Follow
Chapters
Share
I Rejected My Alpha Mate Novel Cover

I Rejected My Alpha Mate

I knew something was wrong before he even closed the door. It was past midnight. I'd been sitting at the kitchen table with a cold cup of tea, waiting. Ryatt had texted around nine — running late, extended training session, don't wait up. I waited anyway. I always waited. He came in quietly, the way he always did when he thought I was asleep. I heard his boots on the hardwood, the soft click of the door. I stood up from the table and walked into the hallway to meet him. That's when I caught it.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

I knew something was wrong before he even closed the door.

It was past midnight. I'd been sitting at the kitchen table with a cold cup of tea, waiting. Ryatt had texted around nine — running late, extended training session, don't wait up. I waited anyway. I always waited.

He came in quietly, the way he always did when he thought I was asleep. I heard his boots on the hardwood, the soft click of the door. I stood up from the table and walked into the hallway to meet him.

That's when I caught it.

Sweet. Floral. Warm in a way that had nothing to do with the night air.

It wasn't perfume. Perfume fades. This was a scent — a she-wolf's scent — pressed into the fabric of his shirt, sitting in the curve of his neck like she'd rested her head there. My wolf went completely still inside me. Not growling. Not panicking. Just still, the way an animal goes still when it recognizes a threat it already knew was coming.

"Hey." Ryatt gave me a tired smile. "You're up late."

"Yeah," I said.

I looked at him for a moment. He looked back. Neither of us said anything else.

I went to bed. I didn't sleep.

---

I waited until his breathing evened out. Until the room settled into that particular quiet that means a person is deeply, genuinely asleep.

Then I got up.

I moved through the pack house the way I'd moved through it for five years — knowing every creak in the floor, every light switch, every drawer that stuck. I went to his jacket first, the one he'd draped over the chair by the door. I checked the pockets.

The leather wrist cuff was in the left one.

I held it under the hallway light. Dark brown leather, hand-stitched, with a small silver clasp. Simple. Expensive. I'd seen its match on Delaney Fox's wrist three weeks ago during a pack training session. I'd noticed it then and told myself it meant nothing. Lots of people wore leather cuffs.

I set it on the table.

Then I sat down at his desk and opened his mind-link log.

Ryatt had always kept his mind-link accessible to me. It was one of those small, unspoken things between mates — a gesture of openness, of nothing to hide. Except tonight, when I pulled up the recent activity, I found a thread I'd never seen before. Shielded. A separate channel, locked with a privacy setting I hadn't known he'd enabled.

I'm the one who manages the pack's communication systems. I know every override code.

I used one.

The timestamps went back six weeks. Late nights, mostly. After eleven, sometimes past one in the morning. The content was nothing explicit — that almost made it worse. It was the kind of conversation you have with someone you're comfortable with. Easy. Familiar. Inside jokes I didn't understand. References to things I hadn't been part of. And woven through all of it, in ways that were small enough to dismiss individually and impossible to dismiss together, the unmistakable texture of emotional intimacy.

He'd told her about the pasta.

I had to read that part twice.

Ryatt grew up poor. Not struggling — poor, the kind that leaves marks. He'd been an orphaned pup taken in by Silverfang, and for years his diet had been whatever was cheapest. Canned pasta, mostly. The kind in the red and white tins. He'd told me once, quietly, in the dark, that he couldn't smell it without feeling like he was eight years old and hungry and invisible. He'd never told anyone else. I'd made sure of it. I'd quietly steered us away from restaurants that served it, removed it from pack house menus, never once mentioned it to another person.

I closed the mind-link log and went to the kitchen.

The refrigerator light was very bright at one in the morning.

The container was on the second shelf. Glass, with a sealed lid. Gourmet baked pasta — the kind with the crispy cheese top and the fresh herbs. Still half full. I stood there looking at it for a long time.

He'd eaten it. He'd eaten it, and he'd kept the leftovers.

I put the container on the counter next to the wrist cuff. Then I went back to bed and lay in the dark beside my fated mate and waited for morning.

---

I didn't cry. I want to be clear about that. I lay there and I felt something move through me — not grief, not yet, something quieter and more final than grief — and then I went very still inside, the same way my wolf had gone still in the hallway. Like something had already been decided and my body was just catching up.

By the time Ryatt came downstairs, I had coffee made and the evidence arranged on the kitchen table. The printed mind-link log. The wrist cuff. The pasta container.

I sat across from him and I watched him see it.

His face did something complicated. For just a second — one second — I saw something that might have been guilt. Then it was gone, replaced by the expression I knew better than almost any other expression on earth: the slight tightening around his eyes, the almost imperceptible lift of his chin.

"Emily—"

"The mind-link thread goes back six weeks," I said. My voice was very calm. "You shielded it from me. The wrist cuff matches the one Delaney Fox has been wearing since she transferred. And the pasta—" I paused. "You know what the pasta means."

He rolled his eyes.

That was the moment. Not the scent, not the cuff, not even the pasta. The eye roll. The reflexive, practiced dismissal of a man who has never once had to account for himself.

Then the aura hit.

It came down like a physical weight — his Alpha pressure filling the room, pressing against my wolf, demanding submission. I felt her flinch inside me. My shoulders wanted to drop. My eyes wanted to lower. Every instinct I'd been raised with said: yield, be quiet, don't push an Alpha.

I kept my eyes on his face.

"You're insanely jealous," he said. "Delaney is a trainee. The pasta is just food. You're building a conspiracy out of nothing because you can't handle that I spend time with other people."

He said it with such complete, practiced certainty. Like he'd rehearsed it. Like he'd known this conversation was coming and had prepared his lines.

I looked at him — really looked at him — and I felt the last illusion I'd been carrying go out like a candle in a closed room. Quietly. Without drama. Just gone.

