Chapter 18 Rune #2

The room fell silent. Eight council members, elders from both the Hale and Fen lines, sat around a broad table.

The air was thick with the scent of old dominance and fresh uncertainty.

Rune took his place at the head, not sitting, resting his palms on the polished surface.

Forrest stood at his right shoulder, a silent pillar of support.

Elder Arlen, a grizzled wolf with a beard, cleared his throat. “By right of challenge and victory, the packs are merged. The Fen Pack dissolves. From today, there is one pack in Blackpine. The Hale Pack. And you are its rightful Alpha.”

A murmur rippled through the room. Rune gave a single, acknowledging nod.

“Integration protocols,” another elder began, shuffling papers.

“Territory borders will be redrawn to reflect the unified whole. Patrols must be reconfigured under a single command structure. Loyalty to Alpha Hale is absolute and non-negotiable. Existing pack laws will be reviewed for compatibility.”

Rune listened, his gaze sweeping the room, measuring each face. He let them talk for a few minutes about patrol rotations and boundary markers. Then he cut through the administrative chatter like a blade.

“Stop.”

The word wasn’t loud, but it carried the full weight of his Alpha authority. The room froze.

“Before we talk about borders or patrols any further, we must amend the most foundational law.” Rune’s voice was calm. “The law that prohibits an Alpha from taking a human mate is archaic. It ends today.”

A stunned silence descended. Elder Arlen’s eyes narrowed. “That law exists for stability, Alpha. Human mates are a vulnerability. They don’t understand our ways. They can’t defend themselves in our world.”

“My mate is human.” Rune didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to. The truth landed with enough force. “Electra Calloway is my fated mate. The bond was completed last night.”

Shock painted every face. He could smell their disbelief and their instinctive unease.

“If the law stands,” Rune continued, the steel in his tone leaving no room for debate, “then I will step down as Alpha. Right now.”

The silence that followed was so complete he could hear the rustle of pine needles against the window outside.

The threat wasn’t subtle. It was a tactical detonation.

Without him, the freshly unified pack would fracture into chaos within hours.

Birch’s loyalists would rise. The power vacuum would drown the region in blood.

“You would choose a human over your pack?” Elder Doreen whispered, aghast.

“I am choosing the best future for my pack,” Rune corrected, his gaze locking on hers. “One that isn’t shackled to fear. One strong enough to evolve. She is my strength, not my weakness. The law changes, or you find yourselves a new Alpha.”

He held his ground, unblinking, his dominance a tangible force pressing against the room.

He felt Forrest’s unwavering support like a solid wall behind him.

The council members exchanged fraught glances.

He could see the calculation in their eyes—tradition versus survival, prejudice versus pragmatic necessity.

After five minutes of tense, silent deliberation, Elder Arlen sighed, the sound heavy with reluctant acceptance. “The world is changing. The pack is already expanding. Very well. The law will be amended to permit human mates, with protocols for their integration and protection.”

Relief, hot and fierce, flooded Rune’s system. It was immediately tempered by a resolve that hardened his spine. He opened his mouth to speak, to vow to lead them into this new era with strength.

Forrest’s radio crackled to life on his belt, a burst of static followed by a frantic voice. “Beta, we have a problem! Patrol near the old Henderson cabin reports screaming—female screaming. Sounds like a struggle.”

The world tilted.

A fraction of a second later, the completed bond screamed.

It wasn’t a sound. It was a physical detonation of pure, undiluted terror—Electra’s terror—that tore through him and ripped a snarl from his throat. The polished council room, the stunned elders, everything blurred into insignificance.

Mate. Danger.

Every instinct exploded. Control incinerated in the white-hot fire of primal need.

“Rune!” Forrest barked, his hand clamping on Rune’s arm as he lunged for the door.

Rune shook him off, his vision tinged with red. “He has her.”

“We don’t know that. It could be—“

“It’s him.” The words were a guttural growl. Tyr. Or Birch. Or both. The ‘who’ didn’t matter. The only fact that existed was the agony in the bond and the direction it pulled him—back toward her cabin, into the deep woods. His mate was in the jaws of a threat, and his wolf was howling for blood.

“I’m coming with you,” Forrest stated, already moving, his Beta’s composure slotting into place over his own fear.

Rune didn’t argue. Reason was a distant memory, but the tactical part of his mind, the war alpha, recognized the value of a second. Rune was a storm of single-purpose fury, but even a storm needed a guide.

He was already running, Forrest at his heels, the council and their new laws forgotten. The only law that mattered now was written in the mate bond, and it commanded one thing.

Protect her.

And he would destroy any threat to do it.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.