Follow
Chapters
Share
After My Alpha Rejected Me, I Took His Territory Novel Cover

After My Alpha Rejected Me, I Took His Territory

I had known this night was coming for eleven months and twenty-three days. I knew it the moment Alexander signed the contract. I knew it when Raelynn's training schedule arrived in his inbox and he read it three times in one sitting, his jaw doing that thing it does when he's trying not to smile. I knew it every single morning I sat across from him at the breakfast table in my carefully constructed Luna role — composed, scentless, unremarkable — while he looked through me like I was a window. So when he stood at the head of the banquet hall and said the words, I was ready. "I, Alexander, Alpha of Black Moon, reject you, Penelope, as my mate." The hall went so quiet I could hear the candles. Two hundred wolves, every one of them holding their breath, waiting for the wolfless Omega to fall apart. I felt their attention like a physical weight — the pity, the satisfaction, the morbid curiosity of people watching something break. I stood up. Not fast.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

I had known this night was coming for eleven months and twenty-three days.

I knew it the moment Alexander signed the contract. I knew it when Raelynn's training schedule arrived in his inbox and he read it three times in one sitting, his jaw doing that thing it does when he's trying not to smile. I knew it every single morning I sat across from him at the breakfast table in my carefully constructed Luna role — composed, scentless, unremarkable — while he looked through me like I was a window.

So when he stood at the head of the banquet hall and said the words, I was ready.

"I, Alexander, Alpha of Black Moon, reject you, Penelope, as my mate."

The hall went so quiet I could hear the candles. Two hundred wolves, every one of them holding their breath, waiting for the wolfless Omega to fall apart. I felt their attention like a physical weight — the pity, the satisfaction, the morbid curiosity of people watching something break.

I stood up.

Not fast. Not dramatic. I simply rose from my chair the way I had risen from it every morning for a year, smoothed the front of my dress with one hand, and reached into the fold at my hip where I had kept the envelope since six o'clock that evening.

The contract was four pages, printed on Black Moon Pack letterhead, signed by Alexander Campbell in blue ink. I had read it so many times I could recite it backward.

"Section seven, paragraph three," I said. My voice carried. I made sure of that. "Upon termination of the contracted mate arrangement by either party, the Alpha of Black Moon Pack agrees to transfer the deed of the Westfield border territory — forty-two acres, including the eastern creek boundary — to the contracted party within thirty days of termination."

I set the contract on the table in front of me. Smoothed it flat with my palm.

"Your thirty days start tonight, Alexander. I'll expect the deed by the fifteenth."

Somebody dropped a fork. The sound rang out like a gunshot.

I didn't look at Raelynn. I had decided that weeks ago — I would not give her the satisfaction of being looked at. I didn't look at Alexander either, not really. I looked at the space just past his left shoulder, the way you look at something you've already finished with.

Then I picked up my clutch, pushed my chair in, and walked toward the door.

My heels clicked against the stone floor. One step, then another. The crowd parted without me asking. I kept my spine straight and my chin level and my face completely, perfectly still.

I did not look back.

The cold air outside hit me like a hand against my cheek. I stood on the front steps of the Black Moon Pack hall for exactly three seconds, breathing it in, and then I walked to the car I had arranged two weeks ago — a rental, paid in cash, registered to a name that wasn't mine — and I drove.

---

The waystation was forty minutes east, just past the edge of Black Moon territory, in the kind of nowhere that rogue-neutral locations always occupy. A converted motel, twelve rooms, run by a wolf who asked no questions and accepted cash. I had booked it under a different name. I had packed my bag three days ago and left it in the trunk.

I had been planning this exit since month two.

The room was small and smelled like industrial cleaner and old carpet. I sat on the edge of the bed and unzipped my bag and took out the notebook.

It was a plain black composition notebook, the kind you buy at a drugstore. The cover was worn soft at the corners from a year of being handled. I had kept it hidden in the lining of my winter coat, which Alexander had never once touched.

I opened it to the first page.

Dorian Voss. Black Moon Beta. Loyalty price: his daughter's medical debt, approximately forty thousand. Owed to the Crescent Ridge Pack healer. Alexander knows and has chosen not to pay it. Dorian has been quietly furious for eight months.

I turned the page.

Eastern alliance with the Greywood Pack: contingent on a timber rights agreement that expires in March. Alexander has not renewed it. Greywood Alpha is already in preliminary talks with the Ironwood Pack.

Another page.

Rival pack territorial weakness, northern border. Unguarded three nights a month during the new moon rotation. Alexander knows. He has not acted on it. He is waiting for a political moment that will never come because he does not understand that political moments are made, not found.

Page after page after page. Forty-seven pages of names, prices, vulnerabilities, and debts. A year of being invisible. A year of being looked through.

A year of watching.

I set the notebook on the bed beside me and looked at it for a long moment. Outside, a truck passed on the highway, its headlights sweeping briefly across the curtains.

I was twenty-two years old. I had no wolf, no pack, no family name worth using. I had forty-two acres of border territory coming to me in thirty days, a notebook full of intelligence that no one knew I had, and a mind that had been sharpened by sixteen years of being underestimated.

I was not broken.

I opened the notebook to a fresh page and uncapped my pen.

