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After My Mate Rejected Me, I Claimed a Rogue King Novel Cover

After My Mate Rejected Me, I Claimed a Rogue King

The music in the pack hall was deafening, a throbbing bass that seemed to mock the pounding of my own heart. Tonight was supposed to be my triumph. My eighteenth birthday. The night I finally shifted, finally heard the voice of my wolf, and finally took my place beside Nolan Tucker as the future Luna of the Tucker Pack. But as I stood near the punch bowl, smoothing the fabric of my simple white dress, I felt nothing. No itch beneath my skin. No whisper in my mind. Just the crushing weight of a thousand eyes, all waiting for the Beta’s daughter to fail. "Drink up, Liv," a sweet voice purred beside me. Dakota Boyd pressed a crystal goblet into my hand.
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Chapter 4

The dress Max had chosen for me wasn’t just clothing; it was armor. Midnight blue silk cascaded down my body like liquid moonlight, hugging curves I didn't know I had until tonight. As I stood before the full-length mirror in the guest suite of Max’s estate, I barely recognized the woman staring back. Her chin was lifted, her eyes sharp. She didn't look like a wolfless reject. She looked like a queen.

"Breathe, Olivia," I whispered to my reflection, smoothing the fabric over my hips. "You survived the rejection. You can survive a party."

A knock at the door made me jump. Max stood there, looking devastating in a tailored black tuxedo that strained against his broad shoulders. His eyes swept over me, darkening with an intensity that made my breath hitch.

"You look..." He paused, searching for the word. "Dangerous."

"Is that a compliment?" I asked, my voice trembling slightly.

"The highest one I can give," he replied, offering me his arm. "Tonight, we show them exactly what they threw away."

The Grand Hall was a sea of glittering lights and expensive scents. Alphas from neighboring packs had gathered at the Lycan King's summons, their curiosity palpable. When we descended the staircase, the room fell silent. I felt hundreds of eyes on me—judging, assessing, wondering why the King had a wolfless girl on his arm.

Then I saw him. Nolan.

He was standing near the buffet, looking miserable in a grey suit. Beside him, Dakota wore a red dress that was too tight and too bright, clinging to his arm like a parasite. When Nolan saw me, he actually dropped his wine glass. It shattered on the marble floor, the sound echoing like a gunshot.

"Olivia?" he breathed, stepping forward as if in a trance.

"Careful, pup," Max rumbled beside me, his hand tightening protectively on my waist. "You're drooling."

Nolan’s face flushed red, his Alpha pride stinging. He marched up to us, ignoring the whispers of the crowd. "What is this game, Ford? You parade her around like a trophy? Everyone knows she's wolfless. She's defective."

"And yet," Max said, his voice silky and terrifyingly calm, "you can't take your eyes off her."

"She was mine first," Nolan snarled, his control slipping. "I have prior rights. The mate bond—"

"You rejected the bond," Max cut him off, his voice dropping an octave, vibrating with royal authority. The music stopped. Every Alpha in the room turned to watch. "You broke it in front of your entire pack. You cast her out into the dirt. You don't get to throw away a diamond and then cry when someone else picks it up."

Nolan opened his mouth to argue, but the sheer weight of Max’s aura slammed into him, forcing him to take a step back. He looked small. Weak. For the first time, I realized that the boy I had loved was just that—a boy playing at being a man.

Dakota stepped in, her eyes flashing with malice. "Come on, Nolan. Let's get a drink. The air here smells like... charity case."

She shot me a venomous look before dragging a humiliated Nolan toward the punch bowl. I watched her ladle drinks for several visiting Alphas, her smile too wide, too sharp. Something about it made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.

Ten minutes later, chaos erupted.

It started with a growl. Alpha Miller from the Northern territory suddenly dropped his glass and lunged at a waiter, his eyes rolling back in his head. Then another Alpha screamed, tearing at his own clothes. The scent of aggression and madness flooded the hall.

"The punch," I gasped, gripping Max's arm. "Dakota was serving them."

Before Max could respond, the perimeter alarms began to wail. A deep, guttural howl tore through the night air outside—rogues.

"Stay here," Max commanded, his eyes shifting to molten gold. "Guards! Protect her with your lives!"

He shifted mid-stride, his clothes shredding as a massive, midnight-black wolf exploded into the room, charging toward the chaos. The ballroom turned into a battlefield of confused, drugged Alphas and panicked guests.

"This way, Miss Spencer!" a guard shouted, grabbing my arm.

But before we could move, the lights cut out. In the darkness, I heard the guard grunt, followed by the heavy thud of a body hitting the floor. A hand clamped over my mouth, dragging me backward into a service corridor.

"Did you really think you could play dress-up and get away with it?" Dakota’s voice hissed in my ear.

She shoved me hard against the wall. In the dim emergency lighting, her face was twisted, ugly with hate. She held a silver dagger—illegal in pack territories—pressed against my ribs.

"You ruined everything," she spat. "Nolan was supposed to be focused on me. On *our* future. But he's obsessed with you again."

"You drugged the Alphas," I wheezed, my heart hammering against my ribs. "You let the rogues in."

"Smart girl," she sneered. "Just like I let them in five years ago to 'attack' Mrs. Tucker. It was so easy. A little wolfsbane in the perimeter sensors, a little acting... and suddenly I was the hero who saved the Luna. I owned that pack the moment I walked in."

The confession hit me like a physical blow. She had orchestrated everything. The attack on Nolan's mother. My humiliation. All of it.

"Why are you telling me this?" I asked, my eyes darting around the corridor.

"Because dead girls don't tell secrets," she raised the knife.

I didn't have a wolf. I didn't have claws or super strength. But I had grown up in these service corridors. I knew where the laundry chute was.

As she lunged, I didn't pull away. I dropped. I swept my leg out, catching her ankle. It wasn't a warrior's move, just desperate survival instinct. Dakota stumbled, surprised by my resistance. I scrambled back, grabbed a heavy brass vase from a hallway table, and swung it with everything I had.

It connected with her shoulder with a sickening thud. She shrieked, dropping the knife. I didn't wait to see if she recovered. I turned and ran, my silk dress tearing as I sprinted toward the kitchen exit.

Outside, the night was alive with growls and fighting. I found Max near the eastern wall, in human form again, wiping blood from his lip. The rogue attack had been repelled, but the tension was thick.

"Olivia!" He rushed to me, scanning me for injuries. "Are you hurt?"

"I'm fine," I panted, adrenaline shaking my hands. "It was Dakota. She admitted it, Max. She staged the attack on Mrs. Tucker years ago. She's the insider."

Max’s face hardened into stone. "Show me."

We moved to the breached section of the wall where the rogues had entered. The sensors hadn't gone off. I knelt in the dirt, ignoring the ruin of my beautiful dress. The air smelled of burnt ozone and... something sweet. Vanilla and rosemary.

"Smell this," I whispered, pointing to the sensor box. "It's a masking agent. It covers the scent of intruders."

Max leaned down, inhaling deeply. A low growl rumbled in his chest.

"I know this scent," I said, looking up at him, the pieces finally clicking into place. "It's the same perfume Dakota wears to cover her rogue scent. And look at the entry point."

I pointed to the hidden service gate covered in ivy. "This is exactly where the rogues came through five years ago when Mrs. Tucker was attacked. Dakota didn't just find a weak spot. She created it."

Max stood up, his power flaring around him like a storm. He looked back toward the estate, toward the woman who had tried to kill me.

"She wanted a war," Max said, his voice deadly quiet. "She's about to get one."

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