
After My Mate Rejected Me, I Reclaimed Power
Chapter 2
The hall of Silver Ridge Pack fell silent as I stood before them, my heart hammering against my ribs. Faces I once knew—faces that should have lit with recognition—stared back at me with cold suspicion. At the center of it all stood Ryan, his golden eyes devoid of the love I remembered. Beside him, Rebecca's fingers were intertwined with his, the Luna pendant—my pendant—gleaming at her throat.
I had rushed here with such hope, such certainty. The mate bond had pulled me like a physical force, guiding me home after five long, empty years. But the reunion I'd imagined had shattered the moment I crossed their borders.
"You abandoned us," Ryan had snarled when I first approached. "You abandoned our son."
Now, as the pack gathered in formal assembly, I knew what was coming. Still, I fought.
"I was attacked by rogues," I pleaded, my voice echoing in the cavernous hall. "I lost my memory. I didn't leave by choice!"
Rebecca's lips curved into a sympathetic smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Poor Aria," she cooed, loud enough for all to hear. "Always with an excuse."
Ryan stepped forward, his Alpha aura pressing down on me like a physical weight. The hall seemed to darken as he raised his chin, eyes flashing with power.
"I, Ryan Sterling, Alpha of Silver Ridge Pack," he began, his voice resonating with Alpha tone that made my knees weaken, "reject you, Aria Blackwood, as my mate."
The words hit me like physical blows. Each syllable tore through me, ripping apart the bond I'd only just rediscovered. I gasped, clutching my chest as searing pain radiated from my heart through every limb.
"Your abandonment broke our bond years ago," Ryan continued, his voice distant through the roaring in my ears. "This merely formalizes what you already chose."
I collapsed to my knees, the ceremonial rejection severing what had once been sacred. Through tear-blurred vision, I saw Rebecca's smile widen, satisfaction gleaming in her eyes as she squeezed Ryan's hand.
"Jake doesn't know you," Ryan said, softer now. "He has a mother. The pack has a Luna. There is no place for you here anymore."
I wanted to scream, to fight, to make them understand. But the rejection's pain was overwhelming, stealing my breath, my strength, my voice. The mate bond that had guided me here was being systematically destroyed, leaving a hollow void where it had burned so brightly.
As darkness crept at the edges of my vision, I felt a presence at the border of my mind—a gentle probe, concerned and warm.
*Aria? Your pain... I can feel it across the territories. What's happened?*
Christopher. His mind-link was faint across the distance, but it was a lifeline in my ocean of agony.
*They rejected me,* I managed to project back, each thought sending fresh waves of pain through my skull. *Formal rejection... can't...*
I couldn't finish the thought as another wave of pain crashed through me. The last thing I saw before consciousness fled was Rebecca leaning down to whisper in my ear, her voice honey-sweet with poison.
"Did you really think you could just come back and reclaim what's mine now?"
When awareness returned, I was being carried in strong arms. The scent of pine and rain filled my senses—Christopher. His face was tight with controlled fury as he strode across what I recognized as the neutral territory between our packs.
"I've got you," he murmured, his Alpha aura a gentle shield around me, so different from the crushing weight Ryan had wielded. "My healer is waiting."
Behind him walked his Beta and three warriors, their expressions grim. They had come for me, crossing territories at great risk.
"How did you know?" I whispered, each word sending fresh pain through my chest.
"I felt your agony," Christopher said simply. "No one deserves to be alone through a rejection."
His healer, an elderly woman with kind eyes, met us at the border of Crimson Shadow territory. Her hands glowed with rare healing ability as she pressed them to my temples, then my chest.
"The rejection was brutal," she murmured. "Deliberately so. He wanted to break you completely."
As she worked, I found myself whispering my story to Christopher through our mind-link, unable to voice aloud the betrayal that cut so deep. He listened silently, his jaw tightening with each revelation.
"Rest now," he finally said, his voice gentle but firm. "You're safe here."
Three days later, I insisted on patrolling our southern border despite Christopher's protests. I needed movement, purpose, anything to fill the hollow ache where my mate bond had been.
That's when I found him—a tiny wolf pup, no more than a few months old, trembling beneath a fallen log. His fur was matted with mud and blood not his own. When I reached for him, he whimpered but didn't run.
"It's okay," I whispered, gathering his small form into my arms. "I've got you."
As I held him, something warm and protective bloomed in my chest—a feeling I'd expected to have when I saw Jake again. But Jake had looked at me with a stranger's eyes, calling another woman "mother."
This pup, however, nuzzled into my neck, his tiny heart racing against mine. In that moment, I made a silent vow: I might have lost one child, but I would not fail this one.
"Tommy," I whispered, the name coming to me unbidden. "Your name is Tommy."
He looked up at me with trusting eyes, and I felt something inside me shift. The void left by rejection began to fill with something new—not a mate bond, but something equally powerful. Something they couldn't take from me.
As I carried Tommy back toward my territory, I caught a familiar scent on the wind—Rebecca's. She had been here, at my borders. Watching. Waiting.
My arms tightened around Tommy. Whatever game Rebecca was playing, whatever she and Ryan had done, I would discover the truth. And this time, I wouldn't be the one who fell.
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