Eliana POV
The house was unnervingly quiet when I entered. The din of the dinner party must have moved to the formal lounge, leaving the hallway wrapped in silence.
I slipped into the study. This room was where I spent most of my nights while Dustin was "working late."
I went straight to the mahogany bookshelf, my fingers trembling slightly. I was looking for the leather-bound manuscript of the Pack's history. It wasn't just a book; it was a relic I had spent two years restoring by hand. On the inside cover, I had painstakingly sketched the ancient totem of the White Wolf, adding my own energy signature to protect the house.
It wasn't there.
Panic, cold and sharp, spiked in my chest. I began pulling books off the shelves, disregarding the order I had meticulously kept.
"Where is it? Where is it?"
"Looking for this?"
I spun around.
Dustin stood in the doorway, his tuxedo jacket discarded, tie loosened. Jami was behind him, holding a glass of wine loosely in one hand.
And in her other hand, she dangled the manuscript.
My *Inner Wolf* snarled, clawing at the surface of my mind. I could smell the ancient ink, but underneath it... nail polish remover?
"Give it to me," I said, my voice trembling.
"What's so special about this dusty old thing?" Jami giggled, swaying slightly. She was drunk, her eyes glassy. "I found it in the trash pile. I thought I'd use the pages for a collage. You know, 'out with the old, in with the new'."
"Trash pile?" I looked at Dustin, horror dawning on me. "You threw it away?"
"It was clutter, Eliana," Dustin said, rubbing his temples dismissively. "Jami is redecorating. Stop being hysterical."
"That manuscript is three hundred years old!" I stepped forward, my hands balling into fists. "Jami, hand it over."
"Oops," Jami said. She opened her hand.
The book fell.
It hit the floor with a heavy, sickening thud. The binding cracked—a sound like a breaking bone.
But that wasn't enough. Jami "stumbled," her heel coming down hard on the open pages, ripping the delicate paper right where my drawing was.
Something inside me shattered.
I didn't think. I didn't plan. My body moved before my mind could catch up.
My fingernails elongated into claws. I wasn't a Luna anymore; I was a wild animal protecting its young. I collided with Jami, my hand raking across her cheek.
"Aaaah!" Jami screamed, dropping her wine glass as it shattered against the floorboards.
"Eliana!" Dustin roared.
The air solidified. *Alpha's Command.*
He grabbed me by the back of my neck and threw me.
I flew across the room. My back hit the edge of the heavy oak desk with brutal force. I heard a crack—a rib, maybe two. I slid to the floor, gasping for air, the taste of copper filling my mouth.
Dustin stood over Jami, checking her scratch. It was superficial. But when he turned to me, he looked at me with pure hatred.
"You attacked a pregnant woman," he growled, his eyes glowing a menacing red. "You are unstable."
I coughed, spitting blood onto the expensive Persian rug. Pain radiated from my chest, white-hot and blinding, but my mind was crystal clear.
The *Mate Bond* was pulsing, trying to heal me, trying to make me submit to my Alpha.
No.
I wiped my mouth. I used the desk to pull myself up. I stood on shaking legs, swaying, but upright.
"Dustin Powell," I rasped.
He looked at me, his lip curled in disgust. "What? Going to apologize?"
I looked him dead in the eye. I summoned every ounce of magic in my blood, every whisper of the White Wolf dormant within me.
"I, Eliana David," I said, my voice gaining a supernatural resonance that vibrated the books on the shelves, "reject you, Dustin Powell, as my Mate."
The silence that followed was absolute.
Then, the scream began.
It wasn't me.
Dustin doubled over, clutching his chest as if he’d been shot. The golden thread that connected our souls snapped with the violence of a whip crack.
I felt a sudden, sharp pain, like a limb being severed, a blinding agony that flashed once and then... nothing.
Just glorious, empty silence.
Dustin fell to his knees, howling in agony, his wolf mourning the death of its other half.
I stood there, bleeding, broken, and completely free.
