
The Dead Luna’s Resurrection-His Living Hell-
Chapter 5
The air in the United Packs summit hall was thick with the scent of old money and territorial pissing matches. Julian Strathmore sat at the massive oak table, his fingers drumming a restless, jagged beat against the wood. His suit, once crisp and authoritative, felt like a leaden weight on his slumped shoulders.
Three years.
He stared at the empty seat across from him, seeing a face that wasn't there. Every grey hair at his temples was a mark of a night spent staring at the bottom of a bottle or a private investigator's useless report. He’d spent millions chasing a ghost. Millions more trying to keep Silver Peak from drowning in the debt she’d left behind like a landmine.
"Alpha Julian, you look like shit," Alpha Silas of the Iron Ridge muttered, leaning back with a smirk. "The 'Broken Alpha' routine is getting old. Just pick a new Luna and get on with it."
Julian’s jaw creaked as he ground his teeth. His wolf, a sullen, starving beast in the back of his mind, didn't even growl. It just whined. Since the day at the waterfall, the bond had been a jagged shard of glass in his chest, never healing, always bleeding.
"Shut up, Silas," Julian rasped. His voice was a wreckage of what it used to be.
"Ladies and gentlemen, Alphas of the High Council," the herald’s voice boomed, cutting through the low hum of gossip. "The High Chancellor of the Syndicate has arrived."
The heavy double doors at the end of the hall didn't just open; they were flung wide by four Lycan guards in tactical gear.
Julian didn't look up at first. He didn't care about the Syndicate's new leader. He just wanted the meeting to end so he could go back to the greenhouse and read her diary again.
Then the scent hit him.
Lavender. Sharp rain. And a terrifying, metallic pulse of raw, evolved power.
Julian’s heart didn't just beat; it slammed against his ribs like a caged animal. He stood up so fast his chair flipped, the wood clattering against the marble floor.
A woman walked in.
She wore a charcoal power suit that hugged a body that was no longer soft. Her hair was a sharp, lethal bob. Her eyes, once wide and submissive, were now chips of frozen sapphire. She moved with a Secondary Shift aura—a vibration of power so dense it made the air hum.
"Vivienne?" Julian’s voice was a broken whisper.
The woman stopped. She looked at him. She didn't flinch. She didn't smile. She didn't scream. She looked at him the way a scientist looks at a specimen under a microscope.
"Chancellor Cade," she corrected him. Her voice was steady, cool, and utterly devoid of the warmth that used to settle his soul.
The room erupted.
"Is that the Strathmore Luna?" "The one who jumped?" "What the f**k is she doing with the Syndicate?"
Julian stumbled forward, his hands trembling. "Viv... you’re alive. I... I looked everywhere. I thought... god, I thought I killed you."
He reached out, his fingers inches from her sleeve.
Clack.
Two Lycan guards stepped between them, their hands on their sidearms. Julian didn't even see them move.
"Back off, Strathmore," a deep, scarred voice rumbled.
Silas Vane, the King of the Rogue Packs—the man Julian had been taught to hate since he was a pup—stepped out from behind the guards. He didn't look like a rogue. He looked like an emperor. He reached out and placed a large, scarred hand on Vivienne’s shoulder.
Vivienne didn't pull away. In fact, she leaned into the touch, a small, subtle shift of her weight that told Julian everything he didn't want to know.
"Julian, you remember Silas," Vivienne said. She spoke as if they were discussing the weather. "He’s my partner. And the man who pulled me out of the Devil’s Drop while you were busy howling at the moon."
The "Partner" part hit Julian harder than a physical blow. He felt the air leave his lungs. He looked at Silas’s hand on her shoulder and felt a surge of possessive rage, but it was hollow. He had no claim. He had rejected her. He had driven her to the edge.
"You've been with him?" Julian choked out. "For three years? You let me think you were dead while you were with him?"
"I wasn't with him, Julian," Vivienne said, stepping around the guards to take her seat at the head of the table—the seat of the High Chancellor. "I was building. I was evolving. And I was waiting."
She opened a leather folder and pulled out a stack of documents. She didn't look at the other Alphas. She looked only at the council president.
"I move for a vote of immediate removal," Vivienne stated. "Alpha Julian Strathmore of Silver Peak. Reasons: Gross financial negligence, instability of leadership, and moral bankruptcy that threatens the stability of the Northern Alliance."
"You can't do that!" Julian shouted, slamming his fist onto the table. "I am a fated Alpha! You’re just a—"
"I am the woman who owns your debt, Julian," she interrupted. She leaned forward, the ice in her eyes finally cracking to show a glimmer of something sharp. "I bought your soul three years ago. Today, I’m just here to collect the receipt."
The meeting was a slaughter.
Vivienne didn't use emotion. She used facts. She used the documents Julian had signed in his own office while he was too busy thinking about Selina’s bracelet. She showed the council his drinking habits, his loss of territory, and his inability to control his own wolf.
By the time the sun began to dip below the horizon, Julian was no longer an Alpha. He was a man with a name and a ruined pack, stripped of his title by the woman he used to call "insignificant."
He waited for her in the private hallway leading to the parking garage. He stood in the shadows, his breath coming in ragged hitches.
When she appeared, walking alone toward her car, he stepped out.
"Vivienne. Please."
She stopped. She didn't look annoyed. She looked bored.
"Julian. It’s late. I have a dinner with Silas."
"I don't care about Silas!" he cried, tears finally breaking and tracking through the grime on his face. He fell to his knees. It was pathetic. He knew it was pathetic, and he didn't care. "I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I read the diary. I know what I did. I know I was a monster. Please, just tell me what I have to do. I’ll give it all back. I’ll be your servant. Just... look at me like you used to."
He reached out, his fingers brushing the hem of her trousers.
Vivienne stepped back. She didn't flinch. She just moved away as if she’d stepped in a puddle she didn't want to ruin her shoes in.
"Julian, look at me," she said.
He looked up, hope flared in his chest like a dying coal.
"Do you see hatred in my eyes?" she asked.
Julian searched her face. He looked for a spark of the old anger, the resentment, even the pain. There was nothing. Just a flat, blue calm.
"No," he whispered.
"That’s because hatred is an emotion," Vivienne said. She adjusted her watch. "I felt it for a long time. It kept me warm in the Alps while I was learning to shift again. But then, one day, I just... stopped. You’re not a monster to me anymore, Julian. You’re not a villain. You’re just a man I used to know. You’re a ghost of a life I’ve already forgotten."
"Vivienne, please! I love you! I realized too late, but I love you!"
"No, you love the woman who rubbed your shoulders and stayed quiet," she said, her voice finally showing a hint of pity. "That woman died at the waterfall. You killed her, remember? And the woman standing here? She doesn't even know your middle name."
She turned and walked toward a black SUV idling at the curb. Silas was waiting by the door. He didn't gloat. He didn't even look at Julian. He just opened the door for her, his movements easy and respectful.
Vivienne slid into the back seat. The door closed with a heavy, final thud.
Julian stayed on the floor. The cold marble seeped into his bones, but it was nothing compared to the ice in his chest. He watched the taillights of her car disappear into the city traffic.
He realized then that she hadn't come back for revenge. Revenge would have meant she still cared. She had come back for business.
He was just a line item she had finally crossed off her list.
Julian let out a sound that wasn't human—a long, agonizing howl of a wolf that had finally realized its mate was gone. Not dead. Just gone.
And she wasn't coming back.
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