Pregnant And Rejected By My Alpha Mate By Caroline Above Chapter 182
Pregnant And Rejected
Chapter 182- Selene Decides Selene Thad a nightmare like this once: being helpless before Blaise while my family hangs in the balance.
However even my worst dreams couldnât have predicted this fate: being forced to choose between Bastienâs life and my own. Bastien is roaring and raging at me, ordering me to leave him behind, but I canât bring myself to turn my back on him, Every time I see the knife go deeper into his back, Luna howls in agony and despair, freezing me in place.
I know Blaiseâs offer is a trap, but I also know that there s no way I can undo what heâs already discovered. One way or another Blaise knows who I am now, he knows where I live and he knows about my unborn child. He doesnât know about Lila, and the only person in Tartarus who might have betrayed her existence to him is dead now. If I run away now, heâll simply follow me back to Elysium, and then thereâ
s no guaranteeing that I can keep my daughter safe.
âBastien,â | sniffle, begging him to understand, âIf I go now heâll only come after me, heâll follow me home.â
I can see my message click into place in his mind, but he only pauses for a moment. âThen donât go home!â He hisses, âgo to ground, go somewhere heâll never find you. Donât sacrifice yourself for me, Iâm not worth it â think about the baby!â
no âI am,â | cry, feeling more helpless than I can ever re member. Even if I went to ground, Blaise would find out about Lila, and I canât stand the idea of running forever and losing Bastien too. âAnd youâre wrong, you are worth it. Iâll find a way out of this, but I canât let him kill you.â
If I thought Bastien was angry with me when he learned I was alive and had hidden our child from him, I didnât know the definition of the word. Iâve never seen rage like the emotion that pours out of my mate as I lower my hands and step towards Blaise. The sound of his fury fills the room like the blast from a cannon, and he actually manages to break free of the small army pinning him down.
Blaiseâs spellcaster, just barely staggering to his feet, lashes out his power towards my mate, stopping him be fore he can collide with the tyrant in front of me. Bastien falls to the ground with a groan as the magic traps him in its hold, and I try to close the distance between us. Instead Blaise catches me around the wait, and I can only weep as I reach for my husband.
âItâll be okay.â | tell Bastien as he loses consciousness. âI promise.â
âThatâs it,â the madman praises me, his wide smile audi ble in his voice. âHold onto that hope, my beauty.â Before I can stop him, he straightens me up and looks me over, studying my fair skin even as he makes it positively crawl. Already I can feel myself lighting up again, the moonâs light surging through my veins out of instinct rather than skill. Blaises tsks, âWeâll have to do something about this magic of yours. You could really do some damage in the right cir cumstances.â
âYou can count on it.â | vow, trying and failing to pull away from him.
âAnd to think.â He leers, looking me up and down like a piece of meat, âYouâve already proven yourself capable of satisfying the strongest of Alphas, itâs almost as if heâs been preparing you for me.â
âYouâre dreaming,â | grit out through clenched fangs, âI will never willingly allow you to lay a finger on me.â
âAnd do you think I care if you are willing?â Blaise coun ters, âdo you not think I will appreciate you all the more for your fight?â
Realizing heâs the twisted sort of sadist that probably loves making others miserable, I soften my pose, ceasing to try and fight him and instead leaning into his large body. âBy all means, Alpha.â | encourage, hoping my willingness will turn him off. âTell me what you like.â
Blaise throws his head back and laughs, the same sort of delighted cackle he emitted when he realized Iâd man aged to harness my powers. âOh my clever pet, do you have any idea how long Iâve been waiting to find a she-wolf like you.â
âOf course I do.â | snap, giving up the act for the time being. âIâve been running from you my whole life â
even be fore I knew it. You killed my father, you caused my mother to die long before her time.â
âAnd you are even more magnificent than she was.â He traces a finger down my cheek, âthe last Volana,â he grins, looking down at my belly. âFor now.â
Narrowing my eyes, I wonder how much he actually knows about my bloodline. After all, thereâs no guarantee the child will inherit the gene, and thatâs assuming itâs an other girl. The magic is only passed from mother to daugh ter. Still, telling him that canât help me: either heâll decide to kill me now despite his filthy fantasies, or decide to indulge them for the few months he can before killing me.
âI can see what youâre thinking.â The wretched man tells me smugly. âThat thereâs a chance your child wonât be the gift Iâm hoping it to be.â I feel my eyes widen, and a skitter of worry works itâs way through my body. âBut Iâve been studying your kind since I was a boy, since the very first time I ever heard about the bloodline. I could tell you se crets about your powers you never dreamed possible.â
As he speaks I can only half concentrate on his words, because his guards are busy shackling Bastienâs legs and dragging him from the room. I continue staring after him even heâs well out of sight, and Blaise catches my chin be tween his thumb and forefinger, draggin my attention back to him. âFor example, I know that thereâs about a seventy percent chance the child will inherit the Volana gift if itâs a girl â and Volanaâs are almost twice as likely to bear daugh ters than they are sons.â
âThatâs not how biology works.â I hiss.
âMagic finds a way.â He smiles, sounding so much like Helene in that moment, that I realize sheâs missing for the first time. I donât know why she didnât stay and help us fight, but I trust her enough to know she wouldnât have simply abandoned me in my time of need. She must have realized we were too outnumbered, she probably divined Blaise wouldnât kill me now and slipped away to come back and fight another day. The tiny kernel of hope that formed when Blaise suggested keeping me for himself grows slightly, settling in my heart and giving me the strength to stare this monster in the eye.
âWe can find out soon enough what youâre expecting.â Blaise reasons, leading me from the church, âIf itâs a boy weâ Il simply get rid of it and make a new one.â The kernel of hope twists and writhes, suddenly feeling too small to do anyone any good. If Iâm having a boy he might abort it be fore I have enough time to escape and free Bastien, and as terrible as that sounds, imagining being raped just to make a child he can kill is worse.
Digging in my heels, I force Blaise to bodily drag me, but it barely slows him. Heâs too strong. âYou would kill your own child?â I squeak, unable to hide my horror.
Blaise only laughs. âIâm never going to die, so I donât need an heir. A boy might grow up to challenge me to be come Alpha, and I have no use for girls. Children are horri ble hassles â in fact you should probably thank me for sav ing you from the trial of motherhood. Youâre too lovely to wither away chasing after a bunch of brats.â He stops so suddenly that I almost fall over, and Iâm only grateful he catches me because the collision might have hurt the baby. Otherwise Iâd gladly smack my head on the church steps than have the psychopath pawing me this way.
When I look up at him, he looks as though heâs been struck with a brilliant idea â and that terrifies me more than anything. âIn fact.â He muses, ogling my curves, âyouâre too lovely to wither away at all. I think weâll have to make a few pups either way. One for me, and one for you.â
Shaking my head, I gape at him in disbelief. When the time comes to fool him, Iâll act as sweet and submissive as possible to annoy him, but right now Iâm incapable of keep ing my outrage to myself.
âYou know I knew only a monster could create this atrocity of a city, but I think you might be the devil himself.â
âThen itâs a good thing I wonât ever have to face judg ment in the afterlife.â He mocks me, not looking the least 81 17%
bit bothered by the accusation. âNow come along my pet, itâs time to see your new home.â