At the top, I wrote: First move.

And then I began.

---

I didn't know yet that three hundred miles away, in the Silverfang Pack's main house, my father was already on the phone.

I didn't know that his intelligence channels had picked up the story within two hours — not the rejection, which he would have celebrated, but the contract. The territory payout. The fact that I had walked out with something in my hand instead of nothing.

I didn't know that his first call was to the Greywood Alpha, and his second was to the Ironwood Pack, and that by midnight he had begun the quiet, methodical work of closing every door in the region before I could reach it.

Stanley Snyder had spent sixteen years making sure I had nowhere to go.

He wasn't going to stop now.

But then, neither was I.

You may also like

Betrayed by First Love Novel Cover
7.8
The carriage wheels crunched over the gravel path as we approached the capital after three long years. Dust clung to the windows, a reminder of the harsh frontier lands I'd left behind. My fingers traced the scar running down my forearm—a souvenir from the battle of Blackwater Ridge. Three years of bloodshed, of commanding troops against enemies who'd threatened our kingdom's borders. Three years away from home... away from Dominic. "General Scott," my aide called from outside, "we've arrived at the city gates." I straightened my uniform, adjusting the row of medals pinned to my chest. Each one represented a victory, a life saved, a battle won. But none of that mattered now. All that mattered was seeing Dominic again.
Betrayed by My Alpha Mate Novel Cover
7.9
I stared at the silver envelope on my small wooden desk, my fingers trembling as I traced the elegant cursive of my name. Today was my twenty-fourth birthday, and this was the only card I'd received. Three years ago, birthdays meant pancakes with extra blueberries and Alex's warm arms wrapped around me as we watched the sunrise from our little cottage porch. Now, they were just another day of scrubbing floors and avoiding Victoria's cruel gaze. Something about the envelope felt wrong. The Sterling family crest pressed into the wax seal seemed to mock me. I broke it open, expecting perhaps a formal acknowledgment from Alexander—something cold but proper. What fell out stole the breath from my lungs. Photographs. Glossy, professional shots of Alexander and Victoria in ceremonial white robes, standing beneath an arch of moonflowers—my moonflowers, the ones I'd cultivated for years.
Betrayed by My Beta Mate Novel Cover
9.4
The fluorescent lights in the pack house's design wing hummed overhead as I spread the evidence across my desk, each document a damning piece of the puzzle I'd been assembling for the past three days. My hands trembled slightly—not from fear, but from the rage that had been building since I'd first seen Evie Anderson's submission for the Silver Ridge Pack alliance project. The plagiarism was blatant. Unmistakable. The crescent moon motif interwoven with silver threading that I'd spent months perfecting, the structural innovations I'd developed through countless sleepless nights—all of it stolen and presented as her original work. Even the small imperfection in the eastern corner design, a deliberate choice I'd made to honor the Moon Goddess's teaching that beauty lies in flaws, had been copied exactly. I gathered the papers, my wolf stirring restlessly within me. Luna, my inner wolf, had been agitated ever since we'd discovered the theft, her anger matching my own. "He'll support us," I whispered to her, though doubt crept into my voice. "Julian is our mate.
Carrying My Mate's Heir For His Betrayer Novel Cover
9.3
To save my mate, I was dragged into rogue territory for ten days and nights. They stripped me of my Luna status, shattered my aura, and forced me to endure the torment of carrying and birthing rogue offspring. When I was finally rescued, the mate who had sworn to never abandon me announced to the entire werewolf community that he would take another as his Luna—Serena, his loyal Beta. He even elevated her to the position of his pack's most influential female leader. In my darkest hour, Hayes, a Lycan Prince who had secluded himself for a decade, emerged from his solitude and offered me his hand in marriage. He declared that a woman’s worth was not defined by her past but by her resilience, and that I was a treasure beyond measure. Ten years later, after countless failed pregnancies, I resorted to using my Omega bloodline in a desperate attempt to conceive a child with a rare, powerful lineage. One day, my mind link accidentally connected with Marcus’s inner circle, and I overheard a conversation I was never meant to hear. “Alpha, it was brilliant of you to orchestrate her capture by the rogues. If it weren’t for her weakened state, Serena might not have secured her position as Beta.” Marcus’s voice was cold and calculated.
After My Alpha Cheated with the Omega, I Found the Lycan Prince Novel Cover
8.4
Rain battered against the windows of our bedroom as I paced anxiously, one hand resting on my swollen belly. The baby had been kicking all afternoon, little flutters that made my heart swell with love and anticipation. I couldn't wait to share this with Quentin. "Luna, do you need anything before I go?" Our Beta asked from the doorway, concern etched on her face. "No, thank you. I'm just waiting for my mate." I smiled, though it didn't quite reach my eyes. Quentin had been distant lately, often returning late from his duties. But tonight would be different. Tonight, we would celebrate our little miracle. The clock struck nine when I finally heard his key in the lock.
Kidnapped By The Alpha  Novel Cover
9.2
Abducted by a mysterious stranger who claimed her to be his soul mate, she was thrust into the world of unknown where she found out everything she had known about herself, family…was all a lie! How will she navigate this new discovery while battling her strange attraction to her captor…!