
Betrayal in the Pack
Chapter 2
I drove away from the pack house with my hands gripping the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles turned white. The betrayal burned in my chest like acid, but beneath it, something else was growing—a cold, calculating fury that felt surprisingly liberating.
My first stop was my private office in the business district, a small space I'd rented three years ago when I needed somewhere to handle my consulting work away from family interference. The key turned in the lock with a satisfying click, and I stepped into the sanctuary they'd never bothered to learn about.
I powered up my laptop and pulled up the family's financial accounts—the ones I'd been managing for years while they lived in blissful ignorance. What I found made my wolf snarl with dark satisfaction.
Unpaid credit card bills totaling sixty thousand dollars. A second mortgage on the pack house they'd taken out behind my back six months ago. Overdue payments on Rachel's BMW, her designer wardrobe account, even the country club membership they insisted was "essential for pack image."
Every single expense had been charged against credit lines secured by my income and the pack house I'd purchased. Without my monthly transfers of fifteen thousand dollars, they were drowning in debt they'd hidden from me with practiced ease.
"Stupid," I whispered, scrolling through months of reckless spending. "So incredibly stupid."
Rachel had charged eight thousand dollars at a maternity boutique just last week. Neo had bought a custom motorcycle worth more than most people's cars. My parents had booked a vacation to the Bahamas for next month, completely confident I'd cover the costs as always.
Sage stirred in my mind, her voice sharp with approval. *Let them drown in their own greed.*
I spent the next hour documenting everything, taking screenshots and printing records. Then I made a series of phone calls that felt like cutting chains from my wrists.
"First National? This is Shelby Robinson. I need to discuss the mortgage options on 1247 Crescent Drive... Yes, the pack house. I want to refinance against the full current value."
The next morning, I walked into Silver Moon Bank wearing my best business suit and carrying a briefcase full of documentation. The loan officer, a nervous Beta named Timothy, kept glancing toward the door as if expecting my father to storm in.
"Miss Robinson, this is... unusual. Your family has never pursued this level of financing against the property."
"My family doesn't own the property," I said calmly, sliding the deed across his desk. "I do. And I'm exercising my right to mortgage it against its full appraised value of 1.2 million dollars."
Timothy's eyes widened as he examined the paperwork. "But the existing mortgage—"
"Will be rolled into the new loan. I want the funds deposited into my personal account, not the family account. And I want the mortgage terms to specifically prohibit any sale or transfer of the property without the primary lender's consent."
It took three hours, but when I walked out of that bank, I owned every brick of the pack house free and clear, with 800,000 dollars in liquid assets and a mortgage that made it impossible for my family to sell or transfer the property without my signature.
My phone had been buzzing nonstop. Seventeen missed calls from Luna Robinson, twelve from Alpha Robinson, and surprisingly, twenty-three from Neo. I turned it off and drove to the neutral territory bordering our pack lands.
The apartment I rented was small but clean—a far cry from the luxury I'd provided for my family, but it felt more like home than anywhere I'd lived in years. As I unpacked my few belongings, my phone rang from the kitchen counter where I'd left it charging.
Rachel's name flashed on the screen.
I answered on the fourth ring. "What?"
"Shelby, thank the Moon Goddess. We need to talk. There's been a misunderstanding—"
"No misunderstanding. You made your choice. Live with it."
"The credit cards were declined today," Rachel's voice cracked with desperation. "The mortgage payment bounced. Daddy's account is overdrawn. What did you do?"
"I stopped being your personal ATM. Figure it out yourself."
"You can't do this! I'm pregnant, Shelby. I need medical care. Neo's been getting threatening calls from pack members who found out he's a rogue. We need—"
"You need to grow up and face the consequences of your choices."
I hung up and turned off the phone again. Through my apartment window, I could see the Silver Moon territory in the distance, the pack house barely visible through the trees. For the first time in my adult life, I felt truly free.
Let them scramble. Let them panic. Let them discover what life was like without someone else cleaning up their messes.
The real reckoning was just beginning.
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