Chapter 26 Cormac's Ascension
POV: Cormac Brennan
Location: Brennan Townhouse, Kensington
Time: Three Months Post-Trial
The Alpha ceremony is tonight. Three months after Father's death, three months after Callum's conviction, I'm being officially recognized as permanent pack leader.
It's a formality. I've been acting as Alpha since Father died. But the ceremony makes it official. Makes it permanent. No more provisional status. No more questions about succession.
I'm dressing in Father's quarters when Beta Declan knocks on the door.
"The pack's gathering. Ceremony starts in twenty minutes." Declan looks me over. "You ready?"
"I've been ready for three months."
"That's not what I meant." Declan closes the door. "This ceremony makes everything permanent. Once you're officially Alpha, there's no going back. No changing course. You're committed to the path you've chosen."
"I chose this path months ago. The ceremony's just recognition."
"Is it? Or is it the moment you become what you've been pretending to be?" Declan's watching me carefully. "Your father was a good Alpha. Fair, respected, loved by the pack. You're not your father, Cormac. You're something else."
"I'm what the pack needs. Strong leadership. Clear hierarchy. Discipline."
"You're paranoid and ruthless. That's not the same as strong." Declan moves closer. "I've supported you because you're family. Because loyalty matters. But I need to know something. Now that Callum's gone, now that you've eliminated your rival, are you going to stop? Or is this just the beginning?"
"The beginning of what?"
"Of whatever you're becoming. This version of you that sees threats everywhere. That solves problems with violence and corruption." Declan's voice is quiet. "Your brother's in prison. You won. Can you be satisfied with that?"
I look at my uncle. Beta Declan, who's served this pack for thirty years. Who supported me even when he suspected what I'd done. Who's asking if I'm going to stop being a monster now that I've gotten what I wanted.
"I'm Alpha. That's all that matters. Everything I do is for pack security."
"Keep telling yourself that." Declan opens the door. "Ceremony's starting. Don't be late."
The ceremony is in the main hall. Over three hundred pack members gathered. Everyone wearing formal clothes. The atmosphere's solemn, respectful. This is important tradition.
Pack elders stand at the front. Marcus, Elena, and Declan. They're the ones who'll formally recognize me as Alpha. The pack will witness and submit.
I walk down the center aisle. Wolves on both sides watching. Some faces are supportive. Some are neutral. A few look uncomfortable but they're here anyway. Attendance is mandatory.
I reach the front. Stand before the elders.
Marcus speaks first. "Cormac Brennan. You stand before the pack as candidate for Alpha. Do you accept the responsibilities of leadership? The duty to protect, provide, and guide?"
"I accept."
Elena continues. "Do you swear to put pack interests above personal desires? To make decisions for the good of all, not the benefit of few?"
"I swear."
Declan finishes. "Do you commit to leading with wisdom, strength, and honor? To uphold the traditions of those who came before?"
I hesitate. Just for a second. Because honor's the word Callum would have valued. Honor's what got him destroyed.
"I commit."
The elders step forward together. Each places a hand on my shoulder. Traditional gesture of recognition.
"We, the elders of the Brennan pack, recognize Cormac Brennan as Alpha. Let the pack submit and acknowledge his leadership."
The pack submits in stages. Starting with those closest to the front. Each wolf approaches, kneels, exposes their throat in gesture of submission. It's symbolic vulnerability. Showing they trust me enough to be defenseless.
Most submissions are genuine. Wolves I've known for years. Wolves who supported me during succession dispute. Wolves who want stable leadership.
Some submissions are reluctant. I can see it in their body language. The hesitation before kneeling. The way they avoid eye contact. They're submitting because they have to, not because they want to.
I note who hesitates. Who avoids my eyes. Who looks uncomfortable. Those wolves are potential problems. Potential threats.
The ceremony lasts two hours. When it's done, I'm officially Alpha. Permanent, recognized, unquestioned.
