
After My Alpha Claimed Me, I Ran Away
Chapter 2
The midnight air bit into my skin through my thin jacket, but I didn't turn back. I crept through the shadows of the Moonveil Pack territory, my boots sinking into the damp earth as I navigated the dense woods toward the northern boundary. My heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs. I was terrified of the dark, terrified of being caught by patrols, but the weight of the fifteen thousand dollars anchoring my mother to life pushed me forward. I had to know who 'skkk' was. I had to look my savior in the eye and thank them.
The trees finally parted, revealing the old ceremonial stone that marked the edge of our lands. The forest was dead silent, save for the distant rumble of approaching thunder. I wrapped my arms around myself, shivering as the wind picked up.
"I'm here," I whispered into the darkness, my voice trembling. "You asked me to come alone."
For a moment, there was nothing. Then, the shadows near the tree line shifted. A tall, broad-shouldered figure stepped out from the darkness, the pale moonlight catching the sharp, familiar angles of his face.
My breath stopped in my throat.
It was Kayson Reynolds. The Alpha heir. The boy who had once been my closest childhood friend, and the man whose family I had spent the last ten years blaming for my father's death.
"Juliana," he said, his voice a low, rough murmur that seemed to vibrate through the earth.
Before I could even process the shock of seeing him, a sudden, heavy gust of wind swept over us. The scent hit me like a physical blow—crushed pine needles and fresh rain. It bypassed my conscious mind, sinking straight into my marrow.
Pain erupted in my chest. I gasped, stumbling backward as something ancient and feral snapped awake inside me. For twenty years, my inner wolf had been a silent, dead thing, a void that earned me nothing but scorn. But now, she tore through my consciousness, clawing her way to the surface with a violent, possessive force.
*Mate!* she howled in my mind, the voice so loud it brought tears to my eyes. *Mate!*
The electrifying pull of the mate bond paralyzed me. It was a suffocating, intoxicating heat that demanded I close the distance between us, demanding I submit to the man standing in front of me.
Kayson’s stoic expression broke. His dark eyes softened with a raw, desperate vulnerability I had never seen on an Alpha. He took a slow, deliberate step toward me, the air around him crackling with dominance and awe.
"Mine," he whispered, the Alpha tone slipping out, heavy with possessive reverence.
*No.* The word echoed in the back of my mind, tiny at first, then growing into a deafening roar. The mate bond was pulling me toward him, but a decade of agonizing grief, of watching my mother wither away, of being treated like dirt by the very pack his family ruled, rose up like a brick wall. The Reynolds family had destroyed my father. They had destroyed my life.
My conscious mind forcefully slammed the door on my wolf's desperate howling. I shoved the bond down, refusing to let the Moon Goddess dictate my heart to the enemy.
"Is this a joke to you?" I screamed, my voice tearing through the quiet woods. Thunder cracked overhead, mirroring the sudden, violent fury boiling in my veins.
Kayson froze, his hand half-extended toward me. "Juliana, please. Let me explain—"
"Explain what?" I shrieked, backing away from him as if he were made of fire. "That you've been playing a sick game with my life? That you watched me starve, watched me beg for scraps, and decided to play God from the shadows? You think buying my mother's life erases what your family did to my father?"
"It wasn't a game," he pleaded, his voice thick with an emotion I refused to name. "I was trying to protect you."
"I don't want your protection!" I grabbed the heavy glass ceremonial lantern resting on top of the boundary stone. With a scream of pure, unadulterated rage, I hurled it at the ground between us.
The glass shattered with a sharp, explosive crack, the shards scattering across the dirt like broken diamonds. Kayson flinched, but he didn't step back.
My chest heaved as the first heavy drops of rain began to fall. I reached up, my fingers hooking under the cheap plastic cord of my pack-issued Omega ID. I yanked it hard. The cord snapped, biting into my neck.
I threw the ID directly at Kayson's chest. It bounced off him and landed in the mud by his boots.
"I am not your mate," I spat, my voice shaking with a finality that tore my own soul to shreds. "And I am no longer part of your pack. I renounce my place in Moonveil."
I didn't wait to see his reaction. I turned on my heel and bolted into the torrential downpour, the rain mixing with the hot tears streaming down my face.
As I tore through the thick brush, the rain blinding my vision, a faint, artificial glow caught my eye. The cloying scent of vanilla cut through the storm. I stumbled to a halt for a fraction of a second.
Hidden behind the dense, wet ferns stood Samantha.
She was slowly lowering her smartphone, the screen still glowing with a recording timer. Our eyes met in the dark. The warm, patronizing pity she had always wrapped me in was completely gone. In its place was a twisted, ugly sneer. It was pure, unadulterated hatred.
I could see the furious gears turning in her head. She had recorded the entire encounter. She knew the pathetic Omega she kept around to feel better about herself was actually fated to the future Alpha King. Her grip on the phone tightened, her posture rigid with a malicious resolve that promised to destroy me before I could ever wear a Luna's crown.
But the betrayal barely registered over the roaring in my ears. I didn't care what she did. I had nothing left to lose. I turned my back on my best friend, my fated mate, and my pack, running blindly into the blackness of the storm.
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