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Chapter 3 - CHAPTER 3

Broken by my Alpha

The morning after the announcement, the sky broke open with rain.

It was a cold, angry rain. Not a cleansing one. It soaked the earth in silence, and not even the wolves dared speak too loudly. It was the kind of rain that refused to wash away pain, only bury it deeper.

Liora stood beneath the awning of the healer's hut, arms crossed, her cloak already heavy with damp. She watched as Vanya Spike laughed at something Gonzalo said, her fingers brushing his arm in a practiced, intimate motion. She tilted her head toward him the way Liora once had, like he was the center of her gravity. Like she couldn't breathe without his orbit.

"You shouldn't watch them," Nyssa said beside her.

"I need to," Liora murmured. "I need to see how far I've fallen."

"You haven't fallen. He just dragged you down so slowly you thought you were flying."

Liora's fingers dug into her arms until the skin throbbed.

"He said he loved me."

Nyssa's voice was gentle, but steel-threaded. "He said a lot of things."

The days that followed blurred into a cruel theater. Strategy meetings. Public rituals. Feasts where meat was passed hand to hand, and lies seasoned the air thicker than smoke.

Gonzalo paraded Vanya through the camp like a prize, smiling, posturing, letting everyone see how well he'd moved on. Pretending Liora had never shared his den. Never touched his soul.

She became invisible.

Worse she became pitied.

The wolves who once bowed their heads in awe now spoke in hushed tones. A warning passed too late. A story with a bitter end. A favorite discarded like a dull blade.

Liora didn't show her rage. Not yet. But something inside her was changing. Not breaking sharpening. Each stolen glance, each cruel smile, each whisper honed her like a whetstone.

The first time she saw them walk hand-in-hand to the central fire, Vanya draped in white fur and Gonzalo in his ceremonial leathers, Liora's wolf didn't mourn.

It howled.

Not in sorrow.

In hunger.

Two nights later, Adrian found her by the outer watchfires. The Beta's shoulders were tense beneath his cloak, and his eyes restless, haunted, never fully met hers.

"He shouldn't have done it like that," he said.

"Why are you talking to me, Adrian?"

"Because I know you. And I know what you're capable of."

"Then you should be afraid."

"I am," he said. "That's why I'm warning you, he's watching you now."

"Let him."

"He sees you as a threat."

"He always did. He just enjoyed pretending I was his."

Adrian looked away, jaw tight.

"Whatever you're thinking don't act on it. Not yet."

"Don't worry," Liora said, her voice like the edge of winter. "I won't make the first move."

But Gonzalo did.

The banishment came during a full gathering. The fire towered, reaching like claws into a bruised sky. Wolves circled in reverence, their voices quiet beneath the crackling flames. Gonzalo stood tall, radiating judgment, and Vanya beside him, silent, watchful, her expression unreadable.

"There are those who sow unrest among us," Gonzalo said. His voice carried, heavy with implication. "Who speak behind my back, who move in shadows instead of light."

He didn't name her.

He didn't have to.

"Liora," he said, finally turning toward her. "You are hereby banished from the Bloodfang lands. You no longer bear my mark. You are no longer protected."

The gasp from the pack rippled like wind across a field.

Liora didn't flinch. Not when he spoke. Not when two enforcers stepped forward. Not even when they reached for her arms.

She looked him in the eye. No trembling. No tears.

"You'll regret this."

"I already do," Gonzalo said. "But not for the reason you think."

And then, he turned his back to her.

That was his final blow. The severing.

She walked away with her spine straight, her jaw like stone, and her heart a forge.

Nyssa caught up with her at the edge of the border.

"You don't have to go. We could hide you. Some of the others"

"No," Liora cut in. Her voice was quiet, deadly sure. "Let him believe he's won. Let him think he's rid of me."

Nyssa hesitated. "What will you do now?"

Liora turned to the dark woods ahead. "What I should've done from the start."

She stepped across the boundary, and felt it: the bond shattered. The threads tying her to Bloodfang frayed and snapped, a pain like burning in her chest. She gasped, but didn't look back.

She wandered for three days.

Through ash-thick woods and valleys where silence held dominion. The moon was cold now. Distant. Unfeeling. Her wolf form cried out for blood, for something to tear, but she denied it. She forced herself to feel the cut of every stone beneath her feet, the sting of the wind, the hunger in her belly.

The world outside the territory was harsh.

But it was honest.

No lies lived here. No false crowns. No promises tied in nooses.

On the third night, deep in a glade untouched by scent or memory, she built a fire. Her hands were shaking from cold and rage, but the flame took.

It was the only light for miles.

Nyssa found her there. Hood up. Voice low.

"I shouldn't be here. He'll know."

"Then don't stay long."

"I brought you something."

She handed over a leather pouch, dried roots, healing herbs, and a small blade. A thread of home in enemy soil.

"If you're going to survive out here, you need more than anger."

"I'll survive. I have before."

"This is different."

"Yes. Now I have purpose."

Nyssa studied her. The firelight danced in her eyes.

"He should have killed me," Liora whispered. "Because now, he's made a mistake he won't survive."

Nyssa hesitated. Then nodded once.

"Do what you must. But don't become him."

Liora met her gaze.

"I'll become worse."

When Nyssa was gone, Liora stood alone beneath the high, pitiless moon.

She let her hair fall loose. Let the silence swallow her. Then she spoke, voice low, rough with promise.

"You took everything. My place. My name. My future. Now I'll take your fear."

The forest did not respond.

Only wind.

Only silence.

Only the stillness before something terrible begins.

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