The pack holds a feast afterward. Traditional celebration. Food, drink, speeches about the future. I make the expected statements about honoring Father's legacy, leading the pack to prosperity, maintaining traditions.
It's all performance. The pack wants to believe I'm like Father. Fair, balanced, loved. So I perform that role while planning something different.
My first official act as Alpha comes three days later. I call a pack meeting. Everyone attends.
"We're implementing new hierarchy protocols," I announce. "Clear structure. Clear expectations. Clear consequences."
Murmurs through the crowd. The pack's not used to formal hierarchy beyond Alpha, Beta, Enforcer. Father kept things relatively casual.
"Effective immediately, all pack members will show visible deference to those above them in hierarchy. Omegas defer to members. Members defer to enforcers. Enforcers defer to Beta. Everyone defers to Alpha." I let that sink in. "This includes physical gestures. Eyes down. Step aside. Verbal acknowledgment of rank."
More murmurs. Louder now. This is significant change from how Father ran things.
Elena raises her hand. "Alpha Cormac, this seems. strict. Your father believed in equality within pack structure."
"My father's dead. I'm Alpha now. And I believe in clarity. Everyone knowing their place prevents conflict." I look directly at Elena. "Do you have concerns about following Alpha directives?"
Elena backs down. "No, Alpha. Just clarifying the changes."
"Good. Because there are more changes coming." I gesture to Declan. "Beta Declan will be implementing new discipline protocols. Omegas who fail in their duties will face consequences. Members who question authority will face consequences. Anyone who disrupts pack harmony will face consequences."
"What kind of consequences?" Marcus asks.
"That depends on the infraction. Minor failures get verbal warnings. Repeated failures get physical punishment. Serious infractions get exile." I pause. "Or execution, if the threat is severe enough."
The room goes silent. Execution is rare in pack law. Reserved for betrayal, murder, extreme violence. Father used it maybe twice in thirty years.
"Execution seems extreme," Declan says carefully. "Perhaps we could discuss proportional responses."
"We're discussing it now. I'm explaining the new protocols. The pack will follow them." I look at Declan. "Do you have concerns about following Alpha directives?"
Declan recognizes the trap. Same one I used on Elena. Question me publicly and I question your loyalty.
"No, Alpha. Just ensuring we're clear on expectations."
"We're clear. Dismissed."
The pack files out. Most look confused. Some look frightened. A few look angry but they keep it hidden.
Declan stays after everyone leaves. "Is this necessary? Public executions? Physical punishments for omegas?"
"Discipline creates loyalty. Fear creates respect. The pack needs to know I'm serious about hierarchy."
"Your father never ruled through fear."
"My father's dead because he was too soft. Too trusting. Too willing to let wolves question his authority." I move closer to Declan. "I'm not making that mistake. Every wolf in this pack will know exactly where they stand. Exactly what happens if they step out of line."
"And if they resist?"
"Then they're removed. Exiled or executed depending on severity." I sit in Father's chair. My chair now. "This pack will be strong. Unified. Loyal. Whatever it takes."
Declan looks at me like he's seeing a stranger. "Your father would be ashamed."
"My father's not here. I am." I dismiss him with a wave. "Implement the protocols. Start with the omegas. Make examples if necessary."
Declan leaves without another word. I sit in the Alpha's chair, in the Alpha's study, ruling the Alpha's pack.
This is what I wanted. Power. Security. Authority that can't be questioned.
The cost doesn't matter. The methods don't matter. Results matter.
And I'm getting results.
Two weeks later, I execute my first wolf.
His name is Thomas. Mid-ranking pack member, been with us for fifteen years. He made the mistake of publicly questioning my authority during a pack meeting.
"Alpha Cormac, these new protocols are too harsh. We're not military pack. We're family pack. Your father believed in community."
"My father's leadership is not your concern. Following my directives is."
"But with respect, Alpha, some omegas are being punished for minor failures. One was beaten for dropping supplies during territory patrol. That's excessive."
