Three days later, Ace called a mandatory pack meeting in the main hall. I sat in the back row, trying to make myself invisible while Maxine occupied the Luna's chair beside him—the chair that should have been mine.
The silver car from yesterday belonged to Bennett Coleman, though Ace had refused to tell me why the Lycan Prince had come calling. Whatever their conversation entailed, it had left Ace in a foul mood that seemed to darken with each passing hour.
"Pack members," Ace's voice cut through the murmur of conversations. "It's time we discussed the future of Moonstone Pack. We've been living in the past for too long, clinging to outdated traditions that hold us back from true progress."
My wolf stirred uneasily. Something in his tone made my skin crawl.
"To that end, I've decided we need significant territory improvements. The old memorial shrine in the eastern grove takes up valuable space that could be better utilized for training grounds and pack housing."
The blood in my veins turned to ice. The memorial shrine—my father's memorial shrine, the sacred space where pack members came to honor his sacrifice.
"Alpha," Elder Morrison spoke up hesitantly, "that memorial has stood for fifteen years. It's where we honor Alpha Thomas Adams' sacrifice for the pack."
Ace's green eyes flashed with irritation. "Ancient history, Morrison. My father-in-law died a long time ago. We can't let sentiment prevent us from moving forward."
Father-in-law. He called my father his father-in-law, as if their connection meant nothing more than a legal technicality. As if the man who'd saved his worthless life was just an inconvenience to be swept aside.
I shot to my feet before I could stop myself. "You can't destroy my father's memorial."
The hall fell silent. Every eye turned to me, but I only saw Ace's face—cold, calculating, and utterly without remorse.
"Sit down, Sadie," he said quietly, but his Alpha power leaked into the words.
I fought against the compulsion, my wolf snarling in defiance. "He saved your life. He saved this entire pack. That memorial is sacred ground."
"Sit. Down." This time, his Alpha command hit me like a physical blow.
My knees buckled against my will, the power of his authority forcing my body into submission even as my mind screamed in protest. I found myself kneeling on the cold stone floor, my hands pressed flat against the ground in a position of complete surrender.
Humiliation burned through me like acid. Around the hall, pack members shifted uncomfortably, some looking away as if they couldn't bear to witness my degradation.
"This is exactly what I'm talking about," Ace continued, his voice carrying easily through the silent hall. "We're so busy worshiping the dead that we forget to serve the living. Thomas Adams was a decent Alpha for his time, but his time is over. I am your Alpha now, and I won't have my authority questioned by someone living in the past."
Tears of rage and shame blurred my vision. The marble floor was cold against my palms, each second of forced submission another crack in what remained of my spirit.
"The memorial will be demolished tomorrow," Ace announced. "The space will be cleared for a new training facility that will actually benefit this pack's future."
"You bastard," I whispered, the words slipping out before I could stop them.
Ace's power pressed down harder, making it difficult to breathe. "What was that?"
I lifted my head, meeting his gaze despite the crushing weight of his command. "I said you're a bastard. My father died saving your miserable life, and this is how you repay him?"
"Your father was weak," Ace snarled, his mask of civility finally slipping. "He died because he couldn't make the hard choices. He died because he put sentiment over strategy. I won't make the same mistakes."
The hall erupted in shocked murmurs. Even his most loyal supporters looked uncomfortable with his casual dismissal of their former Alpha's sacrifice.
That's when I heard the slow, deliberate sound of clapping from the back of the hall.
Every head turned toward the entrance, where a figure emerged from the shadows. Bennett Coleman stepped into the light, his silver eyes blazing with barely contained fury.
"Fascinating display of leadership, Alpha Robinson," Bennett said, his voice carrying the refined courtesy that only made his words more cutting. "Though I have to wonder—is forcing pack members to grovel really the mark of a strong Alpha, or just a weak man desperate to feel powerful?"
Ace's hold on me wavered, his attention shifting to this new threat. I gasped, finally able to draw a full breath.
"Prince Coleman," Ace's voice was carefully controlled, but I could see the tension in his shoulders. "This is pack business. It doesn't concern you."
Bennett's gaze found mine across the crowded hall, and something passed between us—a moment of understanding that made my wolf purr despite everything.
"Actually," Bennett said softly, "I think it concerns me very much indeed."
The sound of chainsaws at dawn shattered what little sleep I'd managed to find.
