
Mate Rejected, Truth Unveiled
Chapter 1
Three years. Three years of surviving on scraps and shadows, of learning to breathe through broken ribs that never quite healed right, of waking each morning to a silence where my wolf's voice should be. Three years of telling myself I could forget the scent of pine and cedar that meant home, forget the warmth of arms that once held me like I was something precious.
But here I am, crouched behind the old oak that marks the boundary of Silverfang territory, my fingers digging into bark that remembers when I used to climb it as a child. The pack house glows warm in the distance, windows spilling golden light across manicured grounds where I once trained warriors, where I once belonged.
I shouldn't be here. Every rational part of my broken mind knows this is madness, but the pull is stronger than reason. The mate bond—severed, damaged, but not completely dead—draws me forward like a moth to flame. Even wolfless, even ruined, I can't seem to stay away.
The kitchen windows beckon. Cook always left scraps in the bins behind the service entrance, a habit from when hungry warriors would raid the kitchens after late training sessions. My stomach clenches, a sharp reminder that pride doesn't fill an empty belly. I've learned to swallow pride along with garbage these past years.
I move through the shadows with muscle memory that refuses to die. My body remembers being Phoenix even when my mind struggles to reconcile that warrior with the scarred wretch I've become. The limp in my left leg barely slows me—three years of practice have taught me to compensate, to flow around my limitations like water around stones.
The service entrance is exactly as I remember. Same heavy wooden door, same loose stone in the third step that used to trip up new recruits. I slip past the motion sensors—their blind spots haven't changed—and reach the waste bins. The smell of roasted meat and fresh bread makes my mouth water. Such simple pleasures, once taken for granted.
I'm elbow-deep in a bin, extracting a half-eaten roll that looks untouched by anything worse than time, when my fingers brush something that makes my heart stop. A crescent-shaped scar on my shoulder—Nathaniel's mark from our interrupted mating ceremony—burns like fire.
Footsteps. Heavy, measured, familiar.
I freeze, bread clutched in my trembling hand. Every instinct screams at me to run, but my body won't obey. Three years of wondering, of hoping, of dreaming he might somehow sense I was alive—and now he's here, maybe ten feet away, and I can't move.
"Who's there?"
His voice hits me like a physical blow. Deeper than I remember, roughened by years and authority, but unmistakably Nathaniel. My mate. The man who should recognize me even in darkness, even broken, even changed beyond recognition.
I turn slowly, keeping my head down, letting my matted hair fall across the worst of the scars. The bread tumbles from my nerveless fingers.
Nathaniel Bishop steps into the light spilling from the kitchen windows, and my breath catches. He's magnificent—broader through the shoulders, more commanding in his presence. Alpha power radiates from him like heat from a forge. But his dark eyes, scanning me with cold assessment, hold no recognition. No spark of connection.
Nothing.
"I asked you a question, rogue."
The Alpha tone rolls over me, compelling submission from wolves who can feel its power. But I'm not a wolf anymore. I'm something less, something broken, so the command slides off me like rain off stone. Still, I lower my gaze and take a step back.
"I was just... hungry." My voice comes out as a rasp, damaged vocal cords struggling with words I haven't spoken aloud in weeks.
His lip curls in disgust. "Stealing from pack stores. Do you know the penalty for trespassing on claimed territory?"
I know. I helped write those laws, helped train the warriors who would enforce them. But I can't tell him that. Can't explain that I'm not stealing—I'm trying to come home.
"Leave. Now." His voice drops to a growl that should terrify me. "If I catch you on pack lands again, there won't be a warning."
He doesn't recognize me. My mate, the other half of my soul, looks at me like I'm garbage. Worse—like I'm a threat to be eliminated.
I nod once and melt back into the shadows, my heart shattering with each step. Behind me, I hear him mutter something about increased patrols and tighter security. Protecting his pack from threats like me.
The irony tastes like blood in my mouth. Phoenix, the pack's greatest protector, now seen as its enemy.
I reach the treeline before my knees give out, and I collapse against the same oak that welcomed me home. The crescent mark on my shoulder throbs in rhythm with my racing heart, a constant reminder of what I've lost.
What we've lost.
But even as despair threatens to drown me, I know I'll be back. The bond may be damaged, but it's not dead. And neither am I.
Not yet.
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