Chapter 7

Eleanor POV

The adrenaline evaporated the moment we crossed the border into Royal Pack territory.

Without the threat of immediate capture propelling me forward, the true cost of the last twenty-four hours came due. The pain of the Rejection—the violent severing of a soul bond—and the physical trauma of the silver poisoning finally caught up to me.

My vision blurred, smearing the world into gray static. The horizon tilted on its axis.

"Eleanor?" Julian's voice was sharp with worry.

I slumped against him. The last thing I felt was his arm tightening around me, an anchor in the spinning void, before darkness swallowed me whole.

*

I woke to the scent of sage, lavender, and strong antiseptic.

I wasn't in a cold, gray cell. I was lying in a bed with crisp, high-thread-count sheets, in a room with large windows overlooking a lush green valley. The sunlight was warm on my face, a sensation so foreign it almost felt heavy.

"She's awake."

An elderly woman with kind eyes and silver hair braided down her back was checking a monitor. I recognized her from the stories—this was the Royal Pack's Elder Healer.

"Where..." I croaked. My throat felt like shredded sandpaper.

"You are safe," the Healer said gently. "You are in the Royal Infirmary. Your body... child, the silver nearly corroded your liver entirely. And your wolf is comatose from the transition."

Julian was sitting in a wingback chair in the corner. He looked like he hadn't slept in days. His shirt was rumpled, sleeves rolled up, and his golden eyes were dark with a simmering, quiet fury.

"Did he really do it?" the Healer asked Julian, her voice trembling with professional rage. "Did Marcus Thorne really leave his mate to rot with silver in her veins for a sprained ankle?"

Julian nodded grimly. "Yes. The medical reports from their pack confirm it. He explicitly denied the authorization for the antidote."

Hearing it from a third party, stripped of Marcus's gaslighting, made it undeniable. It wasn't a misunderstanding. It was attempted murder by neglect.

I closed my eyes. The last ember of hope—that tiny, stupid, pathetic part of me that thought maybe he had just been busy or unaware—flickered and died.

"I rejected him," I whispered, my voice hollow.

The room went silent.

"I heard," Julian said softly. He moved to the side of the bed, his presence a warm weight against the chill in my bones. "Eleanor, what do you want to do?"

I looked at him. "I want to live. I want to start over. I don't want to be an architect for a pack that hates me. I don't want to be a 'Chosen Mate' to a man who treats me like an accessory."

"Then you won't be," Julian said firmly.

Over the next few days, I met Julian's family. His sister, the Pack Beta, brought me clothes that actually fit, replacing the rags I had fled in. His mother, the Luna Dowager, brought me soup and sat with me, asking nothing, just offering her quiet, grounding presence.

They didn't treat me like a broken refugee. They treated me like... a person worthy of space.

One night, Julian performed a healing ceremony. His hands hovered over my abdomen, his Alpha energy pushing the lingering toxins out.

A strange warmth bloomed beneath my skin. Then, the room lit up.

My skin began to glow with a faint, iridescent pearlescent light.

I gasped, the old legends crashing into my mind. *The White Wolf.*

"Hide it," I hissed, grabbing his wrist, panic spiking my heart rate. "Please. If people know... if Marcus knows..."

If Marcus knew I carried the blood of the ancients, he wouldn't just reject me. He would cage me. He would use me as a battery for his own power.

Julian's eyes widened, realizing the implication, but he nodded. "Your secret is safe. We will mask your scent until you are strong enough to control it."

A week later, I was well enough to walk. My first destination was the incinerator room of the hospital.

I had brought the few sketches I had saved—designs I had made specifically for Marcus's dream house. The nursery with the morning light. The garden sanctuary I had designed for his mother.

I threw them into the fire.

I watched the edges curl and blacken, watched the ink vanish into ash.

"We are holding a farewell ceremony for the old year tonight," the Luna Dowager told me later, finding me staring at the flames. "A symbolic burning of regrets. Will you join?"

"No," I said, turning away from the furnace. "I'm done with ceremonies. I'm done looking back."

Despite my declaration, I decided to take a walk to the edge of the Royal territory later that afternoon, just to test my legs. Julian insisted on accompanying me.

We reached a clearing where a diplomatic outpost stood. Ironically, a delegation from Thorne Pack was there, negotiating trade routes. I recognized a few faces—warriors I had fed, Gammas I had helped organize schedules for.

They saw me. They looked uncomfortable, shifting on their feet, eyes darting away.

"Eleanor," one of them started, guilt heavy in his tone. "We... we didn't know about the silver."

"It doesn't matter," I said coldly.

Then, the purr of a high-performance engine cut through the air. A sleek black car pulled up. Marcus stepped out, looking impeccable in a tailored suit that cost more than my life was apparently worth. Isabelle hung on his arm, draped in white furs.

They were laughing.

They walked right past the group. Marcus's eyes swept over the area. He saw me.

For a second, our eyes locked.

I expected anger. I expected pain. I braced myself for his sneer.

Instead, he just... looked away. His gaze slid off me as if I were a tree, or a rock.

He turned his head, whispered something into Isabelle's ear that made her giggle, and they kept walking toward the VIP entrance.

He erased me. Again.

Julian growled low in his chest, stepping forward, his Alpha aura flaring.

I grabbed his arm, holding him back. "No. Let them go."

"How can you stand it?" Julian asked, his voice tight with vicarious pain.

