Current location: Novel nest The Alpha's Wrong Savior Chapter 9:The Heiress Fights Back

"The Alpha's Wrong Savior" Chapter 9:The Heiress Fights Back

The Voss corporate headquarters towered over downtown like a gleaming silver blade — elegant, imposing, and deceptively unbreakable. Elena strode through the marble lobby at 7:15 a.m., her cream silk blouse tucked into a tailored navy pencil skirt, Louboutin heels clicking with crisp authority. Her chestnut hair was pulled into a sleek low chignon, and her hazel-green eyes held a determined glint that masked the exhaustion and heartbreak still lingering from the garden confrontation.

She had barely slept. Nikolai’s cruel words had replayed in her mind like a broken record — sharp, cutting, designed to wound. Yet instead of breaking her further, they had ignited something cold and resolute in her chest.

If he wanted to play power games, she would meet him on the battlefield he chose.

“Miss Voss,” her father’s executive assistant greeted her with visible relief. “Your father is waiting in the main conference room. The situation has… escalated overnight.”

Elena nodded, keeping her expression composed. Inside, her healing gift still ached faintly from the emotional toll of the past days, but she pushed it down. Today was not about feelings. Today was about survival.

She entered the glass-walled conference room where her father, Marcus Voss, sat at the head of a long obsidian table alongside three senior executives. Holographic displays floated above the table, showing stock charts, shipping manifests, and red-flagged contracts.

“Elena,” her father said, voice heavy with fatigue. “Volkov’s legal team moved faster than we anticipated. They’ve quietly pressured three of our largest shipping partners to delay contracts. They’re citing ‘security concerns’ with our routes near Volkov territory. It’s subtle, but effective. We’re already seeing a six percent drop in projected quarterly revenue.”

Elena took her seat, folding her hands neatly on the table. The city skyline stretched behind the glass walls, morning light glinting off steel and glass. “This isn’t random. Nikolai is testing us. He wants to weaken the Voss name before formally dissolving the betrothal. He thinks we’ll fold.”

One of the executives, a sharp-eyed woman named Lydia, leaned forward. “We’ve countered with standard legal pushback, but Volkov’s influence runs deep in the port authorities. If this continues, we could lose two major European contracts by the end of the month.”

Elena’s mind worked quickly, years of watching her father navigate supernatural and human politics coming to the forefront. She may have been raised as the graceful heiress, the secret healer, but she was also a Voss. Steel ran in her blood.

“Call our contacts at Meridian Logistics,” she said calmly. “Offer them a fifteen percent discount on the next two quarters if they publicly renew with us today. Leak a statement to the press about strengthening our independent shipping alliances. And reach out to Senator Hargrove — quietly. Remind him of the campaign contributions we made last year and the… special favors we’ve provided his family’s pack.”

Her father raised an eyebrow, a flicker of pride cutting through his worry. “You’re playing hardball.”

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“I’m protecting what’s ours,” Elena replied, voice steady but edged with steel. “Nikolai Volkov wants to paint us as weak political relics. We will remind him that the Voss family built half the infrastructure his pack relies on.”

For the next three hours, Elena orchestrated a quiet counteroffensive. She made calls using her personal connections — old alliances her mother had cultivated, favors owed to her family across both human elite circles and hidden supernatural networks. She authorized emergency fund transfers to stabilize key suppliers and personally reviewed revised contract language that closed loopholes Volkov’s team had been exploiting.

By midday, the tide had begun to shift.

Two major partners renewed their contracts publicly. A respected business journal published a positive piece on Voss Industries’ “resilient independent strategy” — a piece Elena had gently nudged into existence through a contact at the editorial board. The stock stabilized. The bleeding slowed.

But Elena wasn’t finished.

In her private office overlooking the river, she stood by the floor-to-ceiling windows, arms crossed, watching barges move slowly along the water. The faint scent of her jasmine perfume mixed with the leather and mahogany of the room. Her phone buzzed — a message from one of her most trusted informants.

**“Volkov’s team was behind the pressure on Carter Shipping. Direct order from the Alpha himself.”**

Elena’s lips pressed into a thin line. So it was personal.

A soft knock sounded. Her father entered, closing the door behind him.

“You did well today,” he said quietly, pride evident in his voice. “I haven’t seen you like this in years. Not since your mother…”

Elena turned, her hazel-green eyes meeting his. For a moment, vulnerability flickered across her face. “He accused me of being power-hungry. Of using the betrothal to climb. He chose a thief over me, Father. A woman who stole the medallion I earned with my own hands and blood.”

Marcus Voss sighed, stepping closer. “The Volkov boy carries heavy scars. His rise was soaked in blood. Trust does not come easily to him.”

“That doesn’t excuse cruelty,” Elena whispered. Then her spine straightened again. “But I will not let his blindness destroy our family. If he wants war through business, I’ll give him one.”

Her father studied her for a long moment, then nodded. “You’ve grown into something formidable, Elena. Your mother would be proud. Just… be careful. The mate bond you feel — it’s rare. Powerful. It can destroy as easily as it binds.”

Elena touched her chest absently, where the phantom ache of the bond still throbbed. Even now, miles away, she could sense Nikolai’s presence like a dark shadow at the edge of her awareness. Angry. Restless. Conflicted.

“I know,” she said softly. “But I refuse to be his victim.”

---

Later that afternoon, Elena made one final strategic move.

She attended a private luncheon with three key supernatural allies — old families who had worked with the Voss for generations. Over chilled white wine and delicate seafood, she wove a narrative of strength and stability. She hinted at future healing support for their packs, offered favorable trade terms, and subtly reinforced the message that the Voss family was not to be underestimated.

By the time she left the restaurant, three more contracts had been secured.

As her driver navigated through downtown traffic, Elena leaned her head back against the leather seat, closing her eyes. Exhaustion tugged at her, but so did a quiet sense of triumph. For the first time since Nikolai had torn her heart open with his cruel words, she felt in control again.

Her phone vibrated. An unknown number.

She answered.

A deep, familiar voice — laced with that faint Slavic accent — filled the line.

“Elena.”

Her breath caught. Nikolai.

“I see you’ve been busy,” he said, voice dangerously smooth. “Countering my moves. Interesting strategy for someone who claims she wants nothing from me.”

Elena’s grip tightened on the phone. Even through the line, the fated mate bond pulled at her — heat blooming low in her belly, her healing gift stirring restlessly.

“I’m simply protecting my family, Alpha Volkov,” she replied, keeping her voice cool and composed. “Something you seem determined to destroy.”

A low, rough chuckle sent shivers down her spine. “Careful, little heiress. You’re showing your teeth. I might start believing you’re more dangerous than you appear.”

Elena smiled, small and sharp, even though he couldn’t see it.

“Good,” she whispered. “Perhaps you should.”

She ended the call before he could respond, her heart racing.

The game had truly begun.

And for the first time, Nikolai Volkov was facing an opponent who refused to kneel.

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