Declan Marsh didn't knock like a guest. He knocked like a soldier.
I sat in the armchair by the window of my room, staring out at the Silverfang training grounds. My ribs still throbbed with a dull, constant ache. August stood near the fireplace, drinking his coffee black. When Declan entered, the air in the room shifted. August’s personal Beta didn't waste time on small talk. He walked straight to his Prince and handed over a thin manila folder.
"I tracked the medallion," Declan said. His voice was flat and entirely professional.
I stopped breathing. My hand instantly flew to my bare collarbone.
August opened the folder. His dark eyes scanned the papers. "Where is it?"
"Currently secured in a biometric vault inside the Black Moon Pack compound. Alpha Saanvi's personal safe," Declan replied. He paused, glancing at me for a split second before looking back at August. "But Corey Watkins didn't give it to her directly. At least, not at first. He used a black-market relic dealer in the southern sector as an intermediary to appraise its value and clean the bloodline trace."
I frowned, pushing myself up from the chair. "When?"
Declan looked at a printed receipt in the folder. "The transaction is timestamped. Three months ago."
Three months.
The words hit me like a physical blow. The rotting mate bond in my chest flared, leaking a fresh wave of dark poison into my veins. For weeks, I had told myself Corey made a sudden, stupid mistake. I thought Saanvi cornered him, tempted him, and he cracked under the pressure of a dominant Alpha.
But three months meant premeditation. He had taken my grandfather's sacred crest, looked me in the eye, kissed my forehead, and then walked to a black-market dealer to trade my family's legacy for a place in Saanvi's bed.
August closed the folder with a sharp snap. His jaw tightened—just a single, hard flex of muscle. He saw the color drain from my face. The scent of dark cedar and thunderstorm rain spiked in the room, heavy and protective.
"File a formal tribunal order for its immediate recovery," August commanded softly. His voice was a low, dangerous rumble. "Add it to the assault charges. Theft of a bloodline relic."
Declan nodded once and left the room. I sank back into my chair, staring at the floor. I didn't cry. The ice in my stomach just grew thicker.
Later that afternoon, the stench of cheap cologne drifted up the main staircase.
I froze on the top step. I knew that smell anywhere. It was the cologne Corey used to mask Saanvi's scent on his skin. I crept silently down the hall toward my father’s office. The heavy oak doors were cracked open just an inch.
Corey stood in the center of the room. He looked awful. His hair was a mess, and dark circles bagged under his eyes. He was pacing nervously in front of my father's massive wooden desk.
"Alpha Gerald, you have to listen to me," Corey pleaded. His voice dripped with practiced charm, but it cracked with desperation. "The screenshots... they were manipulated. Deepfakes. Saanvi coerced me into that hotel room. I had no choice! She’s a reigning Alpha. She threatened my life!"
I gripped the wooden banister. He was still lying. Even now, with his entire double life exposed, he was playing the victim.
My father sat behind his desk like a statue. Alpha Gerald didn't yell. He didn't argue. He just stared at Corey with a look of absolute, chilling disgust. The silence in the office was heavier than a shout. It was the pure, suffocating weight of an Alpha's judgment.
Corey swallowed hard. He took a step forward. "Alpha, please. Blakely is my fated mate. I love her. I would never—"
My father raised one large hand. He pointed a single finger toward the door.
Two Silverfang enforcers stepped out from the corners of the office. They grabbed Corey by his arms. Corey thrashed, his eyes wide with panic. "Wait! You don't understand the full picture! Alpha!"
They dragged him out of the office and pulled him through the foyer. I stayed hidden in the shadows of the landing, watching him.
As Corey was shoved out the front doors, I noticed something pathetic. His aura was fading. The bright, energetic light of a pack warrior was gone. It was being replaced by a sickly, dull gray. Several Silverfang warriors were standing on the porch. When Corey looked at them, begging for help, they turned their backs to him. No one met his gaze.
He was shrinking. The pack was shunning him, and his inner wolf was dying from the isolation.
I didn't feel sorry for him. I turned around and walked straight to my grandfather's old study.
I locked the door and pulled out the old pack intelligence files. My grandfather was a legend because he knew how to track prey. He taught me that every predator has a blind spot. For hours, I sat on the floor, surrounded by maps, financial reports, and territorial logs. I ignored the dull ache in my ribs. I dug deep into the Black Moon Pack's history.
Saanvi was powerful, but she had a weak link. I just had to find it.
By midnight, I found a name buried in a grievance report.
Sam Vargas.
Saanvi's publicly rejected fated mate. She had humiliated him in front of their entire pack to prove she didn't need a man to rule. But Sam hadn't left. According to the intelligence logs, he was still inside the Black Moon compound. And he wasn't just sitting around. He was quietly meeting with disloyal Betas. He was building a case against her from the inside.
