Login via

Defy The Alpha(s) novel Chapter 764

Summary for Chapter 764: Defy The Alpha(s)

Chapter overview: Chapter 764 from Defy The Alpha(s)

In this standout chapter of the Romance novel Defy The Alpha(s), Glimmy introduces new challenges, powerful emotions, and major plot progress that captivate readers from beginning to end.

Chapter 764: The Cornered Rabbit

Patrick woke up with a sharp gasp. Instinctively, he tried to sit up only for a calm voice to stop him.

"You shouldn’t do that, sir. You’re in no position to move right now."

As if to prove the point, white-hot pain tore through him, slicing through his body like a blade. Patrick sucked in a shaky breath through his nose, every muscle locking in protest.

He lifted his head slowly and focused on the man standing beside the bed. Recognition hit him.

"Y-you..." His voice came out hoarse.

The man was one of the intern doctors. One of the ones he had worked with during the production of Ignis. They were in a small room with bare walls and a single closed window, clearly not meant for comfort.

"Yes," the man said, offering a polite smile. "Me."

Patrick groaned softly. "What happened?" Even speaking felt like dragging broken glass through his throat.

The intern leaned closer, checking the monitors and bandages. "You nearly died, that’s what happened."

"Oh." Patrick breathed, the word heavy with resignation.

The memory of Vera’s betrayal flooded back all at once. He had always known his sister was ruthless, but trying to murder him? Her own brother? That crossed a line even he hadn’t believed she would step over.

And yet, she had.

Patrick closed his eyes, pain pulsing through him in slow, punishing waves.

"How am I even alive?" he asked.

If Vera wanted him dead, she would have finished the job. As far as he remembered, his sister had never been sloppy.

"It was your brother, sir," the doctor confessed. "After your sister murdered your mother—"

"What?" Patrick stiffened, every muscle going rigid. He looked up at the man, dread flooding his chest. "What did you just say?"

"I’m sorry," the doctor murmured, sympathy etched into his face. "Madam Moira is gone as well."

The color drained from Patrick’s face. His stomach twisted violently, nausea surging up his throat. For a moment, he had foolishly hoped that the memory had all been a hallucination.

But it was real.

His mother had fought for him and Vera had killed her too.

Grief slammed into him, followed closely by bitterness and rage. This was his fault. All of it. If he had never brought Ignis into their lives, none of this would have happened. His mother will still be alive.

The doctor hovered uncertainly as Patrick broke down, sobbing openly now, no longer caring about the pain ripping through his body.

"I’m going to kill that bitch," Patrick snarled through gritted teeth. "Even if it’s the last thing I do, I’ll make sure she suffers. I’ll teach her the real meaning of pain."

"U-um..." the doctor began, clearly uncomfortable. He shifted on his feet before forcing himself to continue. "Perhaps... perhaps that should wait until after you recover."

Patrick let out a harsh, humorless laugh.

"You were stabbed through the lower abdomen," he went on carefully, trying to ground the conversation. "The blade missed your spine, but it tore through muscle and narrowly avoided major organs. You lost a dangerous amount of blood. If your brother hadn’t gotten you here when he did—"

"I’m a doctor," Patrick cut in sharply, "I know how close I came to dying."

"Even so, you’re looking at weeks before you can stand properly, possibly months

before full recovery. Any strain before then could reopen the wound—."

"That is enough!" Patrick thundered.

The man shut up at once. He looked around the cramped space, wishing he could be anywhere but here.

Before either of them could recover, boots thundered across the floor.

In the blink of an eye, the cramped room was flooded with soldiers clad in black uniforms, their weapons drawn. Every gun in the room was aimed at him.

Patrick’s heart pounded violently against his ribs as reality sank in. Neither he nor the doctor dared to move.

They were surrounded.

Then the soldiers began to part, forming a narrow way.

The first thing Patrick noticed was the slow, deliberate sound of boots striking the floor.

Alpha King Elijah stepped into view and stopped directly in front of him.

"Finally," Elijah said sarcastically, "the rabbit runs out of holes."

Patrick swallowed, staring up at Elijah. Though the Alpha King’s expression was calm—almost relaxed—there was a storm brewing beneath it, and waiting to break.

Then Elijah turned his back on him.

He spoke to the soldier nearest him, his voice detached. "Take him," he said. "Kill the other one. We have work to do."

The doctor’s eyes widened.

He opened his mouth, perhaps to plead, or explain, but the sound never came. A gunshot cracked through the cramped room, and the doctor’s body collapsed instantly, lifeless before it hit the floor.

Patrick shouted, straining against the hands grabbing him, pain ripping through his abdomen as blood soaked through the bandages. Yet he was hauled roughly to his feet despite his injuries.

And Elijah never looked back.

Reading History

No history.

Comments

The readers' comments on the novel: Defy The Alpha(s)