LOGINChapter 6
The whip lay coiled on the stone bench beside Aron.
For a moment, no one moved.
The evening air felt colder than it should have been. The courtyard walls trapped the silence, pressing it down over all of us.
I wanted to scream. To tell them how unfair it all was. How none of it had ever been my fault.
Not my missing wolf. Not my missing parents. And certainly not this pendant.
I wanted to tell them that even now, after everything that had happened, there was still a chance to mend what they had broken. I would forgive it all. I loved this pack like a family.
I still do.
But this… this was a line they should never cross.
This was them rejecting me.
As a pack member. As a mate. As a person.
I wanted to cry. To beg. To make them see.
And maybe I should.
“Are you sure?” I asked, looking at my mate. “Is this your final word?”
I searched his eyes.
Waiting for even the smallest flicker of something.
Something worth fighting for.
Nothing.
He didn’t answer.
He didn’t even meet my gaze.
He only nodded to the guards, giving them the signal to act.
And I knew.
There was nothing left to fight for.
No begging and no explanations would change a thing.
So instead of giving them the chance to drag me to the pillar, I walked there myself.
I wrapped my arms around the wooden post, silently refusing to be tied.
And waited.
The rough wood pressed against my chest. Against my heart. And my tattoo.
It should have been a broken crown maybe, I thought bitterly.
Somewhere behind me the visiting Alpha shifted his weight.
Aron picked up the whip.
The last thread that still tied me to this place.
To him.
For a moment nothing happened.
The air behind me shifted.
The whip cracked.
Pain exploded across my back, erasing every other feeling or thought.
For a second, the world narrowed to a single burning line across my skin.
I bit down hard.
No sound.
I would not give them that.
“Two.”
Someone behind me had started counting.
The second strike came before the word had fully faded.
Pain burned across my back, hotter now, sharper.
I tightened my grip around the post.
The wood was rough beneath my fingers.
Solid.
Real.
“Three.”
The whip cracked again.
My body jerked, but I held on.
The courtyard blurred.
Stone. Walls. Shadows.
“Four.”
I focused on breathing.
In.
Out.
In.
Out.
If I could breathe, I could endure.
“Five.”
The sound of the whip became louder than the pain.
Crack.
Then fire.
Crack.
Then fire.
“Six.”
Somewhere to my left, one of the warriors shifted.
Boots scraped softly against stone.
Still, no one spoke.
No one tried to stop it.
“Seven.”
The wood beneath my palms felt wet.
I didn’t want to think about why.
“Eight.”
The number sounded distant.
“Nine.”
My arms trembled around the post. The strength in my fingers was fading, slipping away little by little.
I tried to remember why I was still holding on.
“Ten.”
My thoughts drifted strangely.
To the training yard.
To the laughter that used to fill it.
To my father’s voice correcting my stance.
“Hold your ground.
Never yield.”
The counting went on.
Halfway.
I wasn’t sure if someone had said it out loud
or if my mind had simply guessed.
Their voices blurred around me.
The whip cracked again.
This time the pain sank deeper.
Not just into my skin.
Into something else.
Something fragile.
Something that had been breaking slowly for months.
“Twenty.”
The world tilted.
My breath came in shallow bursts now.
In.
Out.
In—
Another strike.
And suddenly the pain was no longer sharp.
It was distant.
Muted.
As if it belonged to another body.
“Twenty-five.”
Only five more.
Five more pieces of something that had once been me.
My cheek rested against the rough wood.
The post smelled of dust and old rain.
I closed my eyes.
Not to escape.
Just to rest them for a moment.
“Twenty-six.”
Another strike.
Another burst of heat across my back.
But the anger I had carried for so long was gone.
So was the desperation.
So was the hope.
“Twenty-seven.”
I was aware I was there.
I knew what was happening to me.
But it felt as if I were watching from afar.
“Twenty-eight.”
Nothing mattered anymore. Nothing concerned me.
“Twenty-nine.”
The whip rose again behind me.
For a heartbeat the courtyard was perfectly still.
The final strike fell.
“Thirty.”
My body started slipping down the pole.
My hands couldn't hold me anymore.
I had taken it all.
Tall.
Silently.
Proud.
But this final act of defiance had broken me beyond repair.
That broken thing was no longer me.
“Bring her to the healers,” Aron said.
The visiting Alpha stepped forward immediately.
“We agreed on thirty lashes and three days in prison.”
Aron didn’t even look at him.
“And you will have exactly that,” he replied calmly. “But she will not die in my courtyard.”
The other Alpha’s eyes narrowed.
“She is weak. A wolfless girl.” Aron answered coldly. “But she is also the key to this pack’s legitimacy. I will not risk losing that over pride.”
Their voices sounded distant to me.
Muted.
Like echoes drifting through water.
Hands lifted me from the ground.
The healers worked quickly. Cool cloth. Tight bandages. Bitter medicine forced between my lips.
