Chapter Seven

1252 Words
The door did not slam when Diana left. It closed softly, deliberately, the final sound echoing through the Alpha’s office like a held breath finally released. For several heartbeats, no one moved. The air was thick with the residue of power—silver and sharp, still humming faintly in the walls. The cracked floor had stopped trembling, but the damage remained, undeniable. Papers lay scattered across the floor like fallen feathers, the desk splintered where Luna Hazel’s body had struck it. Hazel lay where she had fallen, her breath uneven, the sting of bruises blooming beneath her skin. Pain throbbed through her ribs, but it was nothing compared to the heat curling in her chest. Humiliation. Slowly, she pushed herself upright. Her movements were careful, controlled. Because she could feel the eyes on her now. Beta Rafe did not look away. Gamma Tyler tried to, but failed. The Luna of Crimson Fang had been thrown into a wall. By a woman without rank. By a woman who had refused to bow. Hazel straightened, smoothing her tunic with trembling fingers, forcing her posture into something regal, something composed. Her claws retracted fully now, leaving her hands bare, human vulnerable in a way she had never allowed herself to be before. She lifted her chin and turned toward Asher. He was still standing behind his desk, both hands braced against the wood, his gaze fixed on the door Diana had walked through. His shoulders were rigid, his jaw tight, as though he were holding something back—anger, regret, fear, Hazel could not tell. “You let her walk out,” Hazel said. Her voice sounded thin in the quiet room. Asher did not respond. Hazel laughed once, sharp and brittle. “She assaulted me in your office. She defied me. She threatened this pack. And you let her walk out.” Asher finally turned to her. “Enough,” he said. The word landed like a slap. Hazel’s eyes widened. “Enough?” she repeated. “That’s all you have to say after what she did to me?” “She reacted,” Asher replied, voice controlled. “After you lunged at her.” “So now you blame me?” Hazel stared at him in disbelief. “I am your Luna. She is—she was—a warrior. She has no right to touch me, no right to challenge me, no right to—” “She is no longer a warrior,” Asher interrupted. The words cut sharply, silencing her. Hazel’s lips parted slowly. “What?” Asher exhaled, the sound heavy. “She resigned. And I accepted it.” Beta Rafe straightened subtly. Gamma Tyler swallowed hard. Hazel took a step back, shock flickering across her face before fury rushed in to replace it. “You accepted her resignation,” she said incredulously. “After she humiliated me?” “She earned the right to leave,” Asher replied. “She earned the right to choose.” Hazel’s voice rose. “And what about me? What about my authority? You let her stand there and accuse me of incompetence. You let her lay my failures at my feet in front of your Beta and Gamma.” Asher’s gaze hardened. “You were responsible for the evacuation.” Hazel stiffened. “I followed protocol.” “Your protocol missed two pack members,” Asher said quietly. Hazel’s nails dug into her palms. “You don’t know that it was my fault.” “No,” Asher admitted. “But neither do you.” Silence fell again—heavy, suffocating. Hazel felt something shift inside her. Not just anger now, but fear. Fear that something fundamental had cracked. That Diana Nightshade had walked out not as a defeated outcast—but as a woman who had left scars behind her. Hazel took a slow breath and changed tactics. “She said something.” Asher did not look at her. “She said she was betrayed,” Hazel continued. “Not just by me. But by you.” Asher’s jaw tightened. Hazel’s eyes narrowed. “She said you rejected her.” Beta Rafe’s gaze sharpened. Gamma Tyler lifted his head slightly, attention drawn despite himself. Hazel stepped closer. “What did she mean by that, Asher?” Asher closed his eyes briefly. When he opened them, something weary looked back at her. “She didn’t awaken her wolf,” he said. “When she turned eighteen.” Hazel frowned. “So?” “She was my fated mate,” Asher continued. “And I cannot accept a worthless Luna. She was unfit. I made a decision for the pack.” Hazel stared at him. “So you rejected her.” Asher’s voice hardened. “That is the only way. And her parents begged me not to banish her. So I didn’t.” “No,” Hazel said coldly. “You just made sure she would stay a lowly warrior.” The words lingered, sharp and undeniable. Hazel let out a humorless laugh. “And now she stands in this room with strength that shakes walls, and you look at her like you’ve seen a ghost.” Asher didn’t deny it. Hazel’s eyes gleamed. “You’re afraid of her.” “I’m cautious,” Asher replied. Hazel shook her head slowly. “No. You’re afraid because she became something you can’t control.” Her gaze flicked briefly to the door again. “And neither can I.” Asher said nothing. The admission hung between them like a fracture. Hazel drew herself up again, reclaiming what dignity she could. “So what happens now?” Asher’s gaze was distant. “She stays.” Hazel blinked. “What?” “She chose not to leave the territory,” Asher said. “She will remain in the pack as a regular member.” Hazel’s heart lurched. “You’re letting her stay?” “She lost her rank,” Asher said firmly. “She holds no authority. No command.” “And where will she go?” Hazel demanded. Asher’s voice softened—just slightly. “Her parents’ cabin.” Hazel’s chest tightened. “She asked for that,” Asher added. “She wants distance. Nothing more.” Hazel searched his face, trying to find weakness, regret—anything she could exploit. “You’re letting her hide,” Hazel said. “No,” Asher replied. “I’m letting her grieve.” He turned then to Beta Rafe and Gamma Tyler. “Rafe. Tyler.” Both men straightened immediately. “As of this moment,” Asher said, voice resuming its full Alpha weight, “Diana Nightshade is relieved of her warrior status. She will remain within pack borders as a civilian member.” Hazel’s jaw clenched. “You will relay this decision to the pack,” Asher continued. “And to the training grounds. Make it clear—she answers to no chain of command.” Beta Rafe nodded once. “Understood.” Gamma Tyler hesitated only a fraction before nodding. “Yes, Alpha.” “This is not weakness,” Asher’s gaze returned briefly to Hazel. “This is containment.” Hazel looked away, her reflection catching briefly in the cracked glass of a framed map. Somewhere deep in her chest, a cold realization settled: Diana had not been driven out. She had chosen to stay. And that was far more dangerous, because wolves who stayed after losing everything… Were wolves who had nothing left to fear.
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