
From Rejected to Royalty
Chapter 1
I smoothed down the front of my silver gown for the twentieth time, my fingers trembling slightly as they traced the delicate beadwork. Three months of overtime shifts at the pack's coffee shop had paid for this dress—a dress I'd hoped would finally make me look like I belonged among the Silvermoon elite. Like I deserved to stand beside their future Alpha.
"You can do this, Lauren," I whispered to my reflection, forcing a smile that didn't quite reach my eyes. Seven years of loving Steven, seven years of enduring whispers and sidelong glances from his pack members, and tonight was supposed to be the beginning of the end of all that. Our marking ceremony was just weeks away.
The Full Moon Festival was in full swing by the time I arrived at the clearing. Fairy lights twinkled in the trees surrounding the ceremonial grounds, and the enormous bonfire cast dancing shadows across the faces of pack members dressed in their finest. The scent of roasted meat and sweet wine hung in the air, mingling with the earthy perfume of the forest at night.
"Lauren! You made it," called a friendly voice. I turned to see Marcus, one of the few pack members who had always treated me with kindness despite my wolfless status.
"Have you seen Steven?" I asked, scanning the crowd for his familiar broad shoulders and sandy hair.
Marcus's smile faltered. "He's... around somewhere. Can I get you a drink?"
Something in his tone made my stomach tighten, but I pushed the feeling away. "No, thank you. I should find him before the ceremony starts."
I weaved through the crowd, nodding politely at pack members who acknowledged me with varying degrees of warmth. Some, like Elder Maeve Blackwood, didn't bother to hide their disdain, turning pointedly away as I passed. I was used to it—the price of being a wolfless orphan daring to love an Alpha's son.
"Looking for my brother?" Sarah's voice sliced through the night air like a blade. Steven's sister stood with a group of she-wolves, all wearing nearly identical smirks. "He's busy with pack business. Very important matters."
The way she emphasized "important" made my chest ache, but I lifted my chin. "Then I'll wait for him at the ceremony."
Sarah's laugh followed me as I walked away, my silver dress suddenly feeling too tight, too conspicuous. I found a spot near the ceremonial dais where I could watch for Steven's arrival. The moon rose higher, full and luminous, bathing everything in ethereal light.
The drums began, signaling the start of the ceremony. Alpha Richard Hayes took his place on the dais, his powerful presence commanding immediate silence from the gathered pack. I stood on tiptoes, searching for Steven among those approaching the platform.
When I finally spotted him, my heart leapt—then froze mid-beat.
Steven wasn't alone. Jessica Chen walked beside him, her hand tucked into the crook of his arm, her face glowing with triumph. She wore white—pure, bridal white—and diamonds glittered at her throat.
"No," I whispered, the word lost in the excited murmurs rippling through the crowd.
Alpha Richard's voice boomed across the clearing: "Tonight, under the blessing of the full moon, we witness a momentous occasion for the Silvermoon Pack."
I couldn't breathe. This wasn't happening. This couldn't be happening.
Steven stepped forward, his gaze sweeping over the crowd but somehow never finding me. "I stand before my pack tonight to announce my chosen mate and future Luna."
The mate bond in my chest flared with searing pain. Every instinct screamed at me to run, but I remained frozen, unable to look away from the nightmare unfolding before me.
"Jessica Chen," Steven's voice rang clear in the night air, "who has proven herself worthy of standing by my side as we lead this pack into the future."
The crowd erupted in cheers and applause. Through the blur of my tears, I saw Sarah's face, alight with malicious joy as she clapped louder than anyone.
Something inside me shattered—seven years of love, of compromise, of believing I was building a future. The pain of the betrayal was physical, a burning agony radiating from where our mate bond had taken root in my soul.
I backed away, bumping into pack members who barely noticed me in their excitement. Someone laughed—a harsh, familiar sound. Sarah's voice cut through the celebration: "Looks like the wolfless freak finally got the message."
I turned and ran, my silver dress catching moonlight like tears as I fled through the trees, away from the man who had promised me forever and the pack that had never wanted me.
Behind me, the festival continued, my absence as unremarkable as my presence had always been.
What I didn't know then, as I ran with my heart splintering inside my chest, was that this betrayal wasn't the end of my story—it was only the beginning.
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