A soft knock broke my concentration. The door opened, and August stepped in.
He wore dark sweatpants and a plain black t-shirt. He carried two mugs of steaming black coffee. The scent of cedar and rain washed over me, instantly easing the tension in my shoulders. He looked at the mess of papers on the floor, then looked at me.
"You should be resting," he said quietly.
"I found our way in," I replied. I didn't whisper. My voice was steady and clear.
I pushed a file across the rug toward him. August set the mugs on the desk and crouched down beside me. He was so close I could feel the heat radiating off his massive frame. He looked at the name on the file.
"Sam Vargas," I said. "Saanvi's rejected mate. He has internal pack leverage. If we want to destroy her at the tribunal, we need someone on the inside to corroborate the evidence. We need to approach him."
August went perfectly still.
He slowly lifted his eyes from the paper. The dark brown of his irises burned away, replaced by a brilliant, glowing gold. He stared at me. He didn't look at me like I was a broken she-wolf who needed saving. He looked at me like I was a queen holding a bloody sword.
His jaw flexed. A faint, almost invisible tremor shook his fingers as he reached out and tapped the file.
"I spent the last three hours trying to figure out how to tell you this exact plan," August murmured. His voice was a rough, vibrating purr. "I had Declan pull Sam's file this morning. I was going to suggest him tomorrow."
He leaned in just a fraction of an inch. His golden eyes locked onto mine. "You beat me to it, Blakely."
The way he said my name sent a hot shiver straight down my spine. It wasn't pity. It was pure, unadulterated respect. The rotting bond in my chest actually went numb for a second, overwhelmed by the sheer force of his presence.
"Can you get to him?" I asked, my voice suddenly breathless.
August didn't look away. "I'll arrange the meeting. Neutral territory. Tomorrow night."
The Hollow was a dim, sticky-floored dive bar sitting right on the edge of neutral territory. It smelled like stale beer, old wood, and cheap bleach. No pack claimed this stretch of land. That meant no enforcers, no patrols, and no watching eyes. It was the perfect place to hide in plain sight.
I walked through the heavy wooden door, pulling my jacket tighter around my aching ribs. August was right behind me. He didn't touch me, but his massive presence was a heavy, undeniable blanket at my back. His scent—dark cedar and thunderstorm rain—cut right through the sour smell of the bar. It grounded me. It kept the phantom pain of my rotting mate bond from flaring up and suffocating me.
We moved past a few scattered patrons. A couple of rogues playing pool in the corner. A lone wolf nursing a beer at the bar. No one looked up. They didn't want trouble, and August radiated a lethal kind of authority that made people instinctively look away.
We found Sam Vargas in a back booth, half-hidden in the shadows. He was nursing a glass of amber liquid. He didn't look like a broken, rejected mate. He didn't look pitiful. He looked like a coiled spring.
He wore a dark jacket, and his eyes were sharp and clear. When he saw us approaching, he didn't flinch.
We slid into the booth opposite him. The vinyl seat squeaked under August’s weight.
Sam’s eyes darted to August. He recognized the Lycan Prince instantly. He didn't lower his head in full submission, but his shoulders stiffened with deep respect. Then, his gaze shifted to me. It was measured. Guarded. He was calculating the risk of just sitting at this table.
"Blakely Adams," Sam said. His voice was low and rough, like gravel. "I heard you were in the hospital."
"I was," I said simply. I didn't try to hide the fading purple bruises on my neck. I kept my posture straight, even though my ribs screamed in protest.
"Why are we here?" Sam asked. He looked between us, his fingers tapping the side of his glass. "Lycan royalty and an Alpha's daughter, sitting with a rejected wolf. It's a strange picture."
"Because we share a common enemy," August rumbled softly. He leaned back, taking up the space, but his eyes never left Sam. "And because Blakely has a proposal."
Sam looked at me, waiting.
I took a slow breath. I didn't want to talk about the hotel room. I didn't want to say the words out loud. But I had to. I needed him to understand exactly why I was doing this.
"Corey Watkins is my fated mate," I started. The words tasted like ash in my mouth. "I found out about his secret life. Him and Saanvi. I tracked them to a luxury hotel on neutral grounds."
Sam didn't blink. He just listened.
"When I confronted them," I continued, keeping my voice dead steady, "Saanvi ordered her enforcers to throw me out. Her Gamma beat me until my ribs cracked."
Sam’s eyes narrowed slightly. He knew Saanvi's brutality firsthand.
"But that wasn't the worst part," I said softly. I leaned forward over the sticky table. "Corey just stood there. He watched them do it. He didn't say a word. And around Saanvi's neck... was my grandfather's Alpha crest medallion. Corey stole it from me to give to her."
