The Outcast Omega The Alpha King Found In The Montana Blizzard-mdue - Chainityai

The Outcast Omega The Alpha King Found In The Montana Blizzard-mdue

The white-haired omega was mending clothes alone when armored royal wolves surrounded her cabin.

The whole village had spent years pretending Gwendolyn Hayes was barely there.

They noticed her only when fever ran through a nursery, when a hunting wound turned red, or when winter tore through their blankets and they needed the quiet omega at the edge of Oak Haven to weave more.

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They came to her door with their eyes lowered, took what she made, and left payment on the porch as if touching her hand might bring misfortune into their houses.

Gwendolyn had learned not to ask for kindness from people who only borrowed her goodness in emergencies.

She lived where the mountain road ended, in a weather-beaten cabin pressed against the spruce forest, with an old stone hearth, a row of drying herbs, and the memory of her father in every nail and plank.

Arthur Hayes had built that cabin with his own hands.

He had also built the rules that trapped her inside it.

Keep your hood up.

Keep your eyes low.

Never argue with the pack.

Never let anyone see you glow in moonlight.

When Gwendolyn was a child, she thought those rules meant he was ashamed of her white hair and violet eyes.

When he died of winter fever, she buried him with that hurt still inside her.

Oak Haven buried him with respect, then turned on his daughter before the ground fully froze.

Alderman Regis said her father had been a useful warrior, but blood did not wash away an omen.

After that, Gwendolyn stopped being Arthur’s child and became the white curse at the edge of town.

The night everything broke open, snow had swallowed the road in both directions.

Gwendolyn sat by the fire mending a torn work shirt, her fingers stiff from cold, while the wind scratched at the shutters like nails.

Then the mountain began to thud.

It was too even to be thunder.

Too heavy to be village guards.

Too disciplined to be rogues.

Her inner wolf, usually quiet from years of submission, pressed itself low and whined.

The knock came once.

The door shuddered.

The knock came again.

Dust fell from the rafters.

Gwendolyn reached for the iron poker beside the hearth, though she knew it would do almost nothing if danger had chosen her cabin.

Still, a person who has been treated as disposable learns to hold something in her hand.

She lifted the latch.

The storm burst in and blew out her candle.

Beyond the threshold, her empty yard had become a wall of royal wolves.

They stood shoulder to shoulder in the snow, huge black bodies armored in iron, every chestplate carrying the crest of a crowned wolf over three peaks.

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