
I Returned from the Dead to Destroy My Mate
Chapter 4
The Grand Hall glittered with crystal chandeliers and the forced smiles of two hundred pack members pretending tonight was a celebration. Isla stood in the shadowed archway, her fingers wrapped around the cold stone pillar, watching Orion command the room with the easy confidence of a born Alpha.
He looked magnificent in his formal suit, his restored eyes—Tommy's eyes—catching the light as he gestured broadly. The pack hung on his every word, their faces turned toward him like flowers seeking the sun.
"Unity," Orion was saying, his voice carrying that supernatural Alpha resonance that made even the strongest wolves want to bare their throats. "That is what makes us strong. That is what separates us from the rogues who lurk in the shadows. We are Blood Moon Pack, and in two weeks, when I take my Luna—"
Isla stepped into the light.
The movement caught Orion's attention mid-sentence. His words died as his gaze locked onto her, and she watched something flicker across his face. Surprise. Confusion. And beneath it all, that familiar flash of obligation.
She looked like a ghost. She knew because she'd seen her reflection before leaving the infirmary—pale skin stretched too tight over sharp bones, dark circles shadowing her eyes, her Luna gown hanging loose where it should have clung. The seamstress's careful alterations couldn't hide what Fading Wolf Syndrome had done to her body.
The crowd parted as she walked forward. Two hundred pairs of eyes tracked her movement across the polished marble floor. She heard the whispers starting, saw Mrs. Hunt rise from her seat with a hand pressed to her chest, watched Chloe's face cycle through shock and something that might have been fear.
Isla stopped three feet from the raised platform where Orion stood frozen.
"Isla," he said, and even now, even in front of the entire pack, her name sounded like a burden. "You should be resting. The healer said—"
"I, Isla Hunt," she interrupted, her voice cutting through his words with crystalline clarity, "reject you, Orion Sullivan, Alpha of the Blood Moon Pack, as my mate."
The silence that followed was absolute.
Orion's face went white. His hand flew to his chest, fingers clawing at the fabric of his shirt as if he could reach inside and hold the bond together by force. His mouth opened, but no sound came out.
Isla felt the bond snap.
It wasn't like the slow poisoning of the past three years. This was instantaneous, violent, a metaphysical amputation that tore through her chest and left a gaping wound where the connection had been. Her wolf howled, the sound echoing only in her mind, grief and relief tangled together in a way that made no sense and perfect sense all at once.
Orion staggered backward, his newly restored eyes—Tommy's eyes, always Tommy's eyes—wide with shock and pain. "No. No, you can't—"
"I just did." Isla's legs trembled, but she kept her spine straight. She wouldn't fall. Not yet. Not in front of them.
Marcus Sullivan surged to his feet. "This is unacceptable! You can't reject an Alpha! The ceremony is in two weeks—"
"There won't be a ceremony." Isla turned her gaze to the former Alpha, and she watched him flinch from whatever he saw in her face. "There won't be a Luna. There won't be anything."
The room began to spin.
Isla's vision blurred at the edges, darkness creeping in like smoke. Her wolf was dying—had been dying for months—and the severed bond was the final blow. She felt her knees buckle, felt gravity pulling her down, and distantly she heard Orion roar her name.
Hands caught her before she hit the ground. Dr. Blackwood's face swam into view, her expression professionally concerned but her eyes carrying a message: Trust me.
"Get her to surgery," Elena barked, and suddenly Isla was being lifted, carried through the crowd that pressed in from all sides. She caught glimpses of faces—her mother's horrified expression, Chloe's hand over her mouth, pack members she'd served and cared for staring at her like she was already a corpse.
Orion was shouting something, his Alpha tone trying to command the situation, but Elena ignored him. The operating theater doors swung open, and Isla was laid on the cold steel table under lights so bright they burned.
"Stay with me," Elena whispered, her hands already moving with practiced efficiency. "Just a little longer."
Isla heard Orion's fists pounding on the locked doors. Heard him screaming for them to save her, his voice raw with a desperation she'd never heard before. Three years too late.
Elena's syringe glinted in the surgical lights.
"I'm sorry," the healer breathed, and pressed the plunger.
Isla's heart stopped.
The monitor flatlined, the sound piercing and final, and the last thing she heard before the darkness took her completely was Orion's howl of anguish as her presence vanished from his mind like smoke dissolving into air."
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