Chapter 4 004
Chapter 4
His words won't stop ringing, and as they do, the knot in my chest keeps tightening. That night was a clear message. Marrying him means I'm stepping into the worst hell possible if I marry him. Yet...
I'm sitting in front of a mirror, staring at another version of myself. A fine white dress clasps my lean, fragile frame. Makeup is light, and jewelry glimmers under the dim light.
So much for sending me off in the hands of the devils.
I look pathetic even though this is the first time I'm wearing a dress this beautiful.
The door creaks open. I didn't look to see who it was; I'm too lost to even think.
"It's Elena, dear."
Elena steps forward, resting an assuring hand on my shoulder. She stays quiet for many beats.
"Maybe I should come with you."
I exhale, clutching the hem of my dress. "Don't worry about me, Elena. This is my fate, and I'm not dragging you into this."
Eleana crouches, reaching to hold my hand. "I'm so sorry, Isolde. I tried to talk to your father..."
Two guards showed up before she could finish. "It's time."
I meet Elena's worried eyes and give her an assuring nod and tight smile. I follow the guards, my steps slow and heavy as my back still stings from the whipping I got last night.
Entering the Grand Hall, I keep my gaze to the floor, not bothering to look at anyone.
I can imagine the blank look on my father's face, the smirk dangling on the lips of my stepmom, and Beth's happy face as if she'd won a lottery. And probably Nathan's nonchalant expression, if he is in the crowd.
The silence in the hall is deafening. It's like everyone has their breath seized at Alpha Drogo's thick presence.
I can't bring myself to meet his eyes, not after last night's encounter. But I know his gaze is on me the whole time.
This pack—I had spent my whole life trying to prove my worth to them. To make them see me and not a girl born out of a false accusation of a perfidious act between my mother and a man that doesn't even exist.
Instead, they are marrying me off to save their asses.
The ceremony starts; the elder recites the wedding ritual, reciting as if there's a sword pressed against his neck and he wants to be done with it as soon as possible. He stumbles at some words as if his brain won't stop freezing.
I can't blame him.
I feel it too. It's taking me a lot of effort not to bolt out the grand door. Drogo's presence is too thick and powerful, too choking to ignore. He is staring at me.
I mean, staring at me. The kind of stare that you'd feel deep in your bones
I say my vow as the bride. I say it smoothly, like there isn't a storm beneath my rib.
When it gets to be his turn, he is quiet. So is the hall; one can hear a pin drop.
Still in panic, the elder repeats the vows, but he remains the same.
I hear someone take a deep, measured breath somewhere. My father.
"Is there something wrong, Alpha Drogo?" He asks quietly, not coming closer.
I want to know too, but I still can't look up.
Is he changing his mind?
Drogo steps closer, and I feel my heart ready to jump to my throat. For a second, I think he'll call off the wedding, announcing I'm too much of an outcast to be his bride. He doesn't.
Instead, he reaches for my right arm, pulling it up gently. I couldn't help but look at him.
He isn't staring at me; he is staring at my arm. His tall frame looms over mine. He was wearing a fine dark suit that made him look unfairly hot and dangerous. His hair gelled backward, showing off his well-chiseled, sharp features.
Drogo's jaw tightens. "Where did you get it?"
I trace his gaze to where a whip wound grazes my skin from last night. Red and glaring.
The makeup artist had been ordered not to cover my marks and scars, including Alpha Drogo's handprint on my neck last night. The reason was to make me look pleasing in the eyes of the rogue Alpha.
My father's idea.
"I got whipped for enraging you," I say expecting a smirk.
His eyes meet mine, and my knees weaken instantly. For a second I think he is going to say it wasn't enough, that I need more discipline. Instead, his gaze goes to the crowd, settling on my father. Unreadable.
Without a word, he releases my arm.
"I do," he says to the elder like one just asked for the weather.
The elder pronounces us husband and wife after we exchange rings. No cheers. No purr. Just unbearable stares that want this to be over with.
My world crushes as the fact weighs on my shoulder. I am married to Drogo Elston.
I am married to the rogue Alpha.
He draws closer, gripping my chin gently, prompting my eyes to meet his again.
"I have a gift for you, Isolde," he says, his tone soft. "Or should I say wife?"
The word 'wife' feels like a brutal punch to my guts. Our sudden close proximity fills my senses. Is he going to k!ss me?
As I ponder what gift he might be talking about, he pulls out something from his pocket and points it at the crowd.
A pistol.
Three brutal shots echo.
Gasps ripple.
Screams pierce the air.
I turn sharply toward the crowd and freeze. My father is on his knees, screaming. Blood spreading beneath him, his severed right arm lying on the floor.
What just happened?
Drogo shot him?
I'm pretty sure everyone has the same expression in mind. I'm in shock.
No one moves until Drogo steps down from the podium. He removes a cigar from his pocket; one of his men in a suit from the crowd immediately steps out to hand him a lighter. He lights it on, takes a drag, and crouches before my father.
"How dare you!" Aldric roars, rage etched on every part of his face as he shakes in pain.
Whatever Drogo shot at him is coated in wolfsbane, as the wound didn't heal.
Drogo shoots one of Aldric's legs, earning another scream.
My father's men didn't even budge to help. Only then did I notice the several men in dark suits in the crowd, like threats and warnings.
"You should learn to follow simple instructions, Aldric." Drogo's tone is low as he speaks. "Especially when it involves what belongs to me."
Wait... could that be me?
Nonsense, why will it be me?
Drogo straightens, throws the cigarette in front of my father, and crushes it beneath his boot—a casual blow to my father's pride.
"Losing an arm will remind," he says, looking at my freezing, shocked frame at the altar.
Without a
word, he begins to leave. I take that as my cue because one of the men in suits approaches me and says,
"This way, Mrs. Elston."
