
The Alpha Sacrificed Our Pup for His Fake-Sick Mistress
Chapter 5
The silence wasn’t just quiet. It was a vacuum, sucking all the sound, all the air, out of the room. Silas stared at that red wolf’s head, his father’s seal stamped on the proof of his family’s crime. His face was a pale, blank slate. The dagger slipped from his fingers and clattered onto the marble floor, the sharp sound echoing like a gunshot.
Gideon broke the stillness. He snatched the paper from his brother’s limp hand. “This is… this can’t be real,”
he muttered, his eyes scanning the lines. “Father wouldn’t… for Ivy?”
His voice trailed off. The implication hung there, ugly and obvious. For Ivy. For her weak heart. For the potion that needed my child’s heart to brew.
Before anyone could speak again, a new sound cut through the hall. A frantic, gasping breath. A stumble of footsteps on the gravel outside.
Ivy Sterling burst through the broken courtyard gate.
She looked like a ghost who’d forgotten how to float. Her silver-blonde hair was wild, escaping its pins. Her usually pale, perfect face was flushed and streaked with tears. She clutched her chest, her delicate fingers pressed against the silk of her gown as if holding her heart inside. She stumbled into the hall, her eyes wide and desperate, finding Silas instantly.
“Silas!” she cried, her voice a thin, reedy wail.
She didn’t look at me, or at the guard, or at the papers Gideon held. She only saw him. She rushed forward, her steps uneven, and collapsed at his feet. Not in a faint. She deliberately knelt, her body folding into a posture of supplication. She grabbed the hem of his hunting jacket, her slender hands trembling.
“It’s a lie!” she sobbed, the words pouring out in a hysterical stream. “She stole it! She stole my medallion and planted it here! To make you think I did this! I never… I would never!” Her tears were real, big and shiny, rolling down her cheeks. She looked up at him, her full lips quivering. “You know me, Silas. You know
I couldn’t.”
Silas was still frozen, but his eyes dropped to her. To the woman kneeling before him, clutching his clothes, weeping like a shattered doll.
Gideon reacted faster. He moved, stepping between Ivy and the rest of us, his body forming a protective barrier. He helped her up, his hands gentle on her shoulders. “Easy, Ivy,” he said, his voice surprisingly soft.
“Don’t strain yourself.”
She leaned into him, using his bulk to steady herself, but her gaze remained locked on Silas. “It was her,” she insisted, pointing a shaky finger at me without even looking my way. “Clara! She must have sent someone to my estate, to my room, to take the medallion from my jewelry case! She’s trying to destroy us! To destroy you!”
Her performance was flawless. The frailty, the tears, the absolute conviction. She was a white lotus weeping in the mud, and Silas was the ground she wanted to root herself in.
I watched it all, a cold knot of disgust tightening in my stomach. I didn’t feel rage anymore. I felt a deep, weary contempt. Their double act. Their rehearsed tragedy.
Silas finally moved. He blinked, slowly, as if waking from a dream. He looked from Ivy’s tear-streaked face to the bank transfer in Gideon’s hand, to the silver medallion still spinning lazily on thecoffee table. His father’s seal.
His mistress’s crest. The two pieces of evidence, side by side.
His jaw worked. He was trying to fit the new story Ivy was offering into the hole his father’s signature had blasted in his world. Clara stole the medallion. Clara framed Ivy. The payment… maybe Father was helping
Ivy with something else. A different doctor. Not for…
He couldn’t make it fit. The logic was crumbling. But his loyalty—or his need to believe in a world where he wasn’t a pawn in his father’s cruel game—was fighting to rebuild it.
I didn’t wait for him to decide.
I turned away from them. From his confusion, from her tears, from Gideon’s protective crouch. I walked across the hall, my bare feet silent on the cold marble. My destination wasn’t a person. It was a part of the wall.
The remote villa wasn’t just a house. It was a Thorne family property, built generations ago when their power was more overt, more brutal. The main hall had a feature most guests never noticed. A section of dark oak paneling, carved with intricate, abstract patterns. To most, it was just decoration.
I knew what it was.
I reached the wall. I didn’t hesitate. My fingers found a specific carved knot in the wood, a design that looked like a tangled root. I pressed my palm against it, feeling the cool, polished surface.
Then I pulled.
It wasn’t a handle. It was a concealed iron ring, flush with the wood. My pull triggered a mechanism inside the wall. A deep, grinding clunk resonated through the stone foundations of the house.
From the shadowed corner near the fireplace, Regina watched. Her grip on the fireplace poker tightened. She knew what I was doing.
Behind me, the sobbing stopped. Ivy’s performance halted mid-breath. Gideon turned, his brow furrowed.
“What are you doing?” he demanded.
Silas finally spoke. His voice was rough, stripped of its earlier confidence. “Clara. Stop.”
