
My Alpha Sacrificed Me to Save Her Sister
My Alpha Sacrificed Me to Save Her Sister Chapter 1
The healer gave me three days to live. Caleb gave me a slap.
But I'm getting ahead of myself. Let me back up ten minutes.
"Elena, are you sure you want to do this now?" Dr. Vincent stood beside me in the corner of the Pack Celebration Hall, his voice barely above a whisper. His eyes kept darting to the medical report clutched in my hand. The paper was already damp from my palm.
"I'm sure." I looked down at the words I'd memorized an hour ago. *Wolf Spirit Decay. Terminal. Estimated remaining time: 72 hours.* "I only have three days, Vincent. There's no better time."
He didn't argue. He just pressed his lips together and stepped back, the way people do when they've decided to let you walk off a cliff.
The hall was packed. A thousand white roses hung from the ceiling — Lydia's favorite — and the band was playing something soft and elegant. A banner stretched across the far wall: *Congratulations Lydia Vance — Lead Warrior.* My sister. My husband's favorite person.
I stood up from my corner. The dark green dress hung loose on me now. I'd lost twelve pounds in the last month. Caleb bought me this dress three years ago, told me I looked like a forest spirit in it. He didn't notice I was wearing it tonight. He wasn't even here — supposedly on a two-day border patrol. Supposedly.
I walked to the center of the hall. My heels clicked on white marble. A few heads turned. Then a few more. Being Luna still meant something, even when your own pack looked at you like an inconvenience.
I didn't raise my voice. I didn't need to.
"As of tonight, I formally request a Severing Ritual." The words came out steady. Steadier than I expected. "My wolf will be gone in three days. I want the bond cut clean before I go."
The music didn't stop — the band just kind of stuttered and died, one instrument at a time. The silence that followed was so thick I could hear the champagne bubbles popping in someone's glass.
Then Sarah — my mother — dropped her wine. The glass hit the marble and shattered. She stared at me with her mouth open, but not in concern. In fury.
And Lydia. God, Lydia was good. Her face went white on cue. Her hand flew to her chest. Her eyes went wide and wet. If I didn't know better, I'd have believed it myself. But I'd watched my sister rehearse that exact expression in the bathroom mirror when we were fourteen, practicing how to cry on command.
The main doors slammed open.
Caleb.
He stood in the doorway, still in his patrol jacket, his dark hair windblown. He was supposed to be at the northern border for two more days. He'd come back early — for Lydia's ceremony. Not for the wife who'd been coughing blood into the bathroom sink every morning for a month.
His eyes found me immediately. Not with worry. Not with confusion.
With anger.
"Elena!" He crossed the hall in long, hard strides. "What the hell do you think you're doing?"
"Caleb, I need to tell you—"
"You need to tell me why you're making a scene at Lydia's celebration." He stopped in front of me. Close enough that I could smell it — cedar. His cologne. That damn cedar scent I used to bury my face into every morning, pressing my nose into his pillow before he woke up, breathing him in like he was oxygen.
Tonight it smelled like someone else's husband.
"I'm dying, Caleb."
He didn't hear me. Or he chose not to. His eyes flicked to the frozen crowd, to Lydia's perfectly stricken face, and I watched him do the math he always did — *Elena is causing a problem. Lydia is the victim. Fix it.*
His hand came up fast.
The slap cracked across my face and snapped my head sideways. I stumbled back, my hip catching the edge of a table. Glasses rattled. Someone gasped.
I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I just lifted my hand to my mouth. My fingers came away red. Not from the slap — from the blood already sitting in my throat, waiting.
The cough hit me before I could stop it. It ripped through my chest like something with claws, and I doubled over. A mouthful of dark blood splattered across the white marble floor. Under the chandelier light, it spread in a shape that almost looked like a bloom. Like one of Lydia's white roses, painted red.
The hall went dead silent. A different kind of silent than before. This one had fear in it.
Caleb's expression shifted — just a fraction. His brow creased. He saw the blood. For one second, I thought—
Lydia moved first. She rushed to his side, gripping his arm, pressing herself against him.
"Alpha, please don't be angry at her." Her voice trembled perfectly. "She's not well. Today is just... just not her day."
Every word out of her mouth was a nail. *Not well* — like I had a cold. *Not her day* — like I'd chosen to be dramatic. She wasn't defending me. She was framing me. And everyone in this room was buying it.
My mother's voice sliced into my mind through the pack link. Sharp. Cold. Familiar.
*"Disgusting. Ruining your sister's day on purpose. You've been doing this since you were a child. No wonder no one loves you."*
I stared at the blood on the marble. My blood. On the floor of a party thrown for my sister, in a hall paid for with pack funds I'd managed for three years, surrounded by people I'd served as Luna since I was nineteen.
I closed the mind-link. Cut it clean, like slamming a door. Three years of swallowing her words, and tonight I just... stopped.
Caleb snatched the medical report from my hand. He scanned it for maybe two seconds.
"Wolf Spirit Decay?" He laughed. Actually laughed. A short, cold sound. "Elena, your lies keep getting lazier."
He tore the report in half. Then in quarters. The pieces drifted down to the marble, landing in my blood.
He turned away. His arm went around Lydia's waist. They walked toward the door together, and he didn't look back. Not once.
I stood there. In a too-loose green dress, with blood on my lips and torn paper at my feet, in a room full of people who wouldn't meet my eyes.
Dr. Vincent appeared beside me. He didn't say anything. He just put his hand under my elbow and guided me out the side door.
---
The car was quiet. Vincent drove slowly, both hands on the wheel, eyes straight ahead. The kind of careful silence a doctor keeps when he doesn't know what to say to a patient who's out of time.
I watched the trees blur past the window. Black pines under a half-moon.
"Elena." He cleared his throat. "Do you want me to tell him the full report? The part about the black obsidian traces in your blood?"
Black obsidian. The part that meant this wasn't natural decay. The part that meant someone had done this to me.
I kept my eyes on the window.
"No, Vincent." My voice sounded far away, even to me. "He's earned his ignorance. Let him keep it a little longer."
Vincent's jaw tightened, but he nodded. He pulled up to Luna House — the house I'd lived in alone for the past eight months, ever since Caleb started sleeping at the pack compound. *For security reasons,* he'd said. Lydia's quarters were in the pack compound too. Funny coincidence.
"Do you want me to help you inside?"
"No. I'm fine."
I wasn't fine. But I'd been saying that for three years, and the word had lost all meaning.
I got out of the car and walked to the front door. My legs were steady. That surprised me. I stopped on the porch and turned around.
Down the road, in the opposite direction, I could see taillights disappearing around the bend. Caleb's car. Taking him and Lydia to dinner somewhere. A celebration after the celebration. The Alpha and his Lead Warrior. His Luna left behind with blood drying on her chin.
I stood there for a long time. The wind picked up. Cool against my bare arms, my neck, the damp spot on my dress where I'd tried to wipe the blood away.
I wasn't cold.
That was the strange part. I should have been freezing. But something had shifted inside me — quietly, in the space between the slap and the torn report and the taillights vanishing into the dark. Something I'd been gripping so hard for so long that my fingers had gone numb, and I hadn't even noticed until I finally, finally let go.
"So this is what it feels like," I whispered. "When you stop."
Not hate. Not heartbreak. Just... stop.
I pushed the door open. Walked inside. And when it clicked shut behind me, I heard it — not a snap, not a crack. Something softer. Quieter. Like a thread that had been pulled too thin for too long, finally releasing.
Not breaking.
Just letting go.
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