The Feral Alpha's Captive-Chapter 83: Complete It
🔹 THORNE -
A week passed and there was no sign of Althea leaving her newly prepared room. The door remained locked, food being passed underneath. She refused further care and barely ate what was given. And every day, the dreadful churning in my gut grew louder and more gnawing.
"She is coming to terms with her loss," The crone’s reassurance played in my head numerous times a day. "She needs space and time to heal." But I could see the trepidation in her one seeing eye, like she was just hoping that she was speaking the truth.
"Alpha?" A gravelly voice broken through my reverie. I raised my gaze to meet Zeta Riven’s.
"Are you listening?" He asked, raising a brow.
I dragged a hand through my hair, sighing loudly before replying. "Not at all."
The Zetas exchanged glances, their ire barely concealed. "It is about the prisoner."
At the mention of Althea, the fog over my mind evaporated, my back straightening. "She is no prisoner."
Zeta Lysandra’s jaw tensed. "And what do you suppose she is in our territory?" She hissed. "She’s certainly not one of us."
I weighed it in my mind—she was not one of us; she was different even from her ’own’ people and I had an overwhelming itch to find out what she was.
"She is under my protection," I replied simply, ignoring her tone. "No one touches her."
The table went quiet. My grandmother assessed me while the others glared.
"It is more than that, isn’t it?" Riven challenged. "You have marked her. Against all odds, you laid a claim on her."
A blast shook the room.
The doors slammed open with enough force to crack the wood against the stone walls.
"I am not a property to be claimed, Zeta."
My body went rigid.
Althea.
She stood in the doorway, backlit by the corridor’s dim light, and for a moment I couldn’t breathe.
She looked like death.
Her frame had withered—ribs visible beneath the thin shirt she wore, collarbones sharp enough to cut. Her face was gaunt, hollow, shadows carved beneath her cheekbones.
But her eyes—
Those eyes blazed.
Purple-blue fire, galaxies swirling in depths that held no grey anymore. They burned with an intensity that made even Riven lean back in his chair.
She looked fragile yet looked like a force.
She stepped into the room, despite the way her legs trembled slightly. Every eye locked onto her. The Zetas straightened. My grandmother’s expression sharpened with something like approval, a little smile curved her lip.
"Althea—" I started, half-rising from my seat.
"Sit down." The words were a command, not a request.
I sat.
She didn’t look at me. Her gaze swept across the table, taking in each Zeta with cold assessment.
"I have things to discuss with the pack’s authorities," she said, her voice hoarse but steady. "Not its Alpha alone. The accursed mate bond has compromised objectivity."
Lysandra’s lip curled. "You think you can just walk in here and—"
"And discuss the fate of the Vargan slaves in the allied packs?" She cut her off. "Then yes, I believe I can."
Umbra growled low and proud. "There she is."
"I always suspected that your docile disposition was an act," Lysandra said, her eyes narrowing. "I guess you have proven me correct."
Althea’s gaze didn’t waver. "I had a claw to mythroat, of course, I was docile."
Something heated coiled in my chest—part pride, part something darker, more primal.
This version of her—sharp-edged and unflinching, commanding a room full of Zetas who’d been questioning my authority moments before—was intoxicating.
And gods help me, I wanted her.
The marking had done something to me. Something I hadn’t anticipated.
Marking was supposed to happen during mating—skin to skin, heat to heat, the bond sealed with the knot. What I’d done to save her life had been a pale, desperate version of the real thing.
Incomplete.
And now my body knew it.
Every time I looked at her, every time I caught her scent or felt the phantom pull of the bond tugging at my ribs, the need grew sharper. More insistent.
I wanted to finish what I’d started.
Wanted to pull her close, sink my teeth into her again—properly this time—and feel her surrender beneath me as the bond locked into place the way it was meant to.
Wanted to unravel every secret buried in her mind the way I’d accidentally tasted them during the marking—fragmented memories, flashes of pain and power and fear—and learn every piece of her until there was nothing left hidden.
She just had invasive surgery, I reminded myself harshly, gripping the edge of the table hard enough that the wood groaned. She’s still healing. Depressed. Grieving. 𝒻𝑟𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝑛𝘰𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝘤𝘰𝘮
But the thoughts wouldn’t die.
Umbra paced in my head, restless and hungry, the wolf side of me far less patient than the man.
"Claim her properly. Finish it. Make her OURS."
Not now, I snarled back at him.