I didn’t stop. I kept pulling. The iron chain, hidden within the wall, began to slide out from a narrow, vertical slot that opened beside the panel. It was cold, heavy, and blackened with age. I wrapped my hands around it and pulled down, with all my weight.
A louder sound answered. A rumble, deep and subterranean, like stone grinding against stone.
The section of oak paneling I’d touched began to move. Not a door swinging open. The entire panel, a meter wide, sank inward, then slid sideways, disappearing into the wall. It revealed a gap. Not a hallway. A threshold.
Beyond it was darkness. A cold, damp, earthy smell drifted out—the scent of buried stone and old metal.
Silas stepped forward, his boots clicking on the marble. “That’s the old trial passage. The ‘Bone-Severance’ channel. You can’t… that’s for family disputes. For internal justice.”
“It is,” I said, my voice flat. I turned to face him, my back to the dark opening. “And you are my family. Until the dissolution is formalized, you are still my husband. And this,” I gestured to the room, to the evidence, to the guard with the wisteria tattoo, “is an internal matter. A betrayal of the union. A crime against the bloodline.”
Gideon’s face paled. He knew the stories. The “Bone-Severance” trial was an archaic, brutal ritual from the
Thorne family’s early days. A way to settle accusations of profound betrayal without involving outside law. It was a path of punishment, of penance. And of proof.
Ivy clutched Silas’s arm. “Don’t let her! It’s a trap! She’ll kill you in there!”
Silas looked at the dark passage. His eyes showed fear, real and sharp. He wasn’t afraid of me. He was afraid of what the trial represented. The absolute, unforgiving judgment of his family’s own ancient laws.
The grinding sound continued. Inside the darkness, something else was happening. A heavy, stone slab was rising from the floor of the passageway, triggered by the chain I’d pulled. From the depths, a faint, eerie light began to glow. A greenish, phosphorescent flicker, like swamp fire.
It illuminated the channel.
The passage wasn’t a corridor. It was a tunnel, about ten feet long, leading downward. The floor wasn’t smooth. It was covered in spikes. Not wood, not stone. Silver. Long, thin, sharpened rods of silver, set into the ground at irregular intervals, pointing upward like the teeth of some monstrous jaw. The green light glinted off their polished points.
At the far end of the spike-filled channel, the tunnel opened into a slightly larger space. A small, circular chamber. An altar of rough black stone stood in its center. And on the wall behind the altar, hanging from a simple iron hook, was a single object.
A knife.
It was old, its blade narrow and slightly curved. The metal wasn’t shiny. It was dark, stained, and pitted with rust. But the edge, even in the dim green light, looked sharp. And the handle was wrapped in worn, black leather.
The “Bone-Severance” blade. The instrument of the trial’s conclusion.
The green light from the altar flame grew stronger, casting long, dancing shadows up the walls of the main hall.
Ivy whimpered, burying her face in Silas’s jacket. Gideon took a step back, away from the opening. “This is insane,” he breathed.
Silas stared at me. The shock had burned away, leaving something raw and exposed. “You would invoke this?
For… for this?”
“For the murder of my child,” I said, each word a stone dropped into the silence. “For the conspiracy you and your father and your mistress built. For the blood on my floor and on my sister’s floor.” I took a step toward the opening, the cold air from the passage washing over my skin. “The trial doesn’t require a judge. It requires a claimant and a accused. And proof, offered in the channel. The spikes… they test the truth of the accuser. Only someone with a true, unwavering claim can walk the path without severe injury. The legends say the silver rejects falsehood.”
I looked directly at him. “You can follow me down there. You can walk the channel yourself, and see if your story—your lies about my guilt, your father’s ‘help’—can pass the silver. Or you can refuse. And your refusal will be recorded as an admission of guilt in the family archives. Your name will be marked. Your inheritance will be void.”
His nostrils flared. He was trapped. By his family’s own archaic, vicious rules.
I didn’t give him time to think. I turned my back to them all—to his indecision, to Ivy’s terrified tears, to
Gideon’s stunned silence—and I stepped into the darkness.
My bare foot landed just inside the threshold, on the cold, damp stone floor before the spikes began. The green light from the altar flickered, making the silver teeth gleam like a field of frozen, deadly grass.
I took a second step, placing my foot directly between two of the spikes. They were close together, leaving only narrow gaps to tread. The channel was a test of balance, of focus, of conviction.
From the hall, I heard Ivy’s voice, shrill and desperate. “Silas, don’t! She’s trying to destroy you! She’s a monster!”
I kept walking. The third step. The fourth. The spikes brushed against the sides of my feet, their cold metal touching my skin. I didn’t flinch. I didn’t hurry. I moved with a slow, deliberate precision, my eyes fixed on the rusty blade hanging at the end of the path.
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