The laughter kept coming. Wave after wave of it, crashing over me like I was drowning.
Someone in the back shouted, "At least Lilian knows how to have fun!"
Another voice: "Poor Weston, stuck with a mate who can't even shift."
My hands were shaking. My whole body was shaking. Seven years of this. Seven years of swallowing my pride, of making excuses, of believing that love meant enduring anything.
But love wasn't supposed to feel like this.
I looked at Weston, still grinning like he'd done something clever. At Lilian, whose smirk had nothing innocent about it. At Marcus, who wouldn't meet my eyes. At the pack that had watched me break myself into smaller and smaller pieces, trying to fit into a space that was never meant for me.
My grandmother's amulet pressed against my chest, warm despite the cold spreading through my veins.
Something inside me cracked. Not broke—cracked. Like ice splitting under pressure, revealing dark water beneath.
"No," I said.
The word came out quiet, but the laughter died anyway. Maybe they heard something in my voice. Maybe they finally saw something in my face.
I stepped down from the altar. My legs felt steadier than they had in years.
"Zara—" Weston started, his grin fading.
"I, Zara Hayes," I said, and my voice didn't shake anymore. It rang clear across the clearing, carrying to every corner of the pack grounds. "Reject you, Weston Carr, as my mate."
The words hit like thunder.
The mate bond snapped. I felt it tear through my chest, a pain so sharp and sudden that I gasped. But it wasn't the agony I'd expected. It felt like ripping off a bandage that had been stuck to a wound for too long—painful, yes, but also freeing.
Weston stumbled backward, his hand flying to his chest. His face went white. "What—what did you—"
"I reject you," I repeated, and this time the words tasted like freedom.
The pack erupted into chaos. Voices overlapped, shocked and angry and confused. Marcus stepped forward, his Alpha aura pressing down on me, trying to force me to submit.
But I didn't bow.
I turned and walked straight to Eren. His golden eyes were blazing, fixed on me with an intensity that should have scared me. Instead, it made me feel seen for the first time in seven years.
I held out my hand.
He took it without hesitation. His palm was warm, steady, solid. Real.
"This is my chosen protector," I announced to the stunned crowd. "My partner. And anyone who has a problem with that can take it up with me directly."
Lilian's face twisted with rage. "You can't be serious. Him? He's an Omega. He's nothing."
"He's more than you'll ever be," I said quietly.
Weston was still clutching his chest, his breathing ragged. "Zara, you don't know what you're doing. The bond—the pain—"
"I know exactly what I'm doing." I looked at him one last time. "I'm choosing myself."
Eren's hand tightened around mine. "We need to go. Now."
He was right. The pack was recovering from their shock, and Marcus's face had gone from pale to red with fury. We didn't run—I refused to run—but we walked fast, Eren's body positioned between me and the crowd.
The Alpha suite felt different when we entered. Colder. Like it knew I didn't belong here anymore.
"Pack only what you need," Eren said, his voice low and urgent. "We don't have much time."
I nodded and headed for the bedroom. The door swung open, and the smell hit me like a fist to the gut.
Lilian's scent. Thick and cloying, mixed with the unmistakable musk of sex. And underneath it, Weston's scent, tangled with hers in a way that left no room for doubt.
They'd been here. In the bed I was supposed to share with him tonight. In our nest.
My knees went weak. I grabbed the doorframe to keep from falling.
"Zara." Eren was beside me instantly, his hand on my back. "Don't look. Just pack and let's go."
But I couldn't stop looking. The sheets were rumpled, stained. A red dress—Lilian's dress from earlier ceremonies—was draped over the chair like a trophy.
Seven years. And he'd been doing this the whole time.
"Oh, Zara."
I spun around. Lilian stood in the doorway, her expression dripping with false sympathy. "I'm so sorry you had to find out this way. I wanted to tell you, really, but Weston said—"
"Get out," I said.
She ignored me, gliding into the room like she owned it. Maybe she thought she did. Her eyes landed on my grandmother's amulet, sitting on the dresser where I'd left it this morning.
"You know," she said, reaching for it, "it's funny. All this time, you've been clinging to this little trinket like it made you special."
"Don't touch that."
Her fingers closed around it. "But you're not special, Zara. You're wolf-less. You're weak. You're—"
She lifted the amulet and let it drop.
It hit the floor and shattered. The moon-blessed silver scattered across the hardwood in a dozen glittering pieces.
"Oops," Lilian whispered, leaning close. "I guess a wolf-less girl doesn't need moon blessings anyway."
Something moved behind me. Eren stepped forward, and the temperature in the room dropped.
The sound that came from his chest wasn't a growl. It was deeper than that. Primal. It vibrated through the floorboards, through my bones, through the very air.
Lilian's smirk vanished. Her face went white. She stumbled backward, her body responding to something her mind couldn't process.
That sound—no Omega could make that sound.
"Leave," Eren said, and his voice carried a weight that made my breath catch. "Now."
Lilian fled.
I stared at Eren, at the way his golden eyes were glowing, at the power radiating from him in waves that made my skin prickle.
"Eren," I whispered. "What are you?"
Eren didn't answer my question. Instead, he turned away, his shoulders tight. "Pack. Now."
I grabbed a duffel bag from the closet and started throwing clothes into it. My hands moved on autopilot while my mind spun in circles. That sound he'd made. That power. What was he?
A wave of nausea hit me halfway through folding a sweater.
I dropped it, pressing my hand to my stomach. The room tilted. My knees buckled, and suddenly Eren was there, catching me before I hit the floor.
"Zara." His voice was sharp with concern. "What's wrong?"
"I don't know. I just—" Another cramp twisted through my abdomen, different from the bond pain. Deeper. More insistent.
Eren's nostrils flared. His eyes widened, just a fraction. "No."
