
When My Mate Murdered Our Unborn Pup
Chapter 4
The nursery was supposed to be a secret. It was a tiny room at the end of the hall that used to be a storage closet, far away from Mavis’s prying eyes and the heavy, suffocating scent of her incense. I had scrubbed the floors on my hands and knees until my skin was raw, desperate to create one clean, safe place for the life growing inside me.
I was folding a tiny yellow blanket—yellow, because we didn't know if it was a boy or a girl yet—when the door slammed open. The wood splintered against the wall, the sound like a gunshot in the quiet room.
Gunner stood there. His chest was heaving, his shirt soaked with sweat, and his eyes... his eyes were unrecognizable. The warm blue ocean I used to drown in was gone, replaced by a turbulent, stormy gray that screamed murder.
"Gunner?" I whispered, clutching the blanket to my chest. "What's wrong? Is it the rogues?"
He didn't answer. He stalked into the room, his heavy boots leaving mud on the pristine floor I had worked so hard to clean. He looked around at the humble preparations—the second-hand crib I'd dragged in from the attic, the mobile made of dried wildflowers.
"You built a nest for it," he snarled, his voice vibrating with a low, dangerous growl. "For the parasite."
"Don't call our baby that," I said, my voice trembling but firm. I took a step toward him, reaching for the bond that still faintly hummed between us. It was weak, frayed by Mavis’s dark magic, but it was there. I pushed my own aura toward him—my healer's calm, the soft, white light that used to soothe his nightmares.
"Stop!" he roared, flinching as if I had thrown acid at him. He slammed his hands over his ears. "Get out of my head! Mavis warned me about this. She said you'd try to lure me. A siren's song to make me forget my duty!"
"It's not a lure, Gunner! It's love!" I cried, tears spilling over. "I am your mate!"
"You are a vessel for our destruction!"
With a roar of pure rage, Gunner swept his arm across the changing table. Powder, lotions, and the stack of tiny, folded clothes went flying, crashing against the far wall. The sound of shattering glass filled the small room.
I screamed, throwing myself in front of the crib as he turned toward it. "No! Gunner, please! It's just wood! It's just a bed!"
He grabbed the crib rail, his knuckles white. With a sickening crunch, he ripped the side off and hurled it across the room. "There will be no bed! There will be no nursery! Because there will be no monster!"
He turned on me, looming over my trembling form. "You will terminate it, Camila. Tonight. Mavis has prepared the tonic. You will drink it, and we will flush this curse out of our pack before it kills us all."
"I would rather die," I hissed, backing away until my spine hit the cold wall. My hands covered my stomach protectively. "You'll have to kill me first."
Gunner looked at me, and for a second, I saw a flicker of the man he used to be—the man who defied the Council for me. But then, the shadows in his eyes deepened, swirling like black smoke.
"If that is what it takes to save my pack," he whispered, his voice dead, "then so be it."
***
The next morning, the sun didn't rise. The sky was a bruised purple, heavy with unshed rain.
Two warriors dragged me out of the Pack House. I didn't walk; I couldn't. My legs had given out hours ago from fear. They hauled me to the gathering circle, the sacred ground where Gunner had once claimed me in front of everyone. Now, the dirt was hard and unforgiving.
The entire pack was there. Hundreds of them. They formed a tight circle, their faces hard masks of hatred. Mavis stood on the raised dais, wearing a robe of crimson silk that looked like fresh blood. She was smiling.
Gunner stood next to her. He looked hollowed out, a shell of an Alpha, but his power was still terrifying. It rolled off him in suffocating waves, forcing the wolves in the front row to their knees.
"Kneel," Gunner commanded.
The warriors released me, and I collapsed into the dirt. I tried to lift my head, to look him in the eye, to find one last shred of mercy.
"Please," I croaked, my throat raw. "Gunner... look at me. It's Cam."
He didn't look. He stared over my head, at the horizon where the storm clouds were gathering. He took a deep breath, and the air around us crackled with ozone and magic. The Alpha Tone—the voice that could compel any wolf to obey or die—began to build in his chest.
"I, Alpha Gunner Mitchell of the Blood River Pack," he boomed. The sound hit me physically, like a hammer to the chest. I gasped, clutching the dirt.
"No!" I screamed, but the sound was swallowed by the wind.
"Do hereby reject you, Camila Rogers," he continued, his voice devoid of emotion, robotic and cold. "As my mate, as my Luna, and as a member of this pack."
The pain hit instantly. It wasn't like a physical wound; it was the tearing of my soul. I felt the golden thread that connected our hearts snap with a violent, agonizing recoil. It felt like my chest was being ripped open from the inside out.
But he wasn't finished.
His eyes finally snapped down to mine, glowing with a terrible, unnatural light. "And I reject your cursed offspring. I deny it my blood. I deny it my name. I deny it life."
The world turned white.
A scream tore from my throat that didn't sound human. It was the sound of a mother's heart shattering. The rejection of the pup—the Alpha's direct command denying his own blood—was a magical death sentence.
I doubled over, clutching my belly as a cramp, sharper than any knife, twisted inside me.
"No, no, no!" I sobbed, curling into a ball in the dirt. "Stay with me, little one. Stay with me!"
But the bond was severed. The lifeline that tethered the baby to its father's strength was gone. I felt a wet warmth spreading between my legs, soaking through my thin dress. The scent of copper and tragedy filled the air.
The pack watched in silence. No one moved. No one helped.
Through the haze of agony, I looked up. Gunner was swaying on his feet, his hand over his heart as if he, too, had been shot. But Mavis... Mavis was laughing. A soft, tinkling sound that chilled my blood even as my life drained into the mud.
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