Eliana POV
The room reeked of ozone and raw anguish. Dustin was writhing on the floor, his fingers clawing at his chest as if trying to rip his own heart out.
*Why?* his wolf howled through the mind-link. It was a sound of pure, unadulterated devastation. *Why did you cut us?*
I didn't answer. I slammed the iron gate of my mind shut.
The connection was severed instantly, but the echo remained—a phantom limb pain where my soul used to be attached to his. I felt lightheaded, the adrenaline crashing hard, but deep within me, my Inner Wolf was purring.
She was already licking her wounds, triggering the accelerated healing process unique to the White Wolf bloodline. The pain was fading, replaced by a cold, crystalline clarity.
"Dustin!" Jami shrieked, dropping to her knees beside him. "What's wrong? What did she do?"
She looked up at me with genuine terror. She didn't understand. She was a regular wolf; she couldn't comprehend the spiritual devastation I had just unleashed.
I ignored them both. I raised a shaking hand and tapped my earpiece.
"Laura," I said, my voice steady despite the throbbing ache in my ribs. "Execute Phase One."
"Copy that, Luna—I mean, Ms. David. We are breaching."
Seconds later, the heavy double doors of the mansion burst open.
Six figures marched in. They weren't warriors. They were worse.
They were lawyers and movers, flanked by four massive Gamma wolves from a private security firm.
Laura, looking razor-sharp in a tailored black power suit, stepped into the study. She surveyed the chaotic scene—Dustin gasping on the floor, me bleeding against the mahogany desk—and her eyes narrowed into slits.
"Document everything," she ordered the Gammas.
One of them immediately stepped forward, camera shutter clicking rapidly as he cataloged my injuries and the destroyed manuscript scattered across the carpet.
I pushed off the desk and walked to the center of the living room, where the Obsidian Pack crest was inlaid into the hardwood floor.
"What... what is happening?" Dustin gasped, trying to force himself upright. The rejection pain comes in waves; he was currently in a lull, but the next wave would be worse.
"I'm taking what's mine," I said.
I reached down and picked up a heavy iron poker from the fireplace. I walked back to the crest.
"Eliana! Stop!" Dustin shouted, his voice ragged. "That is the Pack symbol!"
"A symbol built on lies," I replied cold.
I jammed the tip of the poker under the central tile—a piece of rare, polished black onyx I had bought for him three years ago—and leveraged my weight against it. The grout cracked with a satisfying, dry *pop*.
"She's crazy!" Jami yelled, scrambling backward. "Security! Avi!"
"Avi works for the Pack," Laura interjected smoothly, stepping forward to hand me a silk handkerchief for my split lip. "But the security system? The cameras? The payroll software? That belongs to David Tech. And we just revoked your license."
As if on cue, the lights in the house flickered and died.
A second later, the emergency backup engaged, bathing us all in a hellish, crimson glow.
"You..." Dustin stared at me, realization finally dawning through his haze of pain. "You can't do this."
My eyes flashed—not the warm gold of a normal wolf, but the pure, blinding silver of the White Wolf.
The atmospheric pressure in the room shifted instantly. It wasn't just Alpha dominance; it was something ancient. Divine.
"I can," I said softly.
"You betrayed the bond. You broke the covenant. Now, I am collecting the debt."
I gestured broadly to the furniture, the oil paintings, the imported Persian rugs.
"Take it all," I ordered the movers. "If my name is on the receipt, it goes."
"You're stripping the house?" Dustin roared, trying to summon the Alpha Command. But his voice cracked mid-shout. Without a Mate, an Alpha is unstable. His command washed over me like a gentle, harmless breeze.
"I'm not stripping the house, Dustin," I said, dropping the heavy onyx tile into my bag. "I'm repossessing my life."
I turned to the lead mover, my expression void of any emotion.
"Start with the master bedroom," I commanded. "I want the mattress gone."
Dustin’s face went ghostly pale. That was the ultimate insult, the erasure of their infidelity.
