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After My Mate Rejected Me, the Lycan Claimed Me Novel Cover

After My Mate Rejected Me, the Lycan Claimed Me

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.
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Chapter 2

They threw a party.

I could hear it from the healer quarters—music drifting through the walls, laughter rising and falling in waves, the clink of glasses. Celebrating what, exactly, no one said out loud. They didn't have to. Harmony had moved into the Luna's suite that afternoon, and the pack had decided, collectively and without ceremony, that this was something worth celebrating.

My mother had been dead for four days.

I sat on the edge of the cot in the small room I'd been quietly relocated to—a storage-adjacent space near the east corridor that smelled like old wood and disuse—and I listened to the party, and I waited for the grief to swallow me whole the way I expected it to.

It didn't.

What came instead was something quieter. Colder. A kind of clarity that grief sometimes leaves behind when it burns hot enough, long enough. I thought about my mother's hands. I thought about the emergency reserves sitting untouched in the eastern storage while she struggled to breathe. I thought about Bowen's face when he said we're done here—not cruel, exactly. Just indifferent. Like I was a scheduling conflict he'd already resolved.

And then I thought: he has records.

Bowen kept everything. It was one of his Alpha habits, the need to document his own authority—every resource allocation, every pack decision, every transaction that passed through his hands. He kept the ledgers in his private study, locked in the lower cabinet behind his desk. I knew this because I had spent five years in that pack house, and invisible women notice things.

I also knew that on party nights, Bowen's study sat empty.

I didn't let myself think too hard about what I was doing. Thinking too hard would have stopped me.

The hallway outside the study was quiet. The music from the main hall covered the sound of my footsteps, covered the soft click of the lock giving way—I'd watched Bowen open that cabinet enough times to know the combination, another thing invisible women collect without meaning to. Inside: rows of bound ledgers, organized by year, by category, by the particular obsessiveness of a man who trusted no one and therefore needed everything written down.

I found the financial records first. Pack resource allocations going back six years. I flipped to the entries from five years ago—the month of my coming-of-age ceremony—and there it was, buried between a weapons procurement order and a routine supply run. A payment. A significant one. Recipient: S. Vance. Purpose listed as: ceremonial preparation oversight.

Silas. Bowen's Beta. The man who had personally overseen my awakening ceremony.

I kept looking.

It took me another twenty minutes to find the second document—a handwritten note, folded once and tucked inside the back cover of that year's ledger like he'd forgotten it was there, or like he'd never imagined anyone would look. It was in Bowen's handwriting. Specific instructions about the preparation of the awakening herbs. Which compounds to substitute. What the effect would be.

I read it twice. Then I folded it carefully, along with the relevant ledger pages, and placed them inside my work bag, in the inner pocket beside my mother's pressed flower.

My hands were steady. I noticed that.

I left the study exactly as I'd found it.

---

The Pack Council's neutral territory was a four-hour drive. I left before dawn, told no one, and was back before the pack stirred for morning training. The Council Elder who received me was a woman in her sixties with silver-streaked hair and the particular stillness of someone who had heard every kind of terrible thing and learned not to flinch. I laid the documents on the table between us and explained, in plain language, what they proved.

She studied them for a long time without speaking.

Then she said: 'A formal tribunal will be convened. You'll be notified of the date. Until then, you return to your pack and you say nothing.'

'I understand.'

'This process will be difficult for you.'

'I know.'

She looked at me over the documents. 'Most wolves in your position don't invoke the tribunal. They leave quietly.'

I thought about my mother. About the eastern storage. About Harmony's boxes being carried into the Luna's suite while my mother's room was still warm.

'I know that too,' I said.

---

I went back.

Bowen made a comment at dinner that evening about Omegas who didn't know when they'd overstayed their welcome. Harmony laughed, soft and practiced. Several pack members looked away. Several didn't.

I ate my food. I kept my face neutral. I thought about the documents sitting in my work bag, and I thought about the Council Elder's steady hands, and I let Bowen's words move through me like wind through an open window—present for a moment, then gone.

The tribunal date would come.

I just had to still be standing when it did.

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