
Breaking Free from the Alpha's Grip
Chapter 2
The next morning arrived with deceptive normalcy. Sunlight filtered through my cabin windows, casting familiar patterns across the wooden floor where I had collapsed just hours before. But everything had changed. The world looked the same, yet I moved through it like a ghost preparing for her own funeral.
I began with the practical things—the documents that would matter in a world beyond pack boundaries. My birth certificate, tucked away in the bottom drawer of my dresser. The small savings account Edward had insisted I maintain "for emergencies," though he'd never imagined this kind of emergency. My healer's certification from the Moonstone Pack, worthless now but still mine.
Each item went into a worn leather satchel that had once belonged to my grandmother. My fingers traced the familiar creases as I worked, remembering her stories about wolves who chose their own paths. She would have understood what I was doing.
The pack's administrative building stood quiet in the afternoon heat. Most members were either working or resting, leaving the corridors empty as I made my way to Elena Martinez's office. Elena had always been different—an omega who'd clawed her way into a position of minor authority through sheer competence, someone who understood what it meant to survive in a system designed to crush you.
"Isla?" Elena looked up from her paperwork, surprise flickering across her weathered features. "What brings you here?"
I closed the door behind me and approached her desk. From my pocket, I withdrew the small velvet pouch containing the last of my personal jewelry—pieces that had belonged to my mother, gifts from pack members during happier times. "I need documentation. Clean documentation. For someone who wants to disappear."
Elena's eyes widened, but she didn't ask questions. Her gaze moved from the jewelry to my face, reading the desperation I couldn't quite hide. "How clean?"
"New name. New history. Somewhere far from here." I placed the pouch on her desk. "Everything I have left."
She opened the pouch carefully, examining the contents. A gold bracelet with tiny emeralds. My mother's pearl earrings. A silver ring that had been my grandmother's. Not much, but enough.
"Isla Matthews," she said after a long moment. "Born in a small human town in Montana. No pack affiliations. Clean medical records, employment history in... let's say nursing. It'll take me two days."
I nodded, relief flooding through me. "Thank you."
"Don't thank me yet." Elena's voice was soft but firm. "Whatever you're running from, make sure you're running toward something better. The world beyond pack boundaries isn't always kinder."
That night, I waited until the pack house lights dimmed and the territory settled into sleep. Luna stirred restlessly in my mind, sensing what was coming. Together, we walked to the small clearing behind my cabin where I'd once practiced my healing arts.
The fire started small—just a few twigs and dry leaves. But as the flames grew stronger, I felt something inside me growing stronger too. I reached into my pocket and withdrew the first piece: the ornate silver necklace Edward had placed around my neck during our mating ceremony twelve years ago.
"I, Isla Nguyen," I whispered to the flames, "reject the lies that bound me."
The necklace hissed as it hit the fire, silver melting and twisting in the heat. Next came the sapphire earrings that marked my status as Luna—the position I'd held in name only while another woman claimed my mate's heart. They disappeared into the flames with a soft pop.
One by one, I fed my past to the fire. The bracelet Edward had given me for our fifth anniversary. The ring that symbolized our "eternal" bond. Each piece that melted felt like chains falling away from my soul.
Luna whimpered as the ceremonial tiara—the crown that had made me Luna of Silver Ridge Pack—began to dissolve. "It's okay," I told her gently. "We were never truly theirs anyway."
The flames danced higher, casting flickering shadows across my face. In their light, I could see my reflection in the cabin window—no longer the broken, dependent woman who'd accepted scraps of affection while her mate gave his heart to another. The woman looking back at me had steel in her spine and fire in her eyes.
As the last piece of jewelry turned to ash, I felt the final threads of my old life burning away. Tomorrow, Elena would have my new documents ready. Tomorrow, I would become Isla Matthews—a woman with no pack, no mate, no history of betrayal.
A woman who belonged only to herself.
The fire crackled softly as I watched the ashes scatter in the night breeze, carrying away the last remnants of the Luna I'd never truly been allowed to be.
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