
After My Alpha Chose His New Mate
Chapter 2
The sky darkened ominously as I stared out the window of the pack house. Thunder rumbled in the distance, a warning of the violent storm approaching Silver Creek territory. My wolf, Aria, paced anxiously within me, sensing danger beyond the weather.
"The storm's getting worse," I said, turning to find Nathan gathering emergency supplies. "Should I prepare the main hall for those who can't make it to the bunker?"
Nathan barely glanced at me, his attention fixed on his phone. "The bunker's the only safe place tonight. This storm has supernatural elements—Council detected rogue magic in the system."
I nodded, already mentally cataloging what needed to be done. "I'll gather the emergency medical supplies and—"
"Sophia's handling that," he cut me off, his tone dismissive. "Just make sure the pack house is secured."
Aria growled within me. *Five years as Luna, and he assigns our duties to her?*
I swallowed the hurt, focusing instead on the practical. "The bunker only holds forty people at capacity. We have sixty-three pack members currently on territory."
Lightning flashed, illuminating Nathan's face—handsome, distant, and completely unconcerned with my observation. The thunder that followed shook the windows.
"Priority members only," he said, not meeting my eyes. "Warriors, pregnant females, pups."
"And leadership," I added quietly. "You and I should coordinate from inside."
His phone buzzed. A smile—one I hadn't seen directed at me in years—briefly softened his features as he read the message.
"I need to check on Sophia," he said, already moving toward the door.
The first heavy raindrops began to fall as pack members hurried across the grounds toward the underground bunker. I stood on the porch, clipboard in hand, checking names as they filed past. The wind whipped my hair across my face, and I tucked the persistent strand behind my ear, focusing on my duty despite the growing knot in my stomach.
Nathan appeared from the direction of the pack cabins, his arm protectively around Sophia. Her honey-blonde hair—so similar to mine it was almost mocking—was perfectly dry under the shelter of his jacket. She clung to him, her face buried against his chest in a display of feminine vulnerability that made Aria snarl.
They approached the bunker entrance where I stood. For a moment, I thought Nathan might acknowledge me—his Luna, his mate—but his eyes slid past me as if I were merely another piece of pack house furniture.
"Is everyone accounted for?" he asked, his tone all business.
"Almost," I replied, professional despite the ache in my chest. "We're still missing the Johnson family and Elder Morris."
The sky opened then, rain pouring down in sheets. Lightning struck somewhere nearby, the crack of thunder immediate and deafening. Sophia whimpered, pressing closer to Nathan.
"We need to get inside now," she said, her voice trembling.
Nathan nodded, then finally looked at me. His eyes—once warm amber when they gazed at me—were cold and distant.
"Two can take shelter; you'll wait here," he said flatly. "Someone needs to direct the latecomers."
Before I could respond, he was guiding Sophia through the heavy metal door. I caught one last glimpse of her face—a small, triumphant smile playing at her lips—before the bunker door slammed shut with a metallic finality.
I stood alone on the porch, rain soaking through my clothes, clipboard becoming useless pulp in my hands. The reality of what had just happened washed over me with the storm's fury.
*He left us exposed,* Aria howled within me. *His Luna. His mate. Left vulnerable while he protects her.*
The wind howled around me, bending trees and sending debris flying across the grounds. I should have been afraid, but a strange calm settled over me as I turned and walked back into the empty pack house.
Water pooled at my feet as I moved through the darkened hallways. The power had gone out, but I knew every inch of this house—the house I had maintained, decorated, and made a home while Nathan took all my efforts for granted.
*We deserve better than this,* Aria whispered, her voice no longer desperate but resolute.
I made my way to Nathan's office—our office, technically, though he never acknowledged my contributions. Lightning illuminated the room in brief, harsh flashes as I pulled out the ancient leather-bound book of pack law from the shelf.
My fingers, cold and trembling, found the page I sought. The words seemed to burn into my vision: "Mate Bond Severance: Protocols and Procedures."
"No more," I whispered to the empty room, to Aria, to myself. "This ends now."
As thunder shook the foundations of the pack house, I began to write, drafting the formal rejection papers that would sever the bond I had once believed was sacred. Outside, the storm raged on, but within me, a different kind of storm was building—one of determination, of finality, of freedom.
The words flowed onto the page, each one a step toward reclaiming myself: "I, Claire Thompson, reject Nathan Parker as my mate..."
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