"What?" I looked up at him, confused by the horror in his face.
A soft knock at the door made us both freeze. "Miss Hayes?" The voice was familiar. Mrs. Chen, the pack healer. "May I come in?"
Eren hesitated, then nodded. He helped me to the bed as Mrs. Chen slipped inside, closing the door quietly behind her. She was older, with kind eyes that had always treated me with more respect than I deserved in this pack.
"I felt it," she said softly, moving to my side. "The bond breaking. And now..." Her hand hovered over my stomach. "May I?"
I nodded, not understanding.
Her palm pressed gently against my abdomen. Her eyes closed. When they opened again, they were filled with sadness.
"You're carrying a pup," she whispered. "From the last heat cycle."
The words didn't make sense at first. Then they did, and the world stopped.
A pup. Weston's pup.
"No," I breathed. "No, that's not—we were careful, he said—"
"The bond makes us fertile," Mrs. Chen said gently. "Especially during heat. I'm sorry, child."
Eren's hand found mine, squeezing tight.
Mrs. Chen glanced at the door, then back at me. "Alpha Marcus will know soon. He'll use this to keep you here. A bloodline heir, especially from you—" She stopped, shaking her head. "You need to leave. Tonight."
"But the pup—"
"Will be raised by Lilian and Weston," she said bluntly. "Used as a tool to control you. Is that what you want?"
I thought of Lilian's smirk. Of Weston's cold eyes. Of a child growing up watching their mother be humiliated, learning that love meant enduring abuse.
"No," I whispered.
Mrs. Chen reached into her bag and pulled out a worn leather journal. My grandmother's journal. I recognized the handwriting on the cover.
"Your grandmother left this with me before she passed," Mrs. Chen said. "She made me promise to give it to you if you ever needed it. I think that time is now."
She opened it to a marked page. The heading read: Severing Herb.
My hands shook as I took the journal. The recipe was written in my grandmother's careful script, along with a note: For freedom when the bond becomes a cage.
"I can't," I said, but the words felt hollow.
"You can," Mrs. Chen said firmly. "And you must. This pup deserves better than to be born into this toxicity. Sometimes the most loving thing we can do is let go."
She pressed a small pouch into my hands. "The herbs. Already prepared. Just add hot water and steep for five minutes."
Then she was gone, slipping out as quietly as she'd come.
I stared at the pouch. At Eren, whose face was carefully blank.
"It's your choice," he said quietly. "I'll support whatever you decide."
But we both knew there was no real choice. Not if I wanted to be free.
I went to the kitchen with shaking hands. Put the kettle on. Watched the water boil. The herbs smelled bitter when I added them to the cup, like earth and endings.
The tea was dark, almost black. Steam rose from it in lazy spirals.
I thought of the pup. Of what could have been, in a different world. A world where Weston loved me. Where Lilian didn't exist. Where I had a wolf and a pack that respected me.
But that wasn't this world.
I lifted the cup to my lips. The first sip burned. The second one hurt less. By the third, I was crying, tears streaming down my face as I drank my freedom.
Eren held me as the cramps started. Worse than before, like my body was tearing itself apart from the inside. I bit down on my lip to keep from screaming, tasting blood.
"I'm sorry," I sobbed into his chest. "I'm so sorry."
"Don't," he said fiercely. "Don't apologize for choosing yourself."
The pain lasted twenty minutes. When it finally faded, I felt empty. Hollow. But also lighter, like I'd cut the last chain holding me to this place.
I stood on shaking legs. "Let's go."
We finished packing in silence. Two bags. That's all I was taking from seven years of my life.
The pack house was quiet as we made our way to the garage. Too quiet. My instincts screamed danger, but we had no choice.
Eren loaded the bags into his old sedan. I was reaching for the passenger door when lights flooded the driveway.
Three Gamma warriors stepped out of the shadows. I recognized them—Jake, Marcus, and Tom. They'd always been loyal to Alpha Marcus.
"Going somewhere?" Jake asked, his voice cold.
"Let us pass," Eren said.
Jake laughed. "Alpha's orders. The valuable breeder stays."
The words hit like a slap. That's all I was to them. A breeder.
"She's not your breeder," Eren said, and his voice dropped into that dangerous register again. "She's not your anything."
"And what are you going to do about it, Omega?" Marcus sneered, stepping forward.
Eren moved.
I'd never seen anything like it. He was a blur, faster than any wolf I'd ever seen. His fist connected with Marcus's jaw, and the Gamma went down hard. Jake lunged, but Eren caught him mid-air, slamming him into the ground with enough force to crack the concrete.
Tom shifted, his wolf form erupting in a shower of clothes. He was huge, easily two hundred pounds of muscle and teeth.
Eren didn't shift. He didn't need to.
He caught Tom's jaws with his bare hands and twisted. The wolf yelped, crashing to the side. Eren's knee came up, connecting with Tom's ribs. I heard bones crack.
Thirty seconds. That's all it took for Eren to take down three trained Gamma warriors without even shifting.
He turned to me, breathing hard, his golden eyes glowing in the darkness. "Get in the car."
I scrambled into the passenger seat. Eren slid behind the wheel, and we peeled out of the driveway, leaving the groaning warriors behind.
"The SUV," I said, pointing to the pack's black vehicle parked near the gate. "It's faster."
Eren nodded. We switched vehicles quickly, and then we were speeding through the gate, leaving the Black Moon Pack territory behind.
I looked back once. The pack house was lit up, figures moving in the windows. Searching for me.
But I was already gone.
"Where are we going?" I asked.
Eren's hands tightened on the wheel. "Neutral territory. The Lycan Council. You'll be safe there."
"And then?"
He glanced at me, and something in his expression made my breath catch.
"Then," he said quietly, "I tell you the truth."