
My Alpha Let Me Die for His Childhood Friend
Chapter 2
The sirens pierced through the pre-dawn darkness like screams of the damned. From my vantage point floating above the destruction, I watched as emergency vehicles converged on what had once been the old Riverside warehouse. Red and blue lights painted the rubble in hellish colors, casting dancing shadows across the crater where my life had ended.
I tried to call out, to wave, to do anything that might catch someone's attention. But my voice produced no sound, and my hands passed through everything I attempted to touch. The cold that surrounded me wasn't just physical—it was the absolute absence of warmth, of life, of connection to the world I'd been torn from.
The first responders worked with practiced efficiency, their movements sharp and purposeful in the chaos. Paramedics set up a triage area that would remain tragically empty. Fire department crews hosed down the smoldering remains. And then the wolves arrived.
I recognized them immediately—members of the Crescent Moon Pack's security team. They moved differently than the human first responders, their enhanced senses already cataloging details that others would miss. Their Alpha training showed in every measured step, every careful scan of the scene.
Then I saw him.
Kade emerged from a black SUV, his tall frame cutting an imposing figure against the emergency lights. Even from my ethereal perch, I could see the sharp focus in his steel-gray eyes as they swept across the destruction. His dark hair was slightly mussled, as if he'd been roused from sleep, but his expression was all business—cold, analytical, professional.
My dead heart would have hammered if it still could. Here he was, finally at the scene of my death, and yet he looked exactly as he had during every other pack emergency. Detached. Controlled. Utterly unmoved by the possibility that someone he knew might be among the casualties.
"What do we have?" Kade's voice carried easily across the scene as he approached Beta Marcus, the lead investigator.
Marcus consulted his tablet, his expression grim. "Explosion occurred at approximately 2:47 AM. Witnesses reported seeing several individuals fleeing the scene just before the blast. No survivors found yet."
"Any identification on victims?"
"That's the problem." Marcus gestured toward the crater. "The blast was so intense, we're having trouble determining much of anything. But there's definitely at least one casualty."
I watched Kade's jaw tighten almost imperceptibly. To anyone else, he would have looked completely composed. But I had spent three years learning to read his micro-expressions, searching desperately for signs of the warmth he showed so freely to others.
"Cause?" Kade asked, pulling on latex gloves as he moved closer to the debris field.
A crime scene technician looked up from where she was collecting samples. "Preliminary analysis suggests a sophisticated explosive device. But sir..." She hesitated, glancing around nervously. "We're detecting traces of wolfsbane mixed into the explosive compound."
The words hit the gathered wolves like a physical blow. Several security team members exchanged dark looks. Wolfsbane wasn't just deadly to our kind—it was a calling card. A message that this wasn't random violence, but a targeted attack on werewolves.
Kade's expression hardened further, his Alpha instincts clearly engaging. "Rogues?"
"That would be my guess," Marcus confirmed. "This level of planning, the specific targeting... it has their signature all over it."
I floated closer, desperate to see some flicker of recognition in Kade's eyes. Surely he would sense something. Surely the mate bond, even severed, would leave some trace that might alert him to my presence.
But as I watched him crouch beside the twisted metal that had once been my prison, cataloging evidence with the same detached professionalism he brought to every case, I realized the horrible truth. To him, this was just another crime scene. Another faceless victim of rogue violence.
He didn't even know I was missing.
"Sir?" A young security officer approached hesitantly. "We found something."
Kade straightened, following the officer deeper into the debris field. They stopped beside what had once been the warehouse's central support pillar—now a twisted sculpture of metal and concrete. At its base, partially buried under chunks of masonry, lay the remnants of rope.
"Victim was restrained," the officer observed, carefully photographing the evidence. "Tied to this pillar when the bomb went off."
"Torture before execution," Kade murmured, his voice clinical. "Rogues wanted information, or this was punishment for something."
Punishment. The word echoed through my consciousness like a death knell. If only he knew how right he was—but not in the way he imagined.
Kade's phone buzzed against the tense silence. He glanced at the screen, and for the first time since arriving at the scene, his expression softened. His fingers moved quickly across the keyboard, typing a response with the kind of immediate attention he'd never given my desperate calls for help.
I didn't need to see the screen to know who had texted him. The gentle curve of his mouth, the way his shoulders relaxed slightly—it was the same transformation that occurred every time Serena needed something.
"Everything alright, Alpha?" Marcus asked, noticing Kade's momentary distraction.
"Fine," Kade replied, slipping the phone back into his pocket. "Just checking on Serena. She's been having a rough few days."
Of course she had. Serena was always having rough days, rough weeks, rough months that required Kade's constant attention and care. Meanwhile, his actual mate had been kidnapped, tortured, and murdered, and he didn't even know she was gone.
The crime scene technician called out from near the crater's edge. "Alpha Sterling, you need to see this."
Kade strode over, his commanding presence drawing the attention of every wolf on the scene. The technician held up a small evidence bag containing what looked like fragments of fabric and something else—something that made my ethereal form recoil in horror.
"Victim was female," the technician reported, her voice carefully neutral. "Early twenties, based on preliminary examination. And sir..." She paused, clearly struggling with what she'd discovered. "The positioning of the restraints, the blast pattern, the wolfsbane concentration—whoever did this wanted her to suffer. This wasn't a quick execution."
The words settled over the crime scene like a shroud. Even the hardened security team members looked disturbed by the implications. This hadn't just been murder—it had been torture, drawn out and deliberate.
Kade's phone buzzed again. This time, he didn't even hesitate before answering, his voice immediately warming with concern. "Hey, what's wrong? Did something happen?"
Serena's voice was barely audible through the speaker, but I caught the familiar tremor of manufactured distress. "I'm sorry to bother you, but I can't stop thinking about how quickly you left earlier. Did I do something wrong?"
"Of course not," Kade assured her, turning slightly away from the crime scene. "I had to respond to an emergency, but I'll be back as soon as I can. Are you taking your medication?"
I watched this tender exchange play out mere feet from the spot where my life had ended in agony and terror. The juxtaposition was so grotesque, so perfectly emblematic of our entire relationship, that if I'd still possessed a body, I might have laughed until I cried.
As Kade continued murmuring reassurances to Serena, the medical examiner approached with her preliminary findings. She waited patiently until he ended the call, then delivered news that would change everything.
"Alpha Sterling," she said quietly, "based on the physical evidence and the nature of the attack, I believe we're looking at a targeted assassination. The victim was specifically chosen, specifically tortured. This wasn't random rogue violence."
Kade nodded grimly, but I could see his attention was already drifting back to his phone, back to Serena's needs.
"Sir," the examiner continued, "there's something else. The victim showed signs of prolonged psychological trauma before death. Whoever she was, she'd been suffering for a long time."
If only they knew how right she was.
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