
After My Alpha Took My Body, I Fought Back
Chapter 2
The storm raged outside with unnatural fury, as if the Moon Goddess herself was trying to stop what I was about to do. Rain lashed against the isolation ward's window, and thunder shook the foundations of the pack house. Perfect cover for what I needed to do.
Elena's face appeared at the window, her features ghostly in the darkness. The rogue witch's eyes were wide with caution as she slid the vial of potion through the narrow opening.
"Are you certain about this?" she signed, her hands moving with practiced precision. "Breaking a mate bond is not like breaking a promise, child. The pain could shatter your mind."
I nodded, my fingers trembling as I took the vial. The liquid inside glowed with an eerie blue light, pulsing like a heartbeat.
"I have nothing left to lose," I signed back. "My brother is in the dungeons. My mate has become my jailer."
Elena's eyes softened with something like pity. "Drink it all at once. The effect is... immediate."
I uncorked the vial, the scent of bitter herbs and something ancient filling my nostrils. One swallow. That's all it would take to erase Kingsley from my mind forever.
As I raised the vial to my lips, lightning split the sky with blinding intensity. The tower above us was struck directly, a deafening crack shaking the room. The lights flickered, then died.
In that moment of darkness, something strange happened. My hearing aid—my mother's last gift to me—suddenly burned against my ear. I gasped, dropping the vial as static exploded in my ear canal.
And then, impossibly, I heard a voice.
"Who's there?"
Not from the room. Not from Elena. From inside my head.
"Hello?" The voice was young, confused. Male. Familiar.
I froze, my hand still clutching my ear. "Who is this?" I signed frantically to Elena, who watched me with growing alarm.
"Can you hear me?" the voice asked again. "This is Kingsley Anderson. I'm... I'm seventeen. Who are you?"
The static cleared, and suddenly I could hear my own voice in my head, responding to him. "Kingsley? I'm Norah. Your mate."
Silence stretched between us, broken only by the storm's fury.
"That's impossible," he finally said, his voice cracking with emotion. "I haven't presented my wolf yet. I'm just... I'm just a teenager."
As the connection strengthened, images flooded my mind—memories of a younger Kingsley, his wolf newly awakened, his eyes bright with hope instead of the cold calculation I'd come to know.
"Thirteen years," I whispered aloud. "I'm thirteen years in your future."
Before he could respond, I felt something shift in our connection. Without meaning to, I was sending him images—memories of our life together. Kingsley's face as he ordered Trevor's imprisonment. The Alpha command that forced me to submit. The isolation ward's sterile walls.
"Stop," he pleaded, his mental voice agonized. "Please stop showing me this."
"I can't control it," I replied, tears streaming down my face. "I'm sorry."
"I'm going to become... that?" His mental voice broke. "I'm going to hurt you? Imprison your brother? Become that monster?"
I felt his horror wash through our link, pure and undiluted. This wasn't the Kingsley I knew—this was someone who still had hope, who still believed in goodness.
"There must be a way to stop it," he said, determination hardening his voice. "If I reject you before we ever mate—"
The connection wavered as another lightning bolt struck nearby.
"Kingsley, wait—" I called out mentally, but he was already gone.
---
The scene shifted with dizzying speed. Suddenly I was standing in the great hall of the Silver Moon Pack house, surrounded by the scents of pine and ceremonial incense. Hundreds of pack members filled the room, their faces turned expectantly toward a figure on the raised platform.
A seventeen-year-old Kingsley stood there, his face pale but determined. Tears streamed down his cheeks as he looked out over the crowd.
"My wolf has spoken," he announced, his voice cracking with emotion. "I have found my mate."
The crowd murmured excitedly as all eyes turned to me—a younger version of myself, dressed in ceremonial white, hope shining in my eyes.
Kingsley's gaze locked with mine, and I saw the moment he made his decision.
"I, Kingsley Anderson," he began, his voice gaining strength, "reject you, Norah Richardson."
The formal words of rejection hit me like physical blows. Each syllable sent waves of pain through my body as the mate bond—which had barely begun to form—was violently severed.
Gasps erupted from the crowd. Rejection was rare enough; public rejection at a Coming of Age Ceremony was unprecedented.
Young Norah staggered backward, her hand flying to her chest as if she could physically hold the pieces of her heart together. "Why?" she mouthed, though no sound emerged.
Kingsley's face contorted with grief and determination. "I won't become that monster," he said, so quietly only I could hear. "I won't let him hurt you."
As darkness closed in around the edges of my vision, I realized with startling clarity that this wasn't just a rejection.
It was a sacrifice.
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