
After My Mate Rejected Me, the Lycan Claimed Me
Chapter 1
I had rehearsed what I would say a hundred times on the walk over.
My name is Alexis Watson. I am the fated mate of Alpha Bowen Adams. My mother is dying, and I am asking—not for myself, but for her. For the woman who has healed this pack's wounded for twenty years. Please.
I knocked twice, then pushed the office door open without waiting for an answer. I didn't have time to wait.
Bowen was behind his desk, and Harmony was perched on the edge of it like she belonged there. Like she had always belonged there. She looked up when I entered, and something moved across her face—not surprise. Satisfaction.
'Alexis.' Bowen's voice was flat. 'I don't recall scheduling anything with you.'
'You didn't.' I kept my eyes on him and not on her. 'My mother's condition has worsened overnight. The pack healer says she needs the emergency medical reserves—the ones in the eastern storage. I'm asking you to release them.'
A pause. Harmony leaned close to Bowen and murmured something I wasn't meant to hear, but I did. Wolfless gold-digger. Probably faking it for sympathy.
Bowen's expression didn't change. That was almost the worst part—how unchanged he was.
'The pack's emergency resources,' he said, 'exist for pack members who contribute to this pack's strength.' His Alpha tone settled over the room like a physical weight, pressing down on my shoulders, my chest, the back of my knees. 'Your mother's situation does not meet that threshold. I won't authorize the release.'
I heard the words. I understood them. But some part of me kept waiting for the rest of the sentence—the part where he reconsidered, where twenty years of her service to this pack meant something, where being his fated mate meant I was allowed to ask for one thing.
That part never came.
'She has healed every warrior in this pack,' I said. My voice was steady. I had learned, a long time ago, that losing my composure only gave him more reason to dismiss me. 'She has healed your Beta. Your Gamma. She sat with your father when he was dying and held his hand through the night. She—'
'Alexis.' The Alpha tone again, harder this time. Final. 'We're done here.'
I walked back to the healer quarters with empty hands.
The hallway smelled like antiseptic and dried herbs, the same smell it had always had, the smell I associated with safety when I was small. My mother's hands. Her voice telling me to breathe. I pushed open the door to her room and she was still there, still breathing, but the breathing had changed—shallow and uneven, with long pauses between that made my own lungs seize.
I sat beside her and took her hand.
I don't know how long I sat there. Long enough for the light through the window to shift from afternoon gold to the flat gray of early evening. She didn't speak again after I arrived. I think some part of her had been waiting—not for the medicine, but for me. To not be alone.
She wasn't.
When it was over, I stayed very still for a long time. The room was quiet in a way rooms only get when someone has just left them permanently.
There was a small clay pot on the windowsill, the one she kept her garden cuttings in. A single flower, pale and pressed almost flat from the dry air. I don't know why I took it. I just knew I couldn't leave it there to wilt in an empty room. I folded it carefully into the lining of my work bag, in the inner pocket where I kept things I couldn't afford to lose.
I carried her out of that room in the only way I had left.
The days after her death moved strangely—too fast and too slow at once. I went through the motions of existing. I ate when I remembered to. I slept in short, broken stretches.
And then, four days later, I walked into the pack house and found Harmony's belongings being carried into the Luna's suite.
Not a guest room. Not a temporary arrangement. The Luna's suite. My suite, in the only technical sense the word had ever applied to me.
I stepped in front of the door. I don't know what I thought I was going to do—I just stopped moving, and my body filled the frame, and for one moment the pack members carrying her boxes hesitated.
Then Bowen's hand closed around my arm.
He didn't drag me violently. He didn't need to. He simply moved, and I was moved with him, out through the side entrance and into the courtyard where half the pack had gathered for the evening meal. The conversation died when we appeared.
All those faces. People I had lived among for five years. People my mother had healed.
Bowen released my arm and stepped back, and when he spoke, his Alpha tone carried across the entire courtyard without effort.
'I, Bowen Adams, Alpha of the Black Moon Pack, reject you, Alexis Watson, as my fated mate.'
The bond broke like something physical.
I had heard other wolves describe rejection before—the way it tears through you, soul-deep, like something essential is being ripped out by the root. I had always thought that was an exaggeration.
My knees hit the ground before I understood I was falling.
The pain was everywhere and nowhere. It wasn't in my body. It was in the place where the bond had lived, the place I hadn't even known I was still protecting, and now that place was just—open. Raw. A wound with no edges.
I pressed my palm flat against the cold stone of the courtyard and breathed.
Around me, the pack watched in silence.
I was no longer a Luna. I was no longer a mate. I was no longer anything this pack had a word for.
But I was still breathing.
And somewhere in the wreckage of that moment, beneath the grief and the humiliation and the pain that had no name, something else was beginning to move—quiet and certain and entirely mine.
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