I had given this man twenty years. I had managed his pack, guarded his secrets, built my entire sense of self around being the person he trusted most. And when I sat across from him with the evidence of his betrayal laid out in plain sight, his first move was to flood the room with Alpha aura and call me crazy.

He wasn't even going to try.

I straightened the edge of the printed log on the table. A small, automatic gesture. My hands were completely steady.

"Okay," I said.

And I started to think about what I was going to pack.

You may also like

After My Alpha Betrayed, My Healer Found Strength Novel Cover
9.1
The pain was constant. Ten pregnancies in three years had left my body a shell of what it once was. I lay on the thin mattress in the healer's den, my abdomen still cramping from delivering Jason's latest heir just hours ago. The scent of medicinal herbs did little to mask the metallic tang of blood that clung to me. I should have been resting. I should have been recovering. Instead, I was straining to hear the conversation filtering through the thin walls of the den. "How much longer do we need to keep her?" Vanessa's voice, sweet as poisoned honey. "Just until we secure our position in the Northern Alliance." Jason's reply sent ice through my veins. "The last pup she produced has strong Alpha potential.
After My Mate Betrayed Me, I Escaped Novel Cover
8.1
My hands trembled as I finished healing the last warrior, my energy nearly depleted after eighteen consecutive sessions. Sweat beaded on my forehead, and my wolf, Lyra, whimpered with exhaustion inside me. *Just one more, Victoria. Then we can rest.* I nodded, both to myself and to Lyra, as I placed my palms over the deep gash on Delta Carter's shoulder. The familiar warm glow emanated from my fingertips, sealing the wound until only a faint pink line remained where the rogue's claws had torn through flesh. "There," I whispered, my voice hoarse. "You're all set, Carter. Take it easy for the next day or so." The young Delta nodded gratefully. "Thank you, Dr. Hayes.
My Alpha Forced Me to Save His Chosen Mate Novel Cover
8.2
The iron grip on my arm tightened as my father dragged me through the massive wrought-iron gates of the Obsidian Fang Pack territory. My legs trembled with each step, the weight of our pack's massive debt settling heavier on my shoulders than the rough hands guiding me forward. "Keep walking," my father whispered, his once-proud voice now fractured with defeat. "Don't give them any reason to..." He didn't finish. He didn't need to. I knew what happened to Omegas who defied Alphas. The imposing stone mansion loomed before us, its windows reflecting the fading sunlight like watchful eyes. Wolves in formal attire lined the entrance, their cold gazes following our every move. I kept my eyes downcast, focusing on the marble steps beneath my feet as we entered the grand hall. "Alpha Caspian," my father announced, his voice cracking as he pushed me forward.
Reborn Surgeon: The Billionaire’s Secret Obsession Novel Cover
7.4
Standing on the edge of a limestone quarry in the pouring rain, I thought we were just having another family argument. Then my mother, Ardell, screamed that I’d let the life insurance lapse, and my brother, Hakeem, stepped out of the shadows with a cold, calculating look in his eyes. I told them I knew the truth—that Hakeem had cut the brake lines on my father’s car—but they didn't flinch. Instead, Hakeem shoved me hard, sending me tumbling into the abyss. I hit a jagged ledge thirty feet down, the sound of my spine snapping like a dry branch echoing through the rain. As I lay paralyzed and broken, my mother watched from above, asking if I was dead yet, before Hakeem whistled for the starving wild dogs that lived in the quarry floor. "Nature will clean up the mess," Hakeem said, walking away while the first set of teeth sank into my throat. The agony was a tidal wave, but the rage was hotter, a nuclear hatred for the family that stole my future and the daughter I’d never see grow up. I died in that dirt, consumed by fire and teeth, wondering how a mother could choose a car payment over her own child's life. But then, I gasped for air, sitting bolt upright in my old trailer bedroom. I looked at the calendar: May 12, 2014. I was seventeen again, but I wasn't the same girl. Inside this malnourished body was the mind of a world-class trauma surgeon and the elite hacker known as 'Phantom.' This time, I wasn't going to the quarry; I was going for their throats.
Rejected by Alpha, Reborn in Craft Novel Cover
8.1
The tavern buzzed with late-night energy, glasses clinking and voices rising as pack members unwound after a long day. I balanced a tray of drinks, my fingers calloused from years of moonweaving and tavern work, moving carefully between tables. The familiar ache in my chest had been growing stronger lately, but I pushed it aside. There was work to be done. "Another round for table four," Mira called from behind the bar, her eyes sympathetic as they always were when she looked at me. She was the only one who noticed how I sometimes paused mid-step, pressing a hand to my chest as if trying to hold something inside. "On it," I murmured, forcing a smile. The private corner booth was occupied tonight—Duke and his friends, their voices carrying just enough for me to catch fragments as I approached with their order. "—can't believe you've kept her in the dark this long," someone said, laughing. I froze, the tray trembling slightly in my hands.
Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King Novel Cover
8.7
The grand hall of the Silver Moon Pack house had never felt so cold. I stood alone in the center of the circular space, hundreds of eyes boring into me from all sides. The once-familiar faces of my pack members had transformed into a sea of strangers, their expressions ranging from curiosity to disgust. The whispers that had haunted me for weeks had culminated in this moment—this public execution of everything I had ever been. My wolf, Lyra, whimpered weakly inside me. *Stay strong, Victoria. Whatever happens, we face it together.* But Lyra's voice was faint, a mere echo of the powerful presence she had once been. The injuries from the rogue attack three months ago had weakened her beyond recognition, and with each passing day, I felt her slipping further away. The heavy oak doors at the far end of the hall swung open. Alpha Michael Sterling—my mate, my love, my executioner—strode in, his powerful aura washing over the assembly like a suffocating wave.