Chapter 4
“Cheryl, what’s going on? Why are you still in there?” he asked.
I didn’t answer. He pushed the door open in a panic and saw my swollen eyes.
Expressionless, I walked right past him. I heard him sigh in frustration behind me.
“Don’t be like this, darling. It was just a toy. I swear I’ll buy another one tomorrow. Please don’t look at me like that. I can’t take it.”
No, this wasn’t about a toy anymore, but I didn’t say a word.
…
Dinner was unusually quiet—the suffocating silence lingered like a thick fog.
Ethan glanced at me, then at Theo, who kept his head down and hadn’t said a word.
After a moment’s hesitation, he picked up a piece of roasted chicken and placed it on Theo’s plate.
Theo’s eyes lit up immediately, a flash of surprise blooming across his little face.
My chest tightened, and I almost cried. To a pup who’d never truly been loved, even the smallest kindness felt like a blessing.
Ethan’s gesture seemed to give Theo a bit of courage.
He looked up at Ethan cautiously and asked in a barely audible whisper, “Dad, tomorrow’s Father’s Day. The teacher is hosting a handmade gift competition. We have to bring something we made, and the dads vote for their favorite… Will you come?”
Ethan was stunned—not because of the question, but because of the way Theo looked at him.
He remembered a time when Theo had been a cheerful, fearless little boy. Now, he looked more like a nervous animal, ready to be rejected at any moment.
It made something twist in Ethan’s chest.
He swallowed down the complicated emotions and reached out, gently patting Theo’s shoulder.
“Don’t worry. I will be there,” he promised.
Theo’s demeanor lit up. He dragged me out that evening to buy craft supplies. But just as I was about to pay, he proudly pulled out a handful of coins.
He’d earned them by running errands for classmates and taking out the neighbors’ trash. He’d saved them for a whole year, but now he spent every last cent without a second thought.
That night, he spent three hours making a beautiful cardboard house. Inside, he placed three paper figures holding hands together.
He lay in bed, staring at that house and refusing to close his eyes.
It was a simple, cheap craft. But at the very least, maybe he could earn one vote from Ethan.
With a sweet smile on his face, he drifted off to sleep.
The next afternoon, we waited outside the school early. Theo held his paper house close, chest puffed up with pride. Other parents arrived one after another, but Ethan was nowhere to be seen.
Theo’s expression gradually turned uneasy.
Cold sweat broke out on my back. I silently begged Ethan not to disappoint him again.
However, I called him dozens of times in the next half hour, and he didn’t answer a single call.
As I watched Theo’s little fingers turn pale from how tightly he was gripping the house, I knew I couldn’t sit here any longer.
I left him at school and ran straight to the Alpha’s office at the pack headquarters.
It was peak hour. I slipped in easily with the crowd and started searching floor by floor. Soaked in sweat, I finally caught Ethan’s scent on the top floor.
But before I could even breathe a sigh of relief, the scene before me brought me to a halt.
Through the glass wall, I saw Ethan and Mira gathered around a little boy, celebrating his birthday.
The boy looked about Theo’s age. He was fair-skinned, his eyes glowing with happiness. He smiled brightly with nothing to worry about.
Ethan leaned down and ruffled his hair. His gestures were so natural, just like a father.
I couldn’t stop myself from thinking of Theo.
They were the same age. But Theo was waiting in the cold, while this boy was celebrating in the warmth of sunlight.
My heart felt like it had been torn open, and my body trembled from the pain.
I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. I stood there like someone who had stepped into the wrong world.
Just as I gathered my strength to call out his name, a hand clamped over my mouth from behind. A guard dragged me back as he covered my mouth.
Just then, Mira turned her head and smiled at me faintly.
She mouthed the words, “Peasant-blooded bitch. You’re not worthy to stand here.”
I struggled with everything I had, trying to reach Ethan through our mind link.
But the guard slapped me across the face. The blow made me so dazed that I had no strength to summon the link.
In the end, they tossed me out like a stray dog. My knees hit the marble steps hard, stinging with pain. But I couldn’t tell what hurt more—my body, or my heart.
Ignoring the scrapes on my arms, I staggered to my feet and yelled, “I’m Ethan’s mate! Let me in!”
The guards shoved me back to the ground. Their voices were full of disdain.
“Stop spouting nonsense. Alpha Ethan has never officially acknowledged a Luna. All he has is his childhood sweetheart. Do you think a shabby thing like you can be his Luna? You must be out of your mind.”
Luna? I laughed and cried at the same time as I mumbled this title.
As the mate of the Alpha, it was the most revered position in the entire pack.
Maybe my blood really was too worthless. Even after seven years with Ethan and giving birth to his pup, I was still not enough to be Luna.
I laughed silently as tears streamed down my face.
…
I didn’t even remember how I got back. All I knew was I had to go back.
Theo was still waiting at school. His father could choose another pup, but I would never leave him behind.
I was out of breath when I got back to the kindergarten, and what I saw nearly shattered me.
Theo stood in the crowd, clutching his cardboard house. He was all alone and lost.
A group of kids pointed at his shoes and laughed.
“Mom, look! He’s the pup of that wolfless Omega! His shoes are so weird!”
Theo instinctively curled his toes. Only then did I notice the holes in his shoes.
My mind went blank. I wanted to slap myself.
I rushed forward and pulled him into my arms. Even though I came back alone, he accepted it without a word.
His face showed no sadness or joy. At that moment, he didn’t seem like a six-year-old at all.
Theo stared at his paper house for a while. Then, he reached in and quietly removed the tall paper figure of the father.
He looked up at me and gave a bitter smile. “It’s okay, Mom. I can still enter the contest like this.”
Although Theo didn’t say a word, I knew we had reached an understanding.
At the event, every father tried their best to get votes for their child, but Theo ended up with zero votes.
After the contest, I did three things.
First, I withdrew Theo from school and severed his last tie to the pack. Second, I submitted a formal request to the Elder Council to break the mate bond. I even paid extra to expedite it. Third, I packed our bags overnight and took Theo on the next train out.
There was no goodbye or looking back.