Chapter 2 — The Meeting

1563 Words
Aldric POV The council chamber smelled like smoke, wet wool, and the sharp undertone of unease—fear, mostly, though none of the Alphas in the room would have admitted it out loud. Aldric stood near the hearth with his arms folded, letting the heat soak into the front of his body while the back of his neck stayed cold. Outside, the storm raged, wind throwing rain against the tall windows as if the sky wanted in. The sound should’ve been calming—storms always were to him, the kind of chaos that made the inside feel steadier—but tonight it only sharpened the tension crawling beneath his skin. Three young she-wolves. All found within the last month. All drained. It didn’t fit any predator Aldric knew. Wolves killed fast when they hunted. Bears tore. Rogues left mess. This—this was deliberate. Controlled. He listened as Alpha Hale spoke, voice low, rage kept behind iron discipline. “…same wounds. Same blood loss.” Aldric’s jaw tightened. He’d seen the second body with his own eyes. The marks weren’t like a wolf bite. Too neat. Too… precise. And there was something else, too. A faint chemical tang in the blood. Something that didn’t belong. His wolf prowled just beneath his skin, restless, agitated. It hated enclosed spaces when the pack was tense. It hated not hunting down the threat immediately. Aldric forced a steady inhale through his nose, the scents layering and shifting—pine smoke from the logs, old wood from the paneling, the thick male musk of a dozen dominant wolves in one room. Under it all was the faint edge of iron and damp stone, the estate itself breathing with age. His father, Alpha Darius Thorn, stood at the head of the long table. Darius didn’t sit. He never did during meetings like this. His posture was relaxed, but there was a coiled strength in him, like a blade sheathed but ready. “We have reports from Mooncrest as well,” Darius said. “Missing girls. Same age range. Same pattern—taken at night, no struggle.” No struggle. That detail bothered Aldric more than the rest. Wolves fought. Even young ones. Especially young ones. Either the girls trusted whoever approached them… or they were incapacitated. Aldric’s gaze drifted to the other wolves in the room, reading their body language the way he always did. A twitch of a jaw. A too-still stance. The way Alpha Marek’s fingers flexed against the table edge like he wanted to tear something apart. Fear made leaders dangerous. Fear made them careless. “We double patrols,” Aldric said, voice cutting through the room’s murmur. He didn’t raise it; he never needed to. “Border routes. River crossings. Any place someone can move unseen. And we stop letting our young wolves walk alone after dark.” A few Alphas bristled at the instruction, but no one argued. Not with three bodies behind them. Across the room, Rafael leaned against the wall like he was watching a play and knew the ending. He wore a faint smile, the kind that made people feel reassured without realizing why. He looked out of place among wolves—too polished, too still. Too controlled. But he’d been in Aldric’s life since they were boys. A constant presence, somehow always there when Aldric needed him. He was a friend in a way that defied reason. Family, even. Rafael lifted a brow, his voice smooth when he spoke. “Fear creates patterns. Someone is exploiting the fact that you’re all distracted—jumping at shadows. Whoever this is, they’re methodical. They’ll repeat what worked.” Alpha Hale’s gaze snapped toward him, sharp. “And you think you can track them, vampire?” The word vampire landed like a slur. A few wolves shifted, shoulders squaring. Aldric’s wolf bared its teeth internally—not at Rafael, but at the threat of conflict. Not now. Rafael didn’t react. That was what unsettled most wolves about him—how little anything seemed to touch him. His calm wasn’t submission. It was… choice. “I think I can help,” Rafael replied pleasantly. “I have… contacts. Eyes in places wolves don’t usually look.” Aldric stepped forward, placing himself subtly between Rafael and Hale, his tone firm. “He’s here under my protection.” His father’s gaze flicked to him—measuring, approving. Darius trusted Aldric’s judgment. Always had. Alpha Hale’s nostrils flared, but he inclined his head. “Fine. For now.” Aldric’s jaw clenched on the words for now. He hated politics. Hated the way fear made wolves territorial and suspicious, even when they needed each other. But he understood it. A leader couldn’t afford blind trust. Not anymore. The meeting