
After My Mate’s Murderer Forced Me to Be His Luna
Chapter 4
The accusation hung in the air like a guillotine blade, sharp and final. I stared at the map in Vincenzo’s hand, the red ink of the patrol routes blurring through my tears. It was a lie. A meticulously crafted, evil lie.
"Alpha," a gravelly voice broke the stunned silence of the pack hall. Elder Marcus Whitmore stepped forward, his brow furrowed deeply. He was one of the few who remembered the pack before Vincenzo’s reign of terror. "These are grave accusations. But surely... the Luna? To sell us out to rogues? We should investigate the source before—"
"The source was under her mattress, Marcus!" Vincenzo roared, his spit flying as he turned on the Elder. His chest heaved, his Alpha aura pulsing in erratic, violent waves that made the air thin. "Are you questioning my judgment? Are you questioning the safety of this pack?"
Marcus dipped his head, backing down. "No, Alpha. Of course not."
Vincenzo turned back to me. I was still on my knees on the rug, the rough fibers digging into my skin. I looked up, trying to find a shred of the man who shared Keith’s face, but there was only a monster.
"I didn't do it," I choked out, my voice barely a whisper. I forced myself to look him in the eye. "Vincenzo, you know I would never hurt the pack. This is Selene. She—"
The blow came out of nowhere.
The back of his hand connected with my cheekbone with the force of a sledgehammer. The sound—a wet, sickening crack—echoed off the stone walls. My head snapped to the side, and I tasted the sharp, metallic tang of copper as my lip split against my teeth. I collapsed sideways, the room spinning in a nauseating tilt.
"Silence!" he bellowed. "You do not speak her name! You do not speak at all!"
He loomed over me, breathing hard. "You are a traitor, Nora Stone. You have forfeited your title. You have forfeited your rights."
He looked out at the gathered crowd, his voice booming with theatrical authority. "I will not execute her today. No, I want the other Alphas to see what happens to traitors. I want the Council to witness justice at the Summit."
A murmur of agreement rippled through the room—fear, mostly. They were terrified of him.
"Take her to the Silver Cellar," Vincenzo commanded, wiping his hand as if touching me had dirtied him. "Let the metal leach the treason out of her blood."
Two warriors grabbed my arms. I didn't fight. I couldn't. My head was pounding, blood dripping from my chin onto the pristine floor. As they dragged me away, I caught a glimpse of Selene standing in the shadows of the archway. She wasn't smiling anymore. Her face was blank, cold, watching my destruction with the detachment of a scientist observing a dying insect.
***
The Silver Cellar was a relic from a darker time, a dungeon beneath the pack house designed specifically to break a wolf’s spirit. The moment the heavy iron door slammed shut, plunging me into darkness, I felt it.
The air tasted like battery acid.
I crawled into the corner, trying to keep my skin from touching the walls, but the space was cramped. My shoulder brushed against the bars of the inner cage. A hiss of searing flesh filled the silence, followed by the smell of burning hair and skin.
I screamed, scrambling back to the center of the cold stone floor. The silver. The entire cell was lined with it. Pure, concentrated silver that acted like radioactive poison to our kind.
"Please," I whimpered to the darkness. "Please, just kill me."
Minutes turned into hours. Or maybe days. Time had no meaning here. The silver in the air was suffocating my wolf. Usually, I could feel her presence in the back of my mind—a source of warmth and strength. Now, she was silent, curled into a tight ball, fading. My healing ability, already slow from years of malnutrition, had stopped completely. The cut on my lip throbbed, swollen and hot.
I shivered violently, the cold seeping into my marrow. This was it. This was how I died. Not in a blaze of glory, but rotting in a dungeon, framed for a crime I didn't commit, by a man who wore the face of my true love.
My vision began to gray at the edges. My breathing grew shallow, each inhale a struggle against the weight on my chest. I closed my eyes, and for the first time in five years, I didn't try to fight the darkness. I welcomed it. I pictured Keith. I pictured him standing in the sun, holding that guitar, smiling that crooked smile that used to make my heart race.
*I’m coming, Keith,* I thought, my mind sluggish. *I’m finally coming home.*
The static in my head, the wall that had been there since the day Keith died, suddenly shifted.
It wasn't a sound. It was a sensation. Like a dam breaking. Like a sudden intake of breath after being underwater for a decade. The silence in my mind shattered, not with noise, but with presence. Massive. Ancient. Overwhelming.
A voice, deep as the ocean and vibrating with a power that made my very soul tremble, echoed through the bond I thought was dead.
*"Hold on, my love."*
My eyes snapped open in the pitch black. The voice wasn't Vincenzo’s. It wasn't the weak, broken whisper of my own thoughts. It was rich, commanding, and laced with a terrifying, beautiful rage.
*"I have returned."*
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