
My Alpha Let His Ex Kill Our Daughter
Chapter 5
The dungeons smelled like wet stone and fear.
I descended the stairs slowly, my hand trailing along the cold wall for balance. My body felt hollow—emptied out, scraped clean, like someone had reached inside and removed everything that made me human. I hadn't eaten in three days. Hadn't slept. Hadn't spoken.
I didn't need to.
The rogues were chained in the lowest cells, guarded by two warriors who straightened when they saw me. Their faces shifted—pity, discomfort, the particular expression people wore when they didn't know what to say to a mother whose child had been murdered.
I walked past them without acknowledgment.
The first rogue was slumped against the wall, his wrists raw from the iron shackles. He looked up when I approached, his eyes widening slightly. I wondered what he saw. A ghost, probably. That's what I felt like.
I stood outside his cell and breathed.
My wolf was gone, but my sense of smell had never faded—one of the few mercies of my condition, though I'd never thought of it as mercy until now. I could still detect the layers of scent that clung to a person: sweat, blood, the particular musk of fear.
And something else.
Floral. Delicate. Expensive.
Jessica's scent.
It was embedded in his clothing, woven into the fabric of his shirt like perfume deliberately applied. Not just a passing contact—this was deep, sustained, the kind of scent transfer that came from close proximity over time.
I moved to the second cell. The third. Each rogue carried the same signature.
Jessica had been with them. Recently. Deliberately.
I pressed my thumb against my wrist and turned away.
The warriors watched me climb the stairs. Neither asked what I'd found. Maybe they already knew.
---
Connor's office door was open.
I walked in without knocking, the bloodied scrap of rogue clothing clutched in my fist. He was at his desk, bent over patrol reports, two fingers pressed to the bridge of his nose.
He looked up when I entered. His face was haggard, eyes red-rimmed, the kind of exhaustion that came from grief he didn't know how to process.
I didn't care.
I crossed the room in three strides and slammed the fabric onto his desk. It landed with a dull thud, spattering dried blood across his papers.
He stared at it. Then at me.
'Claire—'
I shook my head. No words. I wouldn't waste them.
He picked up the fabric, brought it to his nose. I watched his expression shift—recognition, understanding, then something darker. Calculation.
'This doesn't prove—'
I turned and walked out.
Behind me, I heard him stand, heard the scrape of his chair, but I didn't stop. There was nothing he could say that would change what I knew.
Jessica had orchestrated my daughter's murder.
And Connor was going to bury it.
---
The public execution happened at dawn.
I watched from my window as the pack gathered in the courtyard. The rogues were dragged out in chains, forced to their knees before the assembled warriors. Connor stood at the center, his alpha aura radiating command.
His voice carried up to my room, cold and final.
'These rogues acted alone. They infiltrated our territory during a security lapse and murdered the daughter of our Luna. For this crime, the sentence is death.'
No mention of Jessica. No investigation. No justice.
Just a quick, clean execution that tied up loose ends.
I pressed my forehead against the glass and closed my eyes.
---
Connor came to my room that night.
I was sitting in the dark, staring at nothing, when I heard the door open. His footsteps were hesitant—unusual for an alpha who commanded with such certainty everywhere else.
He sat on the edge of the bed. Didn't touch me. Didn't turn on the light.
'I need to tell you something,' he said quietly.
I didn't respond.
'Jessica's family... they have connections. Ancient ones. They brokered a deal with Aldric Thorne.' He paused, and I heard him swallow. 'A Lycan heart transplant. It's the only thing that can save you.'
I turned my head slightly. Looked at him in the darkness.
'The price was silence,' he continued. 'They would only provide the transplant if I buried Jessica's involvement. If I let her walk free.'
Silence stretched between us.
'I chose you, Claire. I chose to save your life.'
He said it like it was a gift. Like I should be grateful.
I looked away.
'I know you hate me,' he whispered. 'I know this is unforgivable. But I couldn't let you die too.'
He stood, crossed to the door, paused with his hand on the frame.
'The medicine arrives tomorrow. Please, Claire. Please take it.'
The door closed.
I sat in the darkness and ran my thumb along my wrist.
He had traded Haven's justice for my survival.
He had made the choice without asking me.
And he expected me to live with it.
---
The next morning, Connor appeared with something worse than medicine.
He knocked softly, then entered carrying a small, trembling figure. A pup—maybe five years old, with dark curls the exact shade Haven's had been.
The child clutched a stuffed wolf, her eyes wide and frightened.
Connor set her down gently near my bed.
'This is Lily,' he said quietly. 'She's an orphan from the border skirmishes. I thought... I thought maybe...'
He couldn't finish the sentence.
I stared at the child. At her hair. At the wolf toy she held.
He thought he could replace Haven.
He thought a substitute daughter would heal the wound.
Something inside me—something I hadn't known was still intact—shattered completely.
I looked at Connor. Really looked at him. And I made my decision.
'Give me the medicine,' I said.
My voice was hoarse from disuse, barely above a whisper, but he heard it.
Relief flooded his face. 'Claire—'
'Give. Me. The medicine.'
He pulled the small vial from his pocket, hands shaking as he poured a pill into his palm. I took it, placed it on my tongue, and swallowed.
He watched, desperate and hopeful.
I turned away, pressed my face into the pillow, and felt the pill dissolve against the fabric of the napkin I'd hidden there.
Behind me, Connor exhaled in relief.
I closed my eyes and began to plan.
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