Pregnant And Rejected By My Alpha Mate By Caroline Above Chapter 26
Pregnant And Rejected
Chapter 26 The Weak Link Seleneâs POV I glance around the council chambers anxiously, wondering if anyone will step forward to challenge Bastien for control of the pack. The council canât force him to step down as Alpha, but if he loses a fight to a stronger wolf he wonât have a choice.
I doubt there is anyone in Elysium strong enough to take on my husband, but this isnât only about winning. Perception is everything. Whether or not someone can actually succeed, pack members challenging Bastien means theyâve lost confidence in his leadership, that they believe he is weak enough to unseat.
Seconds drag on like hours, mutters swarming like angry bees as Bastien turns on the spot, staring down the complainers until the chamber finally falls silent. I breathe a sigh of relief. Whatever they might say behind closed doors, when push comes to shove no one is brave enough to actually take on the Alpha.
Once heâs certain no one is going to speak up, Bastien turns back to the council. âThere you have it gentlemen. You may not agree with my decisions, and questioning them is your right as advisors to this government, but until another Novan is strong enough to take my place â I am your Alpha.â His deep voice echoes around the room, âYou can work with me, or you can continue working against me, but I guarantee you will not like the results if you do.â
A collective shiver works its way around the room, and I feel my own spine tremble. Iâve never seen Bastien release so much unchecked power, except perhaps when he faced down the Geminis.
However it hadnât been directed at the pack then, and it certainly is now.
âIs that a threat?â One of the councilors interjects, tacking on a nervous âSir?â at the end.
âTake it however you like.â The Alpha replies cryptically, âIâm merely presenting the reality of your situation.â
The head elder straightens up determinedly, his gray hair practically standing on end despite his facade of confidence. âAnd what about your reality, Alpha?â He inquires, âDo you intend to lead the women of this pack as well as the men?â
Color flushes my cheeks as heads turn in my direction. The man was smart enough not to say it outright, but everyone knows heâs talking about my defect. Though Alphas have equal authority over all pack members, their mates are traditionally de facto leaders of the she-wolves.
I am not, and I never will be.
You cannot lead wolves if you donât have a wolf of your own.
Bastien growls, and the elder shrinks in his seat. âI suggest you retract that question, Counselor.â
Unfortunately another counselor speaks up in his colleagueâs stead, âForgive me, Alpha, but Grigoreâs question concerns us all. The fact is that we need strength in all our leaders â a chain is only as strong as its weakest link.â
Bastienâs eyes glow silver, and I see his hands twitching as if heâs fighting to keep his claws retracted.
His brawny arm jerks up, one livid finger pointing in my direction. âMy wife has survived things no one else in this room ever could myself included.â He snarls, tearing off his shirt.
His breath is coming in heavy pants, his body pushed to the brink by the effort of holding his wolf back.
He throws out both arms now, drawing attention to his bare abdomen: a swath of rippling muscles covered in battlescars. âWhy is it you look at my scars and see strength, but find only weakness in hers?â
At first I donât think anyone will have the courage to respond, but after a few tense beats, the oldest counselor rises to his feet. âThe difference is that your scars healed, and forgive me, but Seleneâs never will.â His words drive into my chest like the sharpest knife. âItâs not her fault no one is saying that but the bottom line is that a shifter without their animal cannot protect themselves, let alone a pack.
She is not a suitable mate for an Alpha.â
âI canât believe you would stay after what they did to you.â Drakeâs increasingly familiar voice filters through my cell phone.
We havenât spoken since Gabrielâs funeral, and at the time we hadnât the opportunity to discuss anything personal. Catching him up has been difficult in a house full of shifters with wolf hearing. Iâve finally secluded myself on the terrace, leaning against the railing and constantly scanning my surroundings for eavesdroppers.
