
Betrayal Unleashed: My Alpha Chose Her Over Me
Chapter 3
The council chamber felt suffocating as I took my seat among the pack members. Morning light streamed through the tall windows, illuminating the large oak table where Marcus sat at the head, his expression stern and unreadable. Rebecca perched beside him, the moonstone pendant glinting at her throat. Every time I saw it, Luna stirred restlessly within me.
*Something's wrong with that pendant,* she whispered. *It should be ours.*
I pushed the thought away, confused by my wolf's persistent discomfort around our Alpha and his... friend. That's what Marcus called Rebecca now—his special friend who needed protection and care. The pack had accepted this explanation with varying degrees of skepticism, but no one dared question him openly.
"Our final order of business," Marcus announced, his gaze sweeping the room before landing on me. "We've received reports of unusual activity in the old rogue territory to the north. We need a scout to investigate."
The room fell silent. The northern territory had been abandoned after a violent clash between our pack and a rogue group three years ago. It was considered dangerous ground, full of painful memories.
"Pack member Mitchell," Marcus said, using that formal address that always made Luna bristle. "You'll take this assignment. Your tracking skills are adequate, and you know the terrain."
Something in his tone made me pause. This wasn't just any assignment—it was deliberately isolated and potentially dangerous. Luna growled softly within me.
*He wants us away from the pack,* she warned. *Alone and vulnerable.*
I looked up, meeting Marcus's expectant gaze. The Alpha was waiting for my immediate agreement, as always. But instead, I felt an unfamiliar resistance rising within me.
"I respectfully decline, Alpha," I said, my voice steady despite the rapid beating of my heart.
The room went deadly quiet. Beta Harris's eyebrows shot up in surprise. Delta Wilson nearly dropped the papers he was holding. No one refused a direct assignment from the Alpha—especially not me, who had always been unfailingly obedient.
Marcus's eyes narrowed dangerously. "You... what?"
"I decline the assignment," I repeated, Luna's confidence surging through me. "Delta Jenkins has better tracking skills than I do, and Gamma Peters knows the northern territory better from his previous border patrols."
Rebecca leaned forward, her eyes gleaming with malice. "Alpha, perhaps pack member Mitchell needs a reminder of her place in the hierarchy."
I felt Marcus's Alpha aura expand, pressing against me like a physical weight. In the past, this pressure would have made me immediately submit. But something had changed—Luna stood firm within me, refusing to bow.
"Very well," Marcus finally said, his voice cold. "Jenkins, you'll take the northern assignment. Mitchell, you're assigned to tomorrow's border negotiation with Crescent Ridge instead."
It wasn't a victory—it was a different kind of challenge. The border negotiations were typically handled by Marcus himself or Beta Harris. Sending me was either a test or a punishment.
Luna seemed pleased nonetheless. *Better than being alone in rogue territory,* she murmured.
---
The following day, I arrived at the border clearing where our territory met the Crescent Ridge Pack lands. The morning mist still clung to the ground, creating an ethereal atmosphere as I waited for their delegation to arrive.
I sensed them before I saw them—three wolves approaching through the trees. They shifted to human form as they reached the clearing, and I recognized Beta Nathan Wells at the head of their group.
Tall with broad shoulders and dark hair that fell across his forehead, Nathan Wells had a reputation for fairness in negotiations. His eyes—a warm amber that reminded me of autumn leaves—widened slightly when he saw me standing alone.
"Sarah Mitchell," he said, using my name rather than my pack title. The familiarity was unusual but not unwelcome. "I was expecting Alpha Thompson or Beta Harris."
"Alpha Thompson sent me to represent Shadowmere today," I explained, straightening my shoulders.
Nathan nodded, a curious expression crossing his face. "Well then, shall we begin? I'm particularly interested in your thoughts on the perimeter defenses along the eastern ridge."
I blinked in surprise. He was asking for my opinion directly rather than treating me as merely a messenger for Marcus's decisions. Luna perked up with interest.
"The eastern ridge has been vulnerable since the spring floods," I found myself saying. "We should consider joint patrols until the terrain stabilizes."
Nathan smiled, and something warm flickered in my chest. "My thoughts exactly. Let's discuss the details."
For the next hour, we worked through the border issues with a surprising ease. Nathan treated me as an equal, valuing my input and addressing me directly rather than speaking through me to Marcus. It was... refreshing.
---
Two days later, I found myself on a joint patrol with Nathan along the newly agreed border. Our wolves ran side by side through the forest, checking the markers we'd established during the negotiations.
Luna was unusually playful, darting between trees and occasionally brushing her flank against Nathan's dark brown wolf. Each time they touched, a strange warmth spread through me, along with a comforting scent I couldn't quite place—something like cedar and rain.
*He smells right,* Luna commented, confusing me further.
As we paused by a stream to drink, our wolves stood close together. Nathan's wolf gently nudged Luna's shoulder, and that spark of warmth flared again, stronger this time. I found myself staring into his amber eyes, feeling something stir deep within me—something that felt like recognition, though I couldn't understand why.
When we shifted back to human form at the end of the patrol, Nathan's expression was thoughtful as he looked at me.
"Your wolf seems different from when I last saw her at the inter-pack gathering last year," he observed. "Stronger somehow."
"Different how?" I asked, curious about his perception.
"Like she's finally waking up," he said simply, then added, "It suits you, Sarah."
As he turned to leave, the afternoon sun caught his profile, and for a brief moment, Luna howled within me—not in pain or confusion as she often did lately, but with a longing I didn't understand.
*Why does he feel familiar?* I wondered as I watched him disappear into the trees. *And why does Luna seem to know something I don't?*
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