
My Alpha Rejected Me for the Pack’s Traitor
Chapter 4
The silence in my father’s study was heavy, broken only by the crackling of the fire and the damning audio playing from my tablet. I watched Beta Wells, a man who had dedicated fifty years of his life to the Silver Moon Pack, as his world crumbled.
“...I don’t want cash this time,” Sasha’s recorded voice sneered, tinny and cruel. “I want that custom diamond set... You buy it, you drop it at the dead drop, and the patrol schedules are yours.”
My father didn't move. He sat behind his oak desk, his face a mask of stone, but I saw the tremor in his hands. He was watching the video feed of the Alpha’s office—the office he had sworn to protect with his life—being used as a bargaining chip for jewelry.
I paused the video just as Dawson’s voice began outlining his plan to publicly reject me. I didn't need my father to hear that part again. The look in his eyes told me he had heard enough.
“He gave her the codes,” my father whispered, his voice sounding like gravel grinding together. “He gave a traitor the keys to our home.”
“He plans to make her Luna tonight, Dad,” I said softly, stepping forward to place a hand on his shoulder. “He’s going to reject me in front of the Elders. In front of everyone.”
My father stood up slowly. The air around him shimmered with suppressed power, the Beta aura that usually calmed the pack now spiking with lethal intent. He walked to the window, looking out at the preparations for the ceremony on the lawn below.
“I served his father,” he said, his voice thick with grief. “I held Dawson when he was a pup. I taught him how to track. I thought... I thought he was just lost. I thought he would find his way back to you.”
He turned to me, and for the first time in my life, I saw tears in his eyes. “I failed you, Caroline. I let my loyalty to the title blind me to the man holding it.”
“You didn’t fail me,” I said fiercely. “But we cannot serve him anymore. If we stay, we are complicit in his destruction of this pack.”
He nodded, a sharp, decisive motion. He walked to the ancient family crest hanging on the wall—a silver shield crossed with two swords. He reached behind it and pulled out a small, ceremonial dagger. It was the blade used to swear the Blood Oath, the ancient magic that bound the Beta line to the Alpha.
“The oath binds us to the Alpha,” he recited the old law, his voice steadying. “But the law also states: *Should the Alpha betray the pack’s safety for personal gain, the oath is void.*”
He held the dagger out to me. We didn't need to cut ourselves; the ritual was about intent. We gripped the hilt together, our hands overlapping.
“Tonight,” he vowed, his eyes locking with mine. “When he breaks the mate bond, we break the service bond. We leave, Caroline. We leave him with nothing but his traitor and his ego.”
***
The night air was cool, but the ceremonial grounds were stifling. Hundreds of pack members had gathered in the amphitheater, the stone benches filled with murmuring wolves. Torches lined the perimeter, casting long, dancing shadows that seemed to mock the solemnity of the occasion.
I stood near the front, dressed in a simple black dress that felt more like mourning clothes than celebration attire. My father stood beside me, rigid as a statue. Across the aisle, Sasha was impossible to miss. She was wearing a shimmering white gown that looked suspiciously like a wedding dress, preening for the crowd. She caught my eye and smirked, mouthing the word *Goodbye*.
I didn't react. I just tightened my grip on the small remote concealed in the palm of my hand.
The drums began to beat, a slow, rhythmic thrumming that signaled the arrival of the Alpha. Dawson emerged from the darkness, walking up the stone steps to the central dais. He looked every inch the king he thought he was—shoulders back, chin high, his golden hair catching the torchlight. But I saw the frantic energy in his eyes, the way his gaze darted to Sasha every few seconds like an addict looking for a fix.
The crowd quieted. Dawson raised his hands, basking in the attention.
“My pack,” he began, his voice amplified by the acoustics of the amphitheater. “Tonight is a night of new beginnings. For too long, we have been held back by outdated traditions. Tonight, I embrace the future.”
He turned his gaze toward me. It wasn't a look of regret. It was a look of annoyance, like I was a stain on his perfect evening that he needed to scrub away.
“Caroline Wells,” he called out. The crowd gasped. This wasn't the script. “Step forward.”
I walked up the steps, my heels clicking on the stone. I stopped three feet from him. I could smell the stale scent of champagne on his breath, mixed with Sasha’s cloying perfume.
“You have served this pack well as a... manager,” Dawson said, his voice dripping with condescension. “But a pack needs a Luna who inspires. A Luna who represents strength and beauty, not just spreadsheets.”
He took a deep breath, preparing to deliver the killing blow. I saw his lips form the shape of the rejection ritual. *I, Dawson Lynch...*
“Stop,” I said.
It wasn't a shout. It was a command, clear and cold.
Dawson blinked, thrown off his rhythm. “Excuse me?”
“You want to talk about the future of the pack, Dawson?” I asked, my voice carrying to the back rows. “You want to talk about what a Luna should represent?”
“Know your place, Caroline!” he snarled, his eyes flashing. “I am speaking!”
“No,” I said, lifting my hand. “You’re finished.”
I pressed the button on the remote.
Behind him, the massive projection screen that was meant to display the pack’s history lit up. A collective gasp ripped through the crowd as the image flickered to life. It wasn't the pack crest. It was the high-definition footage from his office.
Sasha’s face, distorted in a greedy sneer, filled the screen, looming over the gathered wolves. Her voice boomed through the speakers, louder than Dawson’s had ever been.
*“The Silver Moon southern patrol routes are weak on Tuesdays... There’s a two-hour gap... You can get your scouts in and out...”*
The silence that followed was absolute. It was the silence of a held breath before the scream.
Dawson spun around, his face draining of all color as he stared at the giant image of his lover selling us out. On the screen, the timestamp was clearly visible—three days ago.
I watched Sasha in the front row. The smirk had vanished. She was frozen, her mouth open in a silent scream of terror as hundreds of wolves turned their heads toward her, their eyes glowing with predatory rage.
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