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Severing False Mate Bond Novel Cover

Severing False Mate Bond

The cold stone walls of the detention cell had been my world for fifteen days. Fifteen days of stale bread, murky water, and the constant whispers of guards who thought I couldn't hear them through the thick walls. "The real Luna won't like this," one had muttered during a shift change. "Alpha's got his hands full with his true family," another had replied with a knowing chuckle. I'd dismissed it as gossip then. Pack members loved to speculate about leadership, especially when someone was locked away for alleged crimes. But now, as Marcus Stone unlocked my cell door with barely concealed discomfort, those whispered words echoed differently in my mind. "Isabella," Marcus said, his usual confident demeanor replaced by something that looked almost like pity. "You're free to go. Alpha Brodie wants to see you in his office immediately." I stepped into the corridor, my legs unsteady after days of confinement.
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Chapter 2

The child's laughter faded as quickly as it had come, leaving behind a silence that felt like the calm before a storm. Brodie's face had gone from white to ashen, and I watched him struggle to find words that would somehow make this better.

"Isabella, I can explain—"

"Don't." The word came out sharp enough to cut. "Just... don't."

I turned and walked out of his office, my legs somehow carrying me despite feeling like they might give out at any moment. The hallway stretched endlessly before me, and I focused on putting one foot in front of the other, breathing in and out, trying to process what I'd just learned.

Eight years. Eight years of a lie.

The next few days passed in a blur of whispered conversations that stopped when I entered rooms, sideways glances, and a growing sense that I was a stranger in what I'd thought was my own home. Then came the announcement: a "welcoming back" gathering to celebrate my release from detention.

I should have known it was a trap.

The pack meeting hall buzzed with conversation as I entered, wearing the blue dress I'd always favored for formal pack events. But something was wrong immediately. The usual warm greetings were replaced by polite nods, and I noticed how people seemed to create a subtle buffer of space around me.

"Isabella!" Sage's voice rang out from across the room, sweet as honey and twice as false. "We're so glad you could join us."

I looked toward the front of the room where the leadership typically sat, and my heart stopped. Sage was seated in the Luna's chair—my chair—her posture regal and confident. She wore a flowing emerald dress that complemented her auburn hair perfectly, and around her neck was a marking bite that looked fresh and official.

Brodie sat beside her in the Alpha's chair, his jaw tight but his silence speaking volumes.

"Please," Sage continued, gesturing toward a chair in the third row, "take a seat. We saved you a spot."

The third row. Not the front where the Luna belonged, but the third row where pack members of moderate standing sat. The message was clear, and from the uncomfortable shifting around me, everyone else understood it too.

*Don't make a scene,* I told myself, even as Luna snarled in my mind. *Not here. Not in front of everyone.*

I took the offered seat, my hands clenched so tightly in my lap that my nails drew blood from my palms. Throughout the meeting, pack members made subtle comments that felt like paper cuts.

"It's so important to know one's proper place in the pack hierarchy," remarked Helen, the head of the women's council, while looking directly at me.

"Loyalty is everything," added James, one of the senior warriors. "Without it, the pack structure falls apart."

Each comment was delivered with false concern, but the underlying message was unmistakable: I was no longer welcome in the position I'd held for eight years.

Sage presided over it all with graceful authority, occasionally placing her hand on Brodie's arm in a gesture of intimate familiarity that made my stomach churn. When she spoke about "pack unity" and "supporting our true leadership," her eyes found mine with a look of triumph that she barely bothered to hide.

The meeting felt endless, but eventually, it transitioned into the more casual barbecue portion. I considered leaving, but something stubborn in me refused to run. This was still my pack, regardless of what legal technicalities said about my mate bond.

I was standing near the dessert table, trying to force down a piece of cake that tasted like sawdust, when a small figure approached me.

"Miss Isabella?" The voice was sweet and innocent, belonging to a child of maybe six or seven years old.

I looked down to see Emery, Sage's pup, holding a large plastic cup filled with what looked like water. The child had Brodie's green eyes and Sage's auburn curls, a living reminder of the family they'd built in secret.

"Hello, Emery," I said, forcing a smile. Whatever was happening between the adults, it wasn't this child's fault.

"Mama said I should bring you something to drink," Emery said, holding up the cup with both small hands. "She said you looked thirsty."

I glanced toward where Sage stood near the grill, deep in conversation with several pack elders. She caught my eye and smiled, giving a little wave as if encouraging her pup's thoughtful gesture.

"That's very kind of you," I said, reaching for the cup.

The moment the liquid hit my skin, I knew something was horribly wrong. It wasn't water—it was silver-laced, and it burned like acid against my right arm. I screamed, dropping the cup as the liquid splashed across my forearm and hand, leaving angry red welts that immediately began to blister.

"Oh my goddess!" Sage's voice cut through my agony as she rushed over, her face a mask of horrified concern. "Emery, what did you do?"

"I just gave her water like you said, Mama!" Emery's voice was confused and frightened now, tears starting to form. "I did what you told me!"

"Someone get the healer!" Sage called out, but I caught the flash of satisfaction in her eyes before she schooled her expression back to worry. "Isabella, I'm so sorry. Emery must have grabbed the wrong container. We use silver solution to clean the outdoor equipment."

Pack members gathered around us, their faces showing genuine concern and shock. But all I could focus on was the burning pain in my arm and the terrible realization that this had been planned. Sage had used her own pup as a weapon against me, coaching an innocent child to cause me harm.

As the healer rushed over with supplies to treat the silver burns, I looked up to see Brodie pushing through the crowd. For a moment, I thought I saw real anguish in his eyes as he took in my injuries.

But he went to Sage first, pulling her and Emery into a protective embrace while offering me nothing more than a concerned glance.

The message was clear: I knew exactly where I stood in his priorities.

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