Morrison, the pack's head butler, stood near the grand staircase. He held out a thick towel, but his posture was stiff, his eyes practically sneering. He looked at the puddle forming at my feet as if my very existence as a *wolfless* Omega was a contagious disease tainting his Alpha's pristine bloodline.
I didn't say a word. I just gave a curt shake of my head, refusing his hypocritical charity, and walked past him.
Despite the numbness settling in my chest, the ingrained habit of four years of submission pushed me toward the kitchen. I prepared a heavy oak tray with two ceramic mugs of hot coffee-no silver, never silver-and carried it toward the Alpha's Wing.
The hallway outside his office was swallowed in darkness, save for a sliver of warm yellow light bleeding from beneath the half-open heavy oak door. I raised my hand to push it open, but the sound of Adrian's voice, accompanied by the low chuckle of his Beta, Gideon, froze me in place.
"The funds have been successfully diverted, Alpha," Gideon was saying. "Seraphina's estate in the city is fully paid for. She arrives next week."
"Good. I want a grand welcome for her," Adrian replied, his tone dripping with an affection I hadn't heard in years.
My breath hitched. *Seraphina.* The highborn she-wolf he claimed was just a political ally.
"And what about Elara?" Gideon asked.
Adrian scoffed, the sound slicing through the quiet hallway. "What about her? She's a scentless, wolfless defect. Marrying her was nothing but a power play, Gideon. Seraphina thought I wouldn't dare defy pack traditions. I took the lowest, most pathetic Omega I could find and made her Luna just to prove I bow to no one. It drove Seraphina crazy with jealousy."
My hands began to tremble. The heavy oak tray felt like lead.
"Still," Gideon murmured, "four years, and her inner wolf hasn't surfaced. Not even a hint of a pup."
A dark, cruel laugh rumbled from Adrian's chest. "Of course not. She's not just naturally broken. I've been having the kitchens slip a silver-based compound into her meals since the day I marked her."
The world stopped spinning. *Silver.* The ultimate poison to our kind.
"It keeps the mutt suppressed and her womb barren," Adrian continued, his voice utterly devoid of remorse. "She's a convenient, docile tool. And who else would take a marked, wolfless Omega? She can never leave."
The shock was a physical blow. My fingers went numb. The wooden tray slipped from my grasp, hitting the floor with a muffled thud on the thick carpet. Scalding coffee splashed across my knuckles, blistering the skin instantly, but the agony in my soul swallowed the physical pain whole.
*He poisoned me. He stole my wolf.*
Footsteps approached the door. Panic, sharp and primal, finally pierced through my paralysis. I scrambled backward, throwing myself into the pitch-black shadows beneath the curve of the grand staircase just as the office door swung wide open.
Adrian stood in the doorway, glancing down at the spilled coffee. He sneered, likely assuming his clumsy, simple-minded wife had tripped and run off in tears. He clapped Gideon on the shoulder and walked him toward the front entrance.
Crouched in the suffocating darkness, I clutched my burned hand to my chest. I didn't cry. The pathetic, submissive Elara died on that floor, drowned in spilled coffee and toxic lies. Adrian thought I was just a brainless Omega who couldn't survive without him. He didn't know about the encrypted terminal in the human city. He didn't know about the data I had been secretly manipulating under the alias *Dr. Patterson*.
I leaned my head against the cold plaster wall, my heart beating in a slow, deadly rhythm. I would stay right here in the shadows of the stairs. I would wait for the dawn, and when the sun rose, I would begin tearing his empire apart piece by piece.