continued, voices overlapping—patrol routes, border agreements, proposed alliances. Aldric absorbed it all, mentally mapping strategies, looking for weak points. The storm outside rose and fell in waves, thunder rolling like distant drums. Then— Something brushed his senses. Not scent. Not sound. A presence. Aldric’s head turned toward the chamber door before he could stop himself, his wolf freezing mid-prowl. For the briefest instant, he felt… warmth. Like sunlight on skin in winter. Like finding the missing piece of a puzzle he’d been working on for years and not realizing it. His heart stuttered. What the— He stared at the door, eyes narrowing, senses flaring outward. He could hear the meeting. He could hear the crackle of fire. He could hear the rain. But beneath it, something else pulsed—soft, quick, nervous. A heartbeat? The air shifted. For half a second, he caught a scent—a whisper of wildflowers and rain-soaked earth and something sweet like crushed berries. Female. Young. And then it vanished, as if whoever it belonged to had stepped back into shadow. Aldric’s hands tightened into fists at his sides. His wolf surged forward, alert and suddenly obsessed with that vanished thread. It strained toward the door, wanting to chase it, to find it, to— Aldric forced it down with practiced control. Not now. Focus. Still, something had changed. The world felt sharper, edges defined. His body hummed with awareness, like a cord pulled taut. Aldric dragged a slow breath in through his nose again. The scent was gone. Only wolves and smoke remained. Rafael’s voice cut through the room, drawing attention. “I’ll take the eastern ridge tonight. If this killer is watching, they’ll be curious about the increased patrols. Curiosity makes them reckless.” Aldric glanced at him. Rafael met his eyes, expression open, almost amused. “You look distracted,” Rafael murmured, too quietly for others to hear. Aldric’s lip curled faintly. “Storm’s loud.” Rafael’s smile deepened by a fraction. “The storm outside, or the one in your head?” Aldric didn’t answer. He didn’t like how perceptive Rafael could be. Darius concluded the meeting with a final warning: “No one leaves this estate alone tonight. We keep our guests safe under my roof.” The other Alphas agreed, some reluctantly. They filed out in groups, their scents trailing behind them like smoke. Aldric stayed behind a moment, staring into the fire. The flames snapped and hissed, casting shadows across the walls that looked too much like reaching hands. His mind kept circling back to that presence at the door. A young female heartbeat. A scent like rain and berries. And that inexplicable warmth—like a tug deep in his chest, muted but undeniable. Aldric swallowed, throat suddenly dry. He’d been looking for his mate for years. Not obsessively, not like some wolves did, but the absence of that bond had always been a quiet ache. An empty place where something should’ve been. He’d told himself maybe he’d never find her. Maybe fate didn’t have one for him. Maybe he’d just lead his pack, build alliances, and accept a life where duty came first and loneliness was managed, not cured. But that feeling— It was the first time in his life that the emptiness had felt… less empty. Aldric turned toward the door, strides measured, expression neutral. He would not chase shadows. He would not let a strange instinct derail him during a crisis. Still, as he reached the corridor and stepped into the dim hall, he paused. The air was cooler out here, carrying faint dampness from the storm. Torches along the wall flickered, throwing light in uneven patterns. Aldric’s hearing sharpened. Nothing. No heartbeat. No soft scent. Just the estate settling around him. Aldric frowned, irritation and something else twisting together in his chest. Then a sound—faint, almost imperceptible. A floorboard creak, down the hall. His wolf lifted its head. Aldric’s instincts flared, every sense tightening into a single point. He started forward. Not toward the creak. Toward the idea that someone was here who shouldn’t be. Toward the certainty that whatever warmth he’d felt was now gone—and he didn’t like the way that absence felt like loss. “Someone’s in the hall,” he called quietly, voice carrying. No answer. The torches flickered. And somewhere, deep in the estate, a door closed with a soft, final click. Aldric’s heart sank—slow and heavy—as dread curled in his gut. Because the storm in his head wasn’t fading. It was growing teeth.
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