
I spent eighteen years raising a false cub, while my own cub was sold by my younger sister, and even my husband knew the truth from beginning to the end. At that day, I was cleaning my son’s room when I found a document he had brought home from school. Shifter Bureau — Pre‑Coronation Lineage Profile. I flipped to the section marked *Predicted Species Manifestation*. *Felidae - Panthera onca (Jaguar) dominant traits detected.* I stared at those words. I stopped breathing. I am a snow leopard. My father was a snow leopard. My mother was a jaguar. My husband Caelan was a Cheetah. There is no way our genes could produce a pure jaguar dominant trait. In our entire family, the only one with jaguar dominant blood is my younger sister. Mirabel. I took the file to Caelan. My polite, soft-spoken husband took one look at the page and exploded. “Our son is about to have his Coronation Shift. What else do you want, Sylvana? You’re always suspicious of everything. Are you losing your mind again?” "Caelan." I kept my voice level. "School predictions aren't always accurate. I want a formal bloodline test at the Shifter Medical Center." "Absolutely not." He slapped me twice. Hard. Then he slammed the door and locked it from the outside. I listened to the lock turn. Then I laughed. Eighteen years of marriage. Eighteen years of devotion. All of it, wasted on a man who'd lock his wife inside her own house. I picked up my phone. I called my husband's biggest competitor. “I agree to transfer my patents to your company.” ...... I hung up. A bitter cold settled in my chest. There shouldn't be any problems with the school's documents. The school tracked their half-shifts for ten years — ears, tails, eye color changes, partial markings — then sent the data to the Bureau. The Bureau used it to predict what species the kid would manifest at their Coronation Shift. Every Shifter kid got one before their eighteenth birthday. And Hayden was coming home next week for his. His first full transformation. Not a public ceremony—like a human signing for their first ID card — just official paperwork confirming you'd become an adult Shifter citizen. But now, what should i do? What a fool I had been. For years, big companies had tried to recruit me. I said no to all of them. For Caelan. For Hayden. I stayed in the shadows behind Vicksmore Group. That patent was worth a trillion. I'd never taken a cent of dividends. I sat on the couch until three in the morning. Caelan came home late. We sat in the dark. Neither of us spoke. We had good years once. When he first started the company, I stayed up with him through the nights, rewriting his pitch decks. When I got tired, I'd lean on his shoulder and doze. He used to say, “Sylvana, when the company is big, I’ll give you everything.” The company made it. Then he was never home. When he came back, he was too tired to talk. I said the house felt empty. He said, “You have Hayden.” I'd say I wanted to go to the Shifter Reserve to shift, get some air. He'd say, "Have my assistant take you. I'm swamped." I stopped asking. I told myself this was what marriage looked like. Passion fading into companionship. Romance into family. Now I realized only one of us had made that shift. And he had turned into something else. ...... At dawn, I went to the kitchen. Caelan was already there. He hadn’t cooked in a long time. “You’re up?” He looked back at me. Dark circles under his eyes. “I made breakfast.” Milk. Toast. Fried eggs, slightly burnt. He sat down. Neither of us mentioned yesterday. “Hayden comes home next week.” I paused with my cup halfway to my lips. “I know.” His voice dropped. “Sylvana, don’t overthink this. I promise I’ll spend more time with you and Hayden.” I looked up at him. I'd looked at this face for eighteen years. Watched it grow from boyish to lined. I used to know when he was lying. The slight twitch at the corner of his mouth. The way his eyes softened before he told the truth. Now I couldn’t read him at all. I looked down. “So when are we doing the bloodline test?" The warmth on his face froze. Then it disappeared. “You’re really doing this?” His fork clattered onto the plate. Then he looked at me with what seemed like disappointment and walked out of the house. I remembered when Hayden was small. Everyone said he looked like Caelan. No one ever said he looked like me. Not once. From age seven, his half-shifts had always shown pale fur and faint scattered spots. Classic Cheetah cub. Caelan was wealthy. He hired private doctors to run all of Hayden's checkups. Every report came back the same. **Cheetah dominant.** And me? I wasn't a geneticist. I was an engineer. So I'd believed it. For eighteen years.
