The scent of her betrayal clung to the air of the great hall, a sickly-sweet perfume layered over the musk of his own pack. Ashton stood on the dais, every muscle locked. The bond in his chest—once a steady, warm pulse—was a frayed wire, sparking and raw. She knelt below him, tears cutting through her makeup. The other man, a beta from the southern border, was already being dragged away, his whimpers swallowed by the stone walls.
"Look at me." Ashton's voice didn't raise. It dropped. The command vibrated through the silent crowd.
Her head lifted. Her eyes, the same hazel he'd woken to for three years, were wide with terror. Not of him. Of the emptiness coming.
He didn't speak her crimes. The scent on her skin was testimony enough. He simply reached into the place where the bond lived, that sacred tether, and he severed it. Not with a gentle unraveling. With a clawed, mental fist. He ripped.
The snap was audible. A crack of psychic thunder that made every wolf in the hall flinch. She screamed, a sound of pure, physical agony, and crumpled to the floor as if her spine had been cut. The warmth that had always connected them vanished, replaced by a howling void. Cold rushed in. His wolf surged forward, furious, lost, screaming mine-mine-GONE.
Ashton didn't move. He absorbed the recoil. His vision sharpened to monochrome, edges bleeding silver. The urge to kill—the beta, her, everyone who had witnessed his shame—was a red tide behind his eyes. His control, the discipline he wore like armor, was the only thing holding it back. He felt his canines slice into his own gums, the taste of his blood metallic and grounding.
"You are packless." The words were final. Absolute. "By sunrise, you are gone."
He turned his back on her weeping. On the pity in some eyes, the satisfaction in others. His boots echoed on the stone as he walked away, each step measured. He didn't go to his rooms. He went to the woods. To the dark and the quiet.
Alone, the control shattered. He fell against a broad pine, the bark biting into his palms. A roar tore from his throat, raw and guttural, shaking the leaves from the branches above. His wolf was a storm inside him, clawing at his ribs, demanding he go back, claim what was his, kill the usurper, make her bleed for the fracture. His c**k was a hard, painful ache against his fly, a brutal, twisted response to the violence of the severed bond—possession and rage fused into one useless need.
He slid down the tree trunk, breath heaving. The silence that followed was worse. It wasn't peace. It was a new, permanent tension. His wolf, once a balanced part of him, was now a caged, watchful thing. It scanned every shadow for threats, its thoughts a constant, low snarl. *Mine. None touch. Mine.* The hyper-vigilance was a weight on his shoulders. The possessiveness, with no object to fix upon, turned inward, a poison.
He stared at his hands, now human, but feeling the ghost of claws. He had sworn an oath then, to the dark and the dirt. Never again. He would never offer his throat to the vulnerability of a bond. He would never be an Alpha who took, instead of earned. He would rule alone. The ache in his chest, the howling void, would just be a part of him now. A scar.
The wind shifted, carrying the distant, fading scent of her departure. His wolf let out a final, internal whine. Then it settled, not in rest, but in a grim, permanent watch. Waiting for a threat that would never come. Or for a scent it would never, ever forgive.