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Chapter 3 - Chapter 3: A Daughter for Debt

The panic radiating off Mr. Reed was a

physical thing, thick and suffocating, far more potent than the stale scent of

disappointment that usually clung to him.

"Don't just stand there, Amelia! This is

serious!" he snapped, yanking her arm and dragging her out of her small room.

"Where are we going?" Amelia demanded, her

voice hoarse from the tears she had silently shed moments before. The sheer

audacity of his request—to sell her—was starting to override the shock.

"To the board room. That's where the

representative is waiting," Mrs. Reed replied, gliding alongside them. Her

facade of sophisticated calm had completely shattered. Her makeup was slightly

smeared, and her eyes darted nervously down the hallway. "We need to finalize

the details before Alexander's demands escalate. He is not a patient man."

They didn't head towards the quiet study

where guests were usually entertained. Instead, they took the elevator down to

the administrative wing—a cold, modern expanse of glass and steel that housed

the Reed family's corporate headquarters. This was where money was worshipped,

and where Amelia understood, with chilling clarity, she was now being treated

as a commodity.

The boardroom was vast and intimidating,

designed to make visitors feel small and compliant. The long, polished mahogany

table was normally reserved for hostile takeover negotiations, but tonight, it

was the altar upon which Amelia's freedom was to be sacrificed.

Seated at the head of the table was not

the fearsome War God Alpha himself, but a man who looked like an animated slab

of granite. He was enormous, dressed in a pristine black suit that couldn't

quite conceal the massive, coiled muscles beneath. He had the sharp, alert eyes

of a trained predator, and his sheer physical presence seemed to shrink the

already vast room.

He stood immediately as the Reeds entered,

his movements silent and unnervingly fast.

"Mr. Reed. Mrs. Reed. And this must be the

offering," the man stated, his voice a deep, gravelly rumble that vibrated

through the floor. He didn't introduce himself. He didn't offer a handshake. He

just looked at Amelia—a long, assessing stare that made her feel stripped down

and cataloged.

"Representative," Mr. Reed stammered,

bowing slightly in a gesture Amelia had never seen him use. Her father, the

great, imposing businessman, was utterly cowed. "Yes. This is my daughter,

Amelia."

The man gave a curt nod. "The Alpha has

been clear. The debt must be cleared tonight. There is only one acceptable

currency remaining." He tapped a thick folder on the table. "She."

Amelia stood frozen, realizing that she

was less a person and more a delivery package. The man hadn't even referred to

her as Miss Reed.

Mr. Reed nervously waved Amelia toward a

chair. "Sit down, dear. We need to explain the situation."

Amelia remained standing, crossing her

arms tightly over her chest, not to appear defiant, but to hold herself

together. "Explain? You just told me you're selling me to a man you called a

monster to pay off a forty-million-dollar mistake. What part of that requires

further explanation?"

Her father flinched at the harshness of

her tone.

"It wasn't a mistake," Mr. Reed insisted,

his voice cracking with the strain of justifying his actions. "It was a

necessary, calculated risk. Two years ago, we leveraged most of our liquid

capital into a major timber export deal into the Black Moon territory. It was

guaranteed to triple our wealth."

Mrs. Reed took over, her voice softening,

attempting a practiced tone of maternal concern that only fueled Amelia's cold

fury. "Unfortunately, the regulatory environment changed. Alpha Alexander—he

doesn't play by traditional rules, Amelia. He doesn't use banks or courts. When

the deal soured, the penalty clauses he put in place were activated. We owe him

forty-two million dollars, with compound daily interest, and he has the legal

power to seize our assets—including the house, your trust fund, everything—by

dawn."

"And you think the answer is to sell your

daughter to him?" Amelia finally asked, her voice dangerously quiet.

Mr. Reed walked around the table, putting

distance between himself and the terrifying Black Moon representative.

"It is the only way to save your sister,

Amelia! And our reputation! If the company collapses, Annabeth's engagement to

Liam is worthless! She needs that status. She needs that future. You… you were

the only option left. Annabeth is already the future Luna of Crestwood. You

have no such ties."

The casual cruelty of his assessment—her

worthlessness measured against Annabeth's social value—was a wound deeper than

the betrayal of Liam.

"Why does he want me?" Amelia challenged,

turning her attention to the terrifying man at the table. "The rumors say

Alexander is crippled, scarred, and violent. Why would a man with that much

power not take the money or Annabeth, who is the more socially advantageous

match?"

The representative, who had been observing

the familial drama with cold disinterest, finally spoke, his eyes briefly

meeting Amelia's.

