From Discarded Mate To Enemy's Gamma

Elara Vance POV:

I spent my first full day as a Sterling recruit learning the rhythms of my new pack. The training grounds had a raw, competitive energy that Blackwood's polished drills had lacked. Gavin, now my grudging training partner, pushed me hard. The exertion was welcome—it left little room for brooding.

Yet at night, alone in my stark new room, my thoughts drifted inevitably back. I stared at the small, tactical communicator I had kept—the only item from my old life that still held any practical value. Its screen remained dark. No messages from Blackwood. No indication anyone had even noticed my absence.

I didn't know whether that silence was a relief or a fresh wound.

[Third-Person Interlude — The Blackwood Packhouse, That Same Night]

Night fell over the Blackwood Packhouse. In Zane's office, the only light came from the dying embers in the grand stone fireplace. The room was quiet, filled with the ghosts of plans and the lingering scent of Seraphina's perfume.

The door creaked open, and an elderly Omega cleaner shuffled in, pushing a small cleaning cart. His back was stooped with age and a lifetime of servitude. He moved with the quiet, practiced invisibility of those who exist at the bottom of the pack hierarchy.

He sighed at the state of the Alpha's desk. It was a chaotic mess of maps, empty coffee cups, and scattered documents. He began his work, methodically clearing away the debris, wiping down the polished surface. He sorted the papers into two piles: official-looking documents to be left alone, and what appeared to be trash—scraps of notes and crumpled drafts.

Elara's letter, the one Zane had carelessly tossed aside, sat precariously on the edge of the desk. As the old wolf wiped down the surface, the slight vibration was enough to send the envelope sliding off the edge. It fluttered to the floor, landing silently on a small pile of discarded papers destined for the fire.

The Omega's eyesight wasn't what it used to be. He bent down stiffly to collect the trash from the floor. He saw the plain, unmarked envelope and assumed it was just another piece of refuse the Alpha had discarded. The most important rule for an Omega was to never touch, and certainly never read, the Alpha's papers. The safest course of action was to dispose of anything that looked like it didn't belong.

He gathered the papers, the letter among them, and shuffled over to the fireplace. Without a second thought, he tossed the entire bundle into the glowing embers.

The parchment caught immediately. The edges curled and blackened. The heat of the fire licked at the ink, consuming the words Elara had poured her heart into—dissolution of the mate bond, departure from the Blackwood Pack—until they were nothing but ash.

The old Omega, completely unaware of the history he had just erased, finished his duties and wheeled his cart out of the office, leaving the room as silent as he had found it.

The next morning, Zane and Seraphina walked side-by-side down the main corridor, their steps in perfect sync. They were discussing alliances, specifically how to secure the loyalty of a neighboring Alpha, Orion Graves.

*Zane was in a good mood. Seraphina's strategic insights were sharp, and he felt a renewed sense of purpose. He even had a fleeting thought about Elara. Perhaps it's time to smooth things over. She's had a few days to get over her jealousy. She'll need to accept Seraphina's new role. *

*He briefly considered reaching out to her through their mind-link. But he dismissed the idea just as quickly. No, let her stew a little longer. It will make her more compliant. She'll come around. *

Seraphina seemed to sense his thoughts. She placed a delicate hand on his arm, her voice soft and full of false sympathy. "Zane, don't worry too much about Elara. I'm sure she's a sensible girl. She'll understand that your decisions are for the good of the pack."

Her words were a balm to his ego, reinforcing his belief that he was doing the right, necessary thing. His admiration for her grew.

He had completely forgotten about the letter Kian had given him. In his mind, it had never existed.

Elara Vance POV:

That same morning, I joined Kael for a perimeter patrol along the Sterling-Blackwood border. The forest was quiet, the winter air crisp and clean. Kael was a man of few words, but his silence was comfortable rather than oppressive.

As we surveyed the tree line marking the boundary between our territories, I felt an unexpected pang—not of longing, but of finality. That land over there was no longer my home. Whatever was happening inside Blackwood's walls, whatever Zane was doing, whoever he was with—it was no longer my concern.

Or so I told myself.

I had no way of knowing that, even now, Zane still believed I was simply sulking in my room. I had no idea my letter had been reduced to ash. And I certainly didn't know that, in the mind of the Alpha I had once loved, I was still a member of his pack—a disobedient wolf waiting to be summoned and forgiven.

The misunderstanding had become a fact. The chasm between his reality and mine was now an unbridgeable canyon. And I, unknowingly, was standing on the other side, preparing for a war he didn't even know had been declared.

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