
Breaking Free from Betrayal
Chapter 3
I sat cross-legged on my thin mattress in the east guest room, the dim lamplight barely illuminating the envelope in my trembling hands. The Moonstone Pack's silver emblem gleamed against the cream paper—an official offer for a wildlife biologist position at their conservation facility in Montana. I'd applied months ago, back when I still believed I had a future beyond being Cameron's shadow. Back before I knew how completely he would betray me.
"Open it," Emma urged, her presence warming slightly in my mind. Since the basement incident three days ago, she'd been unnaturally quiet, wounded by our mate's cruelty.
I carefully broke the seal and unfolded the letter, my heart racing as I read the formal acceptance. They wanted me—my research, my skills, my mind. Things Cameron had dismissed as worthless.
"We could be free," Emma whispered, a flicker of hope in her voice for the first time in weeks.
My mouth went dry as I imagined Cameron's reaction if he discovered my plans. His Beta aura crushing down on me, his cold eyes as he locked me in the basement again...
"He won't find out," I promised Emma, carefully folding the letter and slipping it into the small tear I'd made in my mattress. "We'll be careful."
Over the next three days, I moved like a ghost through the pack house, invisible to everyone except when they needed someone to blame or ridicule. Each night, after completing the menial chores Cameron assigned me, I locked myself in my room with maps of Montana's territories and the conservation facility's location.
I studied concealment routes, memorizing the back roads and forest paths that would let me slip away unnoticed. I calculated how much money I could withdraw without alerting Cameron, who monitored our joint account obsessively. The small inheritance from my grandmother—the only thing I'd kept separate from him—would be enough for gas and food until my first paycheck.
"What about the mate bond?" Emma asked on the third night as I traced the route from Nevada to Montana with my finger.
"We'll deal with that when we're safe," I whispered, though the thought of the pain that would come with distance made my stomach clench. Even a corrupted mate bond was still a bond—one that would tear at my soul with every mile I put between us.
On Friday evening, Cameron ordered the entire pack to attend a formal dinner celebrating the upcoming alliance with the Redwood Pack. I slipped into a simple black dress—the only formal attire I had left after Jenna had "accidentally" spilled bleach on my clothes.
The dining hall glittered with silver decorations and candlelight. Pack members in their finest clothes mingled around elegantly set tables, deliberately turning away when I approached. I found my assigned seat at the far end of the room, isolated from everyone else.
Cameron stood at the head table, magnificent in a tailored suit that emphasized his broad shoulders and powerful frame. Beside him, Jenna preened in a silver gown that matched the ceremonial Luna pendant around her neck—my pendant, the one that had been promised to me.
As servers brought out the first course, Cameron's eyes found mine across the room. His lips curved in a cold smile as he raised his hand, signaling me to approach.
"Madison," he said loudly enough for nearby tables to hear, "be useful for once. The wine needs pouring."
Confusion flickered through me. "But the servers—"
"I said," he repeated, his Beta tone slicing through my resistance, "pour the wine. For Jenna first."
The room fell silent as I stood frozen, humiliation burning through me. Emma growled, a sound of pure rage that only I could hear.
Cameron's aura pressed down, heavy and commanding. "Now, Omega."
My legs moved without my permission, carrying me to the wine cart. With shaking hands, I lifted the crystal decanter and approached Jenna, whose smug smile made my stomach turn.
"Thank you," she said sweetly as I filled her glass, then added in a whisper meant only for me, "This is exactly where you belong—serving your betters."
I moved around the head table, pouring wine for each pack official, acutely aware of the pitying glances and averted eyes. No one spoke up. No one intervened. These wolves who had once called me friend now watched my degradation in complicit silence.
As I reached Cameron, he caught my wrist, his grip painfully tight. "You see how easy it is when you know your place?" he murmured, his eyes cold with satisfaction. "Remember this feeling, Madison. This is your future here."
In that moment, as the crystal decanter trembled in my grip and Emma's rage burned through my veins, I knew with absolute certainty that I would rather die than spend another day under his control.
"No," I thought, meeting his gaze steadily for the first time in weeks. "This isn't my future at all."
I would be gone before the moon rose tomorrow night.
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