
My Alpha Chose Another Luna
Chapter 3
Word travels fast in a pack house.
I didn't expect it to travel this fast.
By the time Sky and I came down for breakfast the morning after Daniel's vigil, the kitchen had gone quiet in that specific way — not silent, just carefully adjusted, the way a room adjusts when someone walks in who everyone has been talking about. Conversations didn't stop. They just shifted. Eyes moved to me and then away, and then back again when they thought I wasn't looking.
I got my coffee. I sat down. I ate my toast.
Sky sat across from me and watched the room with the flat, measuring look she gets when she's cataloguing threats. She didn't say anything. Neither did I.
But I felt it. The attention had changed shape. Three days ago it was pity — soft, uncomfortable, the kind people aim at someone they expect to fall apart. Now it was something else. Quieter. More careful.
I didn't know what to do with that yet, so I just drank my coffee and let it sit.
---
Sky started taking me to the training yard on the fourth day.
"You need to sleep," she said. "You're not sleeping. This will help."
She wasn't wrong. The phantom ache was worst at night — that pull behind my sternum, the ghost of a bond that no longer existed, tugging at me in the dark like it hadn't gotten the message yet. I'd lie there with Pumpkin pressed against my side and stare at the ceiling and feel the absence of him like a bruise I kept accidentally pressing.
Physical exhaustion was the only thing that cut through it.
The warriors were uncertain with me at first. I could see it in the way they positioned themselves — not avoiding me exactly, just leaving a careful margin, like they weren't sure what category I belonged to now. The Alpha's rejected mate. The she-wolf who hadn't opened the door. I didn't fit neatly anywhere.
I didn't ask for adjustments. I just showed up, stretched, and worked.
The first session I could barely keep up. Bond-sickness had taken more out of me than I'd admitted to Sky or to myself, and my legs felt wrong, like they belonged to someone who'd been in bed for a week. Which they had.
I kept going anyway.
By the third session, one of the senior warriors — a Delta named Cass, broad-shouldered and economical with words — moved to spar with me without being asked. She didn't say anything about Daniel. She didn't say anything about the bond. She just squared up and waited for me to be ready.
I was ready.
Afterward, when I was catching my breath with my hands on my knees, she said, "Same time tomorrow?"
"Yeah," I said. "Same time."
That was all. But I walked back to my quarters feeling something I hadn't felt in days. Not better, exactly. Just more like myself.
---
I decided about Pumpkin on the sixth morning.
I'd been circling it since the box. Since the moment Sky reached for the collar and I caught her wrist without thinking. I'd been telling myself *not yet* and letting the pup sleep against my legs and pretending I hadn't already made the decision.
But I had. I'd made it the night I heard Daniel's voice through the mind-link. I just hadn't been ready to finish making it.
I got up before dawn. Pumpkin was already awake — she always woke when I did, some instinct she'd developed in the months of sleeping at the foot of my bed. She looked up at me with her ears forward and her tail starting its slow, hopeful wag.
I sat down on the floor beside her.
She climbed into my lap immediately, all paws and warm weight, and pressed her nose against my jaw. I put both arms around her and held on for a minute. Her heartbeat was steady and fast under my hands. She smelled like sleep and something faintly sweet, the way puppies do.
I had named her. I had picked out her collar. I had been the one who figured out she was afraid of the vacuum cleaner and needed to be in another room when it ran. I had loved her, genuinely, without reservation.
That was the part that made it hard. The love was real. It was just built on a foundation that wasn't.
I couldn't keep her. Keeping her meant keeping the last piece of a life that had been designed for someone else, and I was done living in borrowed spaces.
Sky was waiting in the hallway when I came out. She'd known, somehow. She had Pumpkin's leash in her hand and a look on her face that was very carefully not pitying.
"I'll walk with you," she said.
"No." I took the leash gently. "I need to do this part alone."
She nodded. She stepped back.
I'd written the note the night before. One line, folded once. I tucked it under Pumpkin's collar where it would be found immediately.
The pack house was quiet at that hour. The hallways held the particular stillness of early morning, that held-breath quality before the day starts moving. My footsteps were soft. Pumpkin trotted beside me, tail up, curious about the unusual hour.
I stopped outside Daniel's door.
I unclipped the leash. Pumpkin looked up at me, confused, her tail slowing.
I crouched down and held her face in both hands for a moment. She licked my chin.
"You're going to be okay," I told her. I didn't know if I was talking to her or to myself. Maybe both.
I set her down in front of his door. I knocked twice, sharp and clear, and then I walked away.
I didn't run. I didn't look back. I kept my pace even and my chin level and my thumb pressed against the unmarked side of my neck, and I walked back through the pack house the same way I'd come.
Sky was still in the hallway where I'd left her. She fell into step beside me without a word.
We were almost back to my quarters when I heard it — faint, from the other end of the house. The sound of a door opening. A pause.
Then nothing.
I didn't stop walking.
---
Sky told me later what she'd heard from a pack member who'd been up early.
Daniel had stood in his doorway for a long time. Holding Pumpkin. Reading the note. Just standing there in the gray morning light with the pup tucked against his chest and a single folded piece of paper in his hand.
He didn't come to my door that day.
For the first time since the rejection, he didn't come at all.
I sat in my quarters that evening with the leash still coiled on the dresser — I hadn't moved it yet, I wasn't ready to move it yet — and I thought about what that silence meant. Not hope. I was careful about hope. But something had shifted in him, some certainty had cracked, and I could feel the absence of his pacing in the hallway the way you feel a sound stop.
The phantom ache was still there. It would be there for a while. The bond doesn't unknow itself just because you've severed it.
But I had trained that morning until my arms shook. I had walked through the pack house with my head up. I had given back the last thing that wasn't mine to keep.
Outside, the pack house was full of whispers I was only beginning to understand.
I pressed my thumb to my neck, and I let myself feel the quiet, and I decided that quiet was enough for tonight.
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