"Because," I said, watching Marcus fawn over Isabelle, "that isn't my life anymore. That is a stranger."

Just then, a thunderous boom echoed from the mountains above the pass where Marcus and Isabelle had just walked.

The ground shook violently beneath our feet.

I looked up. Snow—tons of it, white and deadly—cascaded down the mountainside like a collapsing wave.

An avalanche.

And Marcus was right in its path.

Chapter 8

Eleanor POV

The mountain didn't just break; it roared.

The sound drowned out the screams of the Thorne delegation as a tidal wave of white powder surged down the slope, swallowing the path where Marcus and Isabelle had stood only seconds before.

"Rescue teams! Move!" Julian barked, his Alpha command cracking like a whip over the chaotic scene.

Royal Pack warriors shifted into their wolf forms in mid-stride—massive, disciplined beasts—and sprinted toward the churning snow.

I stood by the safety rail, watching the devastation. The Luna Dowager stood beside me, her hand hovering protectively near my shoulder.

"Eleanor," she said gently. "Are you... are you worried?"

I looked at the violent, shifting snow. I searched my heart for the panic that should have been there. I searched for the suffocating fear that used to grip me whenever Marcus so much as got a papercut.

It wasn't there.

"No," I said, surprising myself with the honesty of it. "I hope they are found, for the sake of peace. But I don't feel it. I don't feel him."

It was the truth. The bond was gone. He was just a man. A bad man, but just a man.

An hour later, the radio crackled to life.

"Found them. They were in the reinforced tunnel entrance. Minor injuries. Shaken up, but alive."

"Good," Julian said, though his eyes were fixed on me, gauging my reaction.

"He was brave," the Luna Dowager tested softly, watching my face. "The report says he shielded the girl."

"He's an Alpha," I shrugged, feeling a strange, cool detachment. "Instinct is a powerful thing. It has nothing to do with me."

I felt lighter. As if the mountain had fallen, but I wasn't the one buried under it anymore.

"Eleanor," the Luna said, taking my hand and turning me away from the cliff edge. "You are one of us now. Whatever you need to start this new life—a studio, materials, solitude—you have it. The Royal Pack protects its own."

Tears pricked my eyes. Not for Marcus, but for this. For kindness given without a price tag.

"Thank you," I whispered.

I turned my back on the mountain and the rescue efforts. I had a new studio to organize.

*

Marcus POV

The infirmary in the Thorne Pack house was stifling, smelling of antiseptic and panic.

"It's just a bruise, Marcus," I snapped at the Healer, slapping his hand away. "Stop fussing."

"You were buried in snow for twenty minutes, Alpha," the Healer retorted, though he took a step back. "You need to rest."

I sat up, ignoring the vicious throbbing in my head. Isabelle was in the next bed, weeping dramatically about how cold it had been. Her whining was starting to grate on my nerves like sandpaper.

"Where is Eleanor?" I asked. It was a reflex. Whenever I was hurt, Eleanor was there with cool towels and herbal salves before I even had to ask.

The room went quiet.

"She's... gone, Alpha," the Beta said awkwardly, avoiding my gaze. "She's in the Royal Pack."

"Still?" I scoffed, rubbing my temples. "She's really committing to this tantrum, isn't she? It’s been a week. Surely she's run out of money by now."

"She... she cleared out her accounts before she left, sir. And took her personal designs."

I waved a hand dismissively. "She'll be back. Omegas can't survive without a pack structure. She's probably sleeping on a park bench in the Royal territory, waiting for me to come save her."

I felt a twinge of annoyance. I had planned to go see her today. I was going to be benevolent. I was going to offer her a position designing the new grain silos. It was beneath her talent, but it would get her back in the door. She would be so grateful.

And frankly, I needed a cold compress, and no one else knew how to make them properly.

"Get the car," I ordered, swinging my legs off the bed. "We're going to the Royal Pack border. I'm going to pick her up. She's probably learned her lesson by now."

Isabelle sat up sharply. "Marcus! You can't go to her! She tried to kill me with her... her bad energy!"

"Quiet, Isabelle," I muttered, already walking toward the door. "I need my architect back."

We drove to the address my spies had found. It wasn't a park bench.

It was a sleek, modern studio in the heart of the Royal Pack's arts district. The windows were large, letting in floods of afternoon light.

I walked up to the door, adjusting my cuffs. I prepared my speech. *I forgive you for the scene you caused. Come home.*

I reached for the handle. It was locked.

I peered through the glass. The place was empty. No furniture. No drafting table. Just a single piece of paper taped to the inside of the glass.

It was a legal notice.

"Property of Eleanor Vance. Trespassers will be prosecuted by the Royal Guard."

I frowned. She wasn't here?

I reached out with my mind, trying to push through the static to find our link. Even rejected, there was usually a scar, a residual path I could force open.

*Eleanor?* I projected, pouring my Alpha will into the command. *Stop hiding. I'm here to take you home.*

Silence.

Then, a mechanical, cold sensation hit my mind. It wasn't Eleanor ignoring me. It was a wall. A psychic block so thick and absolute it felt like slamming into concrete.

"The user you are trying to reach has severed all Mind-Link connections. Do not attempt to reconnect."

I staggered back, clutching my chest.

Severed? That wasn't possible. Only dead wolves had severed links.

Or...

Or someone who had truly, utterly, stopped caring.

For the first time, a cold drop of genuine unease slid down my spine.

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