"The Alpha's motivations are his own. But

the terms are clear. Alpha Alexander is the head of one of the oldest,

wealthiest, and most traditional Werewolf Packs. His position requires a

spouse. Not a Luna by birth, as tradition dictates, but a human bride, chosen

for a specific… contract requirement related to ancient pack law."

He reached for the thick folder, opening

it to reveal dense, complicated legal and theological documents.

"The Black Moon Pack requires the Alpha to

publicly wed a human of no discernible social status or Pack

affiliation—someone who is not already claimed or valued by the Werewolf

world—to complete the final clause of the Founding Pact. This action symbolically

severs his dependence on external werewolf politics and affirms his power is

drawn solely from his own Pack."

He paused, a faint, almost pitying look

crossing his face as he summarized her value. "In essence, Miss Reed, you are

the ideal candidate because you are disposable. You are human, unattached, and

entirely lacking in the type of political value that would threaten his

position. The fact that you were publicly discarded by a Beta makes your

candidacy perfect for his purposes."

Amelia felt the floor wobble. Disposable.

Lacking political value. Publicly discarded. The representative had just

delivered the most accurate, devastating character assessment of her entire

life, and it was the very thing that made her suitable for the War God.

"And the rumors?" Amelia pressed, her

voice trembling now. "Is he truly crippled? Why the insistence on secrecy?"

Mr. Reed quickly interjected, eager to

provide the justification for his sacrifice. "Yes, dear. He is. A hunting

accident five years ago. They say he's barely recognizable, his wolf is

unstable, and he's confined to the darkest wing of the manor. The secrecy is

because he is an Alpha who rules through fear; the pack can't see their leader

is a scarred, broken shell of a man."

Mrs. Reed nodded vigorously. "This is why

Annabeth absolutely cannot go. She needs a future, and she deserves a healthy

Alpha. You are merely needed for a temporary, symbolic arrangement. You will be

his wife in name only. You won't be expected to produce heirs or fulfill any

intimate duties, given his condition. You simply exist to satisfy this ancient

clause and save our financial future."

Amelia realized the full, cold horror.

They weren't just selling her; they were selling her to a man they believed was

a grotesque, broken figure, hoping the marriage would be nothing more than a

painful, temporary prison until she was no longer needed.

She finally sat down, the strength

draining out of her legs. She wasn't heartbroken anymore. Heartbreak was a

luxury. This was a slow, crushing realization of her utter powerlessness.

"And if I refuse?" she asked, looking at

her father.

Mr. Reed's eyes narrowed, all pity gone.

"Then I will face financial ruin. Annabeth and Liam will be disgraced, their

engagement will be dissolved, and we will be homeless and bankrupt. You will

have destroyed this family out of spite."

Amelia looked at the granite-faced man,

the Black Moon representative, who silently watched the entire exchange. He

confirmed the threat with a curt, hard look.

There was no choice. Her parents, in their

desperation, had backed her into a corner where her refusal meant destroying

everyone, including herself.

A burning, bitter wave of resentment

washed over her. She would save them. But she would never forgive them.

Amelia lifted her chin, the last vestige

of her soft heart hardening into ice. "Fine," she stated, pushing the word past

the lump in her throat. "Where do I sign?"

The representative produced a marriage

contract from the folder. It was dense, written in complex legal terms that

spanned multiple pages, but the gist was clear: Amelia was signing away her

rights, her freedom, and her name in exchange for the forty-two million dollar

debt clearance.

Amelia snatched the gold pen offered by

her father and signed the document with a furious, illegible flourish. The name

'Amelia Reed' suddenly felt alien. It was the name of a girl who had been

foolishly hopeful, and that girl no longer existed.

"The Alpha requires her presence

immediately," the representative announced, taking the signed contract. He

didn't even glance at Mr. Reed. "The transfer is complete. The debt is

satisfied."

He turned to Amelia. "Pack your

necessities, Miss Reed. You have fifteen minutes. You are leaving the Reed

family home tonight, and you will not be returning."

Amelia stood up, the ruby-red dress

upstairs feeling like a terrible curse. She was no longer Amelia Reed, the

beloved girlfriend, or even Amelia Reed, the placeholder sister. She was

property. She was the unwilling bride of the War God Alpha.

She left her parents standing in the

silent, intimidating boardroom, their forty-two million dollar debt erased,

their future secured, at the cost of her own. She walked back up the stairs, no

longer caring about the noise of the cruel celebration, heading to pack the

meager possessions of the girl who was about to die, and the woman who was

about to be reborn in the shadow of the War God.

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