Sam stopped tapping his glass. The guarded, calculating look in his eyes cracked wide open.
I saw it. I saw the raw, ugly pain underneath his calm exterior. It was the exact same pain I felt every time I tried to breathe. He knew what it was like. He knew what it meant to give everything to a mate, only to be publicly discarded like trash.
He didn't offer me pity. Pity was useless. Pity didn't fix broken bones or rotting bonds. He just gave a slow, solemn nod.
The unspoken solidarity hung heavy in the dim light of the booth. We were both people who loved without reservation. We both believed in the sacredness of the Moon Goddess's design. And we were both destroyed for it by partners who craved power more than loyalty.
"Saanvi doesn't leave loose ends," Sam said quietly, breaking the heavy silence. "If she let you live, it's because she didn't think you were a threat. She thought you were too broken to fight back. She assumes an injured she-wolf will just crawl home and hide."
"That was her first mistake," I said. My voice was cold, completely stripped of the warmth I used to give so freely.
A small, dark smile touched the corner of Sam's mouth. It didn't reach his eyes. "And what's her second?"
Sam reached inside his dark jacket. He pulled out a thick, leather-bound notebook and slid it across the table.
"I haven't just been drinking for the last few months," Sam said. "I've been watching. Saanvi thinks because she rejected me, I disappeared. But I still know the Black Moon Pack better than she does. I know where the cracks are."
I opened the notebook. The pages were filled with neat, cramped handwriting, dates, and figures.
"Financial irregularities," Sam pointed a finger at a column of numbers. "She's been quietly siphoning pack funds for personal use. I also tracked two unauthorized territorial incursions she kept off the formal record."
He flipped the page. "She also buried a formal grievance from one of her Betas. She did it to protect her Gamma from a challenge."
I stared at the page. This was gold. This was a complete abuse of Alpha power. If the independent Alphas saw this, they would demand her immediate removal.
"And that," Sam said softly, pointing to the bottom of the page. "I have three pack members. They are loyal to me, not her. They saw Corey give her that medallion. They know exactly what it represents, and they are willing to testify at a tribunal. They're disgusted by what she's turning our pack into."
August leaned forward. His golden eyes gleamed dangerously in the low light. "My Beta, Declan, secured the hotel security footage. It clearly shows Reza Okafor, her Gamma, leading the assault on Blakely."
Sam looked at August, genuinely surprised by the depth of the Lycan's involvement.
"I also have the financial trails from the black-market dealer," August continued smoothly. "And the transaction records from Corey's premium streaming account."
"You have his streaming records?" Sam asked, raising an eyebrow.
"Every single transaction," August said. His jaw flexed. "He is a submissive kept wolf on camera. He performs for paying audiences. The entire pack world will see it."
I looked down at the notebook, then up at Sam and August. The pieces were all here. Combined, it was a devastating, airtight case. It would strip Saanvi of her title and turn Corey into a rogue.
But the tension in the booth didn't fade. The stakes were too high. If we failed, Saanvi would crush us all, and Corey would get away with desecrating my bloodline.
"Timing is everything," Sam warned. He leaned in closer, dropping his voice to a harsh whisper. "Saanvi has informants everywhere. Across all the allied packs. If she gets wind of this before the summit, she will destroy the evidence. She will silence the witnesses. And she’ll probably try to kill me before I can formally challenge her."
"She won't get the chance," August said. His voice was a lethal, vibrating promise. "The tribunal is set for the joint pack summit in three days. Alphas from six territories will be present. We will drop the evidence on the cross-pack mind-link right as the summit opens. She won't have time to spin it. She won't have time to hide."
"She'll be trapped," I whispered.
The thought sent a jolt of pure adrenaline straight through my veins. For the first time in weeks, the rotting bond in my chest didn't hurt. It was completely numb, overwhelmed by the sheer, terrifying thrill of what we were about to do.
Sam picked up his glass of amber liquid. He held it up in the space between us.
"To dead ends," Sam said softly.
I didn't have a glass. I just met his sharp eyes and gave a firm nod. "To dead ends."
As we slid out of the booth to leave, August’s large hand hovered just an inch above my lower back. He didn't touch me. He never pushed. But the intense heat of his palm seeped right through my thin shirt, chasing away the chill of the bar.
"We have three days," August murmured. His scent wrapped around me, thick and protective. "Are you ready for this, Blakely?"
I thought about my grandfather's silver medallion, locked away in Saanvi's vault. I thought about Corey's blank, empty face as I bled on the carpet.
I looked up into August's burning golden eyes.
"I've never been more ready for anything in my life," I said.