
I Fought My Alpha to Break Our False Mate Bond
Chapter 1
I smelled her before I saw her.
Vanilla and something sharper—expensive perfume, the kind that clings to fabric and announces its wearer before they enter a room. It hit me the second I pushed open the door to the Alpha suite, my duffel bag still slung over one shoulder, exhaustion pulling at every muscle after a week of alliance runs with Silverfang.
I stopped in the doorway.
Emmett stood in the center of our—his—bedroom, a towel in his hands, his posture relaxed in a way I had not seen in five years of living beside him. Elena Salazar sat on the edge of the bed, her hair damp and darkening the collar of the shirt she wore.
His shirt.
Not mine. His.
The oversized dress shirt hung loose on her frame, sleeves rolled to her elbows, hem skimming mid-thigh. Emmett moved the towel through her hair with a gentleness I did not recognize—slow, careful strokes, the kind of attention that required thought. She tilted her head back slightly, eyes half-closed, a small smile playing at the corner of her mouth.
Neither of them had noticed me yet.
I stood there, frozen, watching my mate dry another woman's hair in the space we were supposed to share.
The duffel bag slipped from my shoulder and hit the floor with a dull thud.
Emmett's head snapped toward the sound. His hand stilled mid-motion, towel suspended in Elena's hair. For one brief, unguarded second, something flickered across his face—surprise, maybe guilt—but it vanished before I could name it.
Elena turned, slower, her expression shifting into something that looked almost like concern but felt closer to satisfaction.
"Rylee." Emmett's voice was even, controlled. He lowered the towel. "You're back early."
Early.
As if the problem was my timing.
I stepped into the room, letting the door swing shut behind me. My wolf stirred, restless and sharp-edged, but I kept her leashed. "What is this?"
Emmett set the towel on the dresser with deliberate precision. "Elena returned to the pack yesterday. There are security concerns that require her presence in the packhouse."
Security concerns.
I looked at Elena, still perched on our bed in his shirt, hair drying in soft waves around her shoulders. She met my gaze without flinching, her smile small and unbothered.
"Security concerns," I repeated, my voice flat. "That require her to wear your clothes?"
"Her quarters flooded," Emmett said, as if that explained anything. "She needed somewhere to stay while repairs are made."
I waited for him to say more—to offer an apology, an acknowledgment, anything that suggested he understood what I was looking at. He did not.
Instead, he straightened, and the air in the room shifted.
His Alpha aura rolled out like a wave—cold, suffocating, designed to end conversations rather than have them. It pressed against my chest, a physical weight that made my wolf snarl and my spine lock rigid.
"Elena will be staying in the packhouse indefinitely," he said, his tone dropping into that unmistakable Alpha command, the one that expected obedience without question. "This is not a discussion."
I stared at him.
Five years.
Five years of quiet mornings where he left before I woke. Five years of dinners eaten in separate rooms. Five years of sleeping beside a man who had never once looked at me the way he had just looked at her—gentle, attentive, present.
And now he stood here, using his Alpha authority to tell me I had no right to object.
Something inside me went very still.
"Fine," I said.
Emmett blinked, clearly expecting resistance.
I turned and picked up my duffel bag. "Then I'll make this easy for both of you."
"Rylee—"
"I want the bond severed."
The words came out calm, clear, final.
Emmett went rigid. "What?"
"You heard me." I slung the bag back over my shoulder and met his eyes without flinching. "I'm done. Sever the mate bond."
Elena's smile faltered, just slightly.
Emmett's jaw tightened. "You don't mean that."
"I do."
"Rylee." His voice dropped lower, edged with warning. "You're tired. You've had a long week. We'll discuss this when you've rested."
"There's nothing to discuss." I moved toward the closet, pulling open the door and grabbing the few belongings I kept there—practical clothes, nothing sentimental. "You've made your priorities clear. I'm simply accepting them."
"Stop." The Alpha command cracked through the room like a whip.
My wolf snarled, but my body obeyed, freezing mid-reach.
I hated him for it.
Emmett crossed the room in three strides, stopping just close enough that I could feel the heat radiating off him. "You are my mate. You will not leave this packhouse."
I turned my head slowly, meeting his gaze. "Then you'll have to cage me."
His eyes narrowed.
I wrenched free of the command through sheer force of will, my wolf clawing her way past the Alpha pressure, and shoved the last of my things into the bag. My hands did not shake. I would not let them.
"Rylee," Elena said softly from the bed, her voice dripping false sympathy. "Maybe you should take some time to think about this. You're clearly upset."
I looked at her.
She sat there, comfortable and unbothered, wearing his shirt like it belonged to her.
Maybe it did.
"Enjoy the suite," I said.
Then I walked out.
Emmett did not follow.
I made it down three flights of stairs before my vision blurred, but I did not stop. I kept moving, past the main halls, past the common rooms where pack members glanced up and quickly looked away, down into the basement where the old Omega quarters sat dusty and abandoned.
I shoved open the door to the room I had lived in before the mate bond, before I had convinced myself that duty and patience would be enough.
The air smelled stale. The bed was bare. Dust coated every surface.
I dropped my bag on the floor and sat on the edge of the mattress.
My wolf howled, furious and grieving.
I did not cry.
I had spent five years waiting for him to see me.
He never would.
You may also like





