Chapter 10 Ultimatum Decision
The Council Hall wasn’t a place of justice, it was a place of decisions. Cold, final, and absolute.
Its heavy stone walls were carved with the history of Alphas past wolves kneeling, wars fought, crowns claimed. The oldest laws of the pack world were etched here, untouched by time. No Wolf, Alpha, or Goddess had ever dared break them.
Until now.
Damien stood in the center of the hall, fists clenched, jaw tight, his wolf pacing and snarling in his head.
Five Alphas sat in their council seats, leaders from the surrounding territories. Their eyes held no warmth. No empathy. Just expectation.
Alpha, Damien's father stood by the ancient brazier, arms crossed, face unreadable.
The High Elder spoke first.
“You stand before the Council as heir to the Fairly Moon Pack,” his voice echoed through the chamber. “But there is… a complication.”
A complication.
They couldn’t even call her by name.
“You have formed a mate bond,” Elder Cassian said, voice sharp. “A bond with a breeder. Unmarked. Unfit to be Luna.”
Damien didn’t flinch.
“You will make a choice,” Elder Cassian continued, lifting a parchment sealed in blood red wax.
“Choice one, You reject the breeder, sever the bond, and ascend as Alpha.”
Damien’s heartbeat slammed against his chest not from fear, but from fury.
“And choice two?” he asked, though he already knew.
Elder Cassian looked at him almost pitying.
“You keep her. You claim her as your mate. And you forfeit your title. Forever.”
Silence.
Damien’s wolf, Shadow, growled deep in his chest.
His father took a step forward.
“Your decision affects more than your heart,” Alpha Magnus said hard. “It affects your pack. Your legacy. Your name.”
“My name?” Damien bit out. “What use is a title if I lose my soul keeping it?”
Alpha Magnus’ eyes flashed. “Mate bonds are rare, yes. Powerful. Yes. But a Luna must be born by law not by accident.”
There it was again.
Accident.
As if the Moon Goddess made mistakes.
The Council gave him twenty-four hours.
Then he would choose.
Or the Council would choose for him.
The sky was dark when Damien stood outside the Old Alpha House. The place looked haunted, weathered bricks, broken windows, silent gardens. The kind of place no wolf would willingly enter.
Except her.
He found her in the back garden, sitting alone beneath the bleeding heart tree, barefoot on the dew-stained grass.
She didn’t look weak. She didn’t look broken.
She looked... lost.
She didn’t look up when she sensed him.
“You weren’t supposed to come,” she said softly.
Damien stepped closer. “I had to.”
Silence curled between them, thick with things unsaid.
He wanted to touch her. But he didn’t.
He couldn’t.
Not yet.
If the mate bond sealed, if skin met skin in full acceptance, rejecting her later wouldn’t just break her heart.
It would kill her.
“Damien...” she whispered, voice barely holding together. “Why does it hurt to breathe when you’re not near?”
He closed his eyes.
“Because our wolves are already bound,” he said quietly. “Even if we aren’t.”
She finally looked at him. And gods, her eyes.
Not weak.
Not helpless.
Alive.
“How long?” she asked. “How long have you known I was your mate?”
He took a breath. “Since the first time I smelled you.”
She swallowed. Hard.
“And how long have you been trying… not to be?”
He froze.
Shadow whimpered inside him.
He couldn’t lie.
So he didn’t speak.
She let out a broken breath.
The truth was obvious.
“I’d rather be unloved,” she whispered, tears blurring her vision, “than be someone’s weakness.”
Damien’s heart nearly split.
He stepped closer.
Softly.
Painfully.
Slow enough to stop himself.
“You are not my weakness, Tiara.”
His voice trembled.
“You are my war.”
Her breath hitched.
He reached up like he wanted to touch her face.
Her hand.
Anything.
But he didn’t.
One touch.
One mistake.
And everything would be sealed.
His heart. Her life.
“I saw them,” Tiara whispered. “All of them. The Elders. Damien, they don’t want to understand me. They fear me.”
“They should,” he said quietly. “Power doesn’t always come with a crown.”
She looked at him. “They want me dead, don’t they?”
He didn’t answer.
He didn’t need to.
Tiara took a slow breath. “I’m not meant to be an Alpha’s mate.”
Damien’s jaw tightened. “That’s not true.”
She shook her head, meeting his gaze not weakly, not tearfully, but with something he couldn’t quite name.
Strength.
“I’m not meant to be someone’s Luna,” she whispered.
“I’m meant to be something else. But I don’t know what.”
Damien stared at her like he was seeing her for the first time.
Maybe he was.
“I won’t let them destroy you,” he said fiercely.
Tiara smiled sadly.
“It’s not them I'm afraid of,” she whispered. “It’s you.”
He felt it like a knife.
She stepped back not out of fear.
To keep him safe.
“You have to choose,” she murmured. “Leader of your pack… or leader of your heart.”
He stepped forward.
Only one step.
But she felt it like thunder.
“I do have to choose,” Damien said.
“Just not today.”
He turned away because if he stayed.
He wouldn’t leave.
Ever.
He stopped at the doorway, back still turned to her.
His voice was quiet.
Shaken.
But unbroken.
“When this is over,” he said, “I don’t want the crown.”
Tiara’s heart froze.
“I want you.”
”
The next morning, the Council Hall was full.
Elders, Alphas, ranked wolves, and spectators gathered in silence.
Damien stood before them.
Steady.
Certain.
No crown on his head.
But something far stronger in his eyes.
Elder Cassian spoke. “Your choice, Damien Magnus of the Fairly Moon Pack.”
Damien lifted his head.
“I will fight,” he said calmly.
Murmurs erupted.
“For your title?” someone called out.
Damien shook his head.
“No.”
He looked up at the Elders, at his father, at the Council’s ancient laws.
“I will fight,” he repeated slowly,
“Not for the title.”
His heartbeat was thunder.
“But for her.”
Silence.
Still.
Breathless.
Then the Council stood.
Eyes wide.
This war wouldn’t be political.
This war wouldn’t be about power.
It would be about her.
About what she was.
About who she would become.
About what kind of future she could create.
A future where a breeder could be an Alpha.
Not by bond.
Not by accident.
But by birthright.