaning against the railing as if the night itself obeyed him. His eyes raked my throat, bare, unmarked, lingering with the entitlement that had haunted me for years. Tall, broad-shouldered, perfectly built, every movement radiating lethal confidence, and somehow… irresistible. He was danger made flesh, a storm in human form, and he knew it. A faint smile followed, the kind that never meant anything good.
“I had work,” I replied, keeping my voice even.
I should have kept walking. I didn’t.
He pushed away from the railing and closed the distance between us in a few easy steps. His presence pressed in immediately, his scent sharp and dominant, filling the space until it felt too small to breathe properly. My instincts reacted, tension tightening through my body, urging me to step back, to create distance. I held my ground, even if it was the only control I had.
“You’ve been keeping to yourself,” he said, voice low.
“I do my job.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
Unease settled deeper in my chest, quiet but steady. “I don’t concern myself with anything else.”
“You should.” His hand closed around my wrist before I could move, firm enough to stop me, controlled enough to remind me exactly who he was.
My pulse jumped. “I need to go.”
“You’ll go when I’m done.”
Fear came quickly, sharp and familiar, but it didn’t root me in place the way it used to. I lifted my gaze, meeting his eyes despite the instinct telling me not to. “Let me go.”
For a moment, something darker surfaced in his expression, something that made my stomach tighten. Then it was gone, replaced by something smoother, more controlled.
“You’re unmarked,” he said, like it was the only thing that mattered. “No one’s claimed you.”
I didn’t respond.
“And I’ve been patient. My father too.”
The meaning was clear. This wasn’t a suggestion.
“You’d make a suitable second mate.”
The words hit harder than I expected. Not chosen. Not wanted. Just… convenient.
“I won’t,” I said quietly.
His grip tightened slightly, not enough to hurt, just enough to remind me that my refusal didn’t carry weight here. “That’s not your decision.”
Fear pressed in again, colder this time, but I didn’t look away. “It is mine.”
The space between us shifted, tension stretching thin.
And then everything changed.
A new presence slid into the path, tall, immense, magnetic, every inch of him radiating authority. His shoulders filled the corridor, muscles taut and flawless, posture straight, eyes like steel, gaze locking on me. Breath caught in my throat as the storm of his power pressed in. Darius’s grip slackened, his body rigid as the newcomer advanced, slow and unhurried, each step measured like the earth itself obeyed him.
A shadow fell over us, broad and absolute. Then a voice, low, calm, deadly. “Let her go.” Darius froze. For the first time that night, fear twisted into something else, something raw, pulling at the center of me, a magnetic tug that I couldn’t resist. My pulse thundered, breath uneven. The man in front of me radiated dominance that was both terrifying and… compelling. His body, built like a warrior, presence carved from command, hands large but precise, a jaw strong enough to break or protect, he was power incarnate. And he wanted me to see it.
I couldn’t move. I didn’t want to. Every instinct screamed danger, yet my core responded, drawn to the pull, terrified and daring all at once. Whatever this force was, whatever he was, it was coming for me, and I knew deep in my bones that nothing would ever be the same.