
After My Groom Rejected Me at the Altar
Chapter 2
The silence that followed Zachary’s departure was absolute. It hung heavy over the manicured lawn of the Franklin estate, a suffocating blanket woven from shock and pity. Hundreds of eyes bore into my back, waiting for the inevitable collapse. They expected the new-money girl to scream, to shift into a feral frenzy, or to fall to her knees and beg.
I did none of those things.
Inside my chest, the mate bond was screaming, a physical tether being ripped apart fiber by fiber. It felt like someone had reached into my ribcage and squeezed my heart until it burst. But as the pain crested, something else rose to meet it. A cold, crystalline clarity.
I looked at the empty space where Zachary had stood. I looked at the flowers Shelby had trampled in her theatrical exit.
"I accept," I said. My voice wasn't loud, but in the dead silence, it carried like a gunshot.
My father, Alpha Weaver, let out a roar of pure fury, his eyes flashing a dangerous crimson. He lunged forward, claws extending, ready to tear the Franklin estate apart brick by brick. "That insolent pup! I will kill him!"
"No, Dad." I grabbed his arm. My grip was iron. "We are leaving."
"Valerie, he humiliated you!"
"He humiliated himself," I corrected, my voice devoid of emotion. I turned my back on the altar. "He just doesn't know it yet."
I walked down the aisle alone. I kept my chin high, my spine straight as a steel rod. I could hear the whispers of the high-society Lunas as I passed. *"Poor thing." "I told you their blood wasn't right." "How embarrassing."*
Let them whisper. By tomorrow, they would be screaming.
We reached the border of the Franklin territory, where the manicured gardens gave way to the wilder forest edge. I stopped. The custom-made silk dress, commissioned by Zachary’s mother to hide my curves, felt like a straightjacket. It smelled of them—of old money and rot.
I didn't bother with the zipper. I grabbed the delicate lace at the neckline and tore it open. The sound of ripping fabric was the most satisfying thing I had heard all day. I stripped the ruin of the dress from my body, leaving it in a pile of white silk on the dirt.
My wolf surged forward, no longer suppressed. I shifted. My bones cracked and reshaped, fur sprouting in a wave of russet and gold. I didn't look back at the estate. I threw my head back, howled a sound that was less mourning and more war cry, and ran. I ran until the wind scrubbed Zachary's scent from my skin, burying the girl who just wanted to be liked deep in the forest floor.
***
The next morning, I didn't wake up crying. I woke up with a plan.
I walked into the Weaver Pack's corporate headquarters at 7:00 AM sharp. I was wearing a charcoal power suit, my hair pulled back in a severe bun. Marcus, our Beta and my father's right hand, was already waiting for me, a tablet in his hand and a grim look on his face.
"Valerie," he started, his voice gentle. "You should be resting. The rejection sickness..."
"Is manageable," I cut him off, striding past him into the boardroom. "Connect to the mainframe. Bring up the Franklin accounts."
Marcus hesitated, then followed. The boardroom was cold, the massive screens on the wall reflecting the grey morning light. I sat at the head of the table—my father's seat.
"Initiate the Asset Freeze Protocol," I commanded.
Marcus blinked. "All of it?"
"Everything," I said, typing my authorization code into the terminal. "The security contracts for their perimeter. The construction crews renovating their East Wing. The credit lines underwriting their import business. Cut it all."
"Valerie, that will cripple them within a week. They have no liquidity. They've been leveraging our backing to keep the creditors at bay."
"I know," I said, watching a graph on the screen nose-dive as I hit *Enter*. "They wanted a common wolf. They’re about to find out just how expensive 'common' can be."
I watched the digital transfer of millions of dollars—money intended for the Franklin Foundation—flash red and vanish from their accounts, returning to the Weaver holding shell. It wasn't pettiness. It was business. Zachary had broken the contract of our union; I was simply enforcing the penalty clause.
Just then, the glass doors of the conference room burst open. My father stood there, looking pale.
"Valerie. You need to come down to the gates. Now."
I didn't look up from the slaughter on the screen. "I'm busy bankrupting your ex-future-in-laws, Dad."
"Valerie," he hissed, a tone of genuine fear in his voice that made me pause. "It's the Royal Guard. The King is here."
My fingers froze over the keyboard. The Lycan King? Peyton Hayes never left the Royal City unless heads were about to roll. Why was he here? Had Zachary already spun some lie to the Council?
"Fine," I said, standing up and smoothing my blazer. "Let's go greet our guest."
The atmosphere at the pack gates was thick enough to choke on. A convoy of matte black SUVs idled on the asphalt, the Royal crest—a silver wolf's head on a black shield—emblazoned on the doors. Our warriors stood in rigid formation, heads bowed, trembling slightly. The aura radiating from the lead vehicle was crushing, a scent of ozone and impending storms that forced my wolf to whimper in submission.
I bit the inside of my cheek. *Stand tall,* I ordered my wolf. *We bow to no one today.*
The door of the lead SUV opened. A man stepped out.
He was massive, taller than Zachary and twice as broad, wearing a black trench coat that seemed to absorb the light. His hair was dark as a raven's wing, and his face was a mask of cold, terrifying beauty. But it was his eyes that stopped my breath—molten silver, ancient and assessing.
King Peyton Hayes.
He scanned the trembling crowd of my pack members, his expression bored, until his gaze landed on me. The air around us seemed to snap with sudden electricity. His nostrils flared slightly, inhaling the scent of my distress, my anger, and the fresh wound of my rejection.
I stepped forward, fighting the urge to kneel under the weight of his power. "Your Majesty," I said, my voice steady despite the chaos in my veins. "To what do we owe the honor?"
He didn't speak immediately. He walked toward me, the crowd parting like water. He stopped inches from me, close enough that I could feel the heat radiating from his body. He looked down, his silver eyes searching mine, looking for something I couldn't name.
"I heard there was a disturbance in the balance," the King said, his voice a low rumble that vibrated in my chest. "I came to inspect the damage myself."
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