
My Alpha Husband's Secret Dungeon Broke Me
Chapter 4
His hand was still on my wrist when the black blood hit his skin — and he hissed like it burned.
Beckett jerked back, staring at the dark stain spreading across his knuckles where my blood had touched him. The skin beneath was already blistering, angry red welts forming like he'd been splashed with acid.
"Shit," he muttered, then grabbed my shoulder with his uninjured hand. "Get in the truck. Now."
I didn't argue. The pain radiating from my fake mating mark had escalated from uncomfortable burning to someone driving a white-hot poker through my nerve endings. Every heartbeat sent another wave of agony down my spine, and I could taste copper in the back of my throat.
Beckett's vehicle was a sleek black Rivian R1T, the kind of electric truck that screamed government funding. He practically shoved me into the passenger seat before vaulting behind the wheel, his left hand already reaching for something in the center console.
With his teeth, he tore open what looked like a field dressing packet, then wrapped the gauze around his burned knuckles one-handed while his right hand gripped the steering wheel. The truck pulled away from my neighborhood with barely a whisper of sound.
I pressed both palms against my neck, trying to stem the flow of black blood seeping through Rowan's bite mark. The liquid was warm and viscous, nothing like normal blood. It smelled wrong too — metallic and sweet, with an underlying rot that made my stomach lurch.
"Don't try to stop it," Beckett said without looking at me. His voice was rougher now, strained. "The more you fight the purge, the worse the backlash."
"Purge?" The word came out as a whimper. I bit down on my knuckles to keep from screaming as another wave of pain crashed over me.
"Your body is rejecting the false bond. Seven years of accumulated magical toxins are working their way out of your system." He took a sharp right turn, heading away from Silver Ridge's residential areas toward the darker outskirts of town. "It's going to get worse before it gets better."
The enclosed space of the truck cab was rapidly filling with his scent — black pepper and evergreen, with something underneath that reminded me of the electric charge in the air before a thunderstorm. My wolf, who should have been cowering in pain, was instead stretching toward that smell like a cat seeking sunlight.
The betrayal of my own body made me furious. How dare my wolf react to this stranger when I was literally bleeding out a fake marriage?
"Where are you taking me?" I managed to ask through gritted teeth.
Beckett's jaw tightened. "Somewhere safe. Somewhere Rowan can't track you through the bond residue."
Twenty minutes later, he pulled off the main road onto a dirt track that led to what looked like an abandoned fire lookout tower. The structure rose maybe forty feet into the sky, a skeletal metal frame with a small cabin perched at the top. Moonlight filtered through the pine trees, casting everything in silver and shadow.
Beckett killed the engine and turned to face me. In the sudden silence, I could hear both of our breathing — his carefully controlled, mine ragged and uneven.
"I need to treat that wound," he said, his purple eyes reflecting the dashboard lights. "The false bond backlash will intensify over the next forty-eight hours. If we don't purify the contamination now, the black blood will enter your bloodstream and permanently seal your Moonborn abilities."
He reached behind his seat and pulled out what looked like a leather tool roll, the kind mechanics used for precision instruments. But when he unrolled it on the center console, I saw silver needles, dried herbs that seemed to glow faintly in the darkness, and a small vial filled with liquid that pulsed with its own inner light.
"Council standard anti-curse kit," he explained, noticing my stare. "I need to touch the mark directly. It's going to hurt. And your wolf is going to..." He stopped mid-sentence, his hands stilling on the leather case.
"Going to what?" My voice came out smaller than I intended.
His eyes met mine, and something shifted in the air between us. Heavier. More charged.
"React," he said finally. In the dim light, his pupils were dilated enough that I could barely see the purple irises.
I nodded, not trusting my voice. The pain in my neck was becoming unbearable anyway — whatever he needed to do couldn't be worse than this.
Beckett moved slowly, giving me time to pull away if I wanted to. His fingertips found the edge of Rowan's bite mark, and the moment his skin touched mine, my entire body arched off the seat.
It wasn't just pain — though the silver needle he was using to trace the wound's edges definitely hurt. It was electricity, pure and shocking, racing from his touch down my spine and spreading to every nerve ending I possessed. My wolf didn't just react.
She howled.
Not in pain. In recognition.
The sound that tore from my throat was barely human, a keening cry that seemed to echo in the small space of the truck cab. Beckett's hand stilled against my neck, his breathing suddenly harsh and uneven.
"Wren." My name on his lips sounded like a prayer and a curse combined.
The glowing liquid from the vial was warm as he applied it to the wound, and I felt the black blood flow slow, then stop entirely. But his hand lingered on my throat longer than necessary, his thumb tracing the line of my collarbone with the barest whisper of pressure.
When he finally pulled away, we were both breathing like we'd been running. Beckett retreated to the driver's seat so fast he nearly hit his head on the roof, then gripped the steering wheel with both hands. I could see his knuckles go white even in the darkness.
"What just happened?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper. "That wasn't a normal purification reaction."
"No." He still wasn't looking at me. "It wasn't."
"We need to discuss logistics. You can't go back to Silver Ridge tonight. Rowan will have activated the pack's loyalty protocols—"
"Beckett." Something in my tone made him stop talking. "What did your wolf just do?"
The silence stretched between us, filled only with our uneven breathing and the distant sound of crickets outside. Finally, he turned to face me, and what I saw in his eyes made my breath catch.
Fear. Genuine, bone-deep fear.
"It recognized you," he said, each word forced out like he was speaking against his will. "But that's impossible because I don't have a fated mate. Council Enforcers are surgically stripped of their bond receptors at initiation. I literally cannot bond."
His purple eyes held mine in the darkness. "So either the surgery failed. Or you're something that breaks the rules."
That's when my phone screen lit up.
I'd never turned off airplane mode. There should have been no way for any signal to reach me. But there it was — an AirDrop notification.
Someone within thirty feet was trying to send me a file.
The filename made my blood run cold: "WrenCalloway_BloodlineReport_CLASSIFIED.pdf"
Beckett and I looked at each other, then simultaneously turned to check the mirrors. The road behind us was empty, nothing but pine trees and shadows.
But my wolf could feel it — something watching us from the darkness. Something that didn't smell like any shifter I'd ever encountered.
Something that had been waiting for us to arrive.
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