Page 63 of Mark of an Alpha


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“How are you connected to him? I mean, is he just trying to get you back because you’re an omega, or—”

“He’s the cubs’ sire.”

Tao’s eyes rounded before he glanced back out the front window. “Holy shit.”

Tears filled Xias’s eyes again as fear flooded his heart. “He wants Bai, but he ordered the others be put down because he doesn’t need them.”

“Why wouldn’t he need them?”

“Bai is male. Liang and Ying are girls. Osamu doesn’t need girl children. He can’t breed them, so they have no value in his eyes.”

“But they all have blue eyes,” Tao insisted. “Girls or not, they are alphas.”

“Not in Osamu’s clan. Only males can be alphas.”

“That’s ridiculous. Male or female, an alpha is still an alpha.”

Xias thought that was true, too, but what did he know? He was an omega. “I won’t let him have my cubs, any of them.”

“You don’t have to,” Tao said. “You’re an omega. Your cubs belong to you.”

“Not in Osamu’s clan. All the cubs belong to him.”

“Just because he might have sired them does not mean—”

“No, you don’t understand. All the cubs belong to him. He claims any cub born into the clan. It doesn’t matter if he is the sire or not.”

Tao’s jaw dropped, and for just a moment the snow CAT slowed. “Are you serious?”

Xias nodded.

“You do understand how wrong that is, right?”

Xias nodded again. “When I shifted for the first time and he discovered I was an omega, Osamu took me from my parents. I haven’t been able to speak to them since.”

He’d seen them in passing at mandatory clan functions, but that was it. He wasn’t even sure his parents knew he’d given birth to his cubs. He wasn’t sure if they would care. He’d known their love and affection before he’d been taken away, but Xias had no way to know if they agreed with what Osamu was doing or not.

“Xias.”

Xias reached over and grabbed Tao’s arm when his name whispered softly through his mind. “Zhuang?”

“I’m on my way.”

Xias swallowed tightly before asking, “Are you hurt?”

“Nothing that won’t heal in a couple of hours.”

Xias felt as though he could breathe again. “We’re not too far ahead of you. I’ll have Tao pull over and wait for you.”

“No, don’t do that. I took care of the cats that Osamu sent after us, but he’ll send more.”

Xias glanced at Tao, who was staring at him in confusion. “Zhuang is on his way.”

Tao chuckled. “Damn, I forgot about the mate link.”

Xias had, too, but now he was glad he had. If Tao was right, and he had said something, he would have split Zhuang’s concentration between the fight and him. That wouldn’t have been a good thing.

“He says to keep going and he’ll catch up.”