Chapter 30
Elara’s POV
“Her?” I repeated coldly, narrowing my eyes at Garron. “You’re saying Triss planned it?”
Garron nodded frantically, his face swollen and stained with bruises. “Yes! It was all her idea–I just passed the message. She said Gamma Elara needed to be put in her place!”
Everyone’s attention snapped to Triss.
The woman stiffened, her jaw tightening. Her eyes stayed low as if meeting mine would ignite something in her.
“Is that true?” Thorne’s voice sliced through the tension like a blade. “Triss, did you have anything to do with this?”
For a moment, silence ruled. Then Triss slowly raised her head.
“No,” she said flatly, “but he’s not wrong. I told him the bears were real. I told him that if anyone wandered too far north, they’d find trouble. But it was his choice to send her there.” She flicked her eyes toward me. “I didn’t think he’d actually do it.”
“You encouraged it,” Cael growled beside me. “You planted the seed and watched it grow.”
“And she fought those monsters alone because of it,” Bex added sharply. “Thirty damn bears.”
Triss stood a little straighter, her tone unbending. “I didn’t give the order. He did.”
Thorne turned to the man who had brought the map, “Did she threaten you as well?”
“N–No, Alpha. Only Gamma Garron. She just… knew about the forest. I thought she was joking.”
I drew a deep breath and pushed myself upright in the bed. My body still ached, but fury burned hotter than pain ever could.
“You sent me there to die,” I said to Garron, every word sharp as a blade. “And when it didn’t work, you pointed at your teammate to save your skin.”
“I didn’t mean-” he began.
“You meant exactly what you did.” My voice cracked with rage. “Jory could’ve died. Vessa nearly bled out. You threw my people to monsters and stood there to watch.”
Garron trembled. “You… you don’t understand–this was never supposed to go that far.”
“No,” I said icily, “you didn’t expect me to survive.”
Cael leaned in again, but I stopped him with a hand. I was done letting others fight my battles.
“I want him stripped of his title,” I said clearly, turning to Thorne. “Direstone Keep Pack has no right keeping a Gamma who gambles with other pack members‘ lives.”
Gasps echoed around the room. Garron choked on his protest.
Thorne stared at me in silence. His jaw clenched, but he gave a single nod.
“Effective immediately,” he said. “Garron, you’re removed from your post. You’ll face formal judgment from the council,
1/3
Chapter 30
Guards, take him.”
The soldiers flanking him didn’t hesitate. Garron shouted and thrashed as they dragged him out, sputtering curses. Triss stood frozen, arms crossed tight.
“What about her?” Bex asked, nodding toward Triss.
“She stays for now,” I said after a moment. “She may have known, but she didn’t act.”
Triss flinched like she expected something worse. She turned to me slowly.
“Thank you,” she murmured.
“Don’t thank me. I’m not done with you yet.” My gaze bore into hers. “But I believe in justice before revenge. Don’t make me regret that.”
Triss nodded, her eyes dropping again.
Thorne sighed and ran a hand through his hair. “Elara, you need rest. Let us handle things.”
“I’ve been resting for two days. That’s enough.”
Cael gave me a side–eye. “You look like hell.”
I smirked faintly. “Then I’m in perfect shape for the next fight.”
Laughter broke the tension in the room. Bex chuckled, handing me a bottle of water. “Still want to join the next hunting trip?”
“As long as no one gives me another forged map,” I said dryly.
Thorne cleared his throat. “Elara–there’s something else we need to discuss.”
“Let me guess. More secrets about my past?” I tilted my head at him. “Another memory you just now remembered to care about?”
He looked hurt for a moment, but I didn’t flinch.
“No,” he said quietly. “This time, I just want to apologize.”
The room fell still.
“I should have listened to you before. About your family. About everything. I believed Miela’s lies for too long. And I treated you like you didn’t matter.”
I waited.
“I’m not asking for forgiveness,” he added. “Just… the chance to stand beside you. Not as your Alpha. Just as someone who wants to do right by you now.”
The words sat heavy in the room. I didn’t answer him–not yet. I turned back to Cael.
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