
My Mate Killed Our Pups
Chapter 2
The first thing I noticed was the silence.
Before the darkness took me, there had been a hum in my blood—a dual, rhythmic song of two tiny sparks of life. Now, there was only a hollow, echoing void. The silence was so loud it made my ears ring.
I opened my eyes to the sterile white ceiling of the pack infirmary. My body felt heavy, anchored by lead weights, but my womb felt terrifyingly light.
"Morgan?" Elena Cross, our Head Healer, hovered over me. Her eyes were red-rimmed, swollen from crying. She didn't use my title. That was the first bad sign.
"They're gone, aren't they?" My voice was a scrape of sandpaper against stone.
Elena bit her lip and nodded, a tear slipping free. " The trauma from the impact... the placenta detached instantly. There was nothing we could do."
I didn't cry. I couldn't. I felt like a house that had burned down, leaving only a charred frame standing against the wind.
The door swung open, but it wasn't a worried father rushing in. It was Orion. He looked impeccable in a pressed charcoal suit, not a hair out of place. He smelled of fresh coffee and annoyance.
"Finally awake," he said, checking his watch. "Elena, give us a moment."
Elena hesitated, glancing between us, but the command in his eyes made her bow her head and scurry out. We were alone.
"Orion," I whispered, a desperate part of me wanting him to hold me, to share this grief. "Our babies..."
"Stop," he cut me off, holding up a hand. He didn't come to the bedside. He stayed near the door, as if my grief was contagious. "Don't try to make this a tragedy, Morgan. It was an inevitability."
I stared at him, the air freezing in my lungs. "What?"
"You were hysterical," he said smoothly, adjusting his cuffs. "Screaming about clothes, throwing a tantrum like a child. You tripped over your own feet because you were too emotional to control your body. If anyone killed those pups, Morgan, it was you and your clumsiness."
The gaslighting was so blatant, so cruel, it stole the breath from my chest. "You shoved me," I rasped, gripping the sheets until my knuckles turned white. "You shoved me into the desk."
"I tried to restrain a violent Alpha," he corrected coldly. "And now, because of your temper, we have a mess to clean up. Rest up. You look terrible."
He turned and left me alone in the crushing silence.
***
The next week was a blur of gray fog. I was confined to the Alpha suite on 'strict bedrest,' which I quickly realized was just a polite term for house arrest. My phone was gone. The internet was cut. No visitors were allowed past the Gamma guards stationed at my door.
But walls in the Pack House are thin.
When the maids brought my trays of tasteless soup, they wouldn't look me in the eye. I heard them whispering in the hallway.
"...heard it wasn't even Orion's..."
"...Harlow said she saw texts..."
"...a rogue. Can you imagine? An Alpha carrying a rogue's bastard..."
The rumors were spreading like a virus, engineered and precise. I lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, feeling the trap closing around my throat. Harlow and Orion weren't just erasing my children; they were erasing me.
On the seventh day, the door didn't open for breakfast. It opened for an escort.
"Alpha Morgan," a Gamma warrior said, refusing to meet my gaze. "The Council of Elders has convened. Your presence is required."
I was weak, my body still healing, but I swung my legs out of bed. I put on a black dress that hung loosely on my frame. I didn't bother with makeup to hide the dark circles. Let them see the face of a grieving mother.
The walk to the Tribunal Hall felt like a funeral procession. When I entered the grand chamber, the air was thick with judgment. The entire pack seemed to be squeezed into the gallery, murmuring like a hive of angry bees.
At the head of the table sat Elder Wagner—Orion's mother. She looked like a vulture perched on a tombstone, her eyes glittering with malicious triumph. Orion sat beside her, his head in his hands, playing the part of the devastated, betrayed mate to perfection.
"Morgan Lopez," Elder Wagner's voice boomed, amplified by the acoustics of the hall. "You stand before this tribunal accused of conduct unbecoming of a female Alpha."
"On what grounds?" I asked, my voice steady despite the trembling in my legs.
Elder Wagner gestured to the table. There, in a clear evidence bag, lay a dirty flannel shirt and a cracked burner phone. "We found these stashed in the false bottom of your office desk. The shirt reeks of Rogue. And the phone..." She picked it up delicately. "It contains messages confirming a rendezvous on the night of the conception."
A gasp rippled through the crowd.
"Lies," I said, looking at the pack members I had protected for years. "I have never seen those items in my life."
Orion stood up slowly. He looked at me with eyes full of fake tears. "Morgan, please. Don't lie anymore. It insults the memory of... of what we had."
He turned to the crowd, his voice breaking theatrically. "I tried to love her. I tried to support her leadership. But I cannot lead this pack alongside a woman who opens her legs for our enemies and passes their offspring off as mine."
"Traitor!" someone shouted from the back. "Whore!" yelled another.
My heart hammered against my ribs. It was a perfectly executed execution. They didn't need proof; they just needed a show.
Elder Wagner slammed her gavel down. " The evidence is irrefutable. The Silver Crescent Pack cannot be led by a morally compromised wolf. I move for the immediate removal of Morgan Lopez as Alpha."
Orion looked at me, and for a split second, the mask slipped. He smirked. A cold, victorious smirk that said, *I won.*
"I second the motion," he said softly.
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