

Chapter 1 of Didn't Know I Was Alpha's Daughter When He Humiliated Me
"Don't be nervous. Just breathe."
I whispered the words like a spell, but they did nothing to steady the tremble in my fingers.
The silver necklace slipped between my hands, its cool weight grounding me—barely. The wolf emblem, delicate yet proud, shimmered in the morning sun that slanted through my bedroom window. I turned it over once, then again, like it might whisper answers if I held it long enough.
This is who I am, I reminded myself. Not just Isla from Silvercrest High. Isla Fitzgerald. Daughter of Liam Fitzgerald, Alpha of the Silver Hollow Pack.
For months, I’d hidden behind an ordinary name and a borrowed life—choosing silence over status, distance over legacy. Just to avoid being another shadow of my father’s fame. Just to feel normal.
He didn’t look at me like the world did—through the lens of bloodlines and rumors. He saw me. Not the name. Not the power. Just the girl beneath it all.
So. Here I was.
Hidden no longer.
Lyra, my wolf spirit, stirred in the back of my mind. Show him. Trust him. He has to know.
I met my own gaze in the mirror—dark eyes wide, almost too vulnerable—and tucked a strand of hair behind my ear. My reflection didn’t look like the daughter of an Alpha. It looked like a girl hoping too hard.
“Today,” I whispered. “Today he’ll understand.”
I fastened the necklace. The crest settled just beneath my collarbone, gleaming faintly against my skin. A whisper of who I really was—but only for Rupert. I wasn’t ready to announce myself to the world. Not yet.
My phone buzzed.
Rupert: See you at lunch. Can’t wait :)
My heart did a somersault. This was it. I'd tell him everything. I'd invite him to prom. And maybe, just maybe, we'd start something real.
The halls of Silvercrest buzzed with the usual midday chaos: lockers banging open, sneakers squeaking on linoleum, voices overlapping in a noisy, careless blur. Normally, my enhanced hearing hated this time of day. But not today.
They say that mood affects the way you perceive the world. Maybe it was true, because today, the world felt distant. Like I was walking through it but not of it.
I spotted Rupert near the east stairwell, casually leaning against his locker, flipping through his phone. His sun-kissed hair caught the light, and he laughed at something on the screen. My heart clenched—he really was beautiful. Not just outside, but the way he looked at me like I mattered. Like I was seen.
"Rupert?" I called softly as I approached.
He looked up, smile immediate. "Hey, gorgeous. I was starting to think you'd chickened out."
I laughed—nervous, breathy. "Never."
He tucked his phone away and gave me his full attention, the way he always did.
I held out the small velvet pouch.
“I made something for you,” I said, placing it in his palm. “Well, had it made. Just… open it.”
He untied the pouch and tipped the contents into his hand. The miniature silver wolf crest caught the light, a perfect tie pin, its details lovingly mirrored from my family’s emblem.
His fingers closed around it slowly. “Is this…?”
“It’s a symbol,” I said, brushing my fingers across the necklace at my throat. “Of where I come from. Who I really am. I wanted you to know the truth.”
For a beat, he said nothing. Then—too loud, too clear—he asked, “Wait. Is this supposed to be the Fitzgerald crest?”
My smile faltered. “Yes, it’s—”
"Wow." He chuckled. But it wasn’t kind. “Okay, hold on. Where’d you get this?”
Something in his tone twisted the air around us.
“What do you mean? I… It’s mine,” I said, voice unsteady. “I’m—”
“Did you steal it?” Rupert asked, louder this time.
The hallway seemed to freeze. A few students turned. Others paused mid-conversation.
“What? No. Rupert—”
“I mean, come on, Isla,” he said, scoffing now. “The Fitzgerald crest? You expect people to believe you have that kind of bloodline? What, are you suddenly royalty now?”
A low ripple of laughter stirred nearby. I blinked, confused. Why was he doing this?
"You said I could trust you," I whispered, barely audible.
"Oh, sweetheart." He smirked, and I no longer recognized the boy who'd once traced constellations on my palm. “You actually thought this was real? Us?”
I took a step back. My heart stuttered.
"You asked me to open up," I said. "You said I was different."
"Yeah. Different." He dangled the crest-tie pin like a dead thing. "This whole act you’ve been putting on—‘mysterious girl with a secret noble past.’ Please. You’re just some wannabe with a necklace and a fantasy.”
The crowd had grown. Phones were out. Smirks, whispers, hungry eyes.
“Rupert, stop.” My throat burned. “This isn’t you.”
“I know exactly who I am,” he said coolly. “You’re the one living in a delusion.”
Someone laughed. It sounded sharp. Ugly.
And then a figure stepped forward.
Seraphina Vale. All glossy blonde hair and designer confidence, slinking to Rupert’s side like she'd always belonged there. She didn’t look at me—she looked through me.
“Oh, is this the girl who’s been pretending to be Fitzgerald nobility?” she asked sweetly, mockingly. “Darling, that’s adorable.”
Before I could speak, Seraphina rose onto her toes and kissed Rupert—slow and possessive. The crowd erupted in cheers and catcalls.
I stood there, frozen.
When they finally pulled apart, Rupert didn’t even glance my way. Seraphina, however, turned with venom in her eyes and reached out, brushing her fingers over my necklace.
"This?" Seraphina sneered, her voice laced with cruel amusement. “This isn’t even a good fake. My family knows the Fitzgeralds. Trust me. They don’t produce... this.”
Her fingers closed around the silver chain at my neck—and yanked.
Pain lanced across my skin as the metal dug in, dragging hard against the hollow of my throat. I gasped, stumbling back, my hand flying to the spot where the chain had bitten in. Heat rushed to my cheeks—part pain, part humiliation.
I heard the crowd laugh. I saw a phone flash.
But all I could feel was the way my chest squeezed tight, like my heart was trying to fold in on itself.
Lyra howled in my mind, furious, wild. Let me out. Let me defend us.
But I couldn’t. Not here. Not with all of them watching.
Not with him.
“You’re making a mistake,” I whispered, barely able to breathe. My voice shook with the effort of holding everything in.
Rupert tilted his head, smiling like he was bored. “The only mistake was thinking you were ever worth my time.”
Laughter again—louder this time, sharper, like it had been waiting for permission to erupt.
My vision blurred.
I blinked hard. I couldn’t allow my tears to drop.
Don’t let them see.
My throat ached from swallowing it all down. I could feel the tears threatening to fall—but not here. Not in front of them. Not when they'd already taken everything else.
I turned and pushed through the crowd, their jeers and whispers peeling off me like needles. My feet moved faster than my thoughts—just get away, just go—
And then—
I slammed into a wall of muscle.
Strong arms steadied me. I looked up. A tall figure, dark-haired, broad-shouldered.
The crowd stilled.
Archibald Summerby.
The boy I'd been promised to. The Alpha heir I’d avoided for months. Arrogant, impossible, unavoidable.
His eyes landed on my tear-streaked face, then flicked over the crowd, narrowing sharply.
“Is—Fitzgerald?” His voice cut through the hallway like a blade.
I lost my words, unable to answer.
Just seconds ago, everything I’d hidden—everything I’d protected—was gone.
I should have looked away. Should have pretended not to know him, walked past, disappeared.
But somehow, my chest was burning. Out of humiliation. Or rage.
It made me stand still.
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