
Chapter 1 of When My Mate Let My Parents Die to Save Her
The rain hit like bullets against my skin as I ran the northern border patrol. Three years as Ethan's mate, three years as a Delta warrior for the Silver Moon Pack, and I still pulled the graveyard shifts. Luna, my wolf, stirred restlessly inside me, sensing something off in the air.
Then the mind-link crackled.
It wasn't meant for me. The storm was interfering with the pack frequency, bleeding private channels into the general link. But I heard it clear as day.
"Meet me at the Old Oak, my love." Amanda's voice. Sickeningly sweet, like poisoned honey. "Our little secret is growing inside me. I can't wait to tell you in person."
I froze mid-stride. The world tilted.
Luna howled inside my head, a sound of pure anguish that made my bones ache. The mate bond—that golden thread connecting me to Ethan—turned to barbed wire in my chest.
No. No, this couldn't be real.
But then the scent hit me. Even through the rain, even from half a mile away, I caught it on the wind. Cloying vanilla mixed with something rotten, something wrong. Amanda's scent. And underneath it, the metallic tang I'd smelled a hundred times in the healer's ward.
Pregnancy.
My legs moved before my brain caught up. I tracked the scent trail through the woods, my Delta training kicking in automatically. Every step felt like walking through broken glass, but I couldn't stop. I had to see.
The Old Oak loomed ahead, ancient and twisted. And there, tucked into the hollow at its base, was the proof I didn't want to find.
Ethan's Alpha cloak. The one with his personal scent woven into every fiber. Wrapped around a bundle of soft nesting materials—blankets, pillows, all soaked in Amanda's perfume. The pregnancy scent was stronger here, unmistakable.
I grabbed the bundle with shaking hands. Luna was screaming now, clawing at my insides, begging me to shift and run and never look back. But I was done running.
I was done being the loyal mate who took silver knives meant for him. Done being the Delta who bled for a pack that didn't value her. Done pretending the mate bond was enough when respect was absent.
The pack house was quiet when I stormed through the doors, dripping rainwater and rage. I didn't knock on Ethan's office door. I kicked it open.
He looked up from his desk, those green eyes widening in surprise. "Eliana? What—"
I threw the bundle onto his desk. It landed with a wet thump, Amanda's scent exploding into the room.
"Tell me the truth," I said. My voice came out cold, detached. "About Amanda. About this."
Ethan's jaw tightened. He didn't even try to deny it. "You're being dramatic."
"Dramatic?" The word tasted like ash. "There's a pregnancy scent all over your cloak, Ethan. All over nesting materials hidden at your secret meeting spot. And you're calling me dramatic?"
"Amanda is scared. She needs support." He stood, his Alpha aura beginning to press against the room. "You wouldn't understand."
"I understand perfectly." I straightened my spine, meeting his eyes. Luna surged forward, lending me strength. "I, Eliana Brooks, Delta of the Silver Moon Pack—"
"Stop." His eyes flashed red. Pure Alpha.
"—reject you, Ethan Morris—"
"I said STOP!"
The Alpha Tone hit me like a physical blow. It crashed over me in waves, crushing, suffocating. Luna whimpered and folded, forced into submission by the command woven into his voice. My throat closed. The rejection words died on my tongue, trapped behind the wall of his dominance.
I couldn't speak. Couldn't move. Could barely breathe.
Ethan's hand was still pressed flat against his desk, his chest heaving. "You don't get to reject me, Eliana. I forbid it."
The Alpha command settled into my bones like chains.
He turned away, dismissing me. "Get out. We'll discuss this when you're calmer."
I left. Not because he told me to, but because I needed to think. Luna was whimpering, hurt and confused by the forced submission. The mate bond pulsed with Ethan's satisfaction at having controlled me.
I needed answers. Real answers.
The Pack Archives were restricted, but my Delta clearance got me through the door. I searched through files with trembling hands, looking for anything about the Blood Moon Ambush. The night my parents died defending the border.
I found the tactical audio logs buried in a locked drawer.
My finger hovered over the play button. Some part of me knew—once I listened, there would be no going back.
I pressed play.
Static. Shouting. The chaos of battle. Then Ethan's voice, clear and commanding: "Secure Amanda first. The Brooks family is secondary. That is an order."
The recording continued. Warriors arguing. Someone saying, "But Alpha, the Brooks are pinned down—"
"I gave you an order!" Ethan's voice again, sharp with Alpha authority. "Save Amanda. Now!"
Then screams. My mother's voice, cut short.
The file ended.
I sat in the darkness of the archives, the truth settling over me like a burial shroud. My parents didn't die because the rogues were too strong. They died because my mate—my Alpha—chose to save his traitorous ex-lover instead.
Luna went silent inside me. Not in submission this time. In something far more dangerous.
In the cold, crystalline clarity of absolute betrayal.
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