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He Rose to Beta on My Money—Then Rejected Me Novel Cover

He Rose to Beta on My Money—Then Rejected Me

The burgundy tie cost two weeks of my rent. I’d spent ten years starving myself, scrubbing engine grease from my fingernails till they bled, all to pay Luke’s tuition at the Alpha Academy. I raised him, I funded him. I paid his bills. I helped him rise. I didn’t expect much. I never meant to push him. It was him who kneeled down to propose for a bond first. It was him who promised forever. So all I wanted was nothing but for him to keep his promise. But the day Luke was elevated to the Lycan’s beta, he walked into my shop with a pregnant woman on his arm and handed me a check for three thousand dollars. "Be realistic, Jane," he sneered, smoothing his Italian suit. "You were a useful tenant. But I’m a Beta now. I need a pedigree, not a mechanic. You’re rejected. Consider this severance." Ten years. $312,000 given out. All dismissed as "charity." When I tried to fight, he destroyed me. He broke my employee’s ribs, and when I took my receipts to the capital, every lawyer slammed the door in my face. "He’s untouchable," they whispered. Desperate, I confronted him on the street, clutching the evidence of my wasted life. Luke didn't panic. He called the police, branded me a stalker, and while the officers pinned my arms behind my back, he slapped me across the face. "You are nothing," he whispered, wiping my blood from his knuckles as the cops laughed. "Next time, I won't be so gentle." He thinks he broke me. He thinks because I’m just a human mechanic, I’m powerless against a wolf. He forgot one thing. I know exactly how to take an engine apart—and I’m going to dismantle his life, piece by piece.
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Chapter 2

Bianca stepped closer, her designer heels clicking against the concrete floor like a predator marking territory. The sound echoed through the shop, sharp and deliberate, as she positioned herself directly in front of me. This close, I could smell her expensive perfume—something floral and cloying that made my stomach turn.

"You poor, deluded little thing," she said, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "Did you actually think someone like Luke would end up with someone like you?"

Her manicured hand gestured dismissively at my oil-stained coveralls, my calloused fingers, the grease under my nails that no amount of scrubbing ever seemed to completely remove.

"Werewolf society is built on bloodlines, darling. On breeding. On status." She caressed her rounded belly with deliberate slowness, her diamond ring catching the harsh fluorescent light. "I'm carrying the child of a Beta—a child with pure bloodlines, wealth, and a future. What could you possibly offer him?"

The words hit me like acid, burning through whatever dignity I had left. But she wasn't finished.

"You were useful, I'll give you that. A convenient stepping stone while Luke clawed his way up from whatever gutter he came from. Someone to pay his bills and warm his bed while he learned how to move in proper society." Her laugh was like breaking glass. "But now he needs a real partner. Someone who can elevate him, not drag him down."

I tried to speak, to defend myself, but my throat felt raw and tight. Carl was still groaning behind me, and the sound of his pain mixed with her cruel words made everything feel surreal, like a nightmare I couldn't wake up from.

"The child I'm carrying will inherit wealth, power, connections," Bianca continued, her voice growing more vicious with each word. "Your hypothetical children would have been nothing but burdens—ordinary wolves with a mechanic for a mother. Luke deserves better than that genetic dead end."

Luke stood silent through her entire speech, his face a mask of cold indifference. Not once did he tell her to stop. Not once did he defend me or the ten years we'd shared. His silence was somehow worse than her words.

When I finally found my voice, it came out as a broken whisper. "Luke, how can you let her talk about me like this? About us?"

His amber eyes—now cold as winter stone—fixed on mine with something that might have been annoyance.

"There is no 'us,' Jane. There never really was." His voice was flat, businesslike. "What we had was a temporary arrangement. You provided financial support when I needed it, and I provided... companionship. But I've outgrown the need for charity."

The casual cruelty of it stole my breath. Ten years reduced to a business transaction.

