Chapter 2
Chapter 2
death and it would be foolish to run though I could see that Ivy wanted desperately to do so. So did I bu t a quick death is what I could live with. If we ran, Alpha Brock would tear us apart piece by piece and personally I believe we had suffered enough.
“Come on,” I tell Ivy before she gets any ideas. We wouldn‘t even make it to the forest edge before they caught us. We walked toward the town square and we can hear people in the town ge tting ready for the Alpha. He rarely came to town and had no need to with servants at his beck and call; however, his presence was required today.
The Alpha got to decide our fates, and those wishing to join the pack were once a month herded to the square and put on display. The Alpha decided whether they let you join, cast you out, or killed you. I shuddered at t he last option only because I knew he would put his hand up straight away, and the other option was to be sold. I didn‘t let my mind even go there. I had my heart set on death.
The hustle and bustle echoed loudly as we enter the square as pack members went about their day like we weren‘t about to be slaughtered by their Alpha. When a rogue turns eighteen he gets to choose our fate. It was cruel, and wasn‘t killing our parents enough for him.
the
Though I knew he would never let us go. Ivy wasn‘t eighteen yet but once Mrs. Daley declared I would be going before the Alpha she begged and pleaded to have her case heard at the same time. Mrs. Daley said she would see what she could do but only if she did all her chores. For weeks she busted her ass despi te me telling her not to. She wanted to die with me. See we have a pact, it was probably silly but where one goes the other goes, even in death.
Mrs. Daley though was all too excited to get rid of us and when the Alpha visited next he Alpha Dean, w ho is Alpha Brock‘s father, granted Ivy‘s wish.
After today there would be no rogue orphans. Most of the orphans were pack members‘ children that h ad been lost in pack wars. Yet despite everything, I feel grateful that I am able to stand up on the podium with my best friend and have someone to die with. We promised to go where the other went. Though I couldn‘t imagine a world without Ivy in it, and I suppose she felt the same. She wa s like my sister, we grew up together and I would lay down my life in a heartbeat for her if I could but sh e would never allow that. She would lay beside me that how it has always been and always will be.
People step away from us as we enter, giving us disgusted looks. Rogues had a particular scent to pac k wolves, alerting them to intruders, and that‘s how those here in the town square looked at us, with jud ging, unwelcoming gazes.
squeeze Ivy‘s fingers tighter as she slows taking in those around us. People watched as we made our way to the stage and took our seats next to it. The wind was cool and moved my hair in the breeze. Townspeo ple stared at us, spat at our feet, one even kicked my foot as he passed us and I could feel eyes on me which had me nervously glancing around and I found the culprit. I shrivel in my seat hoping he doesn‘t come over, the butcher. Peeking at him he waves and blows me a kiss and I close my eyes, sucking in a deep breath, fighting the memories of what he did to me away, the way he violated me away. It‘s al most over, Abbie, almost over and we will be free, I remind myself. This is from NôvelDrama.Org.
My wolf sense could pick up his pungent scent from here and I tried to not let it in, tried to stop it from a ssaulting my nose.
Silence falls over the crowd of busy shoppers and those that came to just watch our fates. Everyone rushed to take their seats. Usually, the town square
was an open space, but someone had lined rows of chairs for people, some still standing around when I heard car doors in the distance before Alpha Brock walked down the aisle between the chairs.
He looked to be in his thirties and only took over from his father a few years ago. He was cruel, and since he took over, no rogue has lived, so we knew we were doomed. We were outsiders and apparently, that was good enough reason to hate rogues. It was instantly assumed that without a pack rogues were unsafe or are defiant against pack hierarchy.
I swallow as he approaches; he sneers at us before walking up the steps and addressing the crowd. He wasn‘t bad looking, but he was cruel, which made him deeply unappealing. He was arrogant nothing would ever ruin me like that day did, the day Mrs. Daley sold me to him.
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