
The Awakening
Chapter 6
I had seen the courtyard. Every wolf in the pack had. It was where justice was served, where punishments were carried out, where the Alpha reminded everyone exactly who held the power. I had stood in that courtyard as a child and watched wolves receive ten lashes, twenty lashes, fifty lashes. I had watched one wolf, a rogue who had killed a pup receive a hundred lashes, and I had watched him die before they reached fifty.
The courtyard was where wolves went to be broken.
I started fighting. It was pathetic, really, my body was weak from days without food, from silver poisoning, from wolfsbane. But I fought anyway. I dug my heels into the stone. I twisted in the guards' grip. I tried to bite the one on my left.
He backhanded me across the face without even looking.
My head snapped to the side, and stars exploded behind my eyes. For a moment, everything went grey. Then the world swam back into focus, and we were at the door.
The guard pushed it open.
Sunlight. So much sunlight, after days in the dark cellar. It blinded me, seared my eyes, made tears stream down my cheeks. I blinked desperately, trying to see, trying to orient myself.
The courtyard was packed. Hundreds of wolves, maybe more. They lined the walls, filled the balconies, crowded every inch of space. And they were all staring at me.
The silence was the worst part. In a pack of wolves, silence meant danger. Silence meant everyone was waiting, watching, holding their breath for what came next. I had spent my whole life reading pack silences, the comfortable silence of a shared meal, the respectful silence of a council meeting, the tense silence before a hunt.
This silence was different. This silence was hungry.
We reached the center of the courtyard. The post stood there, black against the bright sky, older than anyone could remember. The runes carved into its surface seemed to pulse in the sunlight, hungry for what was coming.
The guards stopped. For a long moment, no one moved. No one spoke.
Then someone in the crowd cleared their throat. Someone else shifted their weight. And I realized, they were waiting. They were waiting for me to apologize.
It was tradition. A wolf brought to the courtyard for punishment had one chance to save themselves. If they fell to their knees, if they begged forgiveness, if they admitted their crimes and swore loyalty, the Alpha could show mercy. The punishment could be reduced. The wolf could walk away, broken but alive.
Every wolf in that courtyard expected me to apologize. They expected me to cry, to beg, to grovel. They expected me to confirm what they wanted to believe, that I was guilty, that I deserved this, that their Alpha was just.
I looked at the post. I looked at the runes. I looked at the dark stains at its base, stains that would never wash away, stains that held the last moments of wolves who had come before me.
Then I lifted my chin. I squared my shoulders as much as the guards' grip would allow. And I waited.
The silence stretched. Became uncomfortable. Became wrong.
A murmur rippled through the crowd. Someone whispered, "She's not going to do it."
Someone else shushed them.
One of the guards leaned close to my ear. "Apologize," he hissed.
"Just do it. Save yourself."
I said nothing.
The other guard tightened his grip on my arm.
"You stupid—" he started, but a voice cut through the crowd before he could finish.
"June."
Kai. He stood at the edge of the courtyard, flanked by his enforcers. He hadn't taken the throne at the far end, he wanted to be close, I realized. He wanted to see.
"June," he said again, and his voice was almost gentle. Almost kind.
"This doesn't have to happen. A single word. That's all it takes. Admit what you did, and we can end this."
He wanted me to break. He needed me to break. My defiance was a threat to everything he had built.
"I have nothing to admit," I said. My voice came out stronger than I expected. The wolfsbane made everything feel distant, but my words were clear, steady, mine.
Kai's jaw tightened.
"Pride is a luxury, June. One you can no longer afford."
"Then let it kill me."
For a moment, something flickered in his eyes. Surprise, maybe. Or respect. Or regret. It was gone before I could name it.
He nodded to the guards.
They dragged me to the post. The silver chains came next, wrapped around my wrists, my ankles, my throat. The metal bit into my skin, hissed against it, burned. I bit down on the inside of my cheek to keep from screaming. Blood filled my mouth, hot and copper-sweet.
The silver, combined with the wolfsbane, created a pain I couldn't have imagined. It was like being burned from the inside out, like every nerve in my body was on fire, like my bones were cracking and reforming and cracking again. My wolf, suppressed and silenced, whimpered somewhere in the darkness of my mind. She couldn't help me. She couldn't even reach me through the poison.
