
After My Alpha Rejected Me, the Lycan King Said “Mine”
Chapter 2
The bond didn't just break; it shattered. It felt like a physical amputation, a phantom limb ripped from my soul leaving a gaping, bleeding hole in my chest. I screamed until my throat was raw, the sound drowned out by the thunder rattling the windows of my beat-up sedan.
Rain lashed against the windshield, turning the highway into a blur of gray and black. I gripped the steering wheel so hard my knuckles turned white, fighting the tremors racking my body. It wasn’t just the rejection. It was the withdrawal. My blood felt like it was boiling, the years of wolfsbane toxicity warring with the sudden, violent severance of the mate bond.
"Just keep driving," I whispered to myself, my voice a broken croak. "Get to the city. Get to neutral ground."
Under the passenger seat sat my go-bag—a pathetic stash of cash and a burner phone I’d hidden three years ago, back when the first bruises started appearing. I never thought I’d actually use it. I thought I was the Luna. I thought I was loved.
Jonas’s threat echoed in my mind, louder than the storm. *If you try to fight this... I will burn their homes to the ground.*
I couldn't go to my father. Jonas would destroy his small pack before sunrise. My only chance was the Grand Alpha Summit in New York. The Hotel Pierre. It was neutral territory, governed by ancient laws. Even Jonas wouldn't dare attack me there in front of the Council.
Five hours later, I was a ghost haunting the service corridors of the Hotel Pierre. I had ditched my car blocks away and stolen a catering jacket from a laundry cart near the loading dock. It was two sizes too big, smelling of starch and someone else’s sweat, but it covered my torn dress.
The service hallway spun. The floor tilted like the deck of a sinking ship. My vision was tunneling, the edges of my sight turning black. The fever was consuming me. I needed water. I needed to find someone who remembered my father, someone who wouldn't sell me out to Jonas.
I pushed through the heavy swing doors into the main lobby.
The sudden assault of noise and scents hit me like a physical blow. The air was thick with the musk of dozens of Alphas—power, aggression, and expensive cologne. Under normal circumstances, it would be intimidating. In my weakened state, it was suffocating.
"Excuse me," I mumbled, trying to weave through the crowd of tuxedo-clad men and jeweled women. My legs felt like lead. "Please..."
No one looked at me. To them, I was just invisible staff. A wolfless nobody.
A wave of dizziness buckled my knees. I stumbled forward, my hand grasping at empty air. I didn't hit the floor. Instead, I slammed into a wall of solid, unyielding muscle.
Strong hands gripped my shoulders to steady me, the touch searing through the cheap fabric of the jacket. I gasped, bracing for a reprimand, for an Alpha to shove me away.
Then, the scent hit me.
It wasn't the cloying perfume of the ballroom or the metallic tang of wolfsbane that had plagued me for years. It was crisp and overwhelming. *Rain. Fresh cedar. Ozone.* The smell of a storm about to break. It flooded my lungs, clearing the fog in my brain for a singular, crystalline second.
My dormant wolf, silent for three years, suddenly stirred. A low whimper vibrated in my chest.
I looked up.
I was staring into eyes of molten gold. They were predatory, ancient, and terrifyingly beautiful. The man holding me was towering, radiating a power so dense it made the air around us crackle. His face was sharp angles and stubble, his expression shifting from annoyance to shock, and then to something darker. Hunger.
Time stopped. The chatter of the lobby died out. The music faded.
His pupils dilated, swallowing the gold until his eyes were almost black. His nostrils flared, inhaling my scent—my fear, my sickness, and something else underneath.
A low, rumbling growl started in his chest, vibrating into mine. It wasn't a question. It was a decree.
**"Mine."**
The word wasn't spoken; it was commanded. The power of it slammed into the room like a shockwave. Around us, the chatter ceased instantly. I felt the heavy thud of knees hitting the carpet. I turned my head slightly, my vision blurring. Alphas—proud, arrogant leaders of their packs—were dropping to their knees, their heads bowed in instinctive submission to the predator in their midst.
Only I remained standing, held up by his iron grip.
"You..." I whispered, my strength finally giving out. "Help..."
The darkness rushed in. My legs collapsed, but I never touched the ground. He swept me up into his arms, pulling me high against his chest. He felt like a furnace, burning away the cold that had settled in my bones.
"Marcus!" His voice was a roar that shook the chandeliers. "Clear the elevators. Now!"
I drifted in and out of consciousness. I felt the lurch of a high-speed elevator. The soft ping of a bell. The sensation of being carried through a silent, plush hallway.
"Put her down, Callahan, let the healers see her," a distant voice urged. A Beta's voice. Reasonable. Calm.
"No." The King's growl was right against my ear. "She smells of poison. And another male's rejection. If anyone touches her, I will rip their throat out."
I was lowered onto something soft—silk sheets, smelling of him. Cedar and rain. I instinctively curled toward the scent, seeking the comfort it offered.
"She's dying, Cal! Look at her!" the other voice argued.
A warm hand brushed the hair from my sweating forehead. The touch was impossibly gentle, contrasting with the lethal tension in his body.
"Healers," the King snarled, the word dripping with reluctance. "Get them in here. But if they hurt her... if they make her whimper even once... Marcus, I will burn this city to ash."
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