I walked to the balcony and watched his car leave the garage. Then I went to his study. A divorce petition and an asset division agreement sat on the desk. I'd drafted them a year ago. Just in case. The patent that built Vexmoor Corporation — I owned a hundred percent of it. But Caelan had forgotten that. He'd started treating it like his own. My phone rang. My mother. “Sylvana, feeling better?” Her voice was light. "Your sister is coming back next week. Caelan knew you weren't feeling well, so he booked her ticket himself that she could come back and help you. So He's giving her a director's position at Vexmoor." A director's position. I worked for the company for years. No title. No recognition. She comes back and gets a office. A few scattered memories surfaced. Caelan and Mirabel — when had they gotten so close? And she was coming back. Caelan arranged it. Mirabel. The name made my eye twitch. "It's been so long since you two saw each other," my mother went on. "We're all coming over for dinner next week. One family together." I kept my voice steady. “What time? I’ll get food ready.” "Don't worry about it! We'll bring the food. You just rest." She paused. "Sylvana, listen to me. Be warm with Caelan tonight. Men have their pride." I couldn’t listen anymore. I made a few sounds and hung up. Then I booked a rush appointment at the Shifter Medical Center. The Bureau-affiliated facility. The only one whose results were legally binding. No private doctors. No forged reports. I went into Hayden's room and pulled hair from his comb. After I sent them to the center, I messaged a private investigator. Check Caelan’s financial records. Everything. Twelve hours later, the lab report came to my inbox. I sat in the study and stared at the file for a long time. Then I opened it. I skipped to the last page. “By official determination of the Shifter Medical Center, Ms. Sylvana is not the biological mother of Mr. Hayden. Tested subject shows Cheetah × Jaguar hybrid (F1) bloodline. Complete conflict with registered maternal snow leopard lineage.” In my gut, I'd known. But seeing it written down was something else. My hands started shaking and couldn’t breathe. I stood up and walked to the window. Eighteen years. I closed the file. I walked to the window. I tried to breathe. Outside, autumn had come to the city. The plane trees were turning gold. Far in the distance, the dome of the Shifter Bureau caught the afternoon light. I'd had a happy family once. And I thought they would be the two people I protected for the rest of my life. My phone buzzed. From the investigator. A few screenshots- Bank transfers. Caelan’s personal account had been sending fixed monthly transfers to an overseas account for at least ten years. The overseas account belonged to Mirabel. Not a small amount. But enough to keep one person living comfortably abroad. The last line of the report said: **Ms. Mirabel owns a property overseas. Purchased nineteen years ago. Paid in full. ** Nineteen years ago. The year I was told I was pregnant. The same year Mirabel went abroad. A dark thought formed in my mind. ...... On the weekend, my parents arrived with bags of food. Mirabel came behind them. Cream suit. A gift box in her hand. “Sylvana.” She smiled and stepped forward to hug me. I turned slightly. She missed. Her smile froze for a second, then went back to normal. “Long time no see. I brought you a present.” The dining table filled up fast. My mother bustled around the kitchen. My father and Caelan settled into the living room, talking shop. Mirabel sat naturally in the chair next to Caelan. I frowned but said nothing. At dinner, Mirabel reached for a dish. A sapphire bracelet slid down her wrist. I stopped chewing. I had seen that bracelet at an auction two years ago. Stunning blue. Rare clarity. I wanted it, but the price was too high. Caelan had said, “If you like it, just get it. Money's not a problem." I said, “Too expensive. Forget it.” Later, I asked him about it. He said someone else had bought it. Now it was on Mirabel’s wrist. “Sylvana, what are you looking at?” Mirabel noticed my stare. She turned her wrist playfully. “Pretty, isn’t it? Caelan gave it to me. He said it suits me.” Caelan choked on his soup. He looked up at me. “A welcome gift. For Mirabel’s new job.” “Right,” my mother jumped in. "We're family. What's wrong with a gift between family? Sylvana, don't be petty." I didn’t say anything. I just looked at Caelan. He avoided my eyes. Mirabel smiled again, her voice soft. “Don’t misunderstand, Sylvana. I just think some things look better on the right person. Like this bracelet. Doesn't it shine more on me than it did in that auction case?" She was watching Caelan when she said it. I knew that look. It was smug. Possession. The way a woman looks at a man she thinks belongs to her. After dinner, Mirabel volunteered to wash the dishes. Caelan stood up and said he would help. They walked into the kitchen together. I sat in the living room. I heard water running. Low voices. Mirabel’s soft laugh now and then. I glanced toward the living room. My parents were watching television, unaware of anything. I stood up slowly. And walked toward the kitchen quietly. The closer I got, the hotter the mark burned—until it felt like my skin was no longer mine. I stopped at the doorway. Just looked through the narrow gap. Mirabel stood at the sink, sleeves pushed up, humming softly as she washed dishes. And behind her— Caelan. They were too close together. Suddenly, Kaylan began to move, his lower body gently and repeatedly bumping against her hips. His hands were placed at her waist like it belonged there. Mirabel let out a series of ambiguous laughs. Then I saw Caelan gradually reach forward with both hands from behind her, cupping Mirabel's full breasts and gently kneading them. Caelan's breath brushed against Mirabel's neck, licking her marks softly. Mirabel tilted her head back slightly, laughing at something when he near her ear again. My breath stopped. Caelan leaned in closer. Their movements seemed to be getting more and more intense. The mark on my neck burned so violently I almost grabbed the doorframe to stay upright. My body understood before my mind did. This wasn’t new. I had felt this for eighteen years. Every time I mentioned it to Caelan, he smiled and said I was just sensitive. “Some shifters are more aware of their marks. Nothing serious.” “But I never felt this before…” "You haven't shifted in forever. Your body's out of practice." He always said that. I always believed him. Now I knew the truth. The resonance wasn’t mine. It was hers. And every time I told him something was wrong, he called me sensitive. Every single time. I took a step forward without thinking— “Sylvana?” My mother’s voice came from the living room. “Can you bring me some water?” I froze. The sound shattered whatever courage I had gathered. When I looked back toward the kitchen again— Caelan had already turned slightly. Mirabel’s smile was still there. As if nothing had happened. As if I had imagined all of it. I stepped back slowly and walked away from the door. My mother called again. “Sylvana?” “Yes,” I answered softly. My voice didn’t sound like mine anymore. Then I went into the living room and sat on the sofa. My mother slid onto the sofa next to me. "Sylvana, look at how helpful she's being. She came back to support Caelan. You could be a little warmer to her. You're her sister." My father weighed in too. "Caelan built that company from nothing. Having family on the inside is good for him. You're the older sister. Have some grace." I turned to look at my father. "Dad. Caelan is my husband. Mirabel is your other daughter. Don't you think they're too close?" His face darkened. “What are you implying?” "What if I told you," I said quietly, "that Hayden might not be mine?" Both of them froze. My mother recovered first. She grabbed my wrist. "Sylvana! Don't say things like that! Of course Hayden is your son. What's gotten into you?" My father slammed his hand on the table. “Enough! You really do need to see a doctor. Caelan was right.” That was the last thing I needed to hear. Their reactions killed the last bit of hope I had. They only cared about Caelan. About what he gave them. Theynever knew that Vexmoor only existed because of me.
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