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My Alpha Rejected Me for the Pack’s Traitor Novel Cover

My Alpha Rejected Me for the Pack’s Traitor

The stack of budget reports in my arms felt heavier than usual, a physical weight mirroring the dread settling in my stomach. The Silver Moon Pack was hemorrhaging money, and the eastern perimeter wards were failing. As the Beta’s daughter and the unacknowledged Luna, it was my job to fix it. It had always been my job. I stopped outside the heavy oak doors of the Alpha’s office. It was late, the eve of the Summer Solstice Ball, and the hallway was silent. I didn't bother knocking; Dawson and I had been inseparable since we were five. We were fated. Everyone knew it, even if the official marking ceremony hadn't happened yet. I pushed the door open.
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Chapter 1

The stack of budget reports in my arms felt heavier than usual, a physical weight mirroring the dread settling in my stomach. The Silver Moon Pack was hemorrhaging money, and the eastern perimeter wards were failing. As the Beta’s daughter and the unacknowledged Luna, it was my job to fix it. It had always been my job.

I stopped outside the heavy oak doors of the Alpha’s office. It was late, the eve of the Summer Solstice Ball, and the hallway was silent. I didn't bother knocking; Dawson and I had been inseparable since we were five. We were fated. Everyone knew it, even if the official marking ceremony hadn't happened yet.

I pushed the door open. "Dawson, we need to authorize the repair crews for the—"

The words died in my throat. The air in the office was thick, suffocatingly hot, and drenched in a scent that made my inner wolf bristle with hostility. It wasn't just the earthy, pine forest smell of Dawson. It was cloying. Sickeningly sweet. Synthetic vanilla and musk.

*Sasha.*

Dawson was sitting behind his mahogany desk, but his shirt was unbuttoned halfway, his hair messy in a way that didn't come from stress. He looked up, his golden eyes flashing with annoyance rather than guilt.

"Caroline," he sighed, leaning back. "Can't a man get a moment of peace?"

I stepped further into the room, the door clicking shut behind me. The smell was overwhelming now, mingled heavily with the undeniable pheromones of recent intimacy. My stomach churned. "You have someone in here?"

"Don't start," Dawson snapped, waving a dismissive hand. "You're always seeing ghosts, Caroline. It's the cleaning products."

"Cleaning products don't smell like Sasha Perkins' cheap perfume," I said, my voice trembling slightly. "And they certainly don't explain why you smell like sex, Dawson."

He stood up abruptly, slamming his hands on the desk. "I am the Alpha! I don't answer to you yet. You're suffocating me with this constant nagging. 'Sign this, fix that, watch the budget.' You're imagining things because you're jealous and overworked. Now get out."

I stared at him, the man I was supposed to spend eternity with. He wasn't just lying; he was gaslighting me about reality itself. I placed the files on the edge of his desk with trembling fingers. "The wards will fail within the week without these signatures. If rogues get in, that's on you."

I turned and walked out before he could see the tears welling in my eyes.

I retreated to the Pack House, needing the sanctuary of my room. But the night wasn't done with me. As I reached the grand staircase, movement caught my eye. Sasha Perkins was descending the stairs, a smug smile playing on her lips. She was wearing a silk robe that was far too expensive for an Omega's salary.

But it wasn't the robe that stopped my heart. It was the glint of silver around her neck.

The ancestral Luna Necklace. A delicate chain holding a teardrop moonstone that glowed with a soft, inner light. Dawson’s mother had held my hands on her deathbed and promised it to me. She told me it was for the woman who would hold the pack together.

"Take it off," I whispered, my voice harsh.

Sasha fingered the stone, feigning surprise. "Oh, Caroline. I didn't see you there."

"That belongs to the future Luna," I said, stepping forward. "Take it off. Now."

"Dawson!" Sasha cried out, her voice pitching up into a fearful squeak as she shrank back against the banister.

Dawson appeared from the hallway below, looking exasperated. "What is the problem now?"

"She's wearing your mother's necklace," I pointed, my hand shaking.

Dawson didn't even look at the jewelry. He looked at me with cold disdain. "She's just modeling it for me. I needed to check if the clasp needed repairs before the ceremony. God, Caroline, you are being so petty. Do you really think you possess the grace of a Luna when you act like a jealous child?"

He placed a protective hand on Sasha's lower back, guiding her past me. Sasha shot me a look of pure triumph over his shoulder. I stood frozen on the stairs, the betrayal cutting deeper than any blade.

The next morning brought the mandatory monthly pack run. It was a human-form endurance test through the forest trails, meant to build solidarity. The ground was slick with morning dew and mud. Usually, Omegas stayed back to prepare breakfast, but Sasha was there, dressed in pristine athletic gear, sticking close to Dawson.

I kept my distance, running with the warriors I helped train. My father, the Beta, gave me a worried glance, but I kept my eyes forward, focusing on the burn in my lungs.

Suddenly, a shrill scream pierced the air.

"She pushed me!" Sasha shrieked.

I stopped, turning around. I was fifty yards ahead of her. Sasha was sprawled in a mud puddle, clutching her ankle, looking directly at me with tear-filled eyes. "Caroline tripped me!"

It was physically impossible. Everyone saw I was ahead. But Dawson didn't look at the distance. He looked at the crying girl in the mud.

"Caroline!" Dawson roared. His aura flared, dark and oppressive.

"I haven't been near her for two miles, Dawson!" I shouted back, gesturing to the warriors around me. "Ask anyone!"

"Do not lie to me!" he bellowed. And then, he did the unthinkable. He used the Alpha Tone on me. Not a command to a subordinate, but a weaponized force against his own mate.

**"Kneel."**

The word wasn't heard; it was felt. It slammed into my spine like a sledgehammer. My free will shattered. My knees buckled violently, and I crashed into the cold, wet mud. The impact knocked the wind out of me, pain radiating up my legs.

The entire pack went silent. My father took a step forward, his face pale, but Dawson’s aura warned him back.

Dawson marched over to where I knelt, trembling against the supernatural weight crushing my shoulders. He loomed over me, his eyes devoid of the love I had known since childhood.

**"Apologize to her,"** he commanded, the Alpha power vibrating in the air.

I gritted my teeth, tasting blood. I wanted to scream. I wanted to fight. But my body betrayed me, enslaved by the hierarchy I had served so faithfully.

"I'm... sorry," I choked out, the words tasting like ash.

Sasha smirked from the ground, her 'injured' ankle forgotten as she watched the Alpha bring the competent, proud Caroline Wells to her knees. As Dawson helped her up and walked away, leaving me in the dirt, something inside me didn't just break. It died. And in the cold silence of that morning, something else began to wake up.

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