"You mixed up the sperm? Are you kidding me? A hospital with a reputation like yours make a
mistake this unforgivable?”
Isla Spencer’s voice ricocheted off the walls of the sterile office. Her wolf prowled just beneath
her skin, fury rolling off her in waves so thick the human doctor cowered as if she might devour
him whole.
“I—I am so sorry, Miss Spencer.” The small, frightened man pressed himself further into the
corner. “We… We don't fully understand how this happened yet. But we deeply regret your loss.
The hospital is prepared to offer you two million dollars in compensation, and we will refund
every penny you’ve paid for the treatment.”
“You think this is about money?” Isla grabbed him by the collar. Her wolf, Serena, bared its teeth
in her mind. “Coel is lying in a hospital bed, unconscious. That sperm was the Reese family’s last
chance to carry on their bloodline. You destroyed our hope.”
The doctor’s eyes went wide when he finally registered the name. Alpha Coel Reese. His face was
drained of color. He’d assumed Isla was just an Omega—someone the hospital could pay off, bury
the scandal, and move on. But an Alpha? That changed everything.
“I—I truly am sorry,” he stammered. “We’ll do whatever we can to make this right—”
“Make it right?” She shoved him back. “How exactly do you plan to do that?”
Her eyes burned. The past months had been a nightmare she couldn’t wake up from.
Months ago, her fiancé Coel had walked into an ambush with rogues—trying to surprise her, of all
things. He’d barely survived. Now he lay motionless in a hospital bed, and the doctors had already
started whispering about “slim chances” and “preparing for the worst.” Before Isla could even
process her grief, Coel’s parents had come to her with their request: use the sperm Coel had frozen
years ago, they’d begged her. Give the Reeses one last heir.
She couldn’t say no. Even though she’d never imagined having children this way.
For months, she’d split herself in two—spending her days at Coel’s bedside, holding his cold hand,
talking to a face that wouldn’t answer, and spending her nights and every spare hour at the clinic,
turning herself into a machine. The endless blood draws. The brutal hormone shots that left her
bruised and aching. The cold speculums, the sharp probes, the sickening feeling of being handled
like livestock instead of a woman.
She’d swallowed every humiliation, told herself a thousand times that it would all be worth it.
And then—miraculously—she’d gotten pregnant.
She hadn’t even had time to feel happy about it before they told her the truth. Wrong sperm. She
was carrying a stranger’s child.
The betrayal cut so deep she couldn’t breathe. She grabbed the syringe off the doctor’s tray. The
man flinched, convinced she was about to stab him, but Isla only pointed it at his face.
“Schedule me for an abortion. Now. Get this baby out of me.”
The doctor didn’t have time to answer.
The door slammed open—kicked so hard the frame splintered—and a voice cut through the room
like a blade.
“That baby is my heir.”
Isla spun around.
The man who filled the doorway was enormous. Broad shoulders, powerful jaw, eyes so dark and
intent they seemed to drink the light from the room. The air itself thickened around him, pressing
down on her lungs. And worse—worse—her proud, fierce wolf Serena lowered her head without
being told. Submitted. Instinctively.
This was an Alpha. And not just any Alpha. One whose rank dwarfed Coel’s entirely.
The stranger’s gaze locked onto her, unblinking. “Terminate that pregnancy, and I will burn this
hospital to the ground.”
His voice was calm. That was what made it terrifying.
Isla felt it before she understood it—a current racing down her spine, pooling hot and restless in
her belly. Her pulse stuttered. And Serena—traitor—whined low in her throat. A sound of
surrender.
‘Get it together, Serena.’
The wolf rolled lazily inside her. ‘If you ask me, this one makes Coel look like chopped liver. I
wouldn’t mind rolling over for him at all’.
‘Shut up. I am not betraying Coel.’
Serena yawned, ‘I never understood what you saw in that dullard anyway.’
Isla clamped down on her wolf and forced herself to look at the stranger. Really look. Dark hair,
cut close at the sides. A scar feathering across his knuckles. The kind of face that belonged on
wanted posters or ancient statues—all sharp angles and barely leashed violence.
Fine. He was gorgeous. That changed nothing. She was engaged to Coel. She would not carry
another man’s child.
“My uterus. My choice.” She lifted her chin. “You can’t force me to have your baby. And you clearly don’t need the money—find someone else to play incubator for you. I’m done here.”
The man opened his mouth to respond, but before he could, footsteps pounded down the hallway
behind him, and a voice called out—breathless, almost panicked—