"Don't try to use our past to emotionally manipulate me," he continued, straightening his expensive tie. "What happened between us is an embarrassing chapter I need to close. If you're smart, you'll take that check and disappear quietly."

"And if I'm not?" The question slipped out before I could stop it.

Luke's expression hardened, and for a moment, I saw the full weight of his new position—the power he now wielded, the connections he'd made.

"I have influence in the capital now, Jane. Real influence. If you try to cause problems for me or my family," he glanced meaningfully at Bianca's belly, "I can make your little shop disappear. One phone call to the city about 'safety violations' or 'zoning issues,' and you'll be shut down permanently."

The threat hung in the air like a poisonous cloud. He wasn't just rejecting me—he was promising to destroy everything I'd built if I didn't submit quietly to his dismissal.

Bianca clapped her hands together delightedly. "Oh, how romantic! Protecting your pregnant fiancée from a stalker ex. The pack gossips will eat it up."

They turned to leave, Luke's hand possessively on Bianca's lower back as he guided her toward the door. She paused at the threshold, looking back at me with glittering eyes.

"Oh, and Jane? If I were you, I'd get that boy to a hospital. Beta strength can be so... unpredictable."

Then they were gone, leaving me alone with Carl's labored breathing and the scattered wreckage of my life.

***

The emergency room at Seattle General was a fluorescent-lit purgatory of antiseptic smells and muffled suffering. Carl sat hunched on the examination table, his left arm cradled against his chest, his face pale and drawn with pain.

"Three cracked ribs and a dislocated shoulder," the doctor said, not looking up from his clipboard. "He's lucky nothing punctured a lung. We'll need to keep him overnight for observation."

The medical bill felt like another slap in the face. Two thousand dollars for the emergency room visit, plus whatever the overnight stay would cost. Money I didn't have, money that should have been going toward next month's rent.

I sat in the uncomfortable plastic chair beside Carl's bed, watching him sleep fitfully under the harsh hospital lighting. Every few minutes, he'd shift and wince, even in unconsciousness unable to escape the pain Luke had inflicted.

"This is my fault," I whispered to the empty room. "I brought this on you."

When I finally made it back to the shop near midnight, the silence felt oppressive. The scattered tools were still on the floor where they'd fallen, and Carl's blood had dried into dark stains on the concrete. But it was the corner of the office that drew my attention like a magnet.

Luke's things were still there. The coffee mug he'd used during his last visit home, the sweatshirt he'd left hanging on the back of my desk chair, the framed photo of us from three years ago when he'd graduated from the Academy. In the picture, we were both smiling, his arm around my shoulders, my face glowing with pride and love.

I picked up the frame and stared at the strangers we'd been. Had he been planning this even then? Had every kiss, every promise, every whispered "I love you" been a lie designed to keep the money flowing?

The grief that had been crushing my chest since this afternoon began to change, crystallizing into something harder and colder. Something that felt like clarity.

I walked to the filing cabinet and pulled out the folder I'd labeled "Luke - Education Expenses." Ten years of meticulous record-keeping spread across my desk like evidence in a criminal case.

Tuition payments to the Alpha Academy: $47,000 per year for four years. Living expenses: $2,000 per month for ten years. The designer clothes he'd needed to "fit in" with his classmates. The expensive dinners and networking events. The luxury apartment in the capital during his internship.

I added it up three times, unable to believe the number staring back at me.

$312,000.

Three hundred and twelve thousand dollars. More than most people made in five years. Money I'd scraped together working sixteen-hour days, living on ramen noodles and hope.

And Luke had repaid me with a three-thousand-dollar check and a rejection that cut me off from everything we'd built together.

This wasn't a broken heart. This was theft.

Carl's voice echoed in my memory from earlier that evening, groggy with painkillers but fierce with protective anger: "Just take the money and disappear, Jane. You can't fight someone like him. The system's rigged for people like Luke and against people like us."

Maybe he was right. Maybe I should take Luke's insulting check, close the shop, and slink away like the beaten dog they expected me to be.

