
Betrayal Unleashed: My Alpha Chose Her Over Me
Chapter 2
The shaman's chamber smelled of sage and ancient magic. Candles flickered in the corners, casting long shadows across the stone walls as I knelt in the center of a circle drawn with crushed moonstone powder. My heart felt like a trapped bird in my chest, desperate to escape what was coming.
Marcus stood opposite me, his face an emotionless mask. Behind him, Elder Thorne's weathered hands moved methodically, arranging ceremonial items on a small altar. The old shaman's eyes held something like pity when they briefly met mine.
"The ritual requires blood from both participants," Elder Thorne explained, his voice gravelly with age. "And a personal item that symbolizes your connection."
Marcus stepped forward, producing the simple silver promise ring I'd returned to him last night. My throat tightened at the sight of it. Luna whimpered inside me, her presence already feeling distant, as though she was retreating from the pain to come.
*Don't leave me,* I silently begged her.
*Never,* she answered, but her voice sounded faint. *We are one, Sarah, no matter what he takes from us.*
"Are you prepared, Alpha?" The elder's question pulled me back to the moment.
Marcus nodded curtly. "Proceed."
"And you, she-wolf?" Elder Thorne turned to me. "This ritual requires willing participation, even in submission."
I wanted to scream, to refuse, to run. But where would I go? The pack was my only family after losing my parents. And some traitorous part of me still loved Marcus, still hoped this was some terrible mistake.
"I am prepared," I whispered.
The elder began chanting in the ancient language of our ancestors. The moonstone circle began to glow, faintly at first, then with increasing brightness. He took my hand, pricking my finger with a ceremonial silver blade. My blood dripped onto the promise ring, which now lay in a small stone bowl.
When Marcus's blood joined mine, the chanting grew louder. The air in the chamber seemed to thicken, pressing against my skin. A sharp, twisting pain began in my chest, radiating outward until every nerve ending felt like it was on fire.
I gasped, doubling over. It felt like something essential was being torn from me, ripped away cell by cell. Luna's howl of anguish echoed through my mind, growing fainter with each second.
"Luna!" I cried out, both mentally and aloud.
The last thing I remembered was Marcus's face, watching dispassionately as I collapsed.
---
I woke to morning light streaming through my window. My head throbbed dully, and there was an odd emptiness inside me that I couldn't quite place. Luna stirred sleepily.
*Morning run,* she reminded me. *Pack gathering.*
I dressed quickly in running clothes, trying to shake the strange melancholy that clung to me. Something felt different, but I couldn't put my finger on what.
The pack had already gathered at the edge of the forest when I arrived. Alpha Marcus stood at the front, his powerful presence commanding attention. Beside him was Rebecca Hayes, looking pale but determined. Something about seeing them together made Luna bristle unexpectedly.
"Today we run as one pack under the morning sun," Marcus announced. "Follow my lead."
The pack shifted in unison, fur replacing skin, paws replacing feet. I welcomed my wolf form, letting Luna take control as we always did during runs. Her silver-gray fur gleamed in the early light.
Marcus's black wolf led the charge into the forest, with the pack following in formation. Luna started forward, then suddenly balked. A strange whimpering sound escaped her throat.
*What's wrong?* I asked her internally.
*Don't want to follow him,* she growled. *Wrong. Feels wrong.*
Before I could question her further, she veered sharply away from the main pack, taking a different trail through the trees. I felt several pairs of eyes on us as we broke formation—something that simply wasn't done during formal pack runs.
Delta Wilson's brown wolf gave me a puzzled look as we passed. Even Beta Harris seemed surprised by our deviation. But Luna refused to fall back in line, running her own path through the familiar woods until we were alone.
---
Later that afternoon, I cleaned my quarters in the pack house, trying to make sense of Luna's unusual behavior. My wolf had never defied the Alpha before. As I reorganized my dresser drawer, my fingers brushed against something cold and metallic pushed to the back.
I pulled out a simple silver ring. It looked familiar, but I couldn't place where I'd seen it before. Had someone given it to me? It seemed important somehow, but when I tried to remember, my thoughts became foggy.
Luna stirred uneasily as I examined it. *Hide it,* she urged. *Not ours anymore.*
"But whose is it?" I whispered aloud, turning the band in my fingers. A strange sadness washed over me.
Without understanding why, I slipped the ring into a small wooden box where I kept my mother's necklace and father's watch—the only keepsakes I had of them. Whatever this ring was, Luna was right. It didn't feel like it belonged to me anymore.
As I closed the box, I caught sight of myself in the mirror. For a moment, I didn't recognize the woman staring back—her eyes held a confusion and emptiness that hadn't been there before. And somewhere deep inside, Luna whimpered for something we both had lost but couldn't name.
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