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My Alpha Rejected Me but the Lycan Prince Claimed Me Novel Cover

My Alpha Rejected Me but the Lycan Prince Claimed Me

The pack house kitchen was dead quiet at two in the morning. I stood by the marble counter, letting the warmth of my coffee mug seep into my cold hands. I was waiting for him. I always waited for him. Theodore Duncan, Alpha of the Silverfang Pack, and my fated mate. I had endured his coldness for years. My parents had lived in a miserable, loveless mate bond, refusing to reject each other out of stubborn pride. They taught me that endurance was just the normal cost of staying bonded. So, I shrank myself to fit Theodore's world. I believed he would eventually mark me.
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Chapter 4

The soup was just starting to simmer when the banging started. It wasn't a polite knock. It was a heavy, angry pounding that rattled the thin wood of my front door.

I froze. My heart jumped into my throat. Across the small kitchen, Atlas stopped chopping vegetables. His head snapped up, and his dark eyes locked onto the door. The easy, domestic warmth in the room vanished instantly.

I wiped my hands on a dish towel and walked to the entryway. I pulled the door open.

Theodore stood on my porch. The freezing rain soaked his hair and dripped down his expensive leather jacket. Ruby was right beside him, shivering under an umbrella, looking annoyed.

"What do you want, Theodore?" I asked. My voice was surprisingly steady.

"You have the bracelet," he demanded. He didn't say hello. He didn't ask how I was living. He just used his flat, dismissive Alpha tone. "The silver one. It belongs to the Silverfang Luna line. I want it back right now."

It was a lie. My grandmother gave me that bracelet, and it had nothing to do with his pack. He was just here to throw his weight around. He wanted to invade my safe space and remind me that he could still command me.

"It's not yours," I said flatly. "Leave."

"Don't test me, Lilian," Theodore snarled. He took a heavy step forward, trying to push past me into the cabin.

He never made it inside.

A large hand gently gripped my shoulder and pulled me back a single step. Atlas moved smoothly into the doorway, positioning his massive frame completely between Theodore and me.

Atlas didn't raise his voice. He didn't bare his teeth. He just looked down at Theodore and let his control slip.

The Lycan aura slammed into the porch like a physical wave. It was impossibly heavy. The air grew thick, pulling the oxygen straight out of my lungs. It wasn't just dominance; it was absolute, crushing power.

Theodore's eyes went wide. His mouth opened, but no sound came out. For a powerful Alpha who had never bowed to anyone in his own territory, the physical reaction was instant and humiliating. Theodore stumbled backward. His boots slipped on the wet wood, and he nearly fell into the mud. A low, pathetic whimper tore from his throat—his inner wolf involuntarily submitting to a true king.

Ruby dropped her umbrella. She gasped, her face pale with terror. She grabbed Theodore's arm and pulled him hard. "Theo, let's go! Now!"

Theodore didn't argue. He couldn't. He practically scrambled to his truck, and they sped off into the rain, tires spinning in the mud.

Atlas stood in the doorway for a moment, watching the road. Then, he took a deep breath, and the crushing weight in the air vanished. He turned to me, his eyes soft again.

I looked down at my hands. They were shaking violently. But as I clenched them into fists, I realized something. I wasn't scared. For the first time in years, I felt a wild, soaring thrill.

The next morning, the storm had passed. Sunlight streamed through my dusty windows.

I was standing by the stove when the door swung open. Makenna walked in. She didn't knock, as usual. She stopped dead in her tracks when she saw Atlas sitting at my tiny kitchen table, casually sipping from a coffee mug.

Atlas looked up. Makenna looked him up and down. She didn't flinch at his size or his royal status. She assessed him with the frank, critical eye of a best friend who had spent years cataloging Theodore's failures.

After a long, tense moment, Makenna turned her head toward me. She didn't even bother to lower her voice.

"Well," she said bluntly. "He looks at you like you're the only person in the room."

I felt the heat rush to my cheeks. "Mac, please."

I glanced at Atlas, expecting him to look uncomfortable or annoyed. Instead, he just took another slow sip of his coffee. He didn't deny it. A tiny, proud smirk played at the corner of his mouth.

"Mind your own business," I muttered, turning back to the stove.

Makenna just laughed. She walked over, grabbed a mug from the cabinet, and poured herself some coffee. She pulled up a chair across from the Lycan Prince and stayed for an hour, chatting with him about local pack borders like it was the most normal thing in the world.

But the easy peace didn't last.

Two days later, the real world crashed down on us. A courier arrived from the Lycan King's court with a sealed message for Atlas. The King wanted a strict timeline for the alliance negotiations. The subtext was clear. Rival packs were gossiping. The Castillo bloodline was under scrutiny because their Prince was spending all his time at a drafty cabin with a rejected she-wolf.

Atlas told me about the letter quietly. We were standing on my porch. He looked frustrated, his jaw tight. We didn't talk about what it meant for us. We just implicitly agreed that we needed to be careful. We had to keep our distance at official events.

The next afternoon was the final regional delegation meeting. It was held in a neutral pack's hall.

I attended only because Makenna needed a proxy to hold her files. I stood in the far back corner of the grand room. Atlas sat at the head table at the front. He wore a tailored dark suit. He looked every inch the royal heir.

For two hours, he directed the meeting. He spoke with Alphas, signed documents, and negotiated trade routes.

And for two hours, he didn't look at me once.

We sat on opposite sides of the room, acting like perfect strangers. I knew why he was doing it. I knew it was for my protection as much as his politics. But standing in the shadows while the man I cared about pretended I didn't exist... it did something terrible to me.

It felt exactly like Theodore.

It was the same familiar wound. The feeling of being a secret. The feeling of being an embarrassment, something to be hidden away when the important people were watching. My chest ached, and my inner wolf curled up into a tight, miserable ball.

I didn't say anything to Atlas. When the meeting ended, I slipped out the back door before he could even stand up.

That night, I sat in a dim, noisy bar just outside the territory lines. The air smelled of cheap beer and fried food. Makenna sat across from me in a sticky vinyl booth.

I stared at the amber liquid in my glass. I took a large swallow. It burned all the way down.

"I can't do it, Mac," I whispered. My voice cracked.

Makenna watched me carefully. "Do what?"

"Be a secret." I traced the rim of my glass, fighting the tears stinging my eyes. "I spent years letting Theodore hide me. I spent years shrinking myself so I wouldn't embarrass him. I told myself it was fine. I told myself I deserved it."

I looked up at her. My heart felt incredibly heavy.

"Atlas is a good man. He's better than Theodore in every way," I said, my voice shaking. "But sitting in that room today... pretending we didn't know each other... it killed me. I won't be a dirty secret again, Mac. Not even for a Prince."

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