
My Alpha Demanded My Submission
Chapter 3
The borderlands stretched before me like a graveyard of broken promises. Each step sent fire through my legs, but I kept moving, driven by the primal need to put distance between myself and the Black Claw territory. My sapphire gown, once elegant, now hung in tatters from branches that clawed at me in the darkness.
I had no idea how long I'd been walking. Hours? Days? Time blurred together in a haze of exhaustion and pain. My stomach cramped violently, reminding me of the months of forced starvation Ethan had disguised as "pack discipline." Even now, cast out and alone, I could hear his voice: "A true Luna must show restraint. You eat too much, Natalie."
Luna whimpered inside me, her presence barely a whisper. I'd suppressed her for so long at Ethan's command that now, when I needed her strength most, she could barely surface.
My knees buckled.
I hit the ground hard, gravel biting into my palms. The taste of copper filled my mouth—I'd bitten my tongue on impact. For a moment, I just lay there, cheek pressed to the cold earth, wondering if this was how it would end. The Late Bloomer who'd dared to dream of being Luna, dying alone in no-man's land.
Then I smelled them.
Rogues.
The scent hit me like a physical blow—unwashed fur, old blood, and the distinctive musk of wolves who belonged to no pack. My heart hammered against my ribs as I forced myself to look up.
They emerged from the shadows like nightmares given form. Five of them, maybe six. Their eyes glowed amber in the darkness, fixed on me with predatory interest. The largest, a scarred brute with matted gray fur, shifted partially, his face caught between human and wolf.
"Well, well." His voice was gravel and broken glass. "What do we have here? A pack wolf all alone?"
I tried to stand, but my legs wouldn't cooperate. The months of malnutrition had taken their toll. "Stay back," I managed, though my voice came out as barely more than a whisper.
They laughed—a sound like hyenas circling prey.
"She smells wrong," another rogue said, nose wrinkling. "Like pack, but... faded. Abandoned."
"Banished," the leader corrected, circling closer. "I can smell the rejection on her. No pack protection. No Alpha to come running."
Luna tried to surface, to lend me her strength, but she was too weak. I felt her struggling, drowning in the depths of my consciousness where Ethan had forced her to hide.
"Please," I whispered, hating myself for begging. "I have nothing of value."
"Oh, I wouldn't say that." The leader's partial shift completed, and suddenly a massive gray wolf stood before me. "Even damaged goods can fetch a price in the right markets."
The others began to shift too, their forms blurring between human and beast. I pressed my back against a boulder, fingers scrabbling for anything—a rock, a stick, anything to defend myself with.
This was it. After everything I'd survived, everything I'd sacrificed, I would die here in the dirt, torn apart by rogues. Part of me wondered if Ethan would even care when he heard. Probably not. He'd probably laugh with Vanessa about how the barren omega got what she deserved.
The pack closed in, their hot breath visible in the cold night air. I could see saliva dripping from exposed fangs, could smell their excitement at an easy kill.
I closed my eyes.
And then the world exploded.
A presence slammed into my consciousness like a thunderclap—ancient, powerful, and furiously protective. The rogues' snarls turned to yelps of terror as an invisible force scattered them like leaves in a hurricane.
I forced my eyes open to see a figure descending from the ridge above, moving with the fluid grace of an apex predator. Moonlight caught on midnight-black hair and eyes that burned with golden fire. Even from a distance, his aura pressed against me like a physical thing, overwhelming in its intensity.
The Lycan Prince.
Alexander Harrington.
The rogues scrambled over each other in their haste to flee, their earlier bravado evaporating in the face of true power. Within seconds, they'd vanished into the shadows, leaving only the echo of their terror behind.
Alexander landed in a crouch before me, his presence filling the clearing. Up close, I could see the fury etched into every line of his face, though when his eyes met mine, something else flickered there. Recognition. Pain. And something deeper I couldn't name.
"Natalie." My name on his lips sounded like a prayer and a curse combined. "I've got you."
As his arms came around me, lifting me against his chest, I felt something crack inside me. The dam I'd built to hold back the pain, the betrayal, the sheer exhaustion of it all—it shattered.
And for the first time since discovering Ethan's betrayal, I let myself break.
The last thing I remembered was the steady beat of Alexander's heart against my ear and his voice, rough with emotion: "I should have come sooner."
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