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After My Mate Marked the Rogue, I Rejected Him Novel Cover

After My Mate Marked the Rogue, I Rejected Him

The Black River Pack house looked exactly as I remembered it—stone and timber rising against the night sky, warm lights glowing in the windows. I'd been gone for two years leading allied pack training across Europe, and every day I'd thought about coming home to this. To him. I adjusted the tactical vest still strapped across my chest, feeling the weight of the rare dagger I'd forged for Caleb tucked against my ribs. My wolf stirred inside me, eager after the long flight. We were finally home. The front entrance was unlocked. I slipped inside, boots silent on the hardwood floors. Tomorrow was Caleb's birthday ceremony, but tonight—tonight was just for us. I wanted to see his face when he realized I'd come back early, that I was done with the front lines.
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Chapter 3

Time stopped meaning anything in the silver-lined cell.

I couldn't tell if it had been hours or days. The silver burned through my skin, seeping into my bones, turning my blood to poison. My wolf had gone silent—not the peaceful kind of quiet, but the terrifying absence of something that should be there. Like a heartbeat that just stops.

I lay on the cold stone floor because sitting up took too much energy. The fever came in waves, turning my thoughts into fragments. Caleb's face. Oaklynn's smile. The needle piercing my skin. My parents' photo in the trash.

Somewhere above me, footsteps echoed. Voices. The normal sounds of pack life continuing while I rotted in the dark.

I should have been angry. Should have been planning escape or revenge or something. But all I felt was empty. Hollowed out. Like Oaklynn had cleansed more than just our bedroom—she'd cleansed me right out of existence.

The locket was gone. They'd taken it when they threw me down here. The last piece of my parents, gone.

I closed my eyes and waited for whatever came next.

***

The explosion came without warning.

Not a real explosion—but it sounded like one. A massive crash from somewhere above, followed by shouting. Running footsteps. The whole dungeon shook, dust raining down from the ceiling.

I tried to lift my head. Failed.

More crashes. Closer now. And then—a scent.

Pine and winter frost. Sharp and clean, cutting through the rot and silver like a blade through silk. My wolf stirred for the first time in days, a weak flutter that felt like hope and hurt in equal measure.

The dungeon door didn't open. It exploded inward, torn off its hinges like it was made of paper.

A man filled the doorway. Massive. Dark hair, darker eyes, and an aura that made the air itself feel heavier. Alpha Paxton King. The Iron Wolf. I'd seen him at pack summits over the years, always watching, always critiquing my combat form with that intense stare that made me want to prove myself.

He looked at me, and something in his expression cracked.

"Elena." My name came out like a prayer and a curse. He crossed the cell in two strides, dropping to his knees beside me. His coat—heavy, warm, smelling like pine—wrapped around my shoulders before I could process what was happening. "What did they do to you?"

I tried to speak. My throat was too dry.

"Don't." His hands were gentle, impossibly gentle for someone called the Iron Wolf. "Save your strength."

Footsteps thundered down the stairs. Black River guards, weapons drawn. "Alpha King, you have no authority here—"

Paxton's growl cut them off. Not a human sound. Pure wolf, pure dominance, pure rage. The guards actually stumbled backward.

"Stand down." Caleb's voice. He appeared behind the guards, and for a second—just a second—I saw something like guilt flash across his face. "Paxton, this is pack business. You need to leave."

"Pack business." Paxton stood, lifting me with him like I weighed nothing. I should have protested. Should have said something. But his arms felt safe, and I couldn't remember the last time anything felt safe. "You call torturing your mate pack business?"

"She's not—" Caleb started.

"She is my Fated Mate." The words rang through the dungeon like a bell. "And you have forfeited your life by touching her."

The silence that followed was absolute.

I stared at Paxton's face, trying to make sense of the words. Fated mate. The Moon Goddess's bond. The thing that was supposed to be sacred, unbreakable, real.

"That's impossible," Caleb said. But his voice shook.

"I've known for years." Paxton's arms tightened around me. "Since the summit. I stayed away because she chose you. Because I respected that choice. But you threw away what I would have died to protect."

He turned toward the stairs, carrying me like I was something precious instead of something broken.

"You can't just take her," Caleb said. "I'm her Alpha—"

"You're nothing." Paxton's voice dropped to something deadly quiet. "And if anyone tries to stop me, I will consider it an act of war."

No one moved.

Paxton carried me up the stairs, through the pack house, past the staring faces. I caught a glimpse of Oaklynn in the hallway, her expression twisted with something that might have been fear.

Good.

The night air hit my face, cool and clean. I sucked in a breath that didn't taste like silver and rot.

"I've got you," Paxton murmured. "You're safe now. I promise."

And for the first time in three days—maybe for the first time in years—I believed someone.

***

I woke up to softness.

Not the hard stone of the dungeon. Not even the familiar bed I'd shared with Caleb. This was different—clean sheets that smelled like lavender, a pillow that cradled my head, warmth that didn't come from fever.

I opened my eyes.

The room was unfamiliar. Cream-colored walls, wooden beams across the ceiling, sunlight streaming through gauzy curtains. A healer's wing, I realized. But not Black River's.

"Easy." A woman's voice, gentle but firm. She appeared beside the bed—older, with kind eyes and healer's hands. "You're in the Blood Moon Pack. I'm Sarah Mitchell. You're safe here."

Safe. That word again.

I tried to sit up. My body protested, but it was the normal ache of healing, not the burning agony of silver poisoning.

"Your wolf is recovering," Sarah said, checking my pulse with practiced efficiency. "The silver did damage, but nothing permanent. You're strong."

The door opened. Paxton entered, and I tensed automatically. But he wasn't wearing his Alpha authority like armor. He carried a tray—soup, bread, water—and his expression was almost uncertain.

"I thought you might be hungry," he said.

I stared at him. At the tray. At this man who'd torn through a pack house to save me, who'd declared me his fated mate in front of everyone.

"Why?" The word came out hoarse.

"Because you haven't eaten in three days."

"No. Why did you save me? Why now?"

Paxton set the tray on the bedside table and pulled up a chair. He sat, meeting my eyes with that intense stare I remembered from pack summits. "Because my wolf was dying. Because I felt you dying, and I couldn't—" He stopped. Started again. "I should have acted sooner. I'm sorry."

"Fated mates," I said. Testing the words.

"Yes." No hesitation. "I've known since the first summit we attended together. Your scent—" He paused. "Lilies. Not the decaying kind. Fresh ones, after rain. My wolf recognized you immediately."

My wolf stirred inside me, stronger now. And she was purring. Actually purring, a sound I'd never heard her make, not even with Caleb.

"I won't force the bond," Paxton said quickly. "You've been through hell. You need time to heal. I'm offering you sanctuary as a guest first. No expectations. No pressure."

I looked at him—really looked. At the way he held himself carefully, like he was afraid of overwhelming me. At the genuine concern in his eyes. At the tray of food he'd brought himself instead of sending a servant.

"Okay," I whispered.

His expression softened. "Okay?"

"Okay, I'll stay. For now."

It wasn't acceptance. It wasn't love. It wasn't even trust, not yet.

But it was a beginning.

And for the first time in years, that felt like enough.

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