"You dare?" he whispered.
"Watch me."
Eliana POV
They say chaos is a ladder. Today, however, chaos looked a lot like a moving truck.
The mansion was being gutted with military precision. My team descended like a swarm of locusts trained in logistics.
The velvet sofa where I had once sat, waiting hours for him to come home? Gone.
The Steinway grand piano I played to soothe his migraines? Already crated.
Dustin stood in the center of the swirling activity, leaning heavily on Jami for support. He looked like a king watching his castle turn to sand around him.
"This is petty, Eliana," he hissed, trying to summon a shred of his former dignity, though his voice wavered.
"You have billions," he continued, gesturing weakly at a mover walking past. "Why do you need the toaster?"
"It's a Breville," I said, not bothering to look up from the inventory list on my tablet. "And I bought it."
Laura stepped forward, a thick dossier cradled in her arm like a weapon. She faced Arthur, the Pack’s legal advisor, who had just arrived looking disheveled and smelling of panic.
"Here is the itemized manifest of assets legally owned by Eliana David," Laura announced, her voice slicing through the noise of packing tape and dolly wheels.
"This includes the liquid capital in the joint accounts—which, for the record, was ninety percent Eliana's deposit—the deed to the summer lodge, and the patent for the Pack's security algorithm."
Arthur flipped through the pages, sweat beading on his forehead. "This... this algorithm runs our entire border defense grid. You can't just take it."
"It's intellectual property," Laura corrected, her smile thin and sharp as paper. "We are generous, however. We will give you twenty-four hours to procure a replacement system before we shut the servers down."
"Twenty-four hours?" Dustin choked, his face paling. "That leaves us defenseless against Rogues!"
"You should have thought of that before you rejected your Anchor," I said, finally flicking my gaze toward him.
Jami stepped forward, her face flushing a mottled red. "You are endangering the baby! If Rogues attack..."
I leveled a cold stare at her.
"Then maybe the baby's father should have spent less time in bed with his assistant and more time securing his borders."
Two movers marched past us, carrying the massive oil painting that had hung over the fireplace. I watched my own painted face disappear out the front door.
"Wait," Dustin said, his voice trembling. He pushed Jami aside, stumbling toward me with a desperation that was almost pitiful.
"The garden," he gasped. "The Moonflower garden."
I stopped.
The Moonflower garden was my sanctuary. It contained rare, medicinal flora essential for high-level Pack healing potions. I had cultivated that soil from seeds passed down from my grandmother.
"I'm taking the plants," I stated flatly.
"You can't move them! They'll die in transit!"
"Better they die with me than live with you," I replied.
I walked to the window. Outside, a specialized horticultural team was already excavating the root systems, placing the delicate specimens into temperature-controlled bio-pods.
Dustin watched, utterly helpless. His Alpha instinct to protect his territory was screaming, but the broken bond had left him physically hollowed out. He was hemorrhaging energy just by standing there.
"Eliana," he whispered.
"Please."
It was the first time he had used that word in years.
I turned to him one last time. I saw the raw terror in his eyes. He wasn't afraid of losing the herbs. He was afraid because he was realizing, for the first time, exactly how much of his "power" was actually *me*.
"Goodbye, Dustin," I said.
I walked out the front door, refusing to look back at the hollow shell of a house.
I climbed into the back of Laura's black SUV. The moment the door clicked shut, silencing the noise outside, I pulled out my phone.
"Are we done?" Laura asked from the front seat, glancing at me in the rearview mirror.
"Not quite," I said.
I opened a secure app. I had one last card to play.
Dustin’s company, Obsidian Tech, was currently bidding on a massive government contract in Europe. They were the frontrunners solely because of a proprietary encryption key.
My encryption key.
I tapped the screen. One anonymous tip sent to their biggest competitor, highlighting the expiration date of the license Obsidian Tech was using.
*Sent.*
"Now," I said, leaning back into the leather seat and closing my eyes. "Now we're done."