I looked at the numbers again. At ten years of sacrifice reduced to a three-thousand-dollar dismissal.

No.

I wasn't going to disappear quietly. I wasn't going to let Luke rewrite history and pretend I was just some charity case he'd grown tired of supporting. This wasn't about love anymore—it was about justice.

It was about making him pay back every single penny he owed me.

I spent the rest of the night organizing documents, printing bank statements, and loading everything into boxes. When dawn broke over Seattle, I was already loading my battered pickup truck with everything I'd need.

The drive to Lycan City would take eight hours. Eight hours to plan my strategy, to prepare for a fight that everyone would tell me I couldn't win.

But I wasn't the same naive woman who'd handed over her life savings for a man's empty promises. Luke had taught me exactly how ruthless this world could be.

Now it was time to show him I'd learned the lesson.

***

Lycan City rose from the horizon like a monument to power and ambition. Glass towers scraped the sky, their surfaces reflecting the late afternoon sun in blinding flashes. Even from the highway, I could feel the weight of authority that emanated from the capital—the sense that real decisions were made here, that this was where the fate of ordinary wolves like me was decided by people who would never dirty their hands with honest work.

I'd never felt smaller or more out of place.

The law office of Henderson & Associates occupied the fifteenth floor of a gleaming downtown tower. The elevator ride up felt like ascending into another world—one of marble floors, oil paintings, and the kind of hushed reverence that money commanded.

Mr. Henderson himself was a silver-haired Alpha in his sixties, with the kind of confident bearing that came from never having lost a case that mattered. His office overlooked the city, and I could see the spires of the Lycan Court building in the distance, imposing and final.

"Ms. Miller," he said, gesturing for me to sit in one of the leather chairs across from his massive desk. "I understand you're seeking legal representation for a financial dispute?"

I pulled out my carefully organized folder and began explaining the situation. Henderson listened with professional interest, occasionally nodding or making notes on his legal pad. His expression remained neutral as I detailed Luke's betrayal, the ten years of financial support, and the insulting settlement offer.

"The documentation appears thorough," he said when I finished. "And the amount in question is certainly significant. This could be a straightforward case of unjust enrichment, possibly even fraud if we can prove intentional deception."

Hope bloomed in my chest for the first time in days. Finally, someone who understood that this wasn't about a broken heart—it was about theft.

"However," Henderson continued, and that single word made my stomach drop, "I'll need to know the identity of the defendant before I can commit to representation."

"Luke Morrison," I said. "He's the new Beta of Silver Moon Pack."

The change in Henderson's demeanor was immediate and devastating. The professional interest drained from his face, replaced by something that looked almost like fear.

"Beta Morrison?" he repeated slowly. "The Luke Morrison who was just appointed to the Lycan King's inner circle?"

"Yes," I said, though my voice was barely a whisper.

Henderson closed my folder with finality and pushed it back across the desk. "I'm sorry, Ms. Miller, but I won't be able to represent you in this matter."

"But you said the case was straightforward—"

"That was before I understood the political implications." His voice was clipped, professional. "Beta Morrison is one of the King's most trusted advisors. Taking legal action against him would be... inadvisable."

The hope that had been building crumbled into dust. "So that's it? He gets to steal from me because he has a fancy title now?"

Henderson's expression softened slightly, but his resolve didn't waver. "I suggest you take whatever settlement he's offered and consider the matter closed. Some battles aren't worth fighting, Ms. Miller. Especially when you're guaranteed to lose."

I gathered my papers with shaking hands and left his office, the sound of my footsteps on marble echoing like a funeral march. In the elevator, I stared at my reflection in the polished steel doors—a woman in a cheap dress suit, clutching a folder full of dreams that no one with power would ever take seriously.

But as the floors counted down, something hardened inside me. Henderson was the first lawyer I'd contacted, not the last.

Luke might have power now, but I had something he'd forgotten about—the kind of stubborn determination that came from having nothing left to lose.

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