I bolted upright in my bed, my wolf instantly alert and snarling. That mechanical roar was coming from the eastern grove—from my father's sacred oak tree. The tree he'd planted with his own hands the day I was born, the tree that had grown strong and tall like the bond between us, the tree that held fifteen years of whispered prayers and desperate hopes.
"No." The word tore from my throat as I threw on clothes and raced barefoot across the pack grounds.
Through the morning mist, I could see them—three warriors with chainsaws, their blades biting into the ancient bark. Ace stood nearby, arms crossed, watching the destruction with the same detached interest he'd shown when discussing my future as his "secondary mate."
"Stop!" I screamed, launching myself between the warriors and my father's tree. "You can't do this!"
The nearest warrior—Jake Morrison, who'd eaten at my family's table countless times—hesitated, his chainsaw sputtering to silence. The others followed suit, uncertainty flickering across their faces.
"This is sacred ground," I panted, pressing my back against the scarred trunk. My hands found the deep grooves where my father had carved our family initials, where I'd added my own small mark years later. "This tree is part of our pack's history. Part of my father's legacy."
Ace stepped forward, his Alpha authority radiating outward like heat from a forge. "Move away from the tree, Sadie."
"No." I spread my arms wider, as if I could shield the entire massive oak with my body. "I won't let you destroy this. Not this."
His green eyes hardened. "I'm not asking. I'm ordering. As your Alpha, I command you to step aside."
The weight of his power pressed against me, trying to force compliance. My wolf whimpered but held firm, drawing strength from the ancient wood at my back. "My father planted this tree. He blessed this ground with his own blood when he defended our territory. You have no right—"
"I have every right!" Ace's composure cracked, revealing the ugly anger beneath. "I am the Alpha of this pack. This is my territory, my decision. Your father is dead, Sadie. Dead and buried and irrelevant."
Tears burned my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. "He saved your life. Without his sacrifice, you'd be nothing but bones in a rogue's den."
"And look where his heroics got him." Ace's voice dropped to a cruel whisper. "Six feet under while stronger wolves live on. That's the difference between us, Sadie. I don't die for sentiment."
The words hit like physical blows. Around us, the warriors shifted uncomfortably, their chainsaws hanging silent in their hands.
"Jake," Ace barked. "Resume cutting. Now."
Jake Morrison met my desperate gaze, conflict written across his weathered features. "Alpha, maybe we could—"
"Did I stutter?" Ace's Alpha command slammed into the warrior like a sledgehammer. "Cut down that tree. All of you. And if anyone gets in your way, restrain them."
The chainsaws roared back to life. I pressed harder against the bark, feeling the vibrations of the blades as they bit deeper into my father's legacy.
"Please," I whispered, but my voice was lost in the mechanical screaming.
Then Jake's massive hand closed around my arm. "I'm sorry, Miss Sadie," he said, his eyes bright with unshed tears. "Alpha's orders."
They pulled me away despite my struggles, holding me fast while the ancient oak groaned and swayed. The sound it made as it fell was like the earth itself crying out in pain—a deep, resonant crack that seemed to echo in my bones.
When the dust settled, fifteen years of growth lay scattered in broken pieces across the sacred grove. The stump remained, raw and bleeding sap like an open wound in the earth.
Ace surveyed the destruction with satisfaction. "Much better. Jake, have your crew clear the debris. I want this area ready for foundation work by next week."
"You monster," I breathed, staring at the devastation. "You absolute monster."
He turned to me with a cold smile. "I'm a realist, Sadie. Something your father never learned to be."
As the warriors began gathering the fallen branches, I heard soft footsteps behind me. Maxine approached hesitantly, her pregnant belly making her movements careful and deliberate. She looked even more fragile in the morning light, her auburn hair dull and her green eyes haunted.
"Sadie," she said quietly, glancing nervously toward Ace. "I... I wanted to say I'm sorry. About the tree."
I whirled on her, my grief transforming into rage. "Sorry? You're sorry? This is your fault! If you hadn't—"
"Not all bonds are chosen freely," Maxine interrupted, her voice barely above a whisper. She touched her belly protectively, her gaze darting between me and Ace. "Sometimes... sometimes we become what others need us to be. Whether we want to or not."
The strange phrasing made me pause. There was something in her eyes—a desperate kind of warning, as if she was trying to tell me something important but couldn't find the words.
"What do you mean?" I asked, but she was already backing away.
"I have to go," she murmured. "Dylan needs his breakfast."
She hurried toward the pack house, leaving me alone with the wreckage of my father's memory and a growing certainty that there was far more to Maxine Berry's story than anyone knew.