
After My Mate Rigged the Tribunal, I Walked Away
After My Mate Rigged the Tribunal, I Walked Away Chapter 1
The heavy oak doors of the Ironstone Pack’s tribunal hall were closed, sealing in the scent of polished wood, nervous sweat, and the suffocating, heavy auras of the Alpha judges. I adjusted the microphone at my podium, taking a slow breath to steady my racing heart. I am Evie Nichols, and I was born for this.
"The Blackwood Ridge dispute cannot be settled by modern territorial lines," I stated, my voice ringing clear and steady across the silent hall. "By examining the historical hunting migrations of the northern packs, we see that the boundary was never meant to be static."
Judge Catherine Hayes, a senior Alpha whose dominant presence usually made younger wolves shrink, leaned forward with genuine interest. I was nailing it. The cross-territory training placement with the prestigious Silverveil Pack—a once-in-a-generation opportunity—was practically in my grasp.
Allowing myself a brief moment of triumph, I glanced toward the gallery. I was looking for him. Matthew Porter. My pack's Beta, my partner of seven years, and the man I was supposed to officially bind my soul to tomorrow morning. He sat in the second row, his tailored charcoal suit a stark contrast to the casual wear of the other pack members. I waited for his proud smile, the one that always made my chest bloom with warmth.
But his dark eyes weren't on me.
He was staring directly at the opposing counsel's table. At Bella Jackson.
I faltered for a fraction of a second as I caught the exchange. A subtle, calculated nod from Matthew. A slight, knowing tilt of Bella’s chin in return. My inner wolf, Sia, paced uneasily in the back of my mind. *Prey,* she grumbled, her instincts picking up on a threat I couldn't yet name. I pushed the distraction down, forcing my focus back to the judges and finishing my opening argument to a murmur of approval.
But the unease festered. It bloomed into full-blown panic during the cross-examination phase.
Bella strutted to the center of the floor. She smelled heavily of artificial vanilla, a cloying scent she used to mask her natural nerves. She didn't attack my primary evidence. Instead, she offered a sickeningly sweet, confident smile to Judge Hayes.
"I direct the council's attention to the 1892 Moon Treaty addendum," Bella announced, pulling a single sheet of paper from her folder. "Specifically, the clause regarding shifting river boundaries, which completely invalidates Miss Nichols's western border claim."
All the air left my lungs. The room spun.
*No.*
Sia let out a sharp, wounded whimper.
That addendum wasn't just obscure; it was practically buried in the pack archives. I only knew about it because I had spent three weeks digging through dusty, pre-digital records. I had found it exactly twelve hours ago.
Last night, curled up on the leather sofa in Matthew’s private study, I had traced the faded ink of that exact clause. *"Look at this,"* I had told him, my head resting against his chest. *"If opposing counsel finds this loophole, my entire argument collapses."*
Matthew had smiled, his hand resting heavy and possessive on the back of my neck. *"Don't worry your pretty head over it, Evie. No one is going to find a century-old loophole. You'll be a beautiful Luna-in-waiting, placement or not."*
Now, Bella was reciting my worst nightmare, word for word.
I stared at Matthew in the gallery. His face was a mask of polite, Beta-level composure. He didn't even blink.
The rest of the tribunal was a blur of rushing water in my ears. I tried to pivot, to salvage the argument, but the damage was absolute. The loophole was an airtight kill shot to my case.
Judge Hayes struck her wooden gavel. The sharp *crack* echoed like a gunshot. "An ingenious find, Miss Jackson," the senior Alpha declared, her authoritative tone leaving no room for debate. "The council rules in your favor. The Silverveil training placement is awarded to Bella Jackson."
The placement I had bled for. The dream I had sacrificed sleep, sweat, and tears to achieve, stripped away in a single sentence.
The gallery erupted into polite applause. The hall began to empty. I stood frozen at my podium, my hands gripping the edges so hard my knuckles turned white. Sia was thrashing now, howling in a mix of rage and profound, paralyzing grief.
Matthew didn't come down to console me. I watched his broad shoulders disappear through the heavy oak doors, slipping away before I could even catch his eye.
The room quieted. The elders departed. Bella had practically skipped out with her friends to celebrate. I was completely alone.
Moving like a ghost, I began gathering my files. As I walked past the opposing table, a flash of yellow caught my eye. A legal notepad paper, hastily crumpled and abandoned near the edge of Bella's desk.
I didn't want to look. Every instinct I had screamed at me to walk away. But my hand reached out on its own.
I smoothed the crumpled paper flat against the polished wood.
There it was. The 1892 Moon Treaty addendum, summarized in precise, blue ink. It wasn't Bella's messy, looping scrawl. The letters were sharp, slanted, and painfully familiar. I had spent seven years reading this handwriting on birthday cards, anniversary notes, and pack memos.
It was Matthew’s handwriting.
Beneath the legal jargon, a single instructional sentence was underlined twice: *Wait until she brings up the river boundary, then use this to shut her down.*
My vision blurred, a single hot tear spilling over my lashes to land directly on the blue ink. It wasn't just a loss. It was an execution. Matthew hadn't just watched me fail; he had loaded the gun and handed it to Bella.
Tomorrow morning, the packhouse would be draped in white blooms. Tomorrow morning, I was supposed to stand in the bonding circle and submit myself to this man for the rest of my life.
I stared at the note, the crushing weight of seven years of manipulation settling into my bones. He didn't want an equal. He wanted a cage with a pretty bird inside.
I folded the yellow paper, slipping it into my blazer pocket. My tears stopped. Sia stopped howling. In the sudden, deafening quiet of my own mind, a new, terrifying clarity took root.
After My Mate Rigged the Tribunal, I Walked Away of Contents
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