Claimed by My Mafia Alpha King
Chapter 134
Irina’s POV
"Irina, I don’t think you should stay here anymore."
The rag slipped from my fingers. It hit the floor with a wet smack.
The world stopped spinning. The air left my lungs.
*No. No, please no.*
The old fear—the primal, suffocating terror of being cast out—slammed into me so hard I physically stumbled backward. My shoulder hit the heavy metal filing cabinet behind the desk. My heart hammered violently against my ribs, a frantic, trapped bird.
I was being rejected. Again.
"What did I do?" The words tumbled out of my mouth, high and desperate. "Tell me what I did wrong. I’ll fix it. I swear I’ll fix it."
Elena blinked, clearly startled by my sudden, explosive reaction. "Irina—"
"Is it the baby?" I gasped, glancing down at the bassinet. Luka was still sleeping soundly, completely oblivious to his mother’s world collapsing. "Is he too loud? Is he distracting the patients? I can find a sitter. I don’t know how, but I will. I’ll leave him at the apartment. I’ll figure it out."
"Irina, stop."
"I can take a pay cut!" I pleaded, my hands gripping the edge of the polished wood desk so hard my knuckles turned stark white. The thought of losing this job, of losing this safe haven, was paralyzing. "I’ll work longer hours. I’ll scrub the floors. Please, Elena. Please don’t send me away. We have nowhere else to go."
Elena’s face fell. Realization washed over her features, immediately followed by profound, aching regret.
She moved fast. She stepped quickly around the counter, closing the distance between us, and grabbed both of my trembling hands. Her grip was warm. Firm. Deeply grounding.
"Oh, sweetheart," Elena said, her voice laced with immediate guilt. "No. No, I am so sorry. I said that terribly."
I stared at her, my chest heaving, my lungs struggling to pull in air. "You’re... you’re not firing me?"
"I am absolutely not firing you," Elena said firmly, holding my gaze to make sure I believed her. "I would be completely lost without you. Patricia would probably quit tomorrow if you left."
I let out a shaky, jagged breath, but the panic was still buzzing like electricity beneath my skin. "Then why did you say I shouldn’t stay here?"
Elena squeezed my hands. She didn’t let go.
"Because Mia talked to me," she said softly.
I froze.
"She told me about your conversation the other day at the apartment," Elena continued, her tone gentling. "About the anatomy textbooks. About how you wished you could study. How you wished you had a real choice about your future."
My cheeks flushed hot with shame. I looked down at the floor, suddenly feeling incredibly ungrateful. "I didn’t mean to complain. I am so thankful for this job, Elena. I truly am."
"Look at me," Elena commanded gently.
I brought my eyes back up to hers.
"You are incredibly smart, Irina," Elena said, her voice filled with absolute conviction. "You learn faster than anyone I’ve ever trained. You memorized our entire complex filing system in three days. You catch paperwork errors that my experienced nurses miss."
She paused, letting the words sink into my skin.
"But it’s more than just being smart," she said softly. "You are deeply, profoundly kind. You have a natural instinct for healing. You see people’s pain before they even speak. You did it again today with that terrified pregnant girl in the waiting room."
I swallowed hard, my throat clicking.
"You belong in medicine," Elena said simply. "You belong in a classroom. You shouldn’t be spending the rest of your life filing my insurance claims and wiping down this counter. That is exactly what I meant when I said you shouldn’t stay here."
She let go of my hands and stepped back slightly, giving me space to breathe.
"I think you should go to school," Elena stated. "I think you should get your GED, and then enroll in a nursing program. Or pre-med, if you want. Whatever you choose. But you need to start."
My head spun. The dream was beautiful, but it was just a dream. The reality of the human world was heavy and unforgiving.
"I can’t," I whispered, shaking my head frantically. "Elena, I can’t. It’s too much."
"Why not? You can continue to live at our apartment," Elena offered without a single moment of hesitation. "Mia loves having you there. We all love having you and Luka there. You have a roof over your head. You have a support system."
"It’s not just the apartment!" I stepped back, my hands trembling again. "It’s the money! I don’t have enough money."
"Irina—"
"I’m saving," I interrupted, the practical, terrified survivor in me taking over. "I put every extra dollar I can into the envelope under my mattress. But school is expensive. Tests are expensive. Textbooks are expensive. I have a baby to feed. I have to buy diapers and formula and clothes. I haven’t saved nearly enough yet. Maybe in a few years, when Luka is older, but not now. I just can’t afford it."
Elena watched me spiral. She didn’t interrupt. She just let me get it all out.
When I finally stopped to take a breath, she smiled. It was that same calm, maternal smile she gave her most anxious patients.
"Irina, listen to me," she said quietly. "Do you have any idea how much money you have saved me since you started working here?"
I blinked, thoroughly confused. "What?"
"Before you came, this front desk was a disaster," Elena said matter-of-factly. "We were constantly paying late fees on misfiled insurance claims. We were losing patients because the waiting room was too chaotic. I was actively looking to hire another full-time triage nurse—a salary that would have cost me tens of thousands of dollars a year."
She pointed a finger at me.
"You fixed all of that. You organized the entire system. You calm the patients. You saved me from having to hire extra staff." Elena crossed her arms, looking at me with immense pride. "You have brought more value to this clinic in a few months than money can buy."
I stared at her, completely speechless. In my old life, my labor was expected. It was brutally demanded. I was never told I had value. I was just told I wasn’t working fast enough.
"We are going to pay for your classes," Elena stated. It wasn’t an offer. It was a fact.
"No," I gasped, instinctively rejecting the charity. "Elena, I can’t take your money. You’ve already given me so much. You gave me a home."
"It’s not charity," Elena said firmly, cutting off my protests. "Consider it an investment. Consider it a loan. We will cover the costs of your GED prep, the exam fees, and your first semester of classes. Once you graduate and get a high-paying job in a hospital, you can pay us back."
"A loan?" I whispered.
"A loan," she nodded. "Between family. No interest. No deadlines. You just focus on studying, and you focus on that beautiful boy right there."
She gestured toward the bassinet. Luka was still sleeping, his tiny chest rising and falling in perfect peace.
"Why?" My voice cracked. The thick, defensive walls I had built around my heart for an entire year were crumbling, piece by piece. "Why are you doing this for me? You don’t owe me anything."
Elena reached out and gently brushed a stray strand of hair behind my ear. The touch was so tender, so incredibly motherly, it made my breath hitch in my throat.
"Because someone once gave me a chance when I had absolutely nothing," Elena said softly. "And because I see exactly who you are, Irina. You are a survivor. And it’s time you stopped surviving, and started actually living."
I looked into her dark, warm eyes. There was no pity there. Only belief. Pure, unwavering belief in my potential.
For a year, I had been told I was nothing. A useless, broken omega. A mistake. I had believed it. I had let Maxim and his pack grind my spirit into the dirt until I thought I deserved to be there.
But here was a brilliant, successful woman telling me I was smart. Telling me I had a gift. Telling me I deserved a real future.
The sheer weight of her kindness was too much.
A hot tear spilled over my lower lash line. Then another.
I tried to wipe them away, but my hands were shaking too much. My chest hitched, and a choked sob ripped through my throat. Elena didn’t say another word. She just stepped forward and pulled me into a tight, warm embrace. I buried my face in her shoulder, completely overwhelmed.