
After My Alpha Rejected Me, I Became the Lycan Queen
Chapter 2
The bell above the door of *Moon & Bloom* hadn't stopped ringing in my ears, even hours after Alessandro and Janelle had left. My hands shook as I swept up the fallen rose petals, my mind replaying the look in Alessandro’s eyes. It wasn't hatred. It was hunger. A starving, desperate hunger that terrified me more than his rejection ever had.
I locked the shop early, my heart pounding against my ribs like a trapped bird. I needed to hear Caleb’s voice. I needed his calm, his absolute certainty that I was safe. I reached for my phone, my thumb hovering over his contact, but hesitated. He was in deep negotiations with the Northern Elders. Distracting him now could weaken his position.
*I can handle this,* I told myself, though my wolf paced anxiously in the back of my mind. *I am the Lycan King’s mate. I am not prey.*
***
Across town, in the opulent suite the Silver Moon Pack had rented, I imagined the chaos unfolding. I didn't need to be there to know Alessandro was unraveling. The bond, though severed by his rejection, had left a scar on my soul that still throbbed when he was near. I could feel his confusion, his rising panic, like a storm front moving in.
Alessandro paced the length of the penthouse living room, a caged animal in an expensive suit. The scent of him—cedar and ozone—was suffocating the space, thick with aggressive pheromones.
"Marcus!" he roared, the Alpha tone cracking the expensive plaster of the walls.
His Beta, Marcus Reed, hurried in, looking weary. "Alpha? We have the dinner with the council in twenty minutes."
"Cancel it," Alessandro snapped, raking a hand through his hair. "I need the files. The exile records from eight years ago. Specifically, the medical reports."
Marcus blinked, confusion clouding his loyal features. "Sir? That was almost a decade ago. Why dig up the past now? We have the mating ceremony to plan."
"Because she didn't smell like rot!" Alessandro shouted, slamming his fist onto the mahogany table. The wood splintered under the force. "She smelled like rain. Like night-blooming jasmine. Like... royalty." He paced again, his eyes wild. "If she had the rogue taint, her scent would be sour. Decaying. But she smelled purer than anyone in this damn pack. Get me the files, Marcus. Now!"
Marcus hesitated, sensing the dangerous edge of his Alpha's sanity fraying. "I... I will request them from the archives, Alpha. But Janelle—"
"Do not speak to me of Janelle right now," Alessandro growled, his voice dropping to a lethal whisper. "Just get the files."
***
The next morning, the peace of my little shop was shattered not by customers, but by the buzzing of my phone. It vibrated incessantly against the counter, dancing across the wood.
I picked it up, frowning at the barrage of notifications. Dozens of messages. Missed calls from unknown numbers. My stomach dropped.
Then I saw the headline from the *Werewolf Gazette* news feed.
**EXILED 'ROGUE WHORE' HIDING IN NEUTRAL ZONE**
My breath hitched. The photo was grainy, taken through the shop window yesterday. It showed me arranging lilies, my profile clearly visible. The article was vicious, filled with poison only one person could have distilled.
*"Sources confirm that Clementine Patterson, the disgraced she-wolf exiled for servicing feral rogues, has set up shop in the Seattle neutral zone. Locals report strange men entering at all hours..."*
Janelle.
She hadn't just leaked my location; she had painted a target on my back. In the werewolf world, "Rogue Whore" wasn't just an insult; it was a death sentence. Traditionalists and extremists viewed women accused of such things as a stain on the species, something to be purged.
I flipped the sign to 'Closed' and rushed to lock the door, but I was too late.
A brick smashed through the front window, showering the display of orchids in jagged shards of glass. I screamed, shielding my face as a rock followed, wrapped in a piece of paper.
"Come out, traitor!" a voice bellowed from the street. "Get out of our town!"
I peered through the broken glass. A group of five rough-looking wolves stood on the sidewalk, spray paint cans in hand. They were low-ranking males, the kind who got off on bullying those weaker than them. The front of my beautiful shop was already defaced with red paint: *ROGUE LOVER* scrawled across the siding.
"Hey!" one of them shouted, spotting me. He was a heavy-set man with a scar running down his chin. "There she is! Let's teach her a lesson about spreading disease!"
He lunged for the door, grabbing the handle and wrenching it open. I stumbled back, my hand instinctively going to my stomach. Fear, cold and sharp, pierced through me. I was strong, but I was pregnant, and there were five of them.
"Get back!" I yelled, channeling every ounce of authority I had.
The man sneered, stepping over the threshold. "Or what? You gonna call your rogue boyfriends?"
He reached out to grab my arm, his fingers inches from my skin.
*FLASH.*
A blinding pulse of silver-blue light erupted from the doorframe. It wasn't fire, but pure, concentrated energy—ancient magic.
The man screamed, jerking his hand back as if he'd touched a hot stove. Smoke curled from his fingertips, the smell of singed hair filling the air. He stumbled backward, falling onto the sidewalk, clutching his burned hand.
"What the hell?" his friend yelled, backing away. "She's a witch!"
"It's a ward!" another shouted, fear replacing their bravado. "That's not normal magic. That's... that's Lycan magic."
My heart hammered in my throat. Caleb. He had placed wards on the shop months ago, telling me they were just for 'peace of mind.' I had never seen them activate. The silver light hummed around the doorframe, a visible barrier of his protection.
The thugs scrambled back, terrified by the display of power far beyond their understanding. They fled down the street, leaving their spray paint cans rolling in the gutter.
I stood amidst the broken glass and ruined flowers, trembling. The ward had saved me, but it had also revealed something dangerous. Ordinary omegas didn't have Lycan-grade protection spells guarding their flower shops.
I couldn't stay here. Not anymore.
"Caleb," I whispered, closing my eyes and trying to push the thought through the mental link that connected all mates. usually, I could feel him—a warm, solid presence in the back of my mind. But today, with the distance and his exhaustion, the line was fuzzy. Static.
*Caleb, please,* I thought desperately. *They found me.*
Silence. Just the sound of the wind whistling through the broken window and the distant sirens of the human police. I was exposed, alone, and the wolves were circling.
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