"That omega failed in their duty. Consequences were appropriate."
"The omega broke their arm. Required medical treatment. How is permanent injury appropriate for dropping supplies?" Thomas is agitated now. Other pack members are watching. "This isn't leadership. This is tyranny."
Silence. The word hangs in the air. Tyranny. Accusation of Alpha corruption.
I stand. "Thomas. You're accusing me of what, exactly?"
"I'm saying these protocols are wrong. They're hurting the pack. And someone needs to say it." Thomas looks around for support. A few wolves nod. Most look away. "Your father wouldn't have approved of this."
"My father's dead. His approval is irrelevant." I signal enforcers. "Thomas has publicly challenged Alpha authority. He's accused me of tyranny. That's not acceptable dissent. That's rebellion."
"I'm not rebelling. I'm expressing concerns."
"You're undermining pack hierarchy. Creating division. Encouraging others to question their Alpha." I move closer. "The penalty for rebellion is execution. Public execution. So the pack learns what happens to wolves who challenge authority."
Thomas goes pale. "You can't be serious. I'm pack. I've served for fifteen years."
"And now you've betrayed that service by questioning leadership." I look at the enforcers. "Take him to the courtyard. Gather the pack. Everyone watches."
They drag Thomas out. He's screaming. Begging. Saying he's sorry. That he didn't mean it. That he'll follow any directive.
Too late. The challenge was public. The response must be public.
The pack gathers in the courtyard. Over two hundred wolves forced to watch. Some are crying. Most look terrified. This is unprecedented. Alphas don't execute pack members for verbal dissent.
I shift to full wolf form. Thomas is held by three enforcers. Still screaming. Still begging.
I rip his throat out in one motion. Fast. Clean. He dies in seconds.
The pack watches in silence. No one speaks. No one moves. They're all learning the lesson.
This is what happens when you question me. This is what happens when you challenge my authority.
I shift back to human. Stand over Thomas's body. Look at the assembled pack.
"Thomas challenged Alpha authority. He accused me of tyranny. He encouraged division." I let them see the blood on my hands. "This is the consequence. Anyone else who questions, who challenges, who undermines, will face the same fate. Am I clear?"
Three hundred wolves respond in unison. "Yes, Alpha."
"Dismissed."
That night, Declan comes to my study. He doesn't knock. Just walks in and closes the door.
"You executed Thomas. For words. For expressing concern."
"I executed a rebel. There's a difference."
"Thomas wasn't a rebel. He was a worried pack member who spoke up. And you murdered him to make a point." Declan's voice is shaking. "This isn't what Alpha Ronan wanted. This isn't the pack he built."
"Father built a weak pack. Too tolerant. Too willing to let wolves question authority. I'm building something stronger."
"You're building something monstrous." Declan sits across from me. "Wolves are terrified. They're following orders because they're afraid of being executed. That's not loyalty. That's coercion."
"Results are results. The pack is unified. No more dissent. No more challenges. Everyone knows their place."
"Everyone's terrified of you. That's not the same as respect."
"Fear works better than respect. Fear prevents problems. Fear creates obedience." I pour myself a drink. "You disagree with my methods?"
"Completely."
"But you'll implement them anyway?"
Declan's quiet for a long moment. "We chose you. The pack chose you as Alpha. We live with that choice. Even when it's destroying us."
An older pack member approaches Declan after he leaves my study. I watch from the window. Can't hear what they're saying but I can read body language.
The older wolf is gesturing emphatically. Clearly upset. Declan's listening, nodding. Looking resigned.
After a few minutes, I see the older wolf say something final. Declan responds. They both look toward my window. Toward me.
They don't know I'm watching. Don't know I see everything.
But I do. I see the doubt. The fear. The growing resistance beneath the surface obedience.
I see the pack that used to love my father now terrified of me.
And I don't care.
Because terror works. Terror creates order. Terror keeps wolves in line.
I'm Alpha. That's all that matters.
Whatever the cost.