
After My Mate Chose Her, the Lycan King Chose Me
Chapter 4
The roar of the pack was deafening, a chaotic symphony of panic and rage. But as Conor released my throat to drop to his knees beside Zoya, the world around me fell into a strange, muffled silence. He was shouting for the healer, his hands hovering frantically over Zoya’s clutching, uninjured stomach. Not once did he look back at me. Not once did he check if he had crushed my windpipe.
He had made his choice. And in that moment, staring at his back, I made mine.
I didn't scream. I didn't beg. While the Beta and Gamma rushed the stage to help carry the "stricken" mistress, I moved with the ghostly quiet of a shadow. My hand swept over the Beta table, snatching the wine glass Zoya had abandoned. I wrapped it in a linen napkin and shoved it into the deep pocket of my gown. The evidence of her poison.
I slipped out the side service entrance while the rest of the Silver Moon Pack crowded around their Alpha and his precious, counterfeit heir.
My movements in the master bedroom were surgical. I didn't pack clothes; clothes could be bought. I went straight to the wall safe behind the painting of the first Alpha. My trembling fingers punched in the code—my birthday, ironically. Inside lay the deed to the pack lands, the financial ledgers I had already drained, and a yellowed scroll tied with leather: our original Mating Contract.
I unfurled it, my eyes scanning the calligraphy until I found the clause I needed. *Section 4, Paragraph 2: Fidelity of the Spirit.* It was an ancient law, rarely invoked, stating that if a mate’s spirit was broken by betrayal, the bond could be legally dissolved by the Council.
I shoved the documents into my leather satchel, grabbed my passport, and ran.
My SUV was waiting in the garage. Before I started the engine, I popped the hood and ripped out the GPS tracker Conor insisted all pack vehicles have for "safety." Wires sparked, stinging my fingers, but I didn't flinch. I drove fast, the rain blurring the trees into gray smears, heading not for the highway, but for the private airstrip on the edge of the territory. The jet I had chartered under my maiden name, Harper Ross, was already spooling its engines.
As the wheels left the tarmac, climbing into the storm clouds, I felt a tug in my chest. It was the bond. It was stretching, pulling taut like a rubber band about to snap. Conor was reaching for me. I could feel his confusion bleeding through the static, a sudden, sharp realization that I wasn't in the house.
*Harper?* His voice echoed in my head, faint but demanding. *Where are you?*
I closed my eyes, leaning my head against the cool window. We were crossing the border. We were in neutral airspace now.
"Hera," I whispered. "Are you ready?"
*Cut him out,* my wolf snarled, her voice stronger than it had been in years. *Cut him out now.*
I didn't just block him. I visualized the thick, black cord of his Alpha command wrapped around my mind—the block he had used to silence me, the bond he had polluted with Zoya’s scent. I grabbed it with my mental claws and pulled.
The pain was blinding. It felt like tearing a limb from my body. I screamed, the sound lost to the roar of the jet engines, as I ripped the connection free.
*SNAP.*
The silence that followed was absolute. The static was gone. The heavy, suffocating weight of his presence vanished. Somewhere, miles below and behind me, I knew Conor Anderson had just fallen to his knees, clutching a chest that was suddenly, terrifyingly empty.
***
London was draped in fog when I landed, a fitting shroud for the death of my old life. I didn't go to a hotel. I took a cab straight to the Lycan Council headquarters, a formidable stone fortress that predated the city itself.
The guards at the iron gates took one look at my aura—battered, but still undeniably Luna—and let me pass. I was ushered into the office of Lady Victoria Sterling. The Elder sat behind a massive mahogany desk, her silver hair pulled into a severe bun, her eyes sharp as cut glass.
"Luna Harper," she said, her voice dry. "You are far from home. And you smell of distress."
I didn't curtsy. I walked forward and placed the leather satchel on her desk. Next to it, I set the napkin-wrapped wine glass.
"I am not here for a visit, Lady Sterling," I said, my voice steady despite the raw ache in my chest. "I am here to invoke the Code of Separation."
Victoria’s eyebrows shot up. "That is a grave request. It requires proof of life-threatening betrayal. Infidelity alone is not enough to sever a chosen bond in the eyes of the High Law."
I unwrapped the glass. The scent of wolfsbane, metallic and acrid, wafted into the room. Victoria recoiled slightly, her nose wrinkling.
"Attempted murder of a wolf spirit," I stated cold and clear. "By an unranked rogue he brought into our home." I pulled the financial records from my bag and slid them across the polished wood. "A rogue he has been funding with pack money for eight months. A rogue he chose over his mate."
Victoria picked up the papers, scanning the transfers. Her expression darkened with every line she read. She looked at the glass, then at the scars visible just above the neckline of my dress—the price I had paid for a man who had just tried to choke the life out of me.
"He put his hands on you?" she asked quietly.
"He choked me until I saw stars," I replied. "To protect her."
Lady Victoria stood up. She picked up a heavy wax seal and pressed it firmly onto the document I had presented.
"You are granted sanctuary, Harper Ross," she declared, her tone ringing with ancient authority. "As of this moment, the Silver Moon Pack has no Luna."
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