Someone held a cup of water to my mouth.
I drank without thinking.
The taste was strange. Metallic.
I didn’t care.
The world blurred again.
When I opened my eyes next, I was lying on a narrow bed in a stone cell.
Someone had covered me with a rough blanket.
The door closed with a heavy sound.
And the darkness swallowed everything.
🍃 Arria POVSilence followed.Not the sharp silenceFenrircreated.Not the frightened one Alaric pulled from people without trying.This one was heavier.“You don’t have to choose now,” I told them. “You can ask all your questions first. Greg and Stone will answer truthfully. Then you’ll have three more days before the official vote.”
🍃 Arria POVA few minutes later, I was standing beside Fenrir on a wool blanket.Stone had organizedthespace perfectly. We were part ofthegathering circle, butthere was enough space around usso Alaric would not become overwhelmed.We received greetings, and as usual, everyone acted calmly, but no one met Fenrir’s gaze directly for more than two seconds.I positioned myself betweenhislong
🍃 Arria POVI had finished my morning training session an hour ago, and now,freshand physically spent, I was going through the pile of documents I had postponed for the last two days.The housing arrangements were moving swiftly, and all families in the gathering already had their own place. So now I was prioritizing which building should come next—a new school, a packhouse, three more one-family houses, or an actual healing house instead of home visits.A loud knock startled me.
🌘 Fenrir POV Arria was shocked. She needed time to think it through, so I pulled away from her and started moving around the kitchen, preparing the table and reheating the food. It gave my hands something to do. “This can’t be part of the curse,” Arria said eventually. “Alaric had a mate back then, right?” “Yes,” I confirmed. “A chosen mate.” “Chosen or not, it doesn’t matter if he wasn’t forced to take her. And the king’s Beta being forced is out of the question.” “You are right. He wasn’t.” I set a plate on the table. “They had been friends from a young age. Neither he nor she had found their fated mate by twenty-five, so they had decided to try courting for a while. Eight months later, they had been officially mated.”“That doesn’t sound bad,” she said slowly.Uncertain.“No. It had been good. She had always been respectful, understanding, and soft around him, and the Beta had reciprocated her feelings and actions.”I took a moment.“In time, they had grown affectionate wit
🍃 Arria POV I knew my mate pretty well by now. He was a man surrounded by rules, control, and walls. So when I said I loved him, I hadn’t expected “I love you too” in return. I didn’t need the words back. I needed them out of my chest. I needed him to know he had something solid, something permanent with me. I expected a hug, maybe. Or a kiss. I would have been fine with “good” said in his usual level tone, or even just a nod. I wouldn’t have seen a problem in a silent transition into setting the table for an early dinner. What I hadn’t expected was for him to stay so utterly frozen for what felt like two full minutes. And I definitely hadn’t expected the word that eventually left him. “Impossible.” Stated as an undeniable fact. I lowered my gaze, unsure how to deal with an answer like that. What was that even supposed to mean? Did he think I was incapable of love? Or too naive to understand the weight of the words and the extent of the feeling itself? Stone had voi
🍃 Arria POVI opened the office door without hesitation.“I am back,” I announced with a smile and went directly to him to give him a kiss.Fenrir pushed his chair back and pulled me into his lap.The kiss was small and perfect, and then he lifted his hand and started pulling leaves and small sticks out of my hair.My eyes widened.“Oh, Goddess, I must look like a witch,” I said, shifting to slip out of his hold.“You look like a nymph,” he answered, unbothered, tightening his hold on me.I was staying where I was. Obviously.He took a moment to finish, and when he spoke again, his words came tender.“You had fun.”I just nodded.I was still too ashamed of my appearance. And the fact, that he was intentionally showing me how he felt about it by letting his usual even tone soften, did not help at all.“Good.”I was rewarded with another kiss. This time on my forehead.“Are there more tasks on your list for today?”“Yes,” I confirmed softly, glancing at him.“I just came to say hello o
🍃 Arria POV I saw it—the moment he chose to let it go. He looked torn. He wanted to say more. Do more. And still, he didn’t. For me. I wasn’t sure if that was a good thing or a bad one. But my father had taught me to choose my battles wisely. And fighting him now… that would already be a lo
5 days later When I arrived, the yard was empty. The laughter that usually greeted me was gone. Inside, the children were sitting in rows behind desks while an instructor stood in front of the room. “Extra lessons,” one of the caretakers explained when she noticed me standing by the door. “The
In the days that followed, changes began to appear everywhere. Patrols along the borders doubled. Training sessions started earlier and ended later. Warriors who had once joked with one another in the yard now moved with a sharper focus. At first the pack welcomed it. Strength always brings comfo
The pack was left in the hands of the Beta family. Again. And I was left to think about what to do from now on. There was a huge possibility that I would never be truly a werewolf. In fact, according to our history 18th was the last threshold. My parents' obsession with believing I had a wolf w







