
My Alpha Rejected Me but the Lycan Prince Claimed Me
Chapter 3
The knock came at seven in the morning.
I was standing by my rusty stove, waiting for the water to boil. I pulled my oversized cardigan tighter around my chest and walked to the door. I assumed it was Makenna. She was the only person who knew I was out here.
I pulled the door open.
It wasn't Makenna.
Atlas Castillo stood on my small, rotting porch. He wore a dark henley shirt that stretched across his broad shoulders. He looked entirely too large, too powerful, and too royal for my drafty little cabin.
He held out a cardboard cup and a brown bakery bag.
"Good morning," he said. His voice was a low, smooth rumble.
I just stared at him. "What are you doing here?"
"I brought coffee." He pushed the cup toward me slightly. "I noticed you take it black. And a blueberry muffin from the bakery in town. They just pulled them out of the oven."
I didn't reach for it. My heart did a strange, nervous flutter. "Why?"
"Because you need to eat," he said simply. He didn't use an ounce of his Lycan aura. He didn't step closer. He didn't try to invite himself inside. He just waited.
Slowly, I reached out and took the cup and the bag. Our fingers brushed. A jolt of pure heat shot up my arm. I almost dropped the coffee.
Atlas's eyes darkened, the gold flecks in his irises flaring, but he just shoved his hands into his pockets. "I'll see you tomorrow, Lilian."
He turned and walked back to his black SUV. I closed the door, locked it, and leaned against the wood. My inner wolf, the one I thought was dying, let out a soft, sleepy purr. I took a sip of the coffee. It was strong, bitter, and perfect.
True to his word, he came back the next day. And the morning after that. He never asked to come inside. He never demanded my time. He just handed me breakfast, gave me a small, devastating smile, and left. It was a quiet, steady rhythm. I didn't want to admit it, but against my better judgment, I started looking forward to it.
On the fifth day, Makenna came over in the afternoon. She threw herself onto my faded sofa and let out a loud laugh.
"You," she pointed a finger at me, "are causing a massive political crisis."
I frowned, handing her a glass of water. "What are you talking about?"
"Theodore." She grinned, taking a sip. "He is losing his absolute mind."
I stiffened at his name. The phantom pain of the severed bond ached in my chest. "Why?"
"Because half the Silverfang patrols have seen the Lycan Prince's SUV parked outside your cabin every morning." Makenna sat up, her eyes dancing with wicked delight. "I ran into Silas in town. He looked like he hadn't slept in days. He told me Theodore summoned him to his office yesterday, screaming about pack borders and Lycan delegations."
I sat down on the edge of the coffee table. "Theodore doesn't care about me."
"No," Makenna agreed. "He cares about his ego. He rejected you because he thought you were a runt. He thought you were beneath him. Now, a Lycan Prince—a man who outranks Theodore in every possible way—is fetching you breakfast. Theodore can't process it. He demanded Silas tell him what the Lycan delegation wants with a rogue."
"What did Silas say?"
"Silas told him the Prince goes wherever he damn well pleases." Makenna laughed again. "Silas looked like he wanted to punch his own Alpha. Theodore's authority is cracking, Lil. People are noticing."
I looked down at my hands. Theodore was arrogant and cruel. He hated looking foolish. If he felt threatened by Atlas, he wouldn't just let it go. A cold knot of dread formed in my stomach.
Two days later, the sky broke open.
I was at the local market in town. I only had two bags of groceries, but the rain was torrential. It came down in thick, freezing sheets. I stood under the store's canvas awning, shivering. My car was parked three blocks away. I'd be soaked to the bone before I even reached it.
A sleek black SUV pulled up to the curb, splashing water into the gutter. The passenger window rolled down.
Atlas leaned over from the driver's seat. "Get in."
"I have my car," I yelled over the thunder.
"You'll catch pneumonia before you reach it. Get in, Lilian." It wasn't a command. It was a plea.
I looked at the freezing rain, then at his warm, dry car. I opened the door and climbed in.
The inside of the SUV smelled like him. Cedar and rain-soaked earth. It wrapped around me instantly, making my wolf hum. Atlas turned up the heat. He didn't try to make small talk while he drove. He didn't ask me a million questions. He just let the silence sit between us, comfortable and heavy.
When we reached my dirt driveway, the rain was coming down even harder.
"Hold on," he said. He killed the engine, grabbed his jacket, and got out. He jogged around the front, opened my door, and grabbed both grocery bags with one hand. With his other arm, he held his jacket over my head to shield me from the rain.
We ran to the porch. I fumbled with my keys, my hands shaking from the cold. I pushed the door open, and we both stumbled inside.
We were dripping wet. My cabin was freezing.
"I can put these away," I said, taking the bags from him. "You don't have to stay."
Atlas wiped water from his face. His dark hair was plastered to his forehead. "Are you kicking me out into a storm, Lilian?"
I paused. I looked at him. Really looked at him. He was a Lycan Prince. He had a luxury suite in town with a full staff. But he was standing in my drafty kitchen, dripping onto my cheap linoleum, looking perfectly content.
"No," I said softly. "I'm going to make soup. You can stay."
A slow, genuine smile spread across his face.
We didn't plan it, but we moved around the tiny kitchen together. It was a tight space, but we never collided. When I reached for a pot, he moved back. When he started chopping carrots with my grandmother's hunting knife, I handed him a cutting board. It was effortless.
I watched his large, capable hands work. I listened to the steady rhythm of the knife. The rain battered the roof, but inside, it was warm. The scent of broth and cedar filled the air.
For years, I had shrunk myself in Theodore's kitchen. I had walked on eggshells, terrified of doing something wrong or taking up too much space. I had never felt safe.
But standing here, next to a Lycan Prince who chopped vegetables without being asked, the tight knot in my chest finally let go. I leaned against the counter and took a deep breath.
I felt safe.
And for a rejected she-wolf, safety was the most dangerous feeling in the world.
You may also like





