Chapter Five: The Pack’s Judgment

1305 Words
The silence of the sanctuary was shattered by the dawn. I woke up with a start, my skin feeling hyper-sensitive, as if every nerve ending had been upgraded overnight. The heavy, suffocating pressure of the "Moon-Heat" was gone, replaced by a strange, humming clarity. And then, I felt it—a low, rhythmic thrumming in the back of my mind that wasn't my own. Silas. He wasn't in the bed. I sat up, the silk sheets sliding down to reveal the faint, glowing violet-and-gold mark at the base of my neck. It didn't look like a wound; it looked like a tattoo made of starlight. "You can feel me now, can't you?" Silas was standing by the window, his back to me. He was shirtless, his skin covered in a light sheen of sweat, his muscles taut as if he were bracing for a blow. He didn't have to turn around for me to know he was troubled. I could feel his anxiety like a bitter taste in the back of my throat. "I can hear your heartbeat," I whispered, pulling on his discarded dress shirt. It swallowed me, smelling of him and the chaos of last night. "And I can feel that you’re ready to punch a hole through that wall. What’s happened?" He turned then, his eyes a hard, stormy gray. "The Council didn't wait for the full moon. Arthur’s 'execution' failed, but his words didn't. He told them you channeled my power. He told them a human was wielding Alpha energy." "And that’s a bad thing?" I asked, walking toward him. "I saved your life." "To them, it’s an abomination," Silas rasped, his hand finding the back of my neck, his thumb tracing the Mark. His touch sent a jolt of pure, cooling calm through my system. "They see you as a freak of nature. A human who can drain an Alpha is a threat to the hierarchy. They’ve called an emergency Assembly at the Great Hall. They want to test the bond." "Test it how?" "By fire," he said, his jaw tightening. "They’ll demand I release the energy into you again. If you can’t hold it, they’ll claim the bond is defective and demand I... sever it." "Sever it? You mean kill me?" "I’d kill them all before I let that happen," Silas growled, the gold flickering in his eyes. "But if I defy the Council openly, the Silver Moon will split. We’ll have a civil war on our hands before the moon even hits its peak." I looked at my hands. The silver lightning was gone, but I could feel the power sitting just behind my ribs, dormant and heavy. I wasn't just a secretary or an anchor anymore. I was a political target. "Then let them test it," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "I’ve spent four years passing exams that were designed to break me. If a bunch of old wolves want to see what I’m made of, I’ll show them." Silas pulled me into his chest, his heart thudding against mine in a rapid, fierce syncopation. "It’s not an exam, Elena. It’s a physical assault. The power I gave you last night was a fraction of what the Assembly will demand." "Then give me more," I challenged, looking up at him. "If we’re going to a fight, I don't want to go unarmed. Teach me how to ground it, Silas. Don't protect me—arm me." He stared at me for a long beat, a mix of terror and pride swirling in his gaze. "You really don't follow orders, do you?" "Never," I whispered. "Now, show me how to be the storm.” The room felt smaller as Silas stepped into my space, his heat anchoring me. He didn't speak; he simply grabbed my wrists and pulled my hands toward his chest. "Close your eyes," he commanded. "Stop trying to see the power with your brain. Feel it. It’s not an equation, Elena. It’s a pulse." I did as I was told, shutting out the dark silk of the sanctuary. At first, there was nothing but the sound of my own shallow breathing. Then, I felt the vibration. It started in his palms and traveled up my arms like a slow-moving current of molten gold. It wasn't the violent explosion from the boardroom; it was a steady, heavy thrum. "It feels like it's going to burst," I whispered, my knees trembling as the voltage increased. "Like I'm a balloon being overfilled." "That’s because you’re trying to hold it in your chest," Silas growled, his lips pressing against my temple. "Don't hold it. Become the conduit. Let it flow through you and into the floor. You are the earth, Elena. You are the only thing that can catch the lightning without breaking." I shifted my focus. Instead of clenching my muscles, I let them go slack. I imagined the silver light moving down my spine, through my legs, and deep into the foundation of the fortress. The pressure vanished. Suddenly, the power didn't feel like a threat—it felt like a second skin. I opened my eyes, and the room was glowing. Not with the morning sun, but with the sheer radiance of the bond. Silas looked at me, his breath catching in his throat, his golden eyes wide with a shock that bordered on fear. "You're doing it," he breathed. "God, Elena... you're doing more than just grounding it. You’re amplifying it." "I told you," I said, a slow, dangerous smile spreading across my face. "I don't just pass tests. I break the curve." The hum of the bond reached a crescendo, a perfect harmony between his beast and my soul. But the moment was shattered by a sharp, urgent chime from the wall comms. Silas snapped back into CEO mode, though his eyes remained gold. "Speak," he barked. "Alpha," Marcus’s voice crackled through the room, sounding strained. "The Council is at the gates. They’re not waiting for the Assembly. Beatrix is with them, and she’s brought the High Inquisitor. They’re demanding to see the Anchor now." Silas’s grip on my hands tightened until it was almost painful. He looked at the door, then back at me, a silent apology written in the hard lines of his face. "They want to see the freak of nature?" I asked, pulling my hands from his to reach for the navy suit I’d discarded the night before. I didn't need the silk sheets anymore. I needed my armor. "Then let’s give them a show." Silas watched me dress, his gaze heavy and possessive. When I reached for the blazer, he stepped in, helping me slide it over my shoulders. His fingers lingered on the Mark at my neck, his touch sending a final, stabilizing jolt of power through me. "If this goes wrong," he whispered, "I need you to run to the sub-level. Marcus has the keys to the bypass." "Nothing is going wrong, Silas," I said, turning to face him as I buttoned the jacket. I looked like a Senior Secretary again, but the violet light in my eyes told a different story. "I've dealt with aggressive board members and toxic chemicals. A few old wolves won't know what hit them." He leaned down, giving me one last, bruising kiss that tasted like a promise of war. "Then let's go, Luna," he rasped. "Let's go show them why the Silver Moon belongs to us." The elevator doors opened to the main hall, where the air was thick with the scent of ozone and ancient, predatory musk. The judgment of the pack was waiting, and I was finally ready to be the storm. The "Inquisition" has arrived. The High Inquisitor is the ultimate test of Elena’s strength. Ready for Chapter Six: The Trial of the Silver Moon?
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