Chapter 13
Kidnapped by My Mate: The Alpha's Doe Part 2
DOE
My father turned my hand over and dropped the necklace into my palm. The longer I looked at it, the more I realized I had some sort of familiarity with the object.
âI recognize this,â I murmured. My gaze traveled back to him. âWhy do I feel like Iâve seen this before?â
âTracking devices are common in the werewolf community. We often have pups who are entering puberty wear them so they can notify their parents if they start to shift.
âThomas and Elliot started wearing theirs about a year ago, although they havenât had to use them yet. Your mom also wears one in case she unexpectedly goes into heat.
âThey keep them under their clothes, but Iâm sure there have been times when youâve caught a glimpse. The lock on your mind may have erased the memories, but itâs probably why you recognize it.â
âCouldnât they just use mind-link?â
âNot until after they shift for the first time. They need to be in touch with their wolves first.
âAnd as for your mother, she is often in too much pain to mind-link if she goes into heat and weâre not near to each other.â
I nodded slowly, my gut twisting. âWhat if IââI bit back my cringeââgo into heat?â
~Barf. Barfing.~
This wasnât a topic I wanted to be discussing with my father, but it had to be done.
âIf the suppressants stop working and Iâm not near Aceâ¦â My voice trailed off as I imagined all the horrible scenarios that could take place.
An omega in heat, especially an unclaimed one like me, is nearly impossible for unmated male werewolves to resist, or so Iâd been led to believe by the books and everyone else.
It wouldnât matter how far away Ace was or how quickly he could get to me. All it would take is one male to get to me before Ace andâ¦
I shook the thought from my head. I didnât want to think about it.
âAs long as you keep taking suppressants, that wonât happen,â Dad said. âItâs rare for suppressants not to work for omegas, but even so, weâd have known within the first few days of you taking them.
âAnd there are enough suppressants in your new car to get you through the next year or so. But if thatâs not enough, Iâve also left instructions on how to get more.â
âA ~year~?â I exclaimed. âYou expect me to go away for a whole year?â
I wasnât even sure if I wanted to run away yet, but if I did, Iâd been thinking about going for a few weeks at the most.
But going away for an entire year was a completely different story. That was enough time to build a whole new life. I could get an apartment, start a new job, go to college, travel the worldâ¦
The possibilities were endless.
My future had never felt soâ¦open.
âI donât want you to go at all,â my dad reiterated. âBut if you do decide to leave, it can be for as long as you want. A year, a month, even just a long weekend.
âNothing is stopping you. Iâm giving you everything you need. If you donât go, it will be because ~you~ made that choice.â
Silence hung between us while I thought it all over. He really was providing me with everything I needed to escape Embermoon, and I couldnât think of any other excuses that might hold me back.
Well, except for Ace. I would miss Ace a lot. And my family. And Marta.
But my dad was right. If I wanted to do this without Ace immediately dragging me back, I needed to cut off all contact with the people I love.
Otherwise, Ace would force them to give me up if he knew I was still in touch with anyone in this town.
But that meant I would be completely alone. Like, ~alone~ alone. The most alone I had ever been.
I had never even been to a sleepaway camp or an overnight school trip without Ace by my side. Was I really ready to ~live~ on my own?
âCould you come with me?â I asked my dad. At least I would have some sort of support system to count on.
His eyes softened. âI would love to. But I need to stay here with your mother and brothers. They need me. And someone needs to run the pack in Aceâs absence.â
Right. My father was technically the acting alpha of the pack right now.
I considered asking if Mom could come, but I knew better than that. With two of my brothers so close to shifting for the first time, it would have been selfish to take her away.
âSo, I would be completely on my own,â I murmured.
âI know this is scary, Doe. I wish there was another way to do this. But you deserve the same opportunity for independence as any other young person your age.
âEighteen is when you should be experiencing the world, not lying in bed with a broken heart. You are capable of so much more than that. You are ~worth~ so much more than that.â
My eyes pricked with unexpected tears. He was right. I had been thinking the same thing even before he suggested it.
I had been behaving like a weak little girl these past few weeks. Maybe even my entire life.
No more.
âAnd who knows,â Dad continued, âmaybe some distance is exactly what you need in order to be able to forgive Ace.â
I picked at my blankets. âAnd if Iâm never able to forgive him?â
âThen youâre going to need that distance even more.â
My stomach rolled with nerves. Was I actually considering this? No. No, absolutely not. Getting space from Ace was not worth losing my family, even if it was only temporary.
And Iâd surely find a way to mess it all up. Iâd lose the suppressants my dad gave me, or get in an accident and total my car, or get mugged and killed somewhere where no one would ever find my body.
I couldnât be on my own. I just⦠couldnât.
âDo you remember the last conversation we had before you were taken?â
I blinked, confused about the relevance of his question. âYou mean when you were trying to get a hold of Madoc? When you asked me to babysit the boys?â
Of course I remembered that conversation. He called me immature. Actually, I think his exact words were âfucking immature.â
Dad said I wasnât capable of taking care of my younger brothers on my own and that I needed Madoc with me in case anything happened.
âYes,â he answered. âWhen I yelled at you. I said some pretty nasty things. I should never have spoken to you like that. Iâve been meaning to apologize to you, but Iâve been trying to give you space.â
His eyes shone with unshed tears. âI am so, ~so~ sorry, Dorothy.â
My forehead puckered. I had no idea that this had been weighing so heavily on his mind.
âItâs okay. Iâm not going to say it didnât hurt to hear, but itâs not as if you were wrong. You didnât want me alone that night because you knew I shouldnât be without protection.
âAnd maybe, if I wouldâve just listened to you and trusted you when you said I needed someone with me, Robert wouldnât have taken me or hurt the boys.â
He shook his head. âNo, Doe. Nothing that happened that night was your fault. You had every right to question why I wouldnât let you be on your own. You are just as capable as anyone else.â
I lowered my eyes. Was I though? I was pretty sure there was no way that night could have gone more poorly.
My brothers ended up poisoned and unconscious, and I woke up chained to a chair in a basement in Montana while my biological father and his psycho-werewolf-hunter friend held me at gunpoint.
âBut I ~wasnât~ capable that nightââ
âBy no fault of your own. You didnât know about the danger you were in. But ~had~ you knownâhad you had the proper informationâI know it wouldâve been different.â
I supposed he was right. Instead of trying to prove everyone wrong about not being able to handle being on my own, I wouldâve called Ace and told him I couldnât find Madoc.
And I wouldâve been much more worried about going into heat without Ace by my side.
âWe never shouldâve left you alone when you knew so little. We put you in that position. ~We~ failed you, Doe.â He paused, tension filling the air around us. â~I~ failed you.â
My chest tightened. âDadâ¦â
âNever again. ~Never~ again.â He grabbed the car key from the bed and dropped it in my palm, closing my fingers over it. âYou know everything now. Your future is in your own hands.â