"She’s STANDING RIGHT THERE. Strong. Alive. OURS."
I forced my gaze away from the mark on her neck—my mark—and focused on her words instead.
"Yana’s death," Althea said, her voice cutting through the room like a blade, "should be the point where things change."
The Zetas stilled.
"The slavery has gone on long enough," she continued, her hands gripping the edge of the table now, knuckles white. "Yana gave her life so twenty nine Vargans could be free. I refuse to let her sacrifice be for nothing."
My chest tightened.
"So," she said, lifting her chin, her gaze sweeping across every face in the room, "I plan to free every Vargan from the other allied packs."
The words dropped like a bombshell.
Silence.
Then chaos.
"You’re insane—"
"That’s a death sentence—"
"The allied packs will declare war—"
Althea didn’t flinch. Didn’t back down.
She just stood there, fragile and fierce, and let them rage.
I stood.
The room fell silent immediately.
"She’s right."
Lysandra’s face twisted with betrayal. Riven’s eyes widened.
"The Vargans were our people before they were slaves," I said, my voice cold and final. "My mother died trying to protect them. Morgana executed her in front of this entire pack for refusing to surrender."
I let that sink in.
"If Althea is willing to finish what my mother started—if she’s willing to risk everything to end this—then this clan will support her."
"Alpha—" Lysandra started.
"That’s final," I said. "Anyone who has a problem with it can leave. Now."
No one moved.
My grandmother’s smile widened.
"Meeting adjourned," I said.
The Zetas filed out, their anger barely contained but unable to argue against their Alpha’s direct command.
Althea turned to leave too, but I caught her wrist.
"We need to talk."
She stiffened. "There’s nothing to discuss. You’ve made your position clear."
"Not about the plan." I stepped closer, lowering my voice. "About us."
Her jaw tightened. "There is no us."
"There’s a bond," I said. "Whether you like it or not."
"I don’t."
"I know." I released her wrist but didn’t step back. "But it’s incomplete. And that makes it dangerous."
Her eyes narrowed. "Explain."
"What I did to save you—the marking—it was only half of what it should have been. The bond is unstable. Incomplete."
"Good," she said coldly. "Maybe it’ll break."
"It won’t." I shook my head. "It’ll just make us both suffer. Emotional volatility. Physical weakness during separation. And when your heat comes—"
I stopped.
Her expression didn’t change, but I saw her swallow.
"It’ll be brutal," I finished. "Without completion, the bond will fight you every step of the way. It’ll make you vulnerable. Weak. And if you’re going to war with the allied packs, you can’t afford that."
She was silent for a long moment, processing.
"So you’re saying we need to complete it," she said finally.
"Yes."
"Through mating."
"Yes."
Another silence.
Then: "Fine."
I blinked. "Fine?"
"You want stability. I want to survive long enough to free the Vargans. This bond is a tactical weakness. So we eliminate it."
She was treating it like a transaction and far from intimacy like it was nothing but trategic necessity.
"But I have conditions," she added.
"Name them."
She stepped closer, her gaze hard. "This doesn’t mean I forgive you. For Yana. For marking me without consent. For any of it."
"I understand."
"This doesn’t mean I trust you."
"I know."
"This is biology. Nothing more."
"Understood."
"When my heat comes, you’ll help me through it. In exchange, you get a stable bond."
I nodded.
"But you don’t get my heart." The words hit harder than they should have.
"Understood," I said quietly.
She held my gaze for another moment, then turned toward the door.
"When?" she asked without looking back.
"When what?"
"When do we... complete it?"
My jaw tightened. "When your body is ready. When you’re healed. I won’t touch you until then."
She paused.
"But when I do—" My voice dropped, Umbra bleeding through. "—I won’t hold back."
She shivered despite herself. "Good," she said, voice steadier than I knew she felt. "Neither will I."
Then she left.
I stood there alone, the mark on my neck burning, the bond humming with anticipation and hunger.
Soon, I would complete it.
Soon, she would be mine in every way that mattered—even if her heart remained locked away.
And when her heat came, when biology overrode her walls and her wolf demanded what the bond had promised—
I would give her exactly what she asked for.
Nothing more.
Nothing less.
Even if it killed me.
---
PLEASE TELL ME IF THIS Chapter’S SEXUAL IMPLICATIONS FELT TO ABRUPT AND NOT GROUNDED ENOUGH







