The Alpha's Captured Mate
dd
the pack lands," Willis said as he entere
stack of reports across my desk. The majority of the reports were a
the whole of Wyoming mountains, with over two thousand healthy wolves. But after a few weeks, more sickness was recorded and soon the
d my territory. My people were suffering and my first
es. We had hired experts to examine the nearby rivers, reservoirs and water tanks.
n communities so samples of it were sent to both humans and e
lem even after the entire pack was fumigated, the
t each other, the sickness sprung up frustration from the f
much weight on it and I could feel th
ght have been the air, but it was a strange presence. Something was
he told me to search the area," I said, dropping my pen to the desk as I thought hard. "But I didn't expect it to be a human. It's
e possessed the strength of a young boy and the mind of an old
to believe that a human was in the pack as I looked
pha. We
hard that I almost had whiplash. "Her?" My he
s below the mountains, we found a small cabin. At first, we didn't know it was occupied but
ened the burden on my shoulders. It wasn't that the humans wer
ection of our supernatural nature. But the humans were generally curious beings and if they
atories and cages while being experimented on very harshly. The humans were cruel a
e managed to infi
ing a calculation in my head of
e any other humans around. It appears she's alone. We observed
iscovers our people we are in danger. Do you understand the seriou
n say she didn't look like she wanted to cause any proble
saw. Gather twenty scouts we run to the mountains at nightfall and we capture her and bring her here. I would get t
Despite the unusual circumstances, there was something about her that didn't indicate ho
ol come searching out woods and mountains? Where do we hide then? We have many sick people and we can't afford to move them if all of the humans assembl
an might have entered the pack unintentionally and her behavior gave no indication of aggression. In f
is situation any further. Every moment we spend on this human takes away the opportunity to find the solution to the pack's sickness.
uld not sit down and let a human roam free in my pack, my territory and amongst my people," I said in my Alpha's tone as Willis nod
meet at the clearing at sunset," he s
e worst-case scenarios in my head and the possible solutions. There wa
k weight as I rubbed my eyes tiredly. I was going to cal
she was in her twenties. I made up an image of a beautiful woman in my head with tear-
ous. The humans were not open to welcoming a supernatural being and there was no
e Alpha and my words were absolute. Huma