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CHAPTER 3 - The Heiress Revelation

Hours later, the sea plane landed on a glistening lake surrounded by mist-covered mountains. The sign nearby read Lago di Como.

I stepped out barefoot, my gown destroyed, my heart heavier than stone.

The air was different here, clean, quiet, untouched by talk or betrayal.

The pilot helped me down. “You’re safe now,” he said. “Nobody will find you here.”

I nodded, though my chest felt hollow. “Thank you.”

He tipped his cap. “You look like someone who’s lost everything.”

“Maybe,” I said softly. “Or maybe I’m about to find something new.”

He smiled weakly before starting the engine again. “If anyone asks, I never saw you.”

Then he was gone, and I stood there alone on the dock, surrounded by the whisper of the wind and the soft lapping of water against wood.

I walked into a small lakeside town, tired and trembling. My head spun, and every step felt heavier than the last.

A kind-looking woman spotted me from outside a café. She hurried over, worry written all over her face. “Signorina! Are you all right? ”

“I just need a place to stay,” I stammered.

She took my arm gently. “Come, come. You’re freezing.”

She led me inside, wrapped me in a blanket, and gave me a hot cup of tea.

Her name was Rosa. She owned the café and lived upstairs. “You can rest here tonight,” she said kindly. “But tomorrow, you must see a doctor. You look pale, ragazza.”

“Doctor? ” I hesitated, clutching the blanket tighter.

“Yes. For the baby.”

My head snapped up. “What? ”

She smiled softly. “You’re holding your stomach as if protecting it. I’ve had three children. I know that look.”

Tears stung my eyes. “I… I don’t know for sure.”

“Then you will,” Rosa said gently. “There’s a clinic in Milan. My nephew can drive you.”

The next morning, I sat in a white room that smelled of cleaning and lavender. The doctor, a tall woman with kind brown eyes, looked at my test results and smiled slightly.

“You’re from America, yes? ” she asked. “Los Angeles? ”

I nodded weakly. “How did you know? ”

She shrugged. “You carry the exhaustion of someone who’s been running too long.”

I looked away, fiddling with the hem of my borrowed coat. “Just tell me what’s wrong with me.”

The doctor set down the chart. “You’re not sick, Aurora. You’re pregnant.”

The words hit like thunder. “Pregnant,” I repeated numbly.

She nodded. “Approximately seven weeks. Judging by your stress levels, you’ve been through a lot recently.”

My pulse roared in my ears. “Seven weeks…” My mind calculated backward seven weeks ago, the night Damon had returned from a council trip. The night he’d been gentle, apologetic, intense. Last night he had truly been mine.

The doctor’s voice broke through the fog. “Is the father aware? ”

I swallowed hard. “No. And he never will be.”

She studied me quietly, then spoke softly. “You seem certain.”

“I am,” I said, voice shaky but firm. “He doesn’t deserve this child.”

The moment I left the clinic, the cold Milan air hit my face, and the world seemed to tilt.

I leaned against the wall, hand shaking against my stomach.

An Alpha’s child.

The doctor’s words repeated over and over.

My child would take his blood. His power. His memory.

But never his love.

A tear slid down my face. “It’s just you and me now,” I whispered to my future baby. “And I’ll make sure no one ever hurts you like he hurt me.”

But even as I said it, a strange pull tugged deep in my chest the weakening bond between me and Damon. I could still feel him, vaguely, like a ghost brushing against my soul.

Somewhere, miles away, maybe he felt it too.

Damon stood on the deck of his penthouse, looking out at the rain. The city’s skyline mirrored in his cold eyes, but beneath the armor, shame gnawed at him.

He could still smell her scent stayed in his mind like wildfire and honey.

When Celeste called his name from inside, he didn’t turn.

Because for the first time since that night, the bond glowed slightly.

Weak… but living.

And that scared him.

I spent the night looking out at the lake from Rosa’s window, wrapped in a blanket. The moonlight shimmered on the water, silver and silent.

Lila’s last message still blinked on my phone before I threw the SIM card away:

They’re looking for you, Rory. Damon ordered a search team. They think you might hurt yourself.

I laughed bitterly. “Now he’s worried? ”

Thunder rolled over the faraway Alps. The storm outside reminded me of the one inside me: wild, unpredictable, dangerous.

But I wasn’t that broken girl anymore.

Not the Luna he rejected.

Not the woman he shamed.

I was something else now.

A survivor.

A mother.

Just as I turned from the window, the phone in Rosa’s kitchen rang. She answered, her tone changing quickly from casual to worried.

She peeked into the room, eyes wide. “Aurora,” she whispered. “There are men in Milan asking about an American woman with a scar on her shoulder.”

My heart stopped.

Damon’s guards.

Rosa swallowed hard. “What do we do? ”

I pressed a hand to my stomach, every impulse yelling.

“We run,” I said. “Again.”

Outside, thunder cracked and from far across the lake, a wolf’s howl echoed through the night.

Low. Familiar.

Hungry.

The camera flashes on the TV made her flinch before she even knew she was holding her breath. Three years had passed since she’d last faced a camera, three years since she’d run from everything she thought she was meant to be. And yet, even here in Milan, the past was clawing its way back.

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