
After My Alpha's Rejection, I Embraced Freedom
Chapter 3
The training yard fell silent as I stood before Ryan, refusing his command to kneel. The shock on his face quickly hardened into something cold and dangerous—a look I'd seen directed at enemies, but never at me. Until now.
"You will regret this," he said, his voice low enough that only Brittany and I could hear. "I made you what you are. Without me, you're nothing."
Silver growled within me, her presence stronger than ever before. *We were never nothing. He just wanted us to believe that.*
I turned and walked away, my back straight despite the weight of every stare. Behind me, I heard Ryan barking orders, his voice tight with barely controlled rage.
I should have known his retaliation would come swiftly.
---
"Night patrol along the northern border," Lucas announced grimly later that day, handing me the duty roster. "All of us. Every warrior loyal to you."
I scanned the list, my stomach sinking. The northern border ran alongside known rogue territory—violent lone wolves who attacked without warning or mercy. And Ryan had scheduled my entire unit for back-to-back night shifts there, when rogues were most active.
"He's punishing them to get to me," I said, the paper crumpling in my tightening grip.
Lucas nodded, his expression grim. "Three nights in a row. No rotation with other units."
"He can't do this," I whispered, though we both knew he could. He was the Alpha.
"We'll manage," Lucas said, his loyalty unwavering. "We've faced worse."
But as the nights wore on, it became clear that Ryan's strategy was as effective as it was cruel. By the third night, my warriors were exhausted, their reflexes dulled by fatigue. When the rogues attacked—a coordinated strike that suggested they'd been tipped off about our weakened state—we were barely able to hold the line.
I dragged myself back to the pack house at dawn, supporting a limping Eliza whose leg had been badly mauled. Three others had similar injuries. We'd survived, but only just.
Ryan was waiting in the courtyard, Brittany at his side. His smile was all teeth as he surveyed our battered condition.
"Trouble on patrol?" he asked, feigning concern.
"You know damn well what happened," I growled, helping Eliza toward the infirmary.
"Perhaps I should assign more experienced warriors to that border," he said, loud enough for everyone to hear. "Ones who won't let their personal feelings compromise pack security."
I stopped, turning slowly to face him. "Is that what this is? You're willing to risk their lives to punish me?"
"I'm ensuring my pack is led by those who respect the chain of command," he replied coldly. "Something you seem to have forgotten."
Silver surged within me, her rage matching my own. *There must be a way out of this. A way to protect our people.*
---
That evening, I found myself in the pack library, a rarely used room filled with ancient texts on pack law and history. Lucas joined me, bringing food I barely touched as I pored over dusty tomes by candlelight.
"There has to be something," I muttered, flipping through another crumbling volume. "Some way to break this bond without destroying the pack."
Lucas hesitated, then pulled a small, leather-bound book from inside his jacket. "Try this one," he said quietly. "It's from the restricted section. Wolf Council statutes on mate bonds."
I looked up sharply. "How did you get this?"
"I have my ways," he said with a grim smile. "Just read it."
The candle flickered as I turned the brittle pages, my heart racing as I found what I was looking for. "Formal Rejection," I whispered, tracing the words with my finger. "A mate bond can be severed through formal declaration before witnesses, recognized by Wolf Council law."
"There's a price," Lucas warned, pointing to the smaller text below. "The rejection causes intense psychic pain to both parties. Some don't survive it."
I closed the book, meeting his eyes. "It's worth the risk."
Lucas looked away, guilt shadowing his features. "Madison, there's something you should know." He took a deep breath. "About Ryan and Brittany. We—the warriors—we've known for months."
The betrayal hit me like a physical blow. "You knew? All of you?"
"We were ordered not to tell you," he said, his voice breaking. "Alpha command. We couldn't—" He stopped, swallowing hard. "I'm sorry. We should have found a way."
I stared at the candle flame, watching it dance in the darkness. "Why tell me now?"
"Because I can't watch him destroy you," Lucas said simply. "And because whatever you decide to do next, you won't be doing it alone. Every warrior in your unit stands with you. We all do."
I looked down at the book in my hands, the solution to my bondage written in ancient ink. The path forward would be painful—possibly fatal—but for the first time since Ryan's betrayal, I felt something like hope.
"Then help me prepare," I said, my decision made. "It's time to show our Alpha what happens when you betray the wrong wolf."
You may also like





