
After My Mate Rejected Me, the Lycan King Claimed Me
Chapter 3
The smell of bleach had become my new perfume. For two weeks, I had lived on my knees, not in prayer, but in servitude. My hands, once used to signing treaties and calming traumatized pups, were now red and cracked from scrubbing the pack house floors.
I was invisible. I was a ghost haunting the halls I used to rule.
"Missed a spot, Omega," Kehlani chirped, deliberately tipping her latte onto the pristine tiles of the foyer. The brown liquid splashed against the hem of my oversized, gray t-shirt—the uniform of the lowest rank.
I didn't look up. I didn't speak. I just dipped my rag into the bucket of gray water and began to wipe.
"She’s mute now, Ren," Kehlani laughed, turning to Lorenzo, who was watching from the doorway of his office. "Maybe the miscarriage took her voice, too."
Lorenzo didn't laugh, but he didn't stop her. He just looked at me with a mixture of disgust and something else—guilt? No, that would require a conscience.
I focused on the rhythm of the scrubbing. *Circle, wipe, wring.* My silence was the only shield I had left. If I spoke, I would scream, and if I screamed, they would win.
Later, in the shadows behind the industrial laundry machines, a hand grabbed my arm. I flinched, dropping a basket of towels, but it was Teo. My former Beta looked tired, dark circles bruising the skin under his eyes.
"Take this," he whispered, sliding a cheap burner phone into the pocket of my leggings. "Hide it."
"Teo, if he catches you..." my voice was raspy from disuse.
" Let him," Teo hissed, his eyes flashing with suppressed anger. "The accounts are bleeding, Sabrina. Lorenzo authorized a transfer for Kehlani’s 'wardrobe allowance' that wiped out the warrior training budget. The suppliers are threatening to cut us off. He can’t read your coding system on the ledgers, and he’s too proud to ask for the keys."
A grim satisfaction settled in my chest. I had built this pack’s prosperity brick by brick. It was only fitting that removing the foundation would make the house crumble. "Let it burn, Teo."
"Careful," he warned, squeezing my shoulder before slipping away. "He’s planning something for tonight. A show of force."
He was right.
At sunset, the gathering bells tolled—a deep, resonant sound that usually signaled celebration or war. Two enforcers barged into the laundry room, grabbing me by the arms before I could even stand.
"Move, Omega," one grunted, dragging me out the back door and toward the central square.
The entire pack was there. Hundreds of wolves stood in silent formation, their eyes tracking me as I was hauled through the dirt. I saw pity in some gazes, mockery in others. I kept my chin high, even as my bare feet stumbled over the gravel.
Lorenzo and Kehlani stood on the raised wooden platform in the center of the square. Kehlani was wearing a white silk gown, looking every bit the blushing bride, though her smile was predatory. Lorenzo wore his ceremonial Alpha furs.
The guards threw me down at the base of the stairs. The impact jarred my teeth, sending a fresh wave of ache through my healing body.
"Citizens of the Shadow Moon Pack!" Lorenzo’s voice boomed, amplified by the natural acoustics of the square. "Tonight, we officially welcome your true Luna. But before we begin the celebration, we must clear away the remnants of the past."
He pointed a finger at me.
"Sabrina Barnes," he commanded, his Alpha tone pressing down on my shoulders like a physical weight. "Kneel before Luna Kehlani. Acknowledge her station. Kiss the hem of her dress and beg for her mercy, and perhaps I will let you remain in the pack instead of exiling you to the Rogues."
The square went dead silent. Even the wind seemed to hold its breath.
My wolf, Sasha, stirred from her grief-stricken slumber. She was weak, but she was proud.
I stood up.
My legs shook, and my rags hung loosely on my frame, but I stood. I looked Lorenzo dead in the eye, then shifted my gaze to Kehlani.
"No," I said. It wasn't loud, but it carried.
Kehlani’s smile faltered. Lorenzo’s face darkened, turning a violent shade of red.
"What did you say?" he growled, stepping down the first stair.
"I said no," I repeated, my voice gaining strength. "I will not kneel to a mistress. I will not bow to a thief. She has no aura. She has no power. She is not a Luna; she is a pet."
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
Lorenzo roared. It was a feral, ugly sound. He closed the distance between us in two strides, his hand raised high, palm open but heavy with Alpha strength. He was going to strike me. He was going to beat me into submission in front of the people I used to protect.
I didn't flinch. I didn't close my eyes. I wanted them to see. I wanted them to see exactly what their Alpha was.
His hand began its descent.
*Growl.*
It wasn't a sound; it was an earthquake. A low, vibrating thrum that shook the ground beneath our feet and rattled the teeth in my skull. It wasn't the growl of a wolf; it was the roar of a monster.
Lorenzo froze, his hand suspended inches from my face. His eyes went wide, the amber light in them flickering out, replaced by sudden, primal fear.
Gravel crunched loudly as a convoy of four matte-black SUVs tore into the square, ignoring the perimeter guards. They screeched to a halt in a V-formation, blocking the exit.
The air pressure in the square dropped instantly. Gravity seemed to double. It was an Aura, but not like Lorenzo’s. This wasn't a wave; it was an ocean. It was ancient, heavy, and absolute.
Every wolf in the square dropped to the ground. Not out of respect, but because their instincts gave them no choice. Even Lorenzo stumbled back, his knees buckling, fighting to stay upright.
The door of the lead SUV opened. A polished black boot hit the dirt.
Alpha King Orion Spencer stepped out.
He was taller than I remembered, his shoulders broader. He wore a tailored black suit that strained against his muscles, and his eyes... his eyes were molten gold, burning with a rage that could incinerate cities.
He didn't look at Lorenzo. He didn't look at the cowering pack. He walked straight toward me, moving through the crushing pressure of his own aura as if it were nothing.
Lorenzo opened his mouth to speak, to challenge the intrusion, but Orion simply tilted his head. A wave of pure dominance slammed into Lorenzo, forcing him to his knees with a bone-cracking thud.
Orion stopped in front of me. I was the only one left standing, trembling not from his power, but from the sheer intensity of his gaze.
He unbuttoned his suit jacket, sliding it off his shoulders in one fluid motion. The scent of rain and cedarwood enveloped me—pure, clean, and safe—as he draped the heavy coat around my shivering frame.
"Forgive me for being late," he murmured, his voice a deep velvet rumble that soothed the jagged edges of my soul.
He reached out, his large, warm hand cupping my chin, tilting my face up until I was drowning in his golden eyes.
"Lift your head, Sabrina," he commanded softly, loud enough for Lorenzo to hear from the dirt. "A Queen does not bow to peasants."
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