
Mate Rejected, Truth Unveiled
Chapter 2
Five days pass before I dare return to pack territory. Five days of gnawing hunger and restless sleep, of touching the crescent mark on my shoulder until it's tender beneath my fingertips. The mate bond pulls at me like a fishing line, reeling me back toward the man who looked through me as if I were nothing.
I've mapped every blind spot around the pack house now, every shadow that offers concealment. The old storage shed behind the training grounds becomes my favorite perch—close enough to hear conversations, far enough to vanish if discovered. From here, I can watch the daily rhythms of my former home unfold like scenes from someone else's life.
It's during the afternoon meal preparation that I first notice the subtle wrongness in Simone's performance.
"The border patrol found fresh rogue tracks near the eastern boundary," Gamma Marcus reports, his voice carrying through the kitchen window where pack leadership gathers for their daily briefing.
Simone's reaction is barely perceptible—a tiny flinch, fingers tightening around her tea cup. "Rogues again? How concerning." Her voice carries exactly the right note of worry, but I catch the calculation behind her eyes. "Perhaps we should increase patrols. We can't be too careful, especially after..." She lets her words trail off, pressing a hand to her rounded belly.
After what happened to me. After the mission where she claims I died heroically defending our borders.
Nathaniel's hand covers hers instantly, protective and tender. "Don't worry about the rogues, love. Marcus has everything under control."
The endearment hits me like a physical blow. Love. He calls her love while I crouch in shadows, unrecognized and unwanted.
"Of course," Simone continues, "Rose would have known exactly how to handle rogue incursions. She was always so... thorough in her methods." She dabs at her eyes with practiced precision. "I miss her tactical insights terribly."
Liar. The word burns in my throat, but I swallow it down. Simone deflects every detailed question about our final mission with tearful references to trauma and pregnancy hormones. She's built her heroic reputation on my supposed grave, and no one thinks to question the grieving friend who survived.
I'm so focused on watching her performance that I almost miss Marcus organizing search teams.
"Someone's been taking food from storage," he tells his patrol. "Fresh scents around the property. We need to find this intruder before they become a real problem."
Panic floods my system. I slip away from my hiding spot just as boots crunch through undergrowth nearby. For the next two hours, I'm a ghost, flitting between cover as voices call out coordinates and search patterns. My body remembers tactical movement even if my wolf is gone—how to distribute weight to avoid breaking twigs, how to use terrain to mask my scent trail.
But I'm not careful enough.
A low branch catches my sleeve as I dodge between patrol routes, tearing fabric with an audible rip. I don't stop to retrieve it, can't afford to, but the loss settles like ice in my stomach. Evidence. Something they can analyze, trace back to me.
I spend the night in a cave two miles from pack borders, listening to my stomach growl and fighting the urge to return. But the bond won't let me stay away. By dawn, I'm creeping back through forest that knows my footsteps, drawn by a compulsion stronger than common sense.
Nathaniel trains alone in the clearing where we once sparred as potential mates. I settle behind the massive oak that witnessed our interrupted marking ceremony, watching him move through combat forms with deadly precision. His wolf surfaces periodically—I can see it in the fluid grace of his movements, the way his eyes flash gold in morning sunlight.
He's beautiful. Powerful. Everything an Alpha should be.
And he has no idea his mate is dying by degrees in the shadows.
When he pauses by the stream to catch his breath, something inside me snaps. Three years of silence, of hiding, of wondering if any part of him remembers what we shared. I step from behind the oak, just far enough to be visible in his peripheral vision.
The reaction is immediate and violent.
Nathaniel's entire body goes rigid, his head whipping toward me with supernatural speed. Inside his mind, I can almost hear his wolf—howling, pacing, thrashing against some invisible cage. The sound that emerges from Nathaniel's throat is pure animal fury mixed with desperate confusion.
"Who are you?" The Alpha command in his voice could bring lesser wolves to their knees. "Show yourself. Now."
I emerge fully from tree cover, keeping my damaged face tilted away from direct sunlight. His wolf is going completely insane—I can see it in the way Nathaniel's hands shake, how his breathing becomes ragged. Every instinct he possesses screams that I'm important, that I mean something, but his conscious mind can't connect the dots.
"I'm nobody," I whisper, the words tasting like ash. "Just a lost soul looking for home."
His wolf's distress becomes so acute that Nathaniel staggers, pressing his palms against his temples. "Stay back," he growls, fighting some internal battle I can feel but he can't understand. "You... you need to leave. Now."
But neither of us moves. We stand frozen in morning light, separated by three feet and three years of lies, while his wolf recognizes what his heart cannot accept.
That his mate never died at all.
You may also like





