
My Alpha Rejected Me for His Lying Mistress
Chapter 2
The pack house was silent. Most of the warriors were at the border, celebrating the new Luna’s ascension with a bonfire, while the Omegas were busy cleaning up the mess from the party. It was the perfect window.
I slipped through the service entrance, my heart hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird. My hands were shaking, not from fear, but from the sheer adrenaline of what I was about to do. I pulled the hood of my dark sweatshirt lower. I wasn't Madeline, the submissive wife anymore. I was a ghost haunting the halls of my own execution.
I made my way down to the basement levels, past the wine cellar and the storage rooms, until I stood before the heavy iron door of the Roberts' Ancestral Crypt. This was sacred ground. Only the Alpha and Luna had access.
I held my breath and pressed my palm against the biometric scanner.
*Please,* I prayed to a Goddess I wasn't sure was listening anymore. *Don't let them have scrubbed me yet.*
A beat of silence. Then, a soft green light flashed.
*"Access Granted: Luna Madeline."*
The heavy mechanism groaned as the door unlatched. I slipped inside, the air instantly turning cold and stale, smelling of dry earth and ancient incense. The crypt was lined with marble alcoves, each holding the remains of a Roberts Alpha.
I walked past the lesser ancestors and went straight to the two most prominent displays in the center of the room: Alpha Richard and Alpha Thomas. Grayson’s father and grandfather. The men who built the legacy he was so proud of. The men whose stories he used to tell me in bed, his eyes shining with pride.
I stared at the velvet-lined coffins. "He denied my mother her peace," I whispered to the dead men. "He threatened to put her in a latrine. I'm just returning the favor."
I went to the maintenance console on the wall. It controlled the automated cleaning systems for the crypt. My fingers flew over the keypad, overriding the preservation protocols. I initiated a "Sanitation Transfer," a command usually reserved for clearing out dead rats or spoiled floral arrangements.
*"Target: Sector A and B. Classification: Hazardous Biological Waste."*
The system beeped its confirmation. The automated collection arms whirred to life, descending from the ceiling. But I didn't wait for the machines. I needed to do this myself.
I grabbed the heavy duty industrial trash bags I’d shoved in my waistband. With a grunt of effort, I shoved the heavy lids aside. There they were. The bones of the great Alphas, resting on silk pillows.
I didn't feel reverence. I felt cold, hard satisfaction. I scooped the bones up—femurs, skulls, ribs—and dropped them into the black plastic bags. The sound of sacred bones clattering against each other like dry firewood was loud in the silence.
I tied the bags tight, threw them over my shoulder, and walked out.
***
Thirty minutes later, the stolen pack maintenance truck rumbled to a halt. I wasn't on Silverclaw land anymore. I was on the edge of the territory, right where the forest met the chain-link fence of the county landfill.
The smell hit me instantly—rotting food, old diapers, chemical decay. It was pungent and vile. Perfect.
I climbed out of the truck, the heavy bags dragging in the dirt. I set up my phone on a small tripod on the hood of the truck, the camera facing the mountain of human garbage behind me.
I opened the MoonLink app. My account still had the verified "Luna" checkmark. I hit *Go Live*.
The viewer count jumped instantly. Ten. Fifty. Two hundred. The notification would be pinging every wolf in the tri-state area.
I stared into the lens, my face pale and unmoving. "Silverclaw Pack," I said, my voice steady. "You watched your Alpha reject me. You watched him threaten to dump my mother’s ashes in a latrine because she didn't have a pack anymore."
I hoisted the first bag.
"Respect is earned, Grayson. It isn't inherited."
I ripped the bag open and upended it. The skull of Alpha Richard Roberts tumbled out, bouncing down a pile of wet cardboard and rusty soup cans before settling into a heap of coffee grounds.
The chat on the screen exploded.
*OMG is that...*
*She didn't.*
*Holy sh*t.*
I opened the second bag. Alpha Thomas followed his son, his ribs scattering among broken glass bottles.
"An Alpha who denies a mother her rites deserves no ancestors to guide him," I said to the camera, my voice cutting through the wind. "Come collect your legacy, Grayson. It's right where it belongs."
I ended the stream.
My phone was already buzzing with calls—Grayson, Camille, Beta Enzo. I ignored them all. The adrenaline was fading, replaced by a sharp, icy focus. This was just the beginning.
I climbed back into the truck cab and pulled out my laptop. While they were scrambling, screaming, and rushing toward the landfill to salvage their honor, I had one more button to press.
I logged into the pack’s cloud drive. I had managed the accounts for three years. I knew where every dollar went. And I knew where the missing dollars went.
I opened the folder I had named *"Renovations"* years ago to hide my suspicions. It was full of receipts. Designer clothes for Camille. An apartment in the city. A Porsche registered under a shell company. All paid for with pack tributes—money meant for orphan care and border defense, labeled as "Rogue Defense Costs."
I compiled it all into a single dossier.
Recipient: *Lycan King’s Enforcers; Inter-Pack Revenue Service.*
Subject: *Silverclaw Theft.*
I hovered my finger over the enter key. I could see the lights of SUVs racing down the highway toward the landfill in the distance. They were coming for me.
"Burn," I whispered.
I hit send.
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