
From Rejected Mate to Queen
Chapter 2
Pain was the first thing to return. It wasn't the dull ache of a bruise or the sharp sting of a cut; it was a living, breathing entity that had taken up residence in every cell of my body. It felt as though the silver blade was still carving into me, over and over again.
I gasped, my eyes flying open, expecting the damp stone of the dungeon. Instead, I was blinded by pristine, clinical white light. The rhythmic beeping of machinery filled the air, a stark contrast to the silence of the grave I had expected.
"She's awake. Vitals are stabilizing, but the toxicity levels remain critical."
The voice was unfamiliar—calm, professional. I tried to turn my head, but my neck felt stiff, encased in thick bandages. A man in a white coat, Dr. Thorne, adjusted a drip beside my bed. But it was the other presence in the room that sucked the air from my lungs.
He stood by the window, a silhouette of pure, unadulterated power against the snowy backdrop of the Alps. The man from the forest.
"Where..." My voice was a shard of glass in my throat.
"You are safe, Juliette," the dark-haired man said, turning to face me. His voice was a low rumble that vibrated in my chest, strangely soothing against the fire in my veins. "You are in my territory."
I tried to sit up, panic seizing me. As I shifted, the sheet slipped down. Across the room, a large mirror hung on the wall. I froze.
The reflection staring back at me was a monster. Bandages covered my back, but the edges of the wounds on my chest were visible—angry, blackened flesh where the silver had burned through the skin, refusing to close. The word he had carved... even under the gauze, I could feel the weight of the letters branding me.
*Traitor.*
"No," I whimpered, the memory of Brodie’s rejection crashing over me like a tidal wave. My breath came in short, jagged gasps. "Get it off me! Get it off!"
The heart monitor spiked, a frantic staccato. I clawed at my own skin, desperate to tear away the tainted flesh.
"Restrain her! She'll rip the sutures!" Dr. Thorne shouted.
Before the doctor could move, the dark-haired man was there. He didn't grab me with force; he enveloped me. A scent of rain-soaked pine and ozone flooded my senses, so potent it drowned out the antiseptic stench. He placed a large, warm hand over my eyes, blocking out the mirror, blocking out the horror.
"Breathe, Little Wolf," he commanded. It wasn't an Alpha command that forced submission through fear; it was a wave of pure, calming pheromones that seeped into my pores, quieting the storm in my mind. "You are not what he did to you."
I collapsed against him, sobbing into his shirt, the first gentle touch I had felt since my life ended.
***
The next few months were a blur of agony and scalpels. Silver poisoning is a cruel sentence for a werewolf; it halts our natural regeneration, turning our greatest strength into a curse. The tissue around the carvings turned necrotic, requiring endless debridement and skin grafts.
Ryker—I learned his name, though he gave no title—was the only constant in my world of pain. He sat by my bedside while Dr. Thorne flayed the dead skin from my back, his hand gripping mine when I was too weak to scream.
One night, a fever raged through me, my body rejecting the latest graft. I was burning up, thrashing in the sheets, convinced I was back in the dungeon.
"It hurts," I deliriously whispered. "Make it stop."
Cool hands touched my burning forehead. Ryker leaned over me, his eyes glowing not with the typical Alpha gold, but a swirling, deep violet I had never seen recorded in any medical text. He placed his hands over the bandages on my back. A hum of energy, ancient and heavy, poured from him into me. It felt like cool water flowing over magma.
The agony receded, pulled from my body by his sheer will. I blinked up at him, my vision clearing. He looked exhausted, as if he had taken my pain onto himself.
"What are you?" I whispered, my healer's instincts sensing a power far beyond that of a normal Alpha.
He brushed a damp strand of hair from my face, his expression unreadable. "I am the one who will not let you die, Juliette."
***
A year passed. The seasons turned the white peaks of the Alps into lush green valleys, and slowly, I learned to walk again without bleeding.
I found solace in the stronghold's greenhouse. It was a glass cathedral filled with rare medicinal herbs. The scent of lavender and rosemary was the only thing that could mask the phantom smell of burning flesh that haunted my nightmares. I was pruning a batch of moonflowers, my fingers trembling slightly—nerve damage, Dr. Thorne had said.
The heavy thud of boots on the stone floor announced him. Ryker.
"You have a gift with them," he said, stopping beside me. He didn't loom, yet his presence filled the cavernous space.
"Plants don't judge," I murmured, keeping my back to him. I wore a high-collared shirt, buttoned to the chin, hiding everything. "They don't care about scars."
Ryker stepped closer, the magnetic pull between us undeniable. Over the last year, I had felt it growing—a tether in my chest, trying to reach out to him. But my wolf, Sienna, remained silent, buried under layers of trauma.
"I feel it too, Juliette," Ryker said softly, his voice rough with suppressed emotion. "The pull."
I stiffened, dropping the shears. I turned to face him, wrapping my arms around myself defensively. "Don't."
"Why not?" He took a step forward, his dark eyes searching mine.
"Because look at me!" I snapped, my voice cracking. I unbuttoned the top of my collar, pulling it aside to reveal the jagged, silver-puckered skin of my neck. "I am a map of betrayal, Ryker. I am damaged goods. Brodie rejected me because I was broken, and now... now I am a monster. I can never be a mate. I can never be a Luna."
The silence stretched, heavy and suffocating. I waited for him to look away in disgust, to offer pity.
Instead, Ryker reached out. His fingers, rough with calluses, traced the edge of the scar on my neck. His touch was reverent, like a believer touching a holy relic.
"He broke you to silence you," Ryker said, his voice dropping to a lethal, possessive growl that made my dormant wolf stir for the first time in a year. "But he failed. I do not see a monster, Juliette. I see a survivor. I see a Queen forged in fire."
He stepped closer, forcing me to look up at him.
"You think you are unworthy because you are scarred?" He shook his head slowly. "I will not just heal you, Juliette. I will help you sharpen those jagged edges until you are the weapon that brings them to their knees."
For the first time, I didn't pull away. In his violet eyes, I didn't see my ruin. I saw my revenge.
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