"Strip her."
The command came from behind me. Lia. Of course.
A guard stepped forward and sliced through my shift. The fabric fell away, and suddenly I was bare to the waist, my back exposed to the crowd, to the sun, to the whip that would soon tear it apart. I heard gasps from the crowd not at my nakedness, but at the bruises, the burns, the evidence of what had already been done to me in the dark.
"Look at her," Lia said, stepping into my line of sight. She walked slowly, circling me like a predator examining wounded prey.
"Look at what she's become. This is what happens to those who betray the pack."
I said nothing. I focused on her face, on the gold necklace at her throat, on the satisfied smirk she couldn't quite hide.
"You could have been something," she murmured, stopping directly in front of me.
"You could have accepted your place. You could have been grateful for the mercy we showed you. But no. You had to steal. You had to prove that you were exactly what we always suspected."
The lie sat between us, ugly and obvious. I wondered if she even believed it anymore, or if the lie had become so familiar that truth and fiction had blurred together.
"Look at me," she commanded.
I looked.
For a moment, something wavered in her expression. Something almost human. Then it hardened again.
"Any last words?" she asked.
"Before the pack sees what happens to traitors?"
She turned away, and I watched her walk back to the edge of the courtyard, back to Kai's side. He put his arm around her, pulled her close, whispered something in her ear. She smiled up at him, all trace of fear gone.
The executioner stepped forward.
He was huge, larger than any wolf I had ever seen, with arms like tree trunks and eyes that held absolutely nothing. He carried a whip of braided leather, each strand tipped with silver beads that caught the sunlight and threw it back in cruel little glints.
"June of the Bloodmoon Clan," he intoned, his voice flat and empty,
"you have been found guilty of theft from the Alpha's treasury and treason against the pack. Your sentence is twenty lashes, to be carried out in full view of the clan, that all may witness the consequences of betrayal."
The crowd murmured its approval. Or its acceptance. Or its fear. It was hard to tell the difference anymore.
The executioner raised the whip.
I closed my eyes.
The first lash fell.
Pain. Pure, absolute, world-ending pain. It tore across my back like fire, like claws, like everything I had ever feared made real. I screamed, I couldn't help it, the sound ripped out of me before I could stop it and the crowd drank it in.
The second lash crossed the first. The third opened new ground. By the fifth, I had lost count. There was only the fire, the rhythm of destruction, the warm blood sliding down my back and pooling at the base of the post.
I thought about my mother.
She had died when I was six. I didn't remember much about her, just fragments, really. The smell of her fur when she was in wolf form. The sound of her laugh, deep and warm like summer thunder. The way she used to sing to me at night, old pack songs about the Moon Goddess and the heroes of old.
The tenth lash landed. The eleventh. The twelfth.
I stopped screaming. Not because it didn't hurt, it hurt, it hurt worse than anything I could have imagined. But because screaming took energy I didn't have, and because somewhere deep inside, something was changing.
My mother's blood, maybe. Or something older than that. Something that refused to die.
The thirteenth lash. The fourteenth. The fifteenth.
And then, suddenly, it stopped.
I hung from the chains, barely conscious, my back a ruin of torn flesh and flowing blood. I couldn't feel my body anymore. I couldn't feel anything except the deep, cold emptiness where my wolf should have been.
But I was still breathing. I was still alive.
Through the roaring in my ears, I heard voices.
"Fifteen is enough." That was Kai.
"She's learned her lesson."
"She's still defiant." Lia.
"Look at her. She's not broken."
"Enough." Kai's voice, final and absolute.
"I've made my decision."
Footsteps approached. I forced my eyes open, forced my head up.
Kai stood before me. Close enough to touch. Close enough to kill. His face was unreadable, but his eyes, his eyes were something else. Something almost like regret.
"You could have avoided this," he said quietly.
"A single word. That's all it would have taken."
"Go to hell," I whispered.
"Take her back," he ordered.
"And make sure she doesn't die. I want her to live with what she's lost."
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