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Alpha Rejected Me While Pregnant Novel Cover

Alpha Rejected Me While Pregnant

The crystal chandeliers cast dancing shadows across the grand hall, their light reflecting off champagne glasses and ceremonial silver. I smoothed my hands over the Luna robes—deep midnight blue embroidered with silver moon phases—and felt the weight of tradition settle across my swollen belly. Seven months pregnant, and I still moved through the crowd like I'd done this a thousand times before. Because I had. "Alpha Lyra," greeted Alpha Thomson from the Northern Ridge Pack, his weathered face creasing into a smile. "Your territory expansion proposal was brilliant. My council approved it this morning." I smiled, the political mask I'd perfected over five years as Luna sliding into place. "I'm glad we could find common ground, Alpha Thomson. The shared hunting grounds will benefit both our packs." But even as I spoke, my eyes searched the room for Cyrus. My husband.
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Chapter 2

The blizzard hit on our second night as rogues.

Marcus half-carried me through the whiteout, one arm locked around my waist while Derek blazed trail ahead. Silas guarded our backs, his wolf form barely visible through the driving snow. Every step felt like wading through broken glass—not from the cold, but from the gaping wound where my bond with Cyrus used to be.

My wolf had gone silent. Not the peaceful kind of quiet. The terrifying kind.

"There," Derek's voice cut through the wind. "Cave, thirty yards north."

I don't remember reaching it. One moment I was stumbling through snow that burned my bare feet—they'd taken my shoes along with everything else—and the next I was on cold stone, shaking so violently my teeth cracked together.

"She's going into shock." Marcus's hands were on my face, rough and warm. "Derek, we need fire. Now."

"On it."

I tried to speak, but my jaw wouldn't work right. The cold had sunk into my bones, or maybe it was the severed bond, draining my wolf's ability to regulate my body temperature. Either way, I was dying. I could feel it in the sluggish beat of my heart, the way my fingers had gone numb.

The pup kicked weakly.

No. Not the pup. Anything but the pup.

Marcus stripped off his jacket and wrapped it around me, then pulled me against his chest. His body heat felt like fire against my frozen skin. I wanted to protest—Beta and Luna, there were protocols—but I couldn't form words.

"I've got you," he murmured. "Just hold on."

Derek got a fire going somehow, coaxing flames from damp wood with the kind of survival skills I'd never needed to learn. The warmth crept toward us in waves, but it wasn't enough. Nothing was enough.

I drifted in and out. Sometimes I saw Marcus's worried face above me. Sometimes I saw Cyrus, looking at Selene like she'd hung the moon. Sometimes I felt small hands inside me, the pup fighting to stay alive in a body that was failing.

"Talk to me, Luna." Marcus's voice pulled me back. "Stay with us. Where do we go from here?"

Where? We were rogues now. No pack. No territory. No—

Obsidian.

The thought crystallized through the fever haze. Alpha Caleb's territory bordered Silverclaw to the west. Hostile. Dangerous. Our greatest rival for resources and trade routes.

Perfect.

I forced my jaw to work. "Obsidian Pack."

Marcus went still. "Lyra, Caleb will kill us on sight."

"No." I grabbed his shirt, my fingers clumsy. "Ghost Protocol. I built it. Years ago. Fail-safe."

I'd done it when Cyrus first became Alpha, when I realized he was all bluster and no strategy. A deliberate weakness in our defense grid, hidden so deep that even I would need to concentrate to find it again. Insurance, in case everything went wrong.

Everything had gone wrong.

"We have leverage," I whispered. "Defense codes. Silverclaw's entire perimeter. Worth... worth sanctuary."

Marcus's eyes widened. Then he smiled, fierce and proud. "You brilliant, devious woman."

Two days later, we crossed into Obsidian territory.

I could walk again, barely. The cold had released its grip enough for my wolf to stir, a faint whimper in the back of my mind. Not strong. Not healthy. But alive.

The patrol found us within minutes.

Ten wolves, all massive, all radiating the kind of controlled violence that came from serious training. They circled us, growling, and I felt Marcus and Derek tense beside me.

Then the largest wolf shifted.

Alpha Caleb was a wall of scarred muscle and cold authority. His eyes—pale gray, like winter ice—swept over us with zero mercy. When he spoke, his voice carried the weight of absolute power.

"You're on Obsidian land. Give me one reason not to rip your throats out."

I stepped forward.

Marcus tried to grab my arm, but I shook him off. My legs trembled. My Luna robes were shredded and blood-stained. I probably looked like a corpse walking.

But I met Caleb's eyes without flinching.

"Your southern perimeter has a breach," I said clearly. "Coordinates 47.6N, 122.3W. There's a blind spot in your patrol rotation between 0300 and 0400 hours. A skilled team could infiltrate and reach your main compound in under twenty minutes."

Caleb's expression didn't change, but something flickered in those ice-chip eyes.

"I can give you Silverclaw's complete defense grid," I continued. "Every weakness, every patrol route, every hidden entrance. In exchange for sanctuary and a healer."

"You'd betray your pack?"

"They're not my pack anymore."

The words tasted like ash, but they were true. Cyrus had made sure of that.

Caleb studied me for a long moment. I could feel him taking in every detail—the pregnancy, the broken bond radiating from me like a wound, the three high-ranking wolves who'd abandoned everything to follow me.

"Temporary truce," he said finally. "You get medical care and shelter. If your information proves valuable, we'll discuss permanent terms."

He turned and shifted back to wolf form, clearly expecting us to follow.

Marcus leaned close as we walked. "That was insane."

"That was survival," I corrected.

The guest cottage was small but warm—blessedly, impossibly warm. Guards stationed themselves outside, making it clear we were prisoners as much as guests. I didn't care. There was a bed. There was heat.

There was a healer.

Elena Blackwood had kind eyes and gentle hands. She examined me thoroughly while Marcus paced and Derek stood guard at the door.

"The baby's stressed but alive," she said finally. "But your wolf... Luna, she's fading. The rejection trauma—"

"I know." I did know. I could feel her slipping away, taking my strength with her.

"You need rest. Complete rest. And—" Elena hesitated. "You need to rebuild your bond with your wolf. Find something to anchor to, or you'll both fade."

After she left, I sat at the small table and started reconstructing Silverclaw's trade ledgers from memory. Numbers and routes and contracts—things I could control when everything else was chaos.

I was three pages in when the door opened.

Alpha Caleb filled the doorway, his presence sucking the air from the room. He stared at me, then at the papers spread across the table.

"You should be resting."

"I should be a lot of things." I didn't look up. "The breach coordinates I gave you—did you verify them?"

"Yes." He moved closer, and I felt rather than saw his frown. "You're working on trade agreements."

"Your pack's eastern routes are inefficient. You're losing thirty percent profit margin to redundant transportation costs."

Silence.

Then: "You just lost everything. Your mate rejected you. You're pregnant and your wolf is dying. And you're... optimizing trade routes?"

I finally looked up at him. His expression was caught between irritation and something else. Something almost like respect.

"I'm doing what I'm good at," I said simply. "Everything else can wait."

His pale eyes held mine, and I felt a strange pull—not a mate bond, nothing like that. But something. Recognition, maybe. The acknowledgment of one survivor seeing another.

"Get some rest, Lyra Anderson," he said quietly. "We'll talk terms in the morning."

After he left, I allowed myself to shake. Just for a moment. Just long enough to feel the weight of what I'd done—gambling everything on a rival Alpha's curiosity and my own strategic value.

Then I picked up my pen and went back to work.

The pup kicked, stronger this time.

We were going to survive this. Both of us.

I'd make damn sure of it.

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