Fated to the Alpha–And His Triplet Brothers -
Chapter 21: The Dream and the Dress
Chapter 21: The Dream and the Dress
~Hazel’s POV~
"Come here..."
A voice rasped after me, low and twisted like something crawling up from beneath the earth.
I ran. NovelFire
Faster than I ever had before, legs screaming, lungs burning, heart thudding loud in my ears. The air was thick and heavy I couldn’t tell if it was night or if darkness itself had swallowed me whole. I just knew I had to keep running.
I didn’t know where I was.
All I knew was that the voice guttural, broken, inhuman was behind me. Chasing.
My bare feet slapped against cold, damp earth. Tree branches scratched at my arms like fingers trying to pull me back. The scent of decay curled in my nose—wet leaves, moss, something else. Something rotting.
Then my ear caught a noise.
A cry.
A baby’s cry.
High-pitched, fragile... coming from the woods up ahead.
I faltered, breath hitching. My mind screamed at me to run the other way, but my feet turned toward the sound.
I was in a forest. But how? How did I leave Father’s house? I didn’t remember walking out the door. Didn’t remember anything at all.
Not that Father’s house wasn’t its own personal hell, but still... this place was different. Wilder. More dangerous.
I ran toward the baby’s cry, drawn by something I couldn’t explain. The shadow behind me was gaining. I could feel it. I didn’t look back.
"You’re an abomination," the voice hissed again, jagged and seething. "You are bringing more abomination. You’re destroying the balance of nature. You need to be taken down."
Abomination? What did that even mean? I was just... me. Ordinary. Forgotten. The rejected human girl in a cursed household.
How was I suddenly some kind of threat?
My thoughts were spinning, heart thundering as I pushed through thorned bushes and crooked trees. Then, suddenly I tripped.
I fell.
Right in front of a basket.
The baby’s cries pierced the silence, trembling and desperate. In the dimness, I could see the small silhouette of a child swaddled inside. My hand reached out instinctively—but a shadow loomed behind me.
I turned my head slowly.
A dark figure was walking forward. Taller than any man I’d ever seen. Not walking gliding. There was no face, only blackness, swirling and alive. In its hand, A stake. Sharpened and glinting. Like it had been waiting just for me.
My chest hurt. A sharp, aching pulse right over my heart. I couldn’t move. Couldn’t scream.
The baby cried louder, and then
Pain.
White-hot. Piercing. My entire world cracked in half as the stake drove through my heart.
And I screamed.
I jolted upright in bed, a strangled cry ripping from my throat. My hand flew to my chest, and for a terrifying second, I was sure the stake was still there. I could feel the throbbing ache deep in my sternum.
My fingers trembled as they touched the spot. I gasped.
There was... something. A small mark. Tiny, but there.
How? It was just a dream. A horrible, twisted dream. That’s all.
Wasn’t it?
My head was spinning when my door burst open.
"Happy wedding day!" Ariel’s voice chirped, far too cheerful for how haunted I felt. She shoved past the cluster of maids holding baskets of beauty creams, silks, perfumes, towels, and brushes. Ariel leapt on the bed and hugged me tightly. I blinked, still dazed.
The warmth of her arms around me helped anchor me back to the moment. The pain in my chest dulled slightly.
Should I tell her?
Would she call me insane? Probably.
I peeked under my nightgown again. The tiny injury was gone. Not even a shadow remained. My skin was smooth, untouched. Like nothing had happened.
Maybe I was crazy.
Ariel pulled back, her smile softening. "What’s going on?" she asked, her eyes narrowing slightly. "You look like you’ve seen a ghost."
I opened my mouth, but the words wouldn’t come. I just shook my head. No point trying to explain what even I didn’t understand.
She didn’t push. "Good," she said instead, clapping her hands. "Let’s get you ready!"
The bathroom was like something out of a dream one of the good ones, not the nightmare I’d just woken from. A large porcelain tub stood at the center, filled with steaming lavender-scented water and scattered rose petals. Honey swirled in the mix, catching the light in golden ribbons.
I stared, stunned.
Normally, a bath meant a cracked basin, cold water, and a quick scrub if I was lucky.
"This is courtesy of Beta Caspian," one of the maids said with a small smile, as though she could read my astonishment.
Of course it was Caspian. Who else?
They bathed me carefully, scrubbing every inch of skin like I was royalty. But I couldn’t relax. I kept thinking about the dream. The baby. The mark. The voice that said I was bringing abomination.
I told the maids to leave. It was too strange having someone else bathe me, and I needed space. Alone with the lavender and the silence, I breathed in deeply and tried to calm the pounding of my heart.
By the time they returned, I’d dried off and was wrapped in a towel. They helped me dress slowly, reverently, like I was something fragile.
And then I saw it.
My dress. Although I’ve seen it before but it even looked more beautiful this time.
It shimmered like moonlight, covered in delicate lace and sewn-in crystals. Every inch was perfection, hugging my frame just right. As they fastened the last clasp and stepped back, I turned to the mirror and
I gasped.
For once, it wasn’t in shock or fear or disbelief.
I looked... beautiful. Really, truly beautiful.
My hair was styled into a loose bun, elegant but simple, with two strands curling around my face. They framed my hazel eyes, which seemed to glow under the golden light.
Ariel appeared beside me in a dress that mirrored mine, holding a small bouquet.
"You’re glowing," she whispered.
I smiled at her. "So are you."
We descended the stairs slowly, and the atmosphere changed.
Selene. Father. Natasha. Sophia. Lilian.
They were all waiting.
The air turned colder. I felt every pair of eyes snap toward me the moment I stepped into the light, but I didn’t shrink away. No. I stepped further into it. Let the diamonds on my dress catch the light and shine in their envious little faces.
Natasha’s lips curled into something that might’ve been a smile if it weren’t so sour.
Selene rolled her eyes. "When you’re done with your princess moment, let us know. Everyone’s waiting."
The venom in her voice didn’t touch me.
We moved outside where the Gilbert’s bus waited but then Father stopped me. A maid beside him gestured to a sleek black limo parked just beyond the others. Its paint shimmered like obsidian.
"That one’s for you," he said flatly. "Courtesy of Sir Claus."
Sir Claus. The former Alpha.
My heart did something strange swelled, ached, beat faster.
Before I could step in alone, Ariel darted forward and jumped in beside me, ignoring her mother’s protests. She clutched my hand gently. "You didn’t think I’d let you face all this by yourself, did you?"
The cold air outside seemed to vanish inside the limo. But the chill in my bones remained.
The dream still hovered over me. The pain. The shadow. The baby.
What a day today will be.
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