âBastien needs me.â I sigh. âThe council was.. well they were awful.â I admit, my stomach roiling at the memory alone. âBut he stood up for me â despite everything thatâs happened between us. He stood up for me even though he doesnât want me. I owe him the same loyalty.â
âThatâs your heart talking, Selene.â Drake cautions. âNot your head.â When I donât answer he presses on, âThis man wanted nothing to do with you last week, but when something goes wrong for him he expects you to drop everything to help. That isnât loyalty, itâs self-serving manipulation.â
âDrake, I know youâre concerned but please trust that I know my husband slightly better than you do.â I say, âBastien is the least selfish person Iâve ever met.â
âFine.â He concedes. âBut how long is it going to last this time? How long before he throws you over again? Heâs going to stop needing you eventually, especially with the pack pressuring him to do something he already wanted.â The truth of his words hit me like a ton of bricks, and I slide down onto the ground as he continues. âYou told me Bastien finding out about the baby is the last thing you want to happen, right?â
âYes.â I confirm.
âWell by my estimate youâve only got one more week before he scents it on you.â Drake asserts, âSo you need to decide whatâs more important: supporting a man who doesnât love you, or claiming freedom for yourself and your child?â
Tears burn in my eyes, âMaybe thereâs a way to mask the scent.â Iâm grasping at straws and I know it.
âIâll go see the doctor tomorrow, maybe he can help.â
I can practically hear Drake shaking his head. âThatâs a bandaid at best. What happens when you start showing?â
âThat wonât be for another month or so.â I reply, âBecause my morning sickness is so bad the doctor actually said I was more likely to lose weight than gain it.â
Frustration is evident in his voice now. âItâs your decision, Selene. And I will help you whatever you choose, but please think about what Iâve said. This is too important to risk.â
âThank you, Drake.â I exhale, feeling considerably sadder than when I made the call, but slightly less stressed. âI promise Iâll think about it.â
âGood.â He answers warmly. âI only want whatâs best for you.â
Bastienâs POV A knock on the door pulls my attention from the crime reports in my hands, and I call out for Aiden to enter. I donât need to look up to know itâs him. I smelled him when he arrived twenty minutes ago and have been listening to his distinct footsteps of him pacing outside my door ever since.
âYou going to tell me why youâve been hovering outside my office for almost half an hour?â I wonder aloud.
Aiden clears his throat. âWe have a problem.â
Now I do look up. âWhat kind of problem?â
His lips tighten to a straight line. âThere are rumors going around the city about the Alphaâs death. It seems word got out about the secret tunnel.â
âHow?â I demand. âThe only people who knew about that were us and the enforcement investigators.â
âWell,â Aiden reasons, âThe killer knows too.â
âSo,â I speak the words slowly forming in my thoughts. âYou think they mightâve put the information out there so that the enforcers would be able to use it as an indication of guilt in interrogations?â
âOr to undermine you.â Aiden theorizes with obvious agitation, âThe rumors⦠it⦠people are saying it had to be an inside job â because only the Alphaâs family knew about the escape passage.â
âAn inside job.â I repeat. âMeaning me because I stand to gain the most from his death.â
My Beta tips his head in confirmation.
âWhy would I need to use an escape tunnel to break into my own house?â I ask through clenched fangs.
âMaybe it wasnât about getting in, maybe it was about not being seen.â He suggests. There are security cameras all over the place.â
âWhich I could disable if I wanted to commit murder.â I growi, âIt makes no sense.â
âYes, well we both know truth and logic donât mean a damn when it comes to gossip.â He remarks solemnly.
âFirst Iâm unfit because a forged memorial invitation was sent to the Geminis.â I recount, bracing my hands on my desk and fantasizing about sweeping everything on its surface to the ground. âThen Iâm unfit because my mate doesnât have a wolf. And now Iâm a murderer?â
âIâm afraid weâre in the middle of a game no one told us we were playing.â Aiden says, agreeing with my unspoken suspicions. âClearly, your father wasnât the killerâs only target.
âAlright.â I try to shake the bloodthirsty thoughts from my mind and summon some rationality. âSo who are we playing against, and what the hell is their next move going to be?â