
Rebirth: Breaking from My Toxic Mate Bond
Chapter 4
The moon hung like a cruel eye in the star-scattered sky as I prepared for night patrol. My body still screamed from the morning's training disaster, every muscle fiber protesting as I strapped on my gear. The bandages around my arm were already stained with fresh blood from where I'd reopened the wounds during my collapse.
Jackson appeared in the armory doorway, his massive frame blocking the light from the corridor. "Northern route tonight," he said, his voice deceptively casual. "Solo patrol. The territory needs checking after yesterday's storm."
I knew better than to argue, even though solo patrols were typically reserved for experienced warriors, not Luna who could barely stand upright. "How far?" I managed to ask.
"Full circuit. Dawn return." His smile was sharp as broken glass. "Think you can handle it, or should I assign it to someone more... capable?"
The challenge in his voice was unmistakable. Another test. Another opportunity for him to prove my worthlessness to the pack. "I can handle it."
"Good." He stepped aside, but not before his fingers brushed against my injured arm—a seemingly innocent touch that sent fire through my nervous system. "Try not to embarrass us further."
***
The northern forest was a labyrinth of shadows and whispers. Ancient pines stretched toward the sky like skeletal fingers, their branches creating a canopy so thick that moonlight barely penetrated to the forest floor. My footsteps crunched on fallen pine needles as I followed the established patrol route, every sound amplified in the oppressive silence.
Something was wrong. The scent markers along the path seemed off—not quite where they should be, not quite the right intensity. My wolf instincts prickled with unease, but I pushed forward. Jackson expected a full report, and I wouldn't give him another reason to humiliate me.
The first trap almost got me.
A snare, hidden beneath a pile of seemingly innocent leaves, snapped shut just inches from my ankle as I stepped sideways to avoid what looked like unstable ground. My heart hammered against my ribs as I stared at the crude but effective device. This wasn't standard pack territory protection—this was something else entirely.
I moved more carefully after that, testing each step, scanning the darkness for threats that shouldn't exist on pack land. But my weakened body betrayed me repeatedly. Exhaustion made me clumsy, and blood loss made me dizzy. I stumbled over roots that seemed to reach up from the earth like grasping hands.
The second trap was a deadfall—heavy logs balanced precariously over a narrow ravine crossing. I saw the disturbance in the dirt just in time, the unnatural arrangement of stones that would trigger the mechanism. My hands shook as I carefully picked my way around the edge, clinging to tree roots as loose earth crumbled beneath my feet.
Who had done this? The question burned in my mind even as I forced myself to continue the patrol. These weren't random animal traps or natural hazards. Someone had deliberately sabotaged this route, turning a routine patrol into a gauntlet of potential death.
By the time I reached the halfway point, my uniform was torn in three places, and fresh cuts decorated my arms and legs like a roadmap of survival. The scent markers here were completely wrong—leading toward a section of forest where I could hear the distant howls of wild animals, predators that had no business being so close to pack territory.
I ignored the misleading markers and stuck to the established route, even though every instinct screamed at me to turn back. Jackson would demand to know why I'd deviated from patrol protocol. He'd use any excuse to prove my incompetence to the pack.
The final stretch nearly killed me.
A concealed root, artfully hidden beneath scattered leaves, caught my foot just as I crested a small ridge. The world tilted sideways as I tumbled down the embankment, my body striking rocks and tree stumps with sickening thuds. Pain exploded through my left arm as it connected with a sharp outcropping of stone, the impact sending shockwaves of agony up to my shoulder.
I lay at the bottom of the slope for several minutes, too stunned and hurt to move. Blood seeped from the gash on my arm into the dirt beneath me, mixing with the earth in a grotesque parody of some ancient ritual. My vision swam in and out of focus, and for a moment I wondered if this was how it would end—alone in the forest, bleeding out while Jackson slept peacefully in his bed.
But I couldn't die here. Not like this. Not when he would spin my death as another failure, another example of my weakness and incompetence.
I dragged myself upright, using a nearby tree for support. Every movement sent fresh waves of pain through my battered body, but I forced myself to keep going. One foot in front of the other. Just make it back. Just survive until dawn.
***
The pack grounds emerged from the pre-dawn mist like a mirage. I stumbled through the gates just as the first pale fingers of sunlight touched the eastern horizon, my legs barely supporting my weight. Blood had soaked through my bandages and uniform, and I could feel infection beginning to set in around my arm wound.
Jackson was waiting.
He stood in the center of the training ground, arms crossed over his chest, his expression one of cold disappointment. As if my battered appearance was somehow a personal affront to him.
"You're late," he said as I approached, his voice cutting through the morning air like a blade.
"The route was... challenging," I managed to say, each word an effort.
His eyes swept over my torn clothing and bloody bandages with obvious disgust. "Challenging? Or did you simply prove once again that you're unfit for even basic pack duties?"
I wanted to tell him about the traps, about the deliberate sabotage, about the way someone had turned a routine patrol into a death course. But the words died in my throat as I saw the satisfaction in his eyes. He already knew.
"Look at you," he continued, circling me like a predator evaluating wounded prey. "Slow, clumsy, bleeding all over pack grounds. Is this really the Luna our pack deserves?"
Other pack members had begun to gather, drawn by the sound of Jackson's voice. I could feel their stares, their judgment, their growing certainty that I was everything he claimed me to be.
"Perhaps," Jackson's voice dropped to a dangerous whisper that somehow carried to every listening ear, "you deliberately sabotaged your own patrol. Perhaps this pathetic display is just another attempt to gain sympathy, to avoid the responsibilities you're clearly incapable of handling."
The accusation hit me like a physical blow. After everything I'd endured, after barely surviving the night, he was suggesting I'd hurt myself on purpose.
"That's not—" I started, but Jackson cut me off with a sharp gesture.
"Report to the healers," he commanded. "Try not to bleed on anything important."
***
The medical wing felt like a tomb as I entered, my footsteps echoing off sterile white walls. Dr. Sarah looked up from her desk, her expression carefully neutral as she took in my appearance.
"Luna," she said, her voice professionally distant. "What can I do for you?"
I held up my injured arm, blood still seeping through the makeshift bandages. "I need treatment. The wound is deep, and I think it might be getting infected."
Dr. Sarah examined the injury with clinical detachment, her fingers probing the edges of the gash. I hissed in pain as she manipulated the torn flesh, but she showed no sympathy.
"It's not that serious," she finally announced, reaching for a basic first aid kit. "Just needs cleaning and fresh bandages."
"But it's infected," I protested, seeing the telltale redness spreading from the wound site. "I can feel the heat, and the pain is getting worse."
"Infection takes time to develop," she replied curtly, applying a thin layer of antiseptic that did nothing to address the deeper damage. "This is just normal healing process."
I watched in growing horror as she wrapped my arm with basic gauze, ignoring the severity of the injury. No antibiotics. No proper cleaning of the wound. No examination of potential nerve or muscle damage.
"Rest it off," she said, already turning away. "You'll be fine in a few days."
As I left the medical wing with my inadequately treated wounds, Jackson's voice echoed in my memory: *Try not to bleed on anything important.*
I was beginning to understand that in his eyes, I wasn't important at all.
You may also like





