CHAPTER 3

1358 Words
The door opens without warning, and I turn before I can think it through. Three men step inside, all of them pack enforcers, and that alone tells me this is not routine. They do not hesitate, do not explain, and do not look uncertain about why they are here. “Elora Veyne,” the one in front says. I meet his gaze without moving. “What is it?” “You’re required outside the territory.” The phrasing is careful, too careful, and it puts me on edge immediately. “Required for what?” “You’ll be informed.” That means I won’t. “Who gave the order?” “The Alpha.” Of course. I study him for a moment, watching for any shift in expression, but there is nothing there. No hesitation, no uncertainty, just the same controlled neutrality. “When?” “Now.” Not even an attempt to make it look reasonable. “Let me get my things.” “You won’t need them.” That answers everything. This is not relocation. It is removal. The realization settles without panic. There is no rush of fear, no sudden reaction, just a quiet understanding of what this is and what it means. The pressure in my chest tightens again, not from emotion, but from something deeper, something that has not left since the clearing. I step forward. They move with me immediately, close enough to stop me if I try anything. I don’t. There is no point in forcing a scene here, not in a hallway where everyone is already listening, even if they pretend not to be. The corridor is quieter than before. Conversations cut off as we pass, then resume in low voices behind us. Doors remain slightly open, just enough for eyes to follow before disappearing when I look directly at them. No one interferes. No one ever does. We move through the lower quarters, past the central grounds, toward the edge of the territory. The further we go, the thinner the pack presence becomes. The noise fades, and the structure loosens, like the rules only apply where they can be enforced. The boundary comes into view. I stop. “This is outside jurisdiction.” “It is,” the enforcer replies. “Then this isn’t an order.” “It is.” I look at him steadily, not letting the words pass without weight. “Say it properly.” There is a brief pause before he answers. “You are being removed from pack territory.” There it is. “On what grounds?” “You are no longer recognized within the structure.” The wording is precise, practiced. “The bond doesn’t determine status.” “It does when it involves the Alpha.” Convenient. “And this was decided tonight?” “It was decided before tonight.” That lands harder than anything else. So this is not a reaction. It is execution. Planned, decided, and carried out without hesitation. The pressure in my chest sharpens, not painful, just present in a way that refuses to be ignored. I do not react to it. I do not give it space. “Step forward,” he says. I hold his gaze for one second longer, then move past him. The moment I cross the boundary, the air changes. It is subtle, but clear, less controlled and less contained than what I am used to. The order of the pack no longer presses in from all sides. Behind me, they stop. “You won’t return,” the lead enforcer says. “I understand.” Their footsteps fade without another word. No escort. No explanation. Just removal. I stand there for a moment, listening. The silence feels louder than anything inside the territory. Then I start walking. The ground is uneven beyond the boundary, less maintained and less predictable. The further I move, the more the structure of the pack disappears behind me. There are no patrol paths, no marked territory, just open land and whatever survives in it. This is the Hollow Expanse. My wolf shifts again, and this time it does not feel distant. It feels closer, clearer, like it is no longer something I have to reach for. That should not be happening. Rejection should have ended everything, but it didn’t. A sound breaks through the quiet behind me, too close to be coincidence, and I turn immediately. Three wolves step out from the tree line, not pack, not allies, and their positioning is deliberate. They are not here to confront. They are here to contain. The first one moves, fast enough that hesitation would cost me. I step back, then shift sideways instead, forcing its momentum past me instead of meeting it head on. The second closes in immediately, cutting off space before I can reset. The third circles just enough to remove any clean escape. They have been waiting, for me. The first strike comes low, and I duck it just in time, moving forward instead of retreating to create space where they expect hesitation. It almost works, but the third wolf hits me from the side before I can reposition. The impact knocks me down hard enough to force the air out of my lungs. Pain flashes through my side, sharp but brief, and there is no time to stay down. I roll immediately. Claws tear into the ground where I was a second ago as I push myself up, breath uneven but controlled. The first wolf lunges again, and I shift just enough to avoid the full impact without escaping cleanly. The second closes in faster this time. They have adjusted. So do I. My wolf surges, not faint or distant, but present in a way it has never been before. Everything sharpens. Movement becomes clearer, timing easier to read, and my body responds before I can think it through. I pivot instead of pulling back, redirecting the attack instead of absorbing it. The shift creates just enough space for me to move through instead of away. They hesitate. Only for a second. But it is enough. The pressure in my chest steadies instead of disrupting me, and my breathing evens out despite the strain. The second wolf lunges again, and this time I meet it with precision instead of force. It stumbles just enough to break formation. That is all I need. I turn and run. Branches catch against my arms as I push through the trees, the uneven ground forcing constant adjustment. My steps are quicker now, more controlled, less reactive, and behind me I hear movement as they recover. But slower. More cautious. They are no longer certain. I change direction twice, breaking their line and forcing them to reposition instead of tracking directly. The sounds behind me begin to fade, and I keep moving longer than necessary to make sure the distance is real before I allow myself to slow down. My breathing steadies gradually, and the air feels different out here, thinner but clearer, like it carries less weight than it did inside the territory. The silence settles around me, not empty, not calm, but aware in a way that makes it hard to ignore. My wolf does not retreat this time. It stays, steady and present, no longer something distant I have to reach for. I glance back once, expecting movement, expecting something to follow, but there is nothing. No sound, no shift in the trees, no sign that they are still tracking me. That should feel like relief. It doesn’t. I turn forward again and keep walking, even though I no longer have a clear destination. The pack is behind me now, not just in distance, but in everything that defined where I belonged. The rejection did not end anything the way it was supposed to. It stripped something away, but it left something else in its place, something that has not faded and does not feel temporary. And if they were willing to send wolves after me the moment I crossed that boundary, then whatever changed in that clearing is not something they are willing to ignore.
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