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Chapter 4 - CHAPTER 4: THE SHATTERING

The silence in the house was a physical weight, heavy and suffocating. For three days, Skye moved through the rooms like a ghost. She didn't go to class. She didn't answer her phone. The world of Northbridge University, of coffee and lectures and a boy with crimson eyes, felt like a distant, dream from another lifetime. The only reality was the gaping hole where her mother used to be.

Her father was different. Dane Garrick did not grieve quietly. His sorrow was a storm, fueling a cold, relentless fury. He spent his days on the phone or in closed door meetings with the other Alphas who came to pay their respects. Skye could hear their low, rumbling voices through the floorboards—words like "retribution," "alliance," and "final battle." The air around the house crackled with aggressive energy, the scent of wolf so thick it was a miracle the human neighbors didn't notice.

On the morning of the fourth day, she found him in his study, sharpening a long, ceremonial dagger. The sound of steel scraping against stone was unnervingly final.

"You can't do this, Dad," Skye pleaded, her voice raw from tears and disuse. She stood in the doorway, clutching her mother's diary to her chest like a shield. "It's what he wants. Mom's diary… she wrote about their tactics. They thrive on provoking a direct fight. It's a suicide mission."

Dane didn't look up. His focus was entirely on the blade. "He killed your mother, Skye. He slaughtered her like an animal and left her for me to find. There is no other path. There is only vengeance."

"She wouldn't want this!" Skye cried out, desperation clawing at her throat. "She believed in peace! She wrote about the myth of the Golden Wolf, the Mega Alpha who could bring balance without this… this carnage!"

Finally, he lifted his head. His grey eyes, once warm and crinkled with laughter, were now chips of flint. The love in them was buried deep beneath a glacier of rage. "Myths don't bring back the dead, Skye. Only blood can pay for blood."

He stood, sheathing the dagger. "The funeral is tomorrow. The packs will gather. And then, we march." He walked past her, pausing to place a heavy hand on her shoulder. "Stay home. Wait for my victory shout when I tear that red demon's head from his body."

She watched him go, a towering figure of doomed determination, and felt a piece of her heart break off and wither. He was already gone, lost to the ghost of her mother and the promise of a war he might not win.

 

Derek returned to campus feeling like a stranger in his own skin. The brutal training session had left him with a tapestry of bruises that would have hospitalized a human. Every movement was a fresh reminder of his father's "lessons." The memory of the ambush his father had so casually mentioned hung over him like a shroud. A successful strike against the White Pack. The details were murky, but the triumph in his father's voice had been clear.

He needed to see Skye. In the midst of the violence and the pressure, her defiant golden eyes were the only thing that felt real. She was an anchor to a world where strength wasn't measured in how much pain you could inflict.

He went straight to her mythology class, ignoring the stares and whispers that followed him. But her seat was empty. He checked the library, the café, the benches she liked to read on. Nothing. A cold knot of worry tightened in his stomach.

It was Joanna who found him, her expression a mask of faux sympathy. "Looking for your little stray puppy, Derek?" she asked, her voice dripping with sweet poison.

"What do you want, Joanna?" he growled, his patience worn thin.

"I just thought you should know," she said, inspecting her perfect nails. "The word is, she's taken a sudden leave of absence. Family emergency. Something tragic , apparently." She looked up, her eyes gleaming. "Maybe that's why she was so easy for you to impress. She was desperate for a distraction."

Derek's blood ran cold. Family emergency. Tragic. The timeline lined up too perfectly with his father's ambush. A terrible, impossible suspicion began to take root in his mind, so horrifying he tried to immediately crush it. It couldn't be. The world wasn't that cruel.

He didn't have her number. He didn't know her address. But he was the son of an Alpha, and he had resources. It took one phone call and a veiled threat to a university administrator to get Garrick Skye's home address.

He drove there with a lead weight in his gut, his father's words echoing in his mind. "See that she remains of no consequence." But as he pulled up to the modest house on the edge of the forest, he knew with a sinking certainty that she was the most consequential thing that had ever happened to him.

He knocked on the door.

When it opened, the sight of her stole the air from his lungs. She was pale, her beautiful blonde hair lank and unwashed. Her stunning golden eyes were red rimmed and swollen, hollowed out by a grief so profound it struck him like a physical blow. She was wearing a simple black dress.

For a moment, she just stared at him, confusion warring with her sorrow. "Derek? What… what are you doing here?"

"I heard… I was worried about you," he said, his voice softer than he'd ever used with anyone. "You weren't in class. Are you… is everything okay?"

A bitter, broken laugh escaped her. "Okay? No, Derek. Nothing is okay." Her eyes searched his, and he saw the moment the pieces clicked together in her mind. The car accident. His unnatural strength. His rigid training. His father. His red eyes.

The color drained from her face completely. Her grip on the doorframe tightened until her knuckles were white.

"Your name is Clawson," she whispered, the words barely audible.

"Yes," he said, confused by the terror dawning in her eyes.

"Derek Clawson," she repeated, as if tasting the poison on her tongue. "Son of Damon Clawson. Alpha of the Red Pack."

Time stopped. The world narrowed to the doorway, to her shattered expression, to the horrifying truth crashing down between them.

"Skye, I…" he began, but the words died in his throat.

"You," she interrupted, her voice shaking with a fury that seemed to radiate heat. "Your father… your pack… you murdered my mother."

The accusation landed like a killing blow. The suspicion was confirmed. The ambush his father was so proud of… the human woman he'd killed…

The world tilted. The beautiful, real, defiant girl he had fallen for was the daughter of his father's greatest enemy. The woman his father had murdered was her mother.

He was responsible for the grief that was destroying her.

He reached for her, a desperate, instinctive gesture. "Skye, I didn't know… I swear to you, I didn't know."

She flinched back from his touch as if it were acid. The golden eyes that had once held a spark of challenge for him were now filled with pure, undiluted hatred.

"Get away from me," she snarled, her voice low and venomous. "Get away from my house. Get out of my life."

"Please, let me explain"

"EXPLAIN?!" she screamed, the sound tearing from her throat. "Explain what? How your father sank his claws into my mother's heart? How you're training to do the same to mine?!"

Tears streamed down her face, but they were tears of rage. "Everything you said… everything you did… was it all a lie? Was this part of your father's plan? To get close to the Alpha's human daughter?"

"No! Skye, it was real! You have to believe me!"

But it was too late. The door between them, both literal and figurative, was slamming shut. The trust they had begun to build was ash.

"I will never believe anything you say again, Derek Clawson," she said, her voice dropping to a deadly whisper. "Now get off my property before I do something we'll both regret."

She slammed the door in his face. The sound was as final as a guillotine.

Derek stood on the porch, frozen, the truth of his heritage and his father's brutality finally, fully revealed in its most devastating form. He had lost her. Before he had even truly had her, he had lost her forever.

And as he turned and walked back to his car, the howl of a wolf from the nearby forest sounded less like a call